Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAIL Thursday, March 21, 1968 ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER 921 Church St. Friday, Mar. 22, at 8 P.M. "South Africa Today" What arethe eltes? What can students do? SPEA KE R: Gail Morlan, Frontier jntern in South Africa 1966- 1968 Daily Classifieds Get Results DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .,,..........,..* SW.SVflfl.V44.W.W .............*..,* .................,...........e............................. .............,.....................*...* .~ %S.....,......~ House Leaders Spilit Over Civil Rights Bill A (Continued from Page 5) World is Square", March 22, 10 a.m.- 5 p.m., School of Public Health. Canterbury House & Student Peace Union & Draft Teach-In Committee, Teach-In on the Draft and American Soiey March 19, 4 p-m-idnight, Students for McCarthy, Bucket Drive Campaign, March 18, 19, 10, 9 a.m.- 5 p.m., Diag. Doctoral Examinations James Alan Reynolds, English Lan- guage and Literature, Thesis: "Gre- yue'Tcreatises, and the Nature of at 9 a.m. in W. Council Rm., Rackham. Chairman: John Arthos. Jiames Mc'nEoyrhe, Amiccan Culture, the National Election of 1964," on Thurs., March 21 at 10 a.m., in Rm. 625, Haven Hall. Chairman: R. C. Leighton Selman Whitsitt, Pharma- cology, Thesis: "A Pharmacological Levorotatory Isomers," on Thurs., March 21 at 10 a.m. in Rm. M-6314 Medical Science. Chairman: B. R. Luc- chesi. Hardam Singh Azad, Civil Engineer- ing, Dissertation: "Phosphorus Uptake o-nmental and"PhysolgcaltCondi tions," on Thurs., March 21 at 2 p.m. in Rm. 340, W. Engrg. Chairman: J. A. Borchardt-. John Lewis Kurzenberger, Aerospace Eninerng *Tesi"h Use I ofCn iputers," onThurs., March 21 at 2 p.m. L. E. Fogarty andED T reeood.in: Doyle. Wild Buckwaiter, Political Sci- ence, Disssertatin: "The Gulf ofTon- Reality," on Thurs., March 21 at 3 p.m. in Rm. 4609 Haven Hall (Conference Rnm.), Chairman: A. F. K. Organski, Frank udo JnnEuai, Thesis: "Variations inNursin Seric Characteristics and Teachers' Health Observation Practices in Pour Michi- gan Cities," on Thurs,, March 21 at GENERAL DIVISION Peace Corps Week--Information cen.- ter at 3524 S.A.B., all students inter- ested are invited to stop by and speak with representatives between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. No appts. are necessary. The placement exam will be given, questionnaires must be filled out before the exam, these can be picked up dur- ing the hours above. Speakers are available to interested campus groups. Arrangements should be made by call- ing Miss Mildred Webber at 764-7460. First Week of April ends Recruiting Appts., 3200 S.A.B. Requests continue to be sent for both experienced and inexperienced personnel. Come in and company literatue directoriesn ond em may plan. Please report job offers, whether or not you accept, to the Council uses these for statistical pur poses. Keep the Bureau up to date on address changes and plans after grad-. yCurrentraPositioOeig receive phone, call 764-7460 for further infor- mation. Financial Programs, Inc., Oak Park, Mich. - Sales Management positions (5 openings), Mutual Funds and life insrace saar b s on psoal under you. Man or woman, degree de- management desired age 21 nun.sor Northeastern Biologists, Rinedeck, N.Y. - Biologist, man, BS in general Fisheries work, must know how to swim-. Management Consultants, N.Y.C. - Sales Engineer for manuf. of jet air- craft, liaison between engineer and salesman, man, Aeronautical engineer- ing degree or exper. in aircraft mftr. Sales orientation, early 30's age range. Silver Spring Neighborhood Center, Milwaukee, Wis. - Caseworker, MSW, for Family Counselor position, men. 2 yrs. exper. in Social Case work req. Assistant Director, man, some knowl social wk, community problems and resources, course work in psych., soc., wk.. or guid. & couns. Field worker similar work and background to above. 1-3 yrs. In asuditing, public or indus- Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. -Secretarial positions, library assist- ant, technical editor, Research asst., language abortor superisor. Com- reau of appts., 3200 S.A.B. 764-7460. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE, ner 212 S.A.B., Lower Level March 21: Camp Mataponi, Maine, girls, 10-5. Must be 20 or over for waterfront, In- structors for arts & crafts, dance and rCam Mapiehurst, Mich. Coed. 1-5. Counselors for arts & crafts, canoe trips, instructors in sailing and scuba. ENGINEERING DIVISION Make interview appointments at Rm. 128 H West Engrg. Bldg. unless other- wise specified. March 27: Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. WASHINGTON (P) - The Sen- ate-passed civil rights bill was caught in a political cross fire in the House yesterday with Re- publicans and Democrats accus- ing each other of delaying action. The bill is hung up In the Rules Conimittee, where three Democrats joined the five Republican mem- bers in voting 8 o 7Tesday to Wants Conference Following a meeting of all Hou~se Republicans, GOP leader Gerald H. Ford of Michigan called on the Democratic leadership to send the bill immediately to a confer- ence with the Senate and abandon its plan to accept the bill with- out change. Ford and other Republican lead- ers want the bill's strong open housing provision altered to exempt individual homones Under the Senate bill they woul be exempt only If they sell or rent their houses themselves, without using a real estate broker. The Democratic strategy calls for an up or down vote on the bill as it now rstands, with no chance for amendments. "I emphatically urge the Dem- ocratic leadership to send the blU to conference today," said Ford. "That is the quickest way to proceed." Rep. Melvin R. Laird, of Wis- consin, chairman of the GOP conference, added it should be stipulated that if the conferees failed to agree within 10 days the bill could be brought back to the House for the up and down vote the Democratic leaders want. Laird said he and "a vast ma- jority of the Republicans would vote for' the bill under such cir- cumstances. "If they can't get agreement," he said, "We would take the Senate bill." their demand frb a HouseSen ate conference on the House floor Wednesday, they aroused the Dem- ocr ats to swift retaliation. Majority Leader Carl Albert of Oklahoma said, "if we could have gotten a couple of, Republican votes in the Rules Committee yes- terday we could have the bill on the floor next week." Criticizes Republicans' Rep. Richard Bolling, a Dem- ocratic member of the Rules Committe said te sRepublican about the nee for a conference tion that would have permitted the House to choose any course of pro- cedure it wanted. "The point is," said the Missour- ian "there is a group in the Hoiuse that is Insisting on having its way In this. It is saying "You can go to conference or you don't aAct.'" The leadership Is still hoping to bring the bill to a vote on April 10, the day after the Rules Com- mittee is due to vote on it. The House starts a 10 day Easter Re- ii The University of zMichigan School pf Music The An~n ro Smhn Present (Summer only). ii .1 UNION-LEAGUE Th" SEIROFCR of 'V 4 Tickets on Sal at loa Music Stores or phone 663-0035 or 662-4279 Saturday, March 23 8:30 P.M. RACKHAM LECTURE HALL General Admission $2.50 Advance Sales Only (No Tickets at the Door) The University Activities Center anoriun1ce The EXECUTIVE COUNCIL for '68-'69 cess on April 11. I , 'I ( 4' UN IN-LEGUEUNION-LEAGUE ACADEMIC AFFAIRS Jennifer Rhea COMPTROLLER Bill Morrill ' CONTEMPORARY DISCUSSIONS George Ladner CREATIVE A RTS lene Goldman FACILITIES Steye Fogel HOMECOMING Jim Fisher Sue Cooper LABORt DAY Mike Kahn Chris Dabrowski MUSKET Kate Siegel NORTH CAMPUS Steve Waskerwitz PERSONNEL Terry Pink PUBLIC RELATIONS Brian Lucas PUBLICATIONS Judy Kammins R ESEARCH ADVISORY Alan Wagner SOCIAL Sima Juliar SOPH SHOW Amby Burleigh TRAVEL Gates Moss INTERNATIONAL Mike Vasko UNIVERSITY SERVICES Chuck Cady WINTER WEEKEND- MICHIGRAS Mark, Rosenberg Cyndi Brown ANNOUNCING TH E PETITIONING FOR GENERAL CHAIRMAN Pick Up Petitions in the UAC Offices, Second Floor, Michigan Union PETITIONS DUE: MARCH 25, 1968 M KARL IIAAS WJR Fine Arts Director President National Music Camp and Interlochen Arts Academy qi I, 41 * * iscount records.AInc 30s. stae-1235.Uniest '4 iNVITATION TO THE DANCE-i1321 * WAGNER PROGRAM III-13i6* TCHAI KOVS KY- MANFRED- 131 5* VERDI HIGHLIGHTS-I 31 4* SCHUBERT-- SYMPHONIES --1311* WAGNER PROGRAM 11-1278 ROSSINI OVERTURES-i 274 PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION-i1273 TCHAIKOVSKY- SYM. NO. 6-1268 STRAUSS, DUKAS, BERLIOZ-i 267 COMPLETE BEETHOVEN SYMPHONIES EIGHT DISCS-Vic 8000 R5~Ionly 9 WAGNER PROGRAM I per disc TftO~I mnon or stereo 1-1247 HAYDN-SYM. 94 & i0i-262 DVORAK-NEW WORLD SYMPHONY-i 249 VERDI & ROSSINI OVERTURES-i 248 C -C