Page Six THE MICNIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 13, 1968 Po9e Six THE MICH4GAN DAILY Sundoy, October 13, 1968 5 :n... we ..+i .w +.+wwrw COMPUTER SCIENCE ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS M.S. and Ph.D. Schlumberger, the nation's undisputed leader in all oil, well service techniques, is seeking advanced degrees. Duties will in- clude research and development of advanced accoustics, electro- magnetics, nuclear and data handling systems. Here's your chance to work closely with many of the best scientists in this, field. And you will live and work in booming Houston, the nation's space city. Company funds own research, does no term or sub-contract work. Facilities are outstanding. You will have individual office and laboratories, high calibre supporting personnel and excep- tional benefits. Coll or write: T, E. Holman SCHLUMBERGE R WELL SERVICE P.O. Box 2175, Houston Texas 713 WA 8-251 1 ON CAMPUS for interviews on TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER TUESDAY, Oct. 15, 8 P.M., Multipurpose Room "THE UNIVERSITY IN AMERICAN AN END, OF IDEOLOGY MICHAEL NOVAK sugges our society what the churc dents turn upon their pr formers upon complacent churchmen.. .. The stude that the old doctrines are inadequate, the professor realities of life.' The refo 4 well -as practical. We hay of knowledge and of the rc v ourselves and of the worl fact, sound like metaphysi Dr. Novak, for the past three years Professor in Humanities at Chairman of the Common Humanities Seminar at the experimentc versjty of New York at Old Westbury. His books include A New Ge and Belief and Unbelief. With Rabbi Abraham Hesehel and Robert Vietnam: Crisis in Conscience. His articles appear in Commenta and Commonweal. Co-sponsored by Catholic Voices (Newman Center) and Office ofl English dept. reforms Farewell spark faculty debate to REd's THE CANDIDATES: New speeches, old.issues (Continued fran page f) of the present "early"~ and "late" ment; but proposals to change the surveys represents a substan- course have hit on highly com- tial change. plex issues. Schulze points out that a lot of Styan says "I would like to see students currently . take the early, the survey go altogether. Our un- survey, in order to take more in-{ dergraduates don't need this kind tensive courses in modern litera-f of spoon-feeding." ture. But Gindin points out that "There is no excuse for perpe-w hitherto the faculty have delin- tuatfng ignorance of Chaucer and eated a "common core of subject Milton, but the best way to con-, matter" which constitutes Eng- vey this awareness is a difficult lish concentration. This concept is question," he says. the rationale behind survey cours- However, Schulze, likes the es and would inevitably come into proposal for small "studies" cour- question if any serious restructur- ses because students would become ing is done. "more engaged" with the litera- Prof. Robert, H. Super, who is ture. This part of the proposal has presently teaching one of t he h et with fairly widespread ap- survey courses, does not think that proval in the department. p a proposal being considered to di- Styan says he "hopes for a vide the subject matter and cover constant variety in these courses it in six period surveys instead as people come up with new ideas." --But many members of the Eng-I lish department have serious res-I ervations about getting rid of the; n, Undergroad Library survey altogether. Prof. English1 says, "there should be some atten-! ETY -tion to breadth of coverage." SULIIT-- Lenaghan says, "I do believe deeply in a historical dimension,1 and that's hard to read on youri own."I Redistribtuion of administrative j duties throughout the department in order to lighten the overall ts that the university is to teaching load is another matter h onews."aiclsu on which faculty sentiment varies once Was. "Radical stu-hwidely. Several professors have ofessors as protestant re- suggested that not all faculty and powerful medieval members are equally suited to be nts protestants are saying administrators. One professor said he would wel- wrong, the theories are come the, change because "right s are blind to too many now I am saddled with quite a rmation is theoretical as few administrative functions my- e to 'revise our conception self." Another said, "I don't think I would make a very good coun- ole of science, our view of selor because I don't really under- d. The issues involved, in stand the system." cal or theological issues." Stanford University, is now UNDERGROUND al campus' of the State Uni- meration, The Open Church, THURSDAY McAfee Brown he authored ry, Harper's, New Republic, Vth Forum Religious Affairs, 2282 SAB RiteSpot (Continued from page 1) thing was," said Red, "they let me take my bottle to jail with me. When my wife came to pick me up, I was drunker than be- fore.Y Red's newer headquarters re- flected ,a more sober atmosphere than his old joint. At Christ- mas, he still hung mistletoe from a pulley over the counter and smacked unsuspecting coeds. But his new counter was longer, more impersonal than the one in the original rite spot, and people tucked in booths on the other side of the restaurant never knew what was happen- ing at the counter. The new spot even had one of those concave, or convex, mir- rors so Red could keep tabs on all his silverware. The postcards and newspaper clippings Red used to paste off- handedly on the wall of his Wil- liam Street short order house were arranged in frames by the Forsythe Gallery and hung properly on the walls of his new establishment, or pinned neatly to tie billetin board across from the casb register that makes its own change. Now 'Red is cramming all his souvenirs in paper bags for the trip south. He is taking the door and part of the awning from his original rite spot which he has reverently pteserved in his business office downstairs. He has removed the mousetraps, from .behind the intriguing slit in the storage cabinet through which new employes stre'tched curious, naive fingers. Now Red, the curator, gives tours of his dismantled place to friends who return to offer condolences. He proudly displays his still spotless kitchen and rest rooms. He basks in the fare- well poster stretched across his front window by a flock of Couz.. ens customers. Now he's leaving; with no bit- terness. He twists his prize- fighter's mug with a sheepish grin and says "That's life." 4 Wallace in Denver Humphirey *" NEW YORK (R) -- Hubert H. Humphrey pledged yesterday thatt as president he would propose ai 10-fold increase in federal funds to fight crime, violence and dis-1 orders.' Humphrey also accused his Re- publican opponent, Richard M.1 Nixon, of fooling himself and the public in his, crime proposals. Humphrey, in a televised speech advertisqd as a major policy pro-i nouncement on law and order, noted widespread concern aboutt rising crime rates, riots and dis-" orders, saying: "I know you are distressed and] outraged by the riots and disorders in many of our cities, and so am I." Humphrey said, however, tiat "Americans don't want a national police force" which he said could lead to a. police state, "and weI won't have a police state-if I am your president."I Humphrey came down hard on law and order in his prepared1 speech- ,] The first obligation of govern-i ment, said Humphrey, is "to. pro-c vide for the safety of every Amer-, ican in his home and neighbor-; hood," and he added: "Grabbing guns, throwing fire-, bombs, cynically discrediting1 America's institutions and in-l sisting on racial name-calling isI not progress." SALT LAKE CITY (P) -- George C. Wallace told a capacity aud- ienee at the Mormon Tabernacle yesterday people should work for what they get. He brought the crowd of more than 10,000 to their feet several times with pledges to return do- mestic institutions to local con- trol and a, call for a military settlement in Vietnam if the Paris peace talks fail. Wallace's audience at Salt Lake City was slightly smaller than those drawn by Republican Rich- ard Nixon or Democrat Hubert Humphrey, but crowd response£ was more favorable and lively. The third-party candidate called his appearance at the Mormon Tabernacle "the high point of my political career, "to be able to! speak here and hear the Taber- nacle' Choir."' During a brief meeting with off- ficials of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mor- monsi, Wallace was introduced by Ezra Taft Benson, former secre- tary of agriculture and a msmber of the church's Council of Twelve Apostles. Benson confirmed his support for Wallace,~ adding he was not actively campaigning for the for- mer Alabama governor. Benson had been mentioned as a running mate for Wallace before he selegt- ed Gen. Curtis LeMay. Nixon ......... ' KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. ()- Richard M. Nixon] here for-home- stretch campaign strategy talks, said yesterday pommunist Cuba "cannot remain forever a sanc- tuary for aggressions and a base for the export of terror to other lands." The Republican presidential candidate contended in a state- ment that the Democratic admin- istration "has talked tough and walked on eggshells" dealing with Cuba. Nixon, who is staying here at the home of Sen, George Smath- ers, (D-Fla.), did not spell out precisely how he would deal dif* ferently with Cuba. He simply promised that "a new administra- tion will bring into office a new awareness of the continuing prob- lem to ourself." More than half a dozen of' Nixon's top lieutenants flew here from New York to join 'him in weekend meetings that will pro- duce the blueprint for the final weeks of the GOP canmipaign. Oie aim of the talks will be to make decisions on purchasing na- tional television time. Nixon asserted that Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro "seeks through violence to destroy the governments of this hemisphere, operating on the theory ,that . . . we will not take stern measures against him." Paid Po1itcal Advertisement Sheaffer's bid deal gets you through 29 term papers,3 book reports,17exams, 52 quizzes and 6 months of homeworke Sorry about that. Sheaffer's big deal means you can write twice as long. Because you get the long-writing Sheaffer dollar ballpoint plus an extra long-writing 49 refill free. All for just a dollar. How much do you think you can The world's n wririte? SHEAFFER Theword'slongest writi ng dollar ballpoint pen. zH c How, ong-can theywait? For years, the people in our cities have been promised help. For years, billions have been spent... but the problems still exist. Congressman Marv Esch knows that today's urban problems will not be solved with 1930 programs. Washington spending alone will not do the job. He knows that violence is not the answer either. And that such must be met with the necessary restraint. Marv Esch says, "The urban crisis calls for a total community effort. We need the full mobilization of all sectors ... public and private. Only then can we offer a helping hand, rather than a handout. Only then can we have less on welfare, rather than more." The people know the danger, of empty promises. Our cities need action. More words only compound the problem. Congressman Esch has been an action man on the Education and Labor Committee ... .objectively striving to make anti-poverty programs work and to eliminate or revise those that don't. He has offered new direc- tions for urban education .. . improved job training programs ... a bill to promote home ownership for the poor... better vocational educatiorr... and a war against hunger. New programs... involviog the total community ... getting at the root problems of housing, education and jobs. Newsweek Magazine described Esch after his first nine months in office as "...an articulate Michigan Ph.D.... a prototype of the new young GOP breed, sensitive to the problems of the cities and the slums." Combating urban unrest is a prime concern of your Congressman. He warns "It's time we overcome the problems of our cities, before they overcome us." I