Page six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, March 11, 1969 Page SIx THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday1 March 11, 1969 ti,;.v.}'":"::: ........ },":.::" ::::...... :::. ... 1: . , .... ...................... 'r ,'''K .. ............".5.1",.. ..... , DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .... ..1 .. r.. ........ ..../. 1 . .o~... . ... .L . ...W ...... ...... A . . .... .. r .... ....1. A..AS ., . M ..W. .J.t " M A" J r "r "t . The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent' in TYPEW#IITTEN form to Room 358 L.S.A. Bldg., before 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. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Leadership," Conference March 21st - 23rd at HighScopeConference Center. now 1011 SAB between 8:00 - 5:00 Will Smith will be the trainer. Register p.m. Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill Street, Mon., March 10, 8:00' p.m. "Dionysus '69", Mr. Saul Gottieb, Mr. Larry De- Vine,Professor Marvin Felheim, and Law Professor Paul D. Carrington. College Republicans meeting, W e d - nesday, March 12, Room 3-R Union, 8 p.m. Discussion of' proposed constitu- tional amendments and.SGC candidates forum. * * * * U of M Ski Club rpeeting, Tues., March 4, 7:30 p.m., Room No. C. Final1 plans and payment ifor mont TremblantI trip. Also nominations for next years officers. WCBN Radio (650 KHZ) Broadcast- ing Schedule: 11:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Rock Forumg; 7:00 - 7:15 p.m. 'News; 7:15 - 11:00 p.m. Folkways; 11:00 - 11:30 p.m. News, Weather, and Sports; 11:30- -2 Mainline. Weekends-1 :30 p.m. - 3:00 a.m. Fri. Old hits; 11:30 p.m. - 3:00 a.m. Sat., Midnight Special (folk). Student organization notices are 1 not accepted for publication. ForI more information,, phone 764-9270.C TUESDAY, MARCH 11 Day Calendar Trumpet Student Recital: School of Music Recital Hall, 12:30 p.m. Department of English Poetry Read- ing: Donald Hall, reading his poetry: Undergraduate Library Multi-Purpose Room, 4:10 p.m. Cinema Guild: Ann Arbor. Film Festi- val: Architecture Auditorium, 7:00eand 9:05 p.m. Degree Recital: Allen Shaffer, organ:, Hill Auditorium, 8:00 -p.m. Chamber Music for Winds: John, Mohler, clarinet; Florian Mueller, oboe; Charles Fisher, piano; Lynne B'arthol- omew, piano; School of Music Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. General Notices Seniors: College of L.S.&A., and Schools of Education, Musie, and -Un- dergraduate Public Health. Tentative, lists of seniors for April graduation have been posted on the Bulletin Board in the first floor lobby, L.S.&A. Building. Students enrolled in those units not listed above s h o u I d consult their school office. Any changes ud be brought tohthe attentionof teRecorder at' the Office 'of the Registrar, Window A, 1513 L.S.&A. Building or from the respective coun- seling office. Doctoral Candidates who plan to graduate May 3 must observe the fol- lowing deadlines: (A) Three unbound copies ofdthe ndissertation, complete in every way except for binding, and three abstracts must be submitted to the Rackham Dissertation Secretary, by Monday, March 17. These copies are then circulated to the candidate's doc- toral committee for evaluation. (B) Two corrected copies of the disserta- tions - one bound and one unbound two abstracts, and the chairman's report on the final oral examination must be submitted to the Dissertation Secretary by Monday, April 14. F e e s must be paid and paperwork complet- ed by the second deadline. Students who expect to earn the Doctoral Degree at the end of the Winter Term may elect to receive the large diploma (13" x 17") without addi- tional cost provided written applica- tion is made to the Diploma Depart- ment no later than thirty days before the closing date of the term. Appli- cation must therefore be made before March 31, 1969. Ushers are needed for the special concert bythe Moscow State Sym'- phony Orchestra, in HilAuditorium on Wed., March 12th at 8:30 p.m. Per- sons who. are interested in ushering for this concert call 668-8597 and ask for Mr. Warner. This notice does not ap- ply to the concert by the Moscow State Symphony on Thursday,, March 13th, which is the regularly scheduled con- cert on the Choral Union Series. Russian Circle: "A Russian Folk En- semble" a program of Russian and Uk- ranian songs and dances by students from Oakland University: Wednesday, March 12, Auditorium C, Angell Hall. 8:00 p.m. Institute of Science and Technology and Department of Geology and Min- eralogy Lecture: Frontiers in Geology and Geophysics Series: Dr. Neil Op- dyke, Research Associate, Lamont-Do- herty Geological Observatory, New York, "Magnetic Reversals in Ocean Sediments and Sea Floor Spreading": Thursday, March 13, Auditorium F, Physics-Astronomy Bldg., 4:00 p.m. Doctoral xams William Roy Penrose, Biological Chemistry, Dissertation: "Purification and Properties of a Leucine-ltnding Protein from Escherichia col," on Tuesday, March 11, 1969, at 10:00 a.m. in Room 5423 Medical Science Build- ing, Chairman: D. L. Oxender, Milton Antone Netter, Industrial En- gineering, Dissertation: "Critical Path Analysis of Repetitive Man-Machine System Operation," on Tuesday, March 11 at 11:00 a.m. in Faculty Lounge, West Engineering Building, Chairman: W. M. Hancock. Placement 3200 S.A.B. Final Application date for 1969 exam- ination for foreign service information officer careers is March 14, Testing on May 3. The application booklet is avail- able in the Career Planning Unit of Placement Services. If interested read the booklet and meet this deadline. The next Federal Service Entrance' Examination (FSEE) applications a r e due this Wed., March 12, for test on April 19, This test given at Ann Ar- bor; and nationwide. April 19 is the first day of study period before exams, If you will be elsewhere, you may sign up to take the test wherever you will be. If you sign up for the Ann Arbor location, you must, however, take the test here. The test will be given'third Saturdays throughout the summer too. Vista Week, March 17-21. Come in to speak with the representatives, no appts. necess., room 3524, S.A.B., 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Speakers are available. to inter- ested campus groups, call 764-7460 for reservations on Tues., Wed., and Thurs., March 18, 19, and 20. Film will be shown March 18, 19 & 20, 7 p.m. 2512 Frieze Bldg., Ma'rch 18, 3 p.m., room 2225 Angell Hall, March 19, Room 2040. Frieze at 3 p.m. Placement Interviews at Placement Services, General Division, please call 763-1363 for appointments early in the week. All employers wish to speak to applicants regardless of their selective service status. :If you have received offers throughout this recruiting- sea- son, please report them to this office, statistics are helpful for counseling purposes. If you have accepted a posi- tion and are no longer actively seeking our help please come in and tell Mrs. Wiers, so we can properly handle your file. Remember, we can help you throughout the spring-summer also, but only if you let us know where you will be, come explore these services before you leave.' TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1969 Continental National American group, Chicago, Ill., and branch offices throughout U.S. and Canada - Bach. level in Gen. Lib. Arts, and Bach. and Masters in Education, and all degree levels in Math for Foreign Trade, In- surance (Claims, Home office, an d Sales,) Statistics; and Actuarial work. Lincoln National Life, Priamrily, Southeastern Michigan locations, but seeking personnel for 142 other loca- tions incl. Puerto Rico and Hawaii.: Any major at the 'Bhach. or Masters lev- el for Insurance, Mgmt., Trng., Sales, inside and territorial. Stromberg Datagraphics, Inc., S a n Diego, California: Bach. in Math and Business. BSE in EE. Bach. and Mas- tei in Computer areas and Communi- cations Sciences for positions in Com- puting,rManagement Training and Sales Training. No Interviews Wednesday, March 19 THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1969: Chicago Payment Center, Social Se- curity Administration, Ill.: Bach, in Econ., Educ., EngA., Fine Arts.,For. Lang., Gen. Lib. Arts, Journ., Law, Li- brary Sci., Math, Philo., Poll. Sci., Psych., Speech.. Soc., and Soc. Wk. for Claims Examiner positions. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company. Southfield, Mich.: All de- gree levels and areas for insurance work. FRIDAY, MARCH 21. 1969: Pan American World Airways, Jamica, New York: All majors and degree levels for International Flight Stewardesg positions. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE 212 S.A.B., Lower Level MARCH 12, 1969: Camp Cavell, YWCA of Metro De- troit: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., openings for unit assistants, business manager, di- rectors of waterfront, crafts and rid- ing. ENGINEERING PLACEMENT SERVICE 128 H, West Engrg. Bldg. Make interview appointment at Room 128 H, West Engrg. Vldg., unless other- wise specified. MARCH 17, 1969: Litton Industries - Advanced Marine Technology Div. Northern Indiana Public Service Co. MARCH 18, 1969: Ampex Corp. Aro Corp. Borg-Warner Corp.-Research Center Chemical Construction Corp. Leo A. Daly Co. The Service Bureau Corp. Stromberg Datagraphics, Inc. Swift & Co., R & D Center' Turner Construction Co. Elden: Inerest conflict? (Continued from Page 1) Yesterday, then, the hearing be- gan as scheduled - when, unex- pectedly, the lawyer from Arbor' Management, which is suing sev- eral tenants for eviction today, said he would not protest if Eld- en were disqualified from hearing his cases. The hearing recessed, and the lawyer, Conlin, Glotta and Elden entered a series of frantic nego- tiations - Glotta and Elden never met at the same time - to con- sider whether the problem might be solved without any hearing. Elden has always been free to disqualify himself - thus avoid- ing any special hearings and all the backroom tangles.- Friday, in fact, Elden told The Daily "I would be delighted to be disqual- ified. Frankly, it would save me a, tremendous amount of work." By yesterday, however, he had evidently changed his mind: Eld- en refused to disqualify himself, so Conlin will now hear the dis- qualification motion today. Now, however, Glotta has new evidence to present: Elden owns the franchise of the Rox Ex (ex- terminating) Co., an Ann Arbor firm which has worked in the past for several landlords hit by the strike. i The company phone number rings Elden's personal answering service - but, according to Elden, George B. Martin runs the com- pany and handles the business an- gle. "I have no idea what compan- ies they work for," says' Elden. Martin, however, says Rox Ex has worked for: - Apartments Limited (owner Karl Malcolm says "I used them once for my own home, but frank- ly they didn't do the job.") - Wilson-White, an apartment management firm; - Campus Management ("We used them several years ago, but you might say they're not any good," says a company spokes- man); - Ann Arbor Trust. "Elden's interest here is in a company which has sought busi- ness with landlords in the past,, and will continue," says Glotta. Before today's hearing even starts, .Glotta also plans to intro- duce an entirely new motion, ask- ing that Conlin be disqualified from hearing the disqualification motion. Conlin and his brothers own extensive real estate holdings. CHARGE RACISM: MSU professors ask colleges to admit Ferris State.students By MARTY SCOTT A Arequest to five state univer- sities that they accept black stu- dents from embattled Ferris State College has met with immediate. approval - but it will probably have no influence on University admissions policies. A group of black faculty mem- bers at Michigan State University last week sent telegrams to the president of five state universities asking that they accept black stu- dents from Ferris who may be ex- pelled or have other difficulties. Four of the five responded af- firmatively, including the Univer- sity, Michigan State College,j Western Michigan University, Wayne State University. Eastern Michigan University has yet to reply. However, University Director of Admissions Clyde Vroman said yesterday it is unlikely that any p uate. Vrornan pointed out. "We would not be helping them if we admitted them and they did not meet our requirements," he said. In their telegram ,to the f i v e university presidents, the MSU professor cited the "long history of discrimination against blacks" at the college and in the surrounding area as the basis of their request. 9 0 Ferris students would actually bez I is about time the other state admitted here because they would universities recognize what is hap- probably not be qualified. ening at Ferris and take some Ferris has a policy of admitting public action," said Ronald Lee, any in-state high school grad- director of the Center for Urban Affairs at MSU. Lee, also assist- FB ek But which one is he?/ DETROIT (R) - Twelve young men, all of whom said they were the same Army Reservist wanted as a deserter, gathered in a Detroit church yesterday and challenged the FBI to arrest them. They issued a statement saying one of them was namedI Thomas Sincavitch, 27, of Detroit, and was wanted by the FBI. "I don't know whether he is the right man," said Paul? Stoddard, special agent in charge of the FBI's Detroit office. "We have been requested to look for a deserter by the name -of Thomas Sincavitch.' Sell a POT in Laily Classifieds Biafr'a drive- Students here are taking an interest in war-torn Biafra again after a lapse of a month, or so. A petition drive is now going on around campus which "urges the U.S. government" to send aid to Biafra and help solve the diplo- matic problems surrounding a long-lasting peace there. The drive is sponsored by th'e University Committee to Keep Biafra Alive. The group has also planned a lecture program for tonight in the Union Ballroom. Two men with personal experience in Biafra since the war began some 21 months ago will speak. Stephen Lewis, Canadian mem- ber of Parliament, served as a teacher there. And Prof. George Axinn, assistant dean of MSU in charge of international programs, recently returned- from" Biafra where he served as a member of an investigatory committee chair- ed by Sen: Charles Goodell (R- NY). Stoddard would make no fur- ther comment. The Rev. Bob Morrison, pastor of St. Joseph's Episcopal Church, where the 12 men were staying, said, "It is our purpose to prevent the government from taking him easily. "if they want to arrest him, they'll have to take a lot of us with him." The Rev. Morrison wore a name tag saying "My name is Tom Sin- cavitch." "I wore the badge symbolically," he said, "because I don't think they'd mistake me for Tom Sin- cavitch." He said the original 12 had grown to 29. The man claiming to be the real Tom Sincavitch said he joined the Army Reserves in 1963 andI served six months on active duty and four and a half years on re- serve status. 1 Last June, after he was ordered to take riot control training, he resigned, he said, because, "I have been forced to lend my support to a system which I have come to understand is morally wrong." ant provost at MSU, was a mem- ber of the group which sent t h e ,elegram. Lee said the telegram was the result of the disturbance 'that started at Ferris Feb. 27 when two black students were allegedly attacked by a group of white stu- dents after leaving their dates at a dormitory. The situation continued to es- calate until the night of March 3 when police arrested 263 black students who had taken over Starr Hall. There are differing reports as to why, the students had taken over the building. The Associated Press reported it was done to enforce certain demands. However, Lee and spokesmen for the Ferris blacks say they actually took over the building in self-de- fense. Lee said 22 blacks had already aseen hospitalized by then and the college administration was mak- ing no attempt to protect them, Last Friday the Michigan Civil Rights Commission announced it will investigate charges of dis- crimination against several ?ffic- ials of Ferris State, Commission chairman Julian A. Cook, Jr., told a' new conference, "The fact that we are conducting an investigation indicates the lack of any significant response (to the commission members' recom- mendations designed to alleviate racial tensions on the campus) by the college."" 4: air =1 f In a surprise announcement Fri-. day, Gov. William G. Millikei ap- pointed Lowell W. Perry, to the board of control of Ferris. Perry was an All-American football player here in 1951. He is the first blacknever to serve on the board of control. Maywe have a meet in g of, M 8 minds? ' What's happening in YOUR field of interest at Wolf Research and Development Corporation? You're invited to probe the mind of theman from Wolf during his forthcoming visit to the campus. He'll be happy to tell you about the advanced nature of our work in diverse areas of the explosively expanding Information and Data Systems Science. Ask about the unique professional climate and challenge available - how Wolf scientists and engineers work years ahead of the state-of-the-art in concept and analysis problems that would confuse the ordinary mind .. and you'll hear about the benefits - exceptional salary and advancement policy, educational continuation, professional publishing and many other attractive tidbits. Question our representative about our involvement in programs like Space Physics, Numerical Analysis, Real Time Systems Software, Time Sharing & Multiprocessing, Color Display and Computer Aided Design. Inquire about our pace-setting Computer Application Studies, Data Reduction and Analysis Programs and our unparalleled development facilities. We are seeking .. . SCIENTIFIC and ENGINEERING - Bachelor, Masters and PhD Graduates in Applied Mathematics, Statistics, Electrical Engineering, Astronomy, Celestial Mechanics, Physics and Nuclear Engineering. BUSINESS - Bachelor and Masters Graduates who would like to li apply their degree backgrounds to computerized applications. Learn more about the unique professional opportunities at Wolf Research and Development Corporation. MAIL THE COUPON BELOW FOR AN INFORMATIVE COMPANY BROCHURE. Wolf Research And Development Corporation 6715 Kenilworth Avenue / Riverdale, Md. 20840 Gentlemen: Please send me the brochure outlining the career opportunities at WOLF. * I NAMF ADDRESS________________________ I understand that IfI am interested in talking to a Wolf representative, a campus interview will be arranged. ------------------------------------------- ------------------------- ------- - - . X10 Na Deposit FREE service per month Repaired and deliveryI CaTL NE JAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 SERVING BIG 10 SCHOOLS SINCE 1961 Milliken said he took the action to "insure that there is g o o d communication between the stu- dents and campus authorities." He said Perry should help settle the "highly sensitive" situation exist- ing at Ferris. ALTERNATIVE SHAREHOLDER'S MEETING TON IGHT UGhL Multipurpose Room 8:00 p. 1 XwM Of LVIMM".'G Z / #,4 t I Impala Custom Coupe equipped for trailermg '9. If Chevrolet can't haul it, u.,irnukn I.in no MHa or r nvaif. A