Tuesday, November 12, 1,968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Tuesday, November 12, 1 96S THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven -Associated Press A bit of ' in Rome Michael Radock, vice president for University Ireiations, and his wife are leading an alumni group on a nine-day visit to Rome. They met with Gardner Ackley, a former University professor, who is now ambassador to Italy. I __ WON'T' SIT BACK': Will Russian tanks invade Kentucky? Accuse 5 in plot to overthrow gov't of Pike County PIKEVILLE, Ky. (CPS) - Bib overalls, out-of-state license plates, and singing of "We Shall Overcome" were introduced as evidence of un-American activities during an investigation of Appal- achian Volunteers here last week. The Kentucky Un-American Ac-' tivities Committee (KUAC) held hearings on alleged seditious ac- tivities in Eastern Kentucky, a culmination of a conflict that erupted last year when five anti- poverty workers were indicted oXi charges of plotting to overthrow the county government, The state law on which t h e charges were based was later ruled unconstitutional by a federal court. The dispute includes P i k e- ville College, a small liberal arts school headed by Dr. Thomas Johns. He incensed local residents by hiring professors opposed to the Vietnam war and by holding open forums on strip mining. Dr. Johns' critics protest that the college is becoming too liberal, but the president has continued his new policies. "What I'm go- ing to do is run the best educa- tional institution I can, which means I'm going to demand that the issues facing our society be discussed, investigated and analy- zed. I'm not going to sell my soul for prejudice, hate or bigotry," he said. One of the anti-poverty workers indicted for sedition, Alan Mc- Surely (he wore bib overalls), charged recently in a radio broad- cast that Pike County was run by a "courthouse gang" working for a few coal-inine operators. That statement prompted t h e local prosecutor to say, with all seriousness, "I want to warn Mc- Surely that if he calls on Russian tanks to help him conquer Pike County, I intend to appeal to Mayor (Richard) Daley of Chi- cago and (former Ala.) G o v. George Wallace for help in de- fending Pike County." The KUAC committee packed up and left without naming any Communists or taking any action other than recommending less po- litical involvement by AV's. And latest reports indicate that no tanks have been spotted yet in Eastern Kentucky. Think selfishly about your Many have found career own career before you decide enrichment at Du Pont. This comes on one with Du Pont. from being handed a ball and being expected to run with it. From working with top people, from growing in a company where the opportunities are always wide open and the projects are often way out. Many have found professional fulfillment and have built a very full, varied and happy life as "Du Ponters." Others have found, after working at Du Pont, that their professional Be selfish. But be honest. interest lay in teaching, in further You've put in a lot of tough years study or in an industry that to get your degree. Your allegiance offered even wider scope in their lies with a professional discipline. particular discipline. All of these Why, then, must you decide now men left Du Pont far better qualified to plight your trust to a company professionally than when they came. for life? Don't. Join a company first. If it doesn't advance you within that professional discipline, well, you're not married to it. So talk to the Du Pont recruiter. If he offers you something, think of it as a professional challenge, not a proposal of marriage. r----------------------- 1 t iDr Pont Company i Room 6685 Wilmington, DE 19898 I'd like your latest I a Pinformation on opportunities 1at Du Pont for graduates t with degrees in 1 l Namef t 1 University Degree GraduationDate Address sr City State Zip 1 t I An Equal Opportunity Employer (M/F) \ P~iP College Relations House Democrats plan fight to retain Great Society' WASHINGTON (A) - House Democrats are coupling public pledges of cooperation on vital issues with thinly veiled warnings they'll oppose the Nixon admin- istration if it tries to scuttle some Great Society programs. I House Speaker John W. Mc- Cormack of Massachusetts said Friday Democrats "will not be a negative party, but an affirma- tive party." He added that during the Eisen- hower. years "major Eisenhower programs were put through Con- gress largely by the votes of Democrats." But, McCormick said "the elec- tion was a mandate from the American people to support con- tinuance of programs" enacted under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson by Democratic con- gresses. Democrats suffered a net loss of four seats, giving them a 243-192 A ±najority in the coming 91st Con- gress. Although ;the Democrats don't know just what changes, if any; President-elect Richard M. Nixon may propose, they are girding for attacks on the antipoverty pro gram, aid to eduication and legis- p~ lation dealing with urban affairs. Rep. Carl D. Perkins, D-Ky., of the Education and Labor Com- mittee, which is likely to be a major battleground in such a fight, sounded the keynote Friday. "We'll cooperate with Mr. Nixon in any constructive proposals, but I don't intend to sit back and see the things we fought so long and hard for go down the drain' he said in an interview. Perkins plans to get committee Democrats together before the MATHEMATICIANS PHYSICISTS -LECTRICAL ENGINEERS LINCOLN LABORATORY has openings for a limited number of en- gineers, physicists and mathematicians. LINCOLN LABORATORY, a research center of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is engaged in research and develop- ment in advanced elec- tronics, with emphasis on applications to national defense and space exploration. A LABORATORY REPRESENTATIVE WILL INTERVIEW APPLICANTS NOV. 15 new Congress opens Jan. 3 and try to get some agreement on the programs they will fight to con- tinue over any GOP opposition. The same approach on a broad- er scale is being worked out by the Democratic Study Group, a loose- ly-knit organization of liberal and moderate Democrats that functions independently of the regular House leadership. Rep. James G. O'Hara, D-Mich., DSG president, said he will meet with other leaders of the group next week for a preliminary dis- cussion of the situation. "We'll have to figure out where our strength is and where we should make our stand," said O'Hara in -contemplating a Nixon blow at Johnson administration programs. Perkins and O'Hara both expect the Job Corps program for train- ing high school dropouts to be a prime target of the new admin- istration. Nixon was critical of the. Job Corps in his campaign speeches. House Republicans have fought the Job Corps for years, calling it a wasteful program whose aims could be reached better through existing vocational education training centers. The 90th Con- gress ordered a study made of the feasibility of such a switch. Another area of attack expect- ed by the Democrats is in the pro- gram of direct federal grants to school districts. The Republicans favor funneling the money to the states instead of the local districts and Nixon has endorsed such an approach. 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