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September 18, 1968 - Image 6

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The Michigan Daily, 1968-09-18

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Page Six
DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wednesday, September 18, 1968

State lawmakers disagree over Wallace impact

41

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan for which The
Michigan Daily assumes no editor-
ialnresponsiblity. Notices should be
sent In =TYPEWRITER form to
Room 3528 L. S. & A. 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
Calendar Items appear once only.
Student organization notices are not
accepted for publication. For more
information call 764-9270.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18
Day Calendar
Zoology Seminar: Professor Toshijiro
..iawamu ra,. President 'of Hiroshima
University, "Amphibian Cytogenetics
and Speciation" at 4:00 p.m., 1400
Chemistry.
Cinema Guild: Sixth Ann Arbor Film
'estlvial Winners and Highlights: Ar-
chitecture Auditorium, 7:00 and 9:05
p.m.
F'all Art Lecture Series: How New is
Modern? - Victor H. Miesel, Assoc-
late Professor of History of Art, "Im-
preS ionlsm, Post-Impressionism, and
the New Art"; Amphitheater, Rackham
Building, 7:30 p.m.
Departments of Chemical Engineering
and Biostatistics Lecture: Brice Carna-
han, Associate Professor of Chemical
Engineering and Bliostatistics, "An In-
troduction to Computers, the Fortran-
IV Language and the Michigan Ter-
minal System": Natural Science Audi-
torium,' '7:30! to 9:30 p.m.
Professioal Theatre Program: Mo-
liere's The Misanthrope: Lydia Men-
delssohn Theater, 8:00 p.m.
General Notices
roadcasting Service: Radio Station
WUOM-FM. (917 Me.) It1 a.m. to 11
p.m ,daily. Wednesday, 11:00 a.m. The
Eleventh Hour (repeated at 7:00 p.m.)
Ed Burrows hosts an hour of news and
conversation about the arts and liter-
ature Special guests: Stephen Porter,
director of APA production of "The
Misanthrope"; Quentin Fiore, designer
for U-M Press. Wednesday 1:00 p.m.,
Selective Service Seminar: The At-
torney's View - James T. Lafferty, Pro-
ject Coordinator, Detroit Neighborhood
Legal Service, on "Conscientious Ob-
jection and Selective Objection". A
Institute of Continuing Legal Educa-
tion Seminar. Thursday, 1:00 p.m.
Peace, Love, Creativity: Hope of Man-
kind - "Creativity in Literature", with
Prof. Henri Peyre, Yale.
Mental Health Research Institute
Seminar: Otto Z. Sellinger, Research
Pharmacologist, Mental Health Re-
search Institute: "Interactions of
Drugs with Brain Particles and Mem-
branes", 3:45 p.m., Thursday, Sep-
tember 19, 1968, 1057 MHRI
Doctoral.
Examinations
Patricia Ryan Ferman, Sociology, Dis-
sertation: "Kinship and Fertility," on
Wednesday, Sept. 18 at 3:30 p.m. in
Room 28, Population Study Center, 1225
S. Universly, Chairman: D. Goldberg.
Roger Owen Scott, Education & Psy-
chology, Dissertation: "Mathetie and
Progressive Chain Strategies for In-
structional Sequencing," on Wednes-
day, Sept. 18 at 4 p.m. in Library,
CRLT, Chairman: G. L. Gels
Placement
3200 S.A.B.
GENERAL DIVISION
Placement Interviews: The following
organisations will interview at Place-
ment Services ,the representatives ex-
pect to see at least a vita sheet on in-
terviewees, therefore, if you are not
already registered with the General
Division, please stop in and let us pro-
vide you with the proper materials.
Please coall 7631363 to make appoint-
Fments by, phone,. or stop In and make
appt. in person. Make appts. as soon as
possible, none accepted after 4 p.m. day
preceding visit.
Peace Corps Test: given this Sat.,
Sept. 21, downtown branch of Post
Office, Main and Catherine Streets, at
1 p.m. Please take completed applic.
with you, avail at Placement Services.
Peace Corps representatives will be on
campus in November, week of 18th.
Current Position Openings received
by General Division by mail and phone,
please call 764-7460 for further in-
formation.
U.S. Civil Service Commission: Latest
announcements of examinations for
wide variety of positions in all areas of
the U.S. are on file at the Placement
Offies.
Mansanto Company, St. Louis, Mo.:
Training Materials Specialist in central
personnel dept. Latitude on undergrad
degree, adv. degree in education pre-
ferred, exper in training or educational
activities pref. In chemical industry..
interest in educational process, self

programmed instructional approaches.
General Atronics Corporation, Phila.,
Pa.: Electrical Engineer, R&D, design
and. breadboard construction of elec-
tronic signal processing syst. for com-
munications, radar, sonar, and seismic'
signal detection.
Hewlet Packard, Waltham Div.,: Wal-
tham, Mass. - Training Manager for
Marketing Staff, require bckrnd in Bio-
medical Electronics, training for field
sales personnel.
Allstate, Detroit. Michigan: Positions
in acctg., claims, adjustment, person-
nel, sales, sales mgmt, sales devi. Pre-
fer degrees, some exper pref. for higher
level positions, trainee positions avail.
in most areas.
General Foods Corporation, White'
Plains, N.Y.: Associate Editor for em-
ployee newspaper, published weekly.
Travel 25%. Exper pref. in employee
publications with profit making indus- j
trial organizations, exper in photo., lay-
out, graphics, typni.
Frank Seymour Associates, Detroit.
ORGANIZATION
NOTIC ES
University Lutheran Chapel, Midweek
service at 10:00 p.m. Sept. 18th stu-
dent-led devotion: Tom Klammer,
speaker.
Baha'i Student Group: informal dis-
cussion, "The Dignity of Man," Fri..
Sept. 20th, 8:00 p.m., 520 N. Ashley. All
welcome. Call 665-4676 if you need
transportation.
Bach Club Meeting, Thurs., Sept.

Mich.: Commercial public relations
firm specializing in working with the
black communty seeks Account Exe-
cutive, community involvement, em-
ployee relations, and marketingactiv-
ities. Pref. BA' in Journ., will consider
Lib. Arts with writing abilites, min. 21
yrs old.
Summer Placement Service Room 212
S.A.B., lower, level, hours 10 - 12 a.m.
and 1:30 -5 p.m. Mon. - Fri. Open now
for information and browsing, services.
ENGINEERING PLACEMENT SERVICE
128 H, West Engrg Bldg.
September 25, 1968:
Michigan Carton Co.
Sparton Electronics
Sperry Rand Corp.
S Univac-DBata Processing Div.
Univac-Federal Systems Div.
U.S. Gov't. t
Puget Sound Naval Shipyard

LANSING UP)-Some optimistic
Michigan Republicans are hoping!
the third-party candidacy of for-
mer Alabama Gov. George Wal-
lace will help them carry the state!
in the November general election.
S o m e pessimistic Democrats
concede they may be right.
But others, from both parties,
think Wallace's strength will fade
as election day approaches, or that
the effect of the Wallace vote will
be nullified because he will attract
Republicans and Democrats in
roughly equal measure.
Meanwhile, ~ o n e Democratic
lawmaker says defections to Wal-
lace can defeat him and another
says he has changed his mind and

decided . the 1968 presidential
race will wind up in the U.S.
House of Representatives.
Republicans, with some excep-
tions, feel most Wallace support
comes from voters who are nor-
mally Democratic. Many Demo-
crats agree, though some also pre-
dict a near-even partisan split.
"I think in the urban areas,
particularly the "industrial-type
towns - Pontiac, Flint, perhaps
Saginaw-the Wallace vote is go-
ing to be a very serious threat
to the Democrats," says Rep. Wil-
liam Hampton (R - Bloomfield
Hills), the House majority leader.
Hampton predicts up to 20 per
cent of the regular Democratic

voters may switch to Wallace in idential vote in their districts.
such areas. If half of them don't Some say 20 per cent or more.

Some think his vote will be sur-
prisingly large - because many

"come back" and vote for the rest

The local politicians here are voters who plan to support Wal-

of the Democratic ticket, he says, saying up to 25 per cent," reports lace aren't admitting it.
Republicans may pick up from Rep. Richard Young (D-Dearborn Some Democratic candidates say
two to four seats in the State Heights). "The lowest I've heard they are worried. Some say they
House, where they now have a is 15 per cent. aren't. But none of the GOP con-
Hoe hee t"If he takes 15 per cent," Young tenders interviewed feel the Wal-
56-54 edge, adds. "I think I'd lose, because I lace campaign will do them any
He adds Wallace will not draw imagine about 70 per cent harm.
appreciable Republican strength. wouldn't vote the rest of the Rep. Edgar Geerlings <R-Mus-
"I can pick out the most conser- ticket, and most of them are kegon) says he sees more Wallace
vative areas in Oakland county Democrats." bumper stickers in his conserva-
and I don't find any Wallace sup- Some lawmakers think Wallace tive district than those of anyone
port," Hampton says. will get fewer votes than it now else, but most of the Wallace back-
Estimates of Wallace strength appears-because as the election ers, he adds, are Democrats.
by the legislators from around the approaches more voters will con- Referring to the Goldwater
state vary widely. Some say less lude that a vote for a third party campaign of four years ago which
than 10 per cent of the total pres- candidate is a wasted vote. in Michigan brought a Democratic

landslide and defeated him, Geer-
lings adds:
"If I were a Democratic candi-
date this year. I'd feel a lot like
I felt in '64 as a Republican can-
didate."
me

V

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