MMMMR PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DATT.V VI" T A vr - . T- . --. -- . --- PAGE EIGHT THE M llc rgl\ I ,'L'I FRIDAY. JANUARY 26, 1968 3 .. "','. " " ATTE MPT ASSASSIN AT ION. ORGANIZATION NOTICES North Korea H Depends on the giant. Actually, some giants are just regular kinds of guys. Except bigger. And that can be an advantage. How? Well, take Ford Motor Company. We're a giant in an exciting and vital business. We tackle big problems. Needing big solutions. Better ideas. And that's where you come in. Because it all adds up to a real opportunity for young engineering graduates like yourself at Ford Motor Company. Come to work for us and you'll be a member of a select College Graduate Program. As a member of this program, you won't be just another "trainee" playing around with "make work" assignments. You'll handle important projects that you'll frequently follow from concept to production. Projects vital to Ford. And you'll bear a heavy degree of responsibility for their success. You may handle as many as 3 different assignments in your first two years. Tackle diverse problems. Like figuring how high a lobe on a cam should be in order to yield a certain compression ratio. How to stop cab vibration in semi-trailer trucks. How to control exhaust emmission. Soon you'll start thinking like a giant. You'll grow bigger because you've got more going for you. A network of computers to put confusing facts and figures into perspective. Complete testing facilities to prove out better ideas. And at Ford Motor Company, your better ideas won't get axed because of a lack of funds. (A giant doesn't carry a midget's wallet, you know.) Special programs. Diverse meaningful assignments. Full responsibility. The opportunity to follow through. The best facilities. The funds to do a job right. No wonder 87% of the engineers who start with Ford are here 10 years later. If you're an engineer with better ideas, and you'd like to do your engineering with the top men in the field, see the man from Ford when he visits your campus. Or send your resume to Ford Motor Company, College Recruiting De- partment. You and Ford can grow bigger together. grasses South USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- Associated Press News Analysis have brought every resource into rNeOUNCe NTsds available to officially The aborted plot to assassinate play - including electronic gear fizations only Forms are available in President Chung Hee Park and such as that believed to have been room 1011 SAB. the seizure of the U.S. intelligence aboard the Pueblo - to detect1 * * * ship Pueblo appear to be part of Communist moves southward. Committee for Improved Education a blueprint to subvert South Ko- Speculation among Japanesef presents - John Holt, educator and rea, mapped out 15 months ago. officals here is that capture of the{ author of "How Children Fail" and Pel a aebe ieso "How Children Learn," in a benefit On Oct. 7. 1966, North Korean Pueblo may have been a diversion talk for the Children's Community, Premier Kim Il Sung announced to draw attention away from the 7:30 p.m., Wed., Jan. 31, SchorlingrAud. a detailed plan for infiltrating failure of the Sunday attack on University High School (corner of;th SohKrenpsdnia Monroe and East U). the South, establishment of a the South Korean presidential * * * "Marxist Leninist" party there, miansion. a91.vi th,. m o, a Another possibility could be umuess ~uo meeting, Jan. 26. 321 Union, 7:30 p.m. * * * La Sociedad Hispanica, una tertulia, Mon., Jan. 29, 3-5 p.m. 3050 Frieze: cafe, conversacion, musica. vengan Todos. Baha'i Student Group, Informal dis- cussion, "Religion and Science - in Harmony or not?" Fri., Jan. 26, 8:00 p.m. 520 N. Ashley. All welcome. Call1 662-3548 if you need transportation. tocie recruitment oz peasants and workers. Since then, infiltration of Com- munist agents across the demili- tarized zone or by sea has stepped up. Japanese sources say there were 500 incidents involving this underground in 1967, 10 times that that North Korea wished to im- mobilize the Pueblo-and its in- telligence gathering capabilities- while it stepped up the movement of agents into the South. Not Due to Mao !It is not likely that the in- standing leader." Pyongyang has said little about Mao since it adopted a neutrally independent pose in the Communist bloc in Aumust 1966. There has been nothing else to indicate that the North is getting ready to abandon its independent stand: there has been some evi- dence that Kim I Sung has had to deal with pro-Chinese factions in recent months. Reports of un- rest and purges, published by Red Guards in Peking, have been de- nied. But they persist. The Chi- nese wing may be gaining in strength and influence. News Broadcasts Any swing of the North Ko- reans toward the Chinese might be expected to be detected in New China News Agency broad- casts. So far, none has appeared. The events of the past week have yet to be reported by Peking. Kim's Oct.' 7, 1966, statement admitted that President Park "provided grave obstacles" to the establishment of communism in the South and called for his over- throw. THE AMERICAN ROAD, DEARBORN, MICHIGAN AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER& What's it like tDe g9191efor a giant?. of the previous year. creased North Korean belligerency South Korea and the U.S. forces is partly due to greater accept- in the United Nations Command ance within the army of Com- - --- - munist Chinese Chairman Mao Tse tung's ideas on people's war, revolution and violence. Western intelligence sources re- ported Saturday that North Ko- rean loud speaker propaganda broadcasts along the demilitarized! zone described Mao as "an out- t 4 i--° i -e 1 . INTER HOUSE ASSEMBLY ___.____ __ _M ___ i i;II ' II Congratulates the W of the Annual I.H.A. S COUZENS HAL inners tin LL r Rather enlarging! 0 0 0 JoinTheMichiganDaily "Idon't hve* twoyears experience. I have one year twice." Some people get experience The more experience you get, in a job. the faster you grow. Other people get older. And that's to our mutual There's a big difference. And benefit. it all depends on where you work, and with whom you Here's the kind of experience work. You can start some you get place that has all the proper MITRE is pioneering in the systems engineering creden- design and engineering of tials -significant contracts, complex information, sensor, modern physical plant, and command, control and com- the usual fringe benefits -- munications systems for the and find yourself a couple of United States Government. years later, just a couple of Our assignments include years behind. prominent military electronic Or, you can come to a place systems, as well as civilian like MITRE and get experi- systems for future national lieMITREAnd g et exphari-he air traffic control and high ence. And grow. We have the speed ground transportation. credentials, of course. (We sedgon rnprain happen to think they're the We'd like you to know more best.) But we have something about MITRE more. An attitude. We want About what we do, how we you to get the best systems think, and what it might be experience in the business. like to work with us. If you'd We want to share what we like to know more about us, know with you, want you to and have a degree (preferably absorb it as fast as you can. advanced) in electronics, The quicker you grasp things, mathematics or physics, we'd the quicker things get done. like to talk with you. INTERVIEWS WILL BE CONDUCTED ON CAMPUS,' JANUARY 30 SIGN UP NOW AT THE PLACEMENT OFFICE. Or write for more information: Mr. L.J. Glinos, College Relations Coordinator, The MITRE Cr-oration, Box 208 CCO, Bedford, Massachusetts. CNA THE MITRE An Equal Opportunity Employer (Male & Female) Formed in 1958 ... pioneer in the design and development of command and control systems . .. MITRE serves as technical advisor and systems engineer for the Electronic Systems Division of the Air Force Systems Command and provides technical assistance to the Federal Aviation Administration, the De- partment o Defense, the Department of Transportation and the National Aero- nautics and Space Administration. :, r U ~ANDERSON HIJlm j AND INVITES EVERYONE TO COME BACK NEXT YEAR! III in the COLUMBIA MASTERWORKS PANASON IC RCA VICTOR present PHONOGRAPHS: Portables or Consoles RADIOS: A.M. or A.M -F.M., Portables or Consoles, Clock-Radios TAPE RECORDERS TELEVISIONS: Black and White or Color, Portables or Consoles Visit this World at 417 E. Liberty NO 2-0675 just past AA Bank usc S - - M 0 To the y alwaysI up to.be oung man whther knew he'd gr ;president We need you. We're looking for a future pre nt right now. O's -Is. d%'3 I aV 3 Open: Mon., Wed., and Thurs. 4 P.M.-2 A.M. Open: Fri., Sat., Sun. Noon to 3 A.M. (Closed Tues.) DeLONG'S PIT BARBECUE 314 Detroit St. Phone 665-2266 CARRY OUT ONLY FREE DELIVERY Bar-B-Q Beef Dinner............$1 .95 V2 Fried Chicken ...............$1.55 Fried Shrimp ...................$1.60 All Dinners include French Fries and Slow He'll probably come from a campus such as this. He'll work with us inventing and developing new liquid transport. Or on pollution control equipment. Or in international trade. He'll join us at one of our nationwide locations. You see our corporation is eight companies. We have offices from New Jersey to California, and we're growing so fast we need all kinds of people. C!1l ":WTA h MV3 f0 f WWA: T m .37.3t*37 FdG Eating Out is the Cure for all Evils- TRY IT!! STEAK and SHAKE 1313 South University CHAR-BROILED STRIP STEAK & EGGS . ... $1.85 Two Eggs. Potatoes, Toast HALF CHICKEN, Potato Salad ..... ....$1.50 Bread and Butter 'the X'wi 90.x Located in Scenic Northern Ann Arbor Area (Dixboro) BEST SELECTION OF SEAFOOD IN ANN ARBOR AREA "the fish you eat today played yesterday in Gloucester Bay" Old Heidelberg 211-213 N. Mai St. 668-9753