THE MiCH( AN DAILY Page Seven THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Do you think a bright young engineer should spend his most imaginative years on the same assignment? Neither do we. DAILY OFFICIAL3 BU.LLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- Isity of Michigan. Notices should he sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 L. S, A B 1 d ,. before Stout, French hoarn; Lewies Cooper, bas- soon; Louis Nagel, guest pianist, Rack- ham Lecture Hall, 8:00 p.m. Professional Theatre Program: Cab- aret, Hill Auditorium, 8:30 p~m. Generaxl Notices Botany Seminar: Dr. Bruce Pollack, MSU, "GerminationTemperature Sen- sitivity Controlled by Seed Moisture",; Thurs., Feb. 5, 1139 Nat. Sci., Bldg. 4:15 p.m. SENATE STUDY: Panel finds life bleak for American Indians d ~ , N . . r l ., ll1 2 p.m., of the day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for F Saturday and Sunday.ap- GENERAL DIVISION tion notices a r e not accepted for 3200 S.A.B. publication. For more informa- ANNOUNCEMENT: ti n, phone 764-9270. Union Carbide Pan American, seeks graduates in Liberal Arts, Engrg. and WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4 Bus. Ad. for trainee positions through- out their Latin American Operations. uj ay I alendtar ENationals and U.S. citizens interested Sin living and working in Latin Amer- Statistics Seminar: Jas. Landwehr, U. ica. are encouraged to apply~ directly ofChicgo,simnationf.oLnduser or to speak witha rep, from Union Analysis" 2433 Mason Hall, 4:00 p.m. Carbide at a group meeting at Pae- Astronomy General Colloquium: F. ment Services, 4:30 p.m., Feb. 23. T. Haddock, "Recent Results in Radio- SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICES Astronomy" P & A Colloq. Rm., 4:00 T 21y SAB, LoerLevel p~m. Today Feb. 4 is deadline for appli- Botany Seminar: Dr. Peter Marks, cation for test to work in Fed. Gov. Yale, "The Role of a Successional this summer. This is the last test. Species in the Maintenance of Forest Interviews at Summer Placement: Ecosystem Stabiility" 1139 Nat. Sci. Feb. 5: Camp Scotmar, Coed, Calif, Bldg., 4:15 p.m. general couns., unit heads and spec. in Computer Lecture: Prof. T. J. Schrib -arts and crafts, sports, nature and sci., er, "Time-Shared Demonstration of riding instructor. Computer Use; Role of a Programming Feb. 9: Miss Liberty, London, stu- Language".421 West Engineering, 7:00 dents for many positions, 2-5 p~m. and 8:30 p.m. ANNOUNCEMENTS: Professional Theatre Program (Phoen- Computer Software Systems, Inc., ix Theatre) :Helen Hayes and James Stamford, Conn., openings for students STtearear in Harvey, Lydia Mendelssohn with BA or adv. degrees and exper. Theater, 8:00 p.m. in syst. prog. on IBM 360. University Woodwind Quintet: Nei- Standard Oil Company, Cleveland, son Hauenstein, flute; Florian Mueller, openings for Cleveland area residents oboe; John Mohler, clarinet; Louis in Travel F'ureau Dept. That's why we have a two- year Rotation Program for graduating engineers who would prefer to explore several technical areas. And that's why many of our areas are organ- ized by function-rather than by project. At Hughes, you might work on spacecraft, communi- catibns satellites and/or tacti- cal missiles during your first two years. All you need is an EE, ME or Physics degree and talent. You may select special- ized jobs, or broad systems- type jobs. Or you can choose not to change assignments if you'd rather develop in-depth skills in one area. Either way, we think you'll like the Hughes ap- proach. It means you'll become more versatile in a shorter time. -.-----..--.-.--- (And your ;HUGHES salary will ---------- show it.) ...HES ..I..tRCAfCONPNY WASHINGTON IP)-"The red man is alone in his misery. We behold him now on the verge of extinction, standing on his last foothold." George Armstrong C U s t e r, who later was to die at Indian hands, so wrote in a term paper as a West Point cadet .more than 100 years ago, and a new compilation of Indian studies says nothing much has changed since. The two' volumes were' pub- lished Jan. 31 by a Senate- House Economics subcommittee, which says there is a need for total revamping of federal In- dian policy. "By virtually every available measure of economic and social well being-family, income, em- ployment opportunity, educa- tional opportunity, h o u s i n g quality-the American Indians continue to be the most prov- erty stricken and disadvantaged group in American society," the subcommittee says. Government paternalism, show-piecet programs, confine- ment to the reservation, assimi- lation in mainstream society all have had one thing in common the subcommittee says:. they have not worked. The subcommittee found a growing white appreciation of the Indians' plight and a real- ization that the Indian can keep his old values while living in the 20th century. There are. about 600,000 In- dians, about 85 per cent still on the reservation, According to statistics available, the Indian's life is relatively short, his in- fants are more likely to die, his bad h e a 1 t h contributes to his unemployability, and suicide attempts are a major concern of the Indian Health Agency. The Indian unemployment rate is an average 50 per cent, soaring to 70 and 80 per cent on some reservations. Average fam- ily income is put at $1,500 a year, seldom much higher, and trailing downward to $105 a year according to one study of the Pine Ridge Sioux in the Dakotas. The "oil rich" tribe of Okla- homa and the Arizona Navajo fare little better than their bretheren. The Oklahoma In- dian family gets $1,200 a year as its share. Better coordination of Indian programs, more money, and vastly improved social services are called for. Resource development -- tim- ber, minerals-is another hope- ful avenue, but first the restrict- ed, snarled Indian land owner- ship problem must be solved, the subcommittee said. "If e c o n o mn i csdevelopment among the Indians is to succeed it must be compatible with the Indians' own sense of values," the report says, "It is now wide- ly recognized, as unfortunately it often was not in the past, that the Indian does not wish to abandon his identity and his traditional cultural and social values. "Indian cultures place high value on preservation of the nat- ural environment, on sharing . on maintaining a life style which allows time, for quiet and contemplation," the subcommit- tee report continues. If you qualify, we'll arrange for you to work on several different assignments...and you can help pick them. I - ----------------------------------------------------------- 1 I ,CAMIIPUS IINIER1vIvvS: I l1_February 17, 19704 Representatives of several activities of Hughes Aircraft Company (each with highly- specialized personnel requirements and separate interview schedules) will visit your campus. If your career interests lie in one or more of the following fields of aero- I t space/electronics, contact your Placement Office TODAY to make sure your name gets on the interviewing schedule for HUGHES AEROSPACE DIVISIONS:t Microwave & Antenna Engineering Electro-Optical Engineering Guidance & Controls Engineering Microcircuit Engineering Spacecraft Design Engineering Space Systems Engineering Components & Materials Engineering Missile Systems Engineeringt Weapon Systems Engineering Circuit Design Engineering + U.S. Ctizenship required/An equal opportunity employer.1 +Ue Daily Classifieds + is w time.. unless you find a job that turns you on and We, need action-seeking graduates with degrees makes good use of your education. Inland Steel in most fields for management opportunities in wants only people who want to use everything sales . . . production . ..research.. engineering they've learned in college-and strongly desire . . . finance . .. administration . . . or you name to grow personally and professionally. it.j Inland's future depends on the creativity and Think it over. If you have high aspirations roductivity of its people. If you want a really and a good record, take time to find out about a challenging opportunity to contribute-with the career with us. rewards and responsibilities that go with it - For information, see us on campus. Inland wants to talk to you. THURS., FEB. 5, 19701 E XC L U SI V EL Y OF ENGLAND ki '$.;. - DESERT'BOOT . Resolve right now that before the week is out you'll be the proud owner of a pair of Clarks Desert Boots. They're comfortable, casual, correct, English-crafted. Have genuine Malayan plantation crepe soles. In sand and oakwood brown suede at $16.00. MAST'S SHOES 619 E. LIBERTY The Ann Arbor Bank doesn't care about you. It cares about your money! That's why the withdrawal of your bank account is the only effective way to protest its policies. FREE YOUR MONEY THE ANN ARBOR TENANTS UNION, OTHER CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONSI STUDENTS TO WITHDRAW THEIRE SGC, URGE BANK AND ALL AC- COUNTS FROM THE ANN ARBOR BANK ON FRi- DAY, FEB. 6, FROM SOUTH UNIVERSITY1 3 P.M. ONWARD AT THE BRANCH OF THE BANK: TENANT UNION - - : '' 1528 SAB 763-3 1 )1 _______III.3. FRESHMEN AND SOPHOMORES: ANN ARBOR "BLUES" GOT YOU DOWN? Disco ver Exciting Ways to Beat the People Problem Explore the Educational, Opportunities at the I. University of Michigan's Dearborn Campus Degree Programs Offered In: Teacher Certification -Business Administration* -Eng ineering~ -Liberal Arts -General Studies ("'Salaried Cooperative Internships with Business and Industry Mandatory for Graduation) Cross Campus Transfer Available to All Qualified Students - ,.u ~