I' IL MICHIGAN DAILY a SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7,4967 jUt MICIII(~AN DAIlY SATURDAY, OCTOI3I~R 7.1967 ._ ,....J ..... .y. .-- I Int'ernational Figres STATE DEPARTMENT WRONG': Eome Folk' Rambler locking Back to the ( s Dazzle, View Science Needs Myrdal Fears Vietnam Victory Would Isolate U.S. from World -'"I By DAVID STEIN cited his discovery of heavy hy- ood -T iM e Three world-famous scientists drogen which in turn resulted in discussing the "Scientific Future bomb.oWhenito was first develop- stressed yesterday the need for bomb.UWeniouhthwatfirtdevelp ed its versatility and virtuosity carefuldresearch work and the in-ed, Urey thought that It would continuously. After many years of creasing interrelation between the be used in lab work or become an performing together, the Ramblers various sciences, agent like neon in signs. have developed a timing that al- ., Urey could cite only one scien- The "Voices of Civilization" lows them to pull off humor that ThelVwicespofeCefieizati tific prediction that has come true is corny and predictable. In much panel wh spke beforena -Malthus' theory of overpopula- the same way, their music appears tion - while many unpredicted simple, yet it is not. The Ramblers T h u r s d a y afternoon, included discoveries came to mind. He de- are all excellent musicians and Jean Piaget, Swiss psychologist; scribed the development of atomic Arne Tiselius, Nobel Prize win - singers. ning biochemist from Sweden' power, radio - astronomy, and Mike Seeger remains folk music's and Harold Urey, American chem- computers as examples of such best musician with the possible ist and Noble Prize winner. discoveries. exception of Doc Watson. He He predicted that the most played some beautiful mandolin on Tiselius called for more plan- promising scientific advancementsi "In the Pines," where he teamed ning in research, explaining that of this century will be in bio- with Schwarz in a great bit of "research has become so costly chemistry, concerning the struc- bluegrass duet singing that made that we can't do everything tur eand behavior of living or- for an interesting number. It isn't worthwhile, and we must be se- ganisms. frequent that you hear bluegrass lective." without Scruggs-style banjo. It is time to include in our withot Scrggs-tyle an'o plans a sort of cleaning-up," said TT John Cohen performed some Tiselius.a Sciitsshouldsestab- H fm an F brilliant ail d b nfrailedtra Tbanjo. cionisstheud tra- !Hffishfsh research roriieprioritiesio al Cubasedwh chon s ngEmp rta ceUath r o fn ost h ditional "Cuckoo," which he sang importance rather than cost, he in the style of Clarence Ashley. At declared, and must remember differentutimes the instrumenta- their debthto the fture as they 1rou g tion featured two fiddles and a develop the abiilty to control mandolin, auto-harp, guitar andnaueo gi E By ROGER RAPOPORT Editor Swedish economist G u n n a r Myrdal says he feels "an Ameri- can military victory in the Viet- nam war would be the worst thing that could happen to the United States. "If the U.S. won the war, real hell would break out," he pre- dicted in a Daily interview. "America would become morally and perhaps physically isolated from most of the world. The U.S. would be viewed as an anti-co- role in Vietnam before, but now I'm really mad," 69-year-old Myrdal says. "The U.S. State De- partment has been completely wrong about Vietnam. Dean Rusk just doesn't know anything about Asia," claims Myrdal, who has been studying Asia for the past 12 years. The former Swedish minister of commerce and secretary gen- eral of the economic council ifor. Europe believes that "there isn't anyone in Europe who would send a squadron to fight with you in lonial country putting down re- Vietnam. Sweden wouldn't give bellions i n s i d e and outside a single kronor. America with police power. "When Vice President Hubert "I was angry about the U.S. Humphrey toured Europe this oresees Future Peace conomic Integration summer the police had to guard him from all the dissenters. The people are not behind you. The officials may have been cordial but that's only because the United States does them favors." Myrdal says he thinks that only political power of the vote "would convince the Johnson adminis- tration to change its views." Myrdal suggests that the Presi- dent take a cue from French President Charles DeGaulle who entered office backing his nation's military effort in Algeria, but then reversed himself and pulled out: "DeGaulle did not become a real political power in France and Europe until after he pulled out of Algeria. He gained immeasur- ably by changing his stand." :I've always been an optimist about America," says Myrdal, author of "An American Dilem- ma." a classic study of: the U.S. racial problem. He emphasizes that "'ven during the dark days of the Depression when some people thought the country might go under I was not a pessimist. But if this war should go on, this country could become a thorough- ly brutal police state." Myrdal feels that the only thing that would convince President Johnson to change the U.S. course in Vietnam "is the power of the vote." He also points out that when the Swedish parliament had a foreign policy debate; "not only the spokosmen for the govern- mem' but also the leaders of all the political parties from the Conservatives to the Comnunists -demanded that the United States stop bombing North Viet- nam." *'" 0 mouth-harp, with each Rambler Piaget, speaking through an By JAMES NEUBACHER East as an ex playing at least three instruments, he said them Theyng blegass ahnde mrumntn interpreter, focused on closer re- "Ours is a troubled world. How- aid the The bluegrass and mountain lationships between sciences. He along the b harmonies were both smooth and cited the new relationships be- can and must be won, not in my and Israel, y tight, as was the band except for tween biology and physics, and can an m us ,, njudgment w minor lapses. In fact, if there was the relationship of linguistics, me but in yours.at peace. one flaw, it was that the band was economics,, and biology to psy- So said Paul Hoffman Wednes- Real peac a bit sloppy. But with the crowd chology. day in an address before an audi- man, canno well on their side it simply was Piaget said that one of the most ence of several hundred people at where gover another feature of their good- promising new interdisciplinary Rackham Lecture Hall. Hoffman, are spending time music. relationships is that between bio- Administrator of the United Na- lion per yea logy and psychology. He described tions Development Program, spoke their militar the fundamental common prob- as, part of the "Voices of Civil- R( ization" Sesquicentennial Cele- "h od lems of biology and psychology tThe con FOR F VUN AN Das the construction of new struc- bration on the topic, "Peace in lived in since tures, and the adaptation of or- Your Time.' direct opposi ganisms to new environments. Hoffman predicted that peace Hoffman PROFIT -"Although each science retains'will be achieved through regional the work of its own characteristics, there are and global economic integration. Development Redad Uereciprocal relations between the Economics, he said, can set the directs, re-e Read nld Use sciences," said Piaget. He attack- stage for day-to-day cooperative of economic The Dai' ed the theory of a linear develop- contact between long-time ene- means fora ment of sciences such as logic mies. prosperity. Cis fed Ads ! leading to math and math leading Mutual Dependence According to physics. He advanced the idea "The European Common Market, UNDP helps of a spiral relationship between for example, has helped to make by assisting sciences. "This s p ir a 1 effect France and Germany so dependent their natural causes an interdevelopment be- on each other that war between them to trail .............. ..:these:; ' tween sciences," he former long-time enemies fective useo < : ::4,: ::;;::::r::<: .:::.:;"::;a: t e n developing these added. would actually be almost impos- by aiding ti To illustrate how unpredictable sible," he stated. ient of app] scientific advances are, Urey Hoffman listed the "incredible Hoffman destructiveness of modern wea- charges that ponry" and "battlefield reporting as an organi ':{~.1::1": ".""..+,;-+ ."e. ...A D is la msby television and the other mass that 85 per Near East Countries, Netherlands, or- - media" as two other major factors ployes are ac tugai, S. Africa, Switzerland, Trinidad, contributing to the prospects of cial and ec Turkey,United Kingdom, Venezuela. rressii'e peace in our time. political, fiel All degree ievels in Econ., Math, Phys-! "The simple 1tIC frsl For Gen. Chem., Bus. Ad. and Engrg. (Continued from Page1i preservation is a better deterent, Fon r to great power conflicts than ever Burroughs Corp., Jackson, Mich.-BA scheduled, Schwartz received a tore por "oslcd h an in any field plus 1 year of acetg. ex- call from the OEO saying that the before in history," said Hoffman, per. or courses. Sales trng., mktg. of office did not want the march to referring to the totality of any complete line of data processing equip. .o e" future world conflict. Hoffman WED., OCT. 11-.furthe-clied that television Rike-Kumler Co., Dayton, Ohio - It further claimed that "The er claim Male & female. BA Econ., Gen. Lib. NSB agreed to keep the re son has made it obvious that war is a Arts and Soc., for Mgmt. Trng., Mer- for the cancellation secret." The "brutal, bloody business." chandising. frtecnelto ert h cns-_ South End attributed these to an 'War Losing Glamour' ENGINJERING PLACEMENT SERV- unnamed person later claimed to "As a result," Hoffman said, xample. For ten years, re was relative quiet orders between Egypt yet by no standard ofI ere these two nations' e, according to Hoff- t exist in a climate nments of the world more than $150 bil- r for the support of y forces. ole of UNDP itions the world has e 1945 are almost the te of peace," he said. moved on to explain f the United Nations Program, which he mphasizing the theme c measures as the achieving peace and "Ours is a rich, rich «'orld in which wide-spread poverty is sim- ply and truly unnecessary. The poverty of the developing countries is not due to the lack of resources, but to their under-utilization." he said. Programs similiar to UNDP are not only necessary in order to ob- tain peace, claimed Hoffman, but also necessary for the economic and political well-being of the United States. "What's good for the woild is good for America as well," he said. Hoffman concluded by proposing that young people try to be in-, dividuals, try to understand their country, and try to understand the world around them. 9 4 New Lost City Ramblers ::y; ""t :"v '.;" :rr;..;.;r";";".i:..":""i'}{":: iXe5::}a 44?i'}Yr:{.::." }s::: :: r: ".r :: r. r:::?".::;. '' :M ILYFFICIAL Bi T.. ............... Tho nai ~ls J l )Uii Hi I R l b inis r- .e auy urie Bu ez i s an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The. Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be- sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published' a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day falendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For ,more information call 764-9270. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7 Placement ANNOUNCEMENTS: Procter and Gamble-Will interview for sales positions at School of Bus. Ad, on 'Thurs., Oct. 10. Call 764-1372 for appointments. FSEE (Federal Service Entrance Exam- ination)-Next application period closes Oct. 11, Aext Wed. This will qualify you to take the test on Nov. 18. Mgmt. Intern exam will be given the after- noon of same day. All Dec. grads are urged to take thi' exam, processing applications takes time. National Security Agency-Applica- to Hoffman the low-income countries them in identifying l resources, by helping n their people in ef- f these resources, and hem in the establish- 4ied research facilities. denied widespread the UN is ineffective zation. He pointed out cent of the UN em- xtively engaged in so onomic, rather than ds. Muck i Is -- OVER,'' NOW SHOWING "AN EXTREMELY EROTIC MOVIE!" -Playboy Magazine "EACH SCENE A WORK OF ART." - Cue Magazine tiohs fr the first test are due Oct. Day Calendar Medical Center Alumni Society Con- ference, '1967-Meeting, Medical Cen- ter Alumni Fund: Room 7330 Medical Science Bldg., 9:30 am. Professional Theatre Program - Luigi Pirandello's "Right You Are": Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 2:30 and 8 p.m. Lecture: Prof.. Ralph A. Leigh, of Trinity College, Cambridge, will lecture on Mon., Oct. 9 at 4:10 p.m., in Aud. A, Angell Hall, on the subject "Les Liaisons Dangereuses." University Players Dept. of Speech -William Shakespeare's "King John": Trueblood Aud., High School Assembly Performance, 10 a.m.; evening perform- ance, 8 p.m. Concert Dance Organization and De- partments of Speech and Art Concert: Marguerite Lundgren-Harwood, Euryth- mist, "The Art of Eurythmy": Barbour Gymnasium, Sat., 8 pam. General Notices TV Center Program: 12 noon, WWJ- TV Channel 4-"The Canterbury Tales. The Prioress' 'Tale." The 'Prioress tells of a devout young boy and a miracle of the Virgin. The .tale is dramatized, followed by the commentary of Prof. Thomas Garbaty. Parking Office: Effective Meon., Oct.. 9, the restrictions in staff lot E-12 will be extended from 6 a.m.-10 p.m., Monday through Friday. Flu Shots: There will be a "flu shot" clinic at the Health Service, Tues., Oct. 10, from 8-11:30 a.m. and 1-4:30 p.m. The charge is $1.50 for students and spouse and $2 for faculty, staff and spouses. 1. 'rest on Oct. 21. Another test in ICE Make nterveapointmen Dec. Dec. grads should take the Oct. ICE: Make interview appointments at test, however. Room 128-H, West Engineering Bldg. Public Service Commission of Canada OCT. 13- -Test for Public Service and Foreign Baxter Labs., Inc.-International. Service will be given evening of Oct. 17. Bell System- AT&T Long Lines, Bell Please contact Bureau if interested. Labs., Michigan Bell, Western Electric, Sat., Oct. 7-3529 SAB, 9-10 a.m., Sandia Corp. representatives from Canadian Public Brunswick Corp. Service Commission and Consulate in Corning Glass Works. Detroit will be talking to students E. I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co., Inc. Interested in careers with Canadian (BS & MS). governmient. Owens-Illnois, Inc. ---- -Scott Paper Co. PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: Those Square D Co. wishing to interview the following em- Union Carbide Corp.-Linde Div. ployers must have forms in the Bureau West Virginia Pulp and Paper - by the end of this week. Employers ex- Bleached Board Div. pect to see this resume. Call 764'-7460 -- for appointments, and come to General} Division, 3200 SAB, to get forms. MON., OCT. 9- Mobil Oil Corp., Niles, I. - Male &rj female. BA Gen. Lib. Arts, all disci- plines, Computing Mgmt. Trng. and Sales (inside and territorial). Inland Steel Co., Chicago, Ill.-Male SUP URB & female. Any degree, any major. Mgmt. Trng., Sales (inside and' terri- torial), Finance, Computer Systems. 11.Maei & femae BAod Athro, En.W A M Joseph T. Ryerson & Son, Chicago, II.-alea& faealeB nthro.A Eco. A EngI., Gen. Lib. Arts, Hist., Journ., MtPhilo., Poll. Sci., Psych., Soc. andg Chem. AdcF, Computing, Mgnt. Trng., Personnel, Production, Sales (in- side and territorial), Secretarial. Chi- Wrsago ndCorldwide;Pann n pr TDUES,, OCT. 10- 1BM l Tr adsCIrc.-CitKanss City Mo.-Ma& female BA/MBArEngCty, AND Engi., Gen. Lib. Arts, Journ., Math, Psych, & Organic Chem, For Trade, Mgmt. Trng. Res., Merchan., Personnel. 'rod., Stat., Territorial Sales, General 1111 tWriting, Corporate Planning and Oper- IIIf ations Res. OR OS1 IBM World Trade Corp.-Citizens, malej HU O US & female, only who are returning to j Wanda Hale, the following countries for career as- New~ York Daily News signment: Australia, Austria, Belgium. Bahamas, Denmark, Finland, France, Sosa Germany, Iran, Italy, Jamaica, Japan. Sosa be Mrs. Millspaugh. "war is losing its glamour. I can The article con inued, "But sec- remember when in World War I rets are not easily kept in NSA. the spectacle of great masses of Delegates from Wayne State said men marching off to fight 'over that Schwartz received threats there' seemed thrilling. Today it from the OEO and these real saddens us deeply." threats caused the cancellation." Hoffman criticized the attitude Soglin said that the delegation that the official absence of war fi'om Wayne State, of which South defines peace, using the Middle End editor Art Johnston was, a - member, broke into a closed NSB Phone 434-0130 meeting, and that the meeting was then promptly adjourned. I' POITIER iA JAMES CLAVELL'S WITH, For Feature Times Dial NO 2-6264 Kirnx CARPENTER R&DA Free OPEN 7:00 P.M. Free Heaters NOW SHOWING Heaters Shown at 7:40 and 11:00 TECHNI O0 ALSO Shown at 9:15 Only -No ic r i INEMAy Tonight & Sunday Marius Trilogy dir Marcel Pagnol, 1932 "Wine, Women, & Song" -featuring Raimu, great French comedian. FRANCO CRISTALDI CLAUDIACARDINALE A NINO MANFREL OL AHF [AMOO BWClAWA & AKIM 1AMIFI~f fRANCO ROSSI I YANIs TECHNICOLOR' MA! ZKTTERLINGS Nigt Stamerng Nig ame INGRID 7:00, 9:15-Mon.-Thurs. 7:00, 9:15, 11:30-Fri. & Sgt. 6:00 ,8:15, 10:30-Sun. A 1I 4 1 I __'-.'--'''.--- ' -___ ________________ 1-3-5-7-9:30 - ----~-1- 4 ORGNIATONNOTICES .J.TAT UNION-LEAGUE CONTEMPORARY DISCUSSION COMMITTEE presents USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- I ence, Sun., Oct. 8, 7:30 p.m., at the NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially First Unitarian Chuych, 1917 Washte- recognized and registered student' orga- cnaw. nizations only. Forms are available in * * * Rm. 1011 SAB, f The 'Honors Steering Committee is * * * now open to petitioning for new mem- Unitarian Universalist Student Reli- bers. Petition forms may be picked gious Liberals: Allan Slinalberg, Dept.' up and submitted at 1210 Angell Hall. of Sociology, and others in Sociology Deadline for petitioning is Oct. 12. Dept., will speak on "The Population * * * Problem and Some Possible Changes," Triangles (Engineering Honorary), followed by 'discussion from the audi- meeting, Oct. 9, 11 a.m., Union. NATIONAL. eENERAL CORPORATION 3RD WEEK FOEASTERN THEATShowis D y *N FO.A V -ILLE- SHOWING 375 No. MAPLE RD .76941300 p. Who says they don't make4 Blood-and-Guts Westerns any more? ii r i s i I E 3 "ANARCHY .4 U .SA MONDAY, OCT. 9, 7:30 P.M. I IrliC'~ ii PA! nnCIA Lrmwrl__- _ 1II