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October 31, 1969 - Image 6

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Page Six

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Friday, October 31, 1969

Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 31, 1969

JOIN THE SPORT OF THE SPACE AGE
PARACHUTING SERVICE
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Saturday, Sunday, Holidays
---For Information Call-
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DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
2= . *=-= - -.

CONSERVA TIV E SHIFT
ISR analyzes '68 presidential election

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of The Univer-
sity of Michigan. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to
35U LSA before 2 p.m. of the day
preceding publication and by ?
pin. Friday for Saturday and Sun-
day. Items may appear only once.
Student organization notices a r e
not accepted for publication. For
in formation, phone 764-9270.
FRIDAY, OC'TOBER 31
Day Calendar
Michigan Scholars Fall Conference:
Registration. Rackham Lobby, 9:15
a.mr. First Meeting, Rackham Amphi-
theater. 10:00 a.m.
Biological Chemistry and Botany Lee-
ture: Dr. N. Ed Tolbert, Mich. State,
'Peroxisumes 'Microbodies'*"; N o r t h
Lecture Hall, Med. Science 11, 4:00
G eneral Notices
A representative from the New York
University Law School will be in the
Jr. Sr. Counseling office. 1223 Angell
Hall to talk with interested students.
For info. 764-0312.
Fr Junior Year in Germany: The an-
nual fall meeting for freshmen and
sophomores interested in spending

-AC:T TO END THE WAR-
March on Washington
Nov. 15 To Bring All
The Troops Home Now
Bus Tickets are Available at the Union
(9-4). Need Drivers, Cars, Rides, Workers.
For More Information Contact:
NEW MOBE,-1532 SAB
769-2570

their Junior year In Freiburg with the
UM Jr, Year in Germany Program will
be held Monday evening,bNovember 3
at 8 pam. in the Assembly Room of
the Michigan Union.
Foreign Language Instruction Coin-
inittee meeting guest speaker -- Ronj
Landsman, Michigan Daily, Wed., Nov.
5, 3050 Freize, 9:00 am.
Placement Service
GENERAL DIVISION
3200 SAB
Inspiration Consolidated Copper Com-
pany, Arizona, offers programs for en-
gineers: Metallurgy, Electrical, Chemi-
cal. Mining, and Mechanical.
Newspaper Fund, Inc., Brunswick,
N.J., offers summer internships with
newspapers throuhgout the country.
Juniors interested in reporting and
editing, without professional b a c k-
grounds and with some journ/engl.
coursework. Apply before Dec. 1.
Phillips Exeter Academy, New Hamp-
shire, offers Jrs, Srs, and graduate stu-
dents teaching intern programs InE
many subjects.
ORGANIZATION
'NOTICES
South & Southeast Asia Club Brown
Bag, October 31, 12 Noon, Commonsi
Room, Lane Hall. No speaker this week.t
Everyone invited to come and chat
informally. Coffee.
m-D. i-nrf..
Rent your
Roommate with
a Classified Ad

C
i
x
E
i

(Continued from Page 11 he (Nixon) doesn't make any pro-
streets and racial disturbances as gress on Vietnam, I'm afraid he
treasonable." will try to pick up that vote."
And not only are the young While Converse maintains that
Northern factory workers probably Nixon "wouldn't dare" cater to
the most agitated voters, they are!the most extreme forms of Wal-
muchmor nuerou thn teirlace sentiment, he could achieve
liberal counterparts. the same effect by slowing down
While college youths "sally the civil rights timetables and
forth to do battle against a cor- pushing the law and order theme.
rupted and cynical older gen-
eration," the ISR report states, Although the Wallace vote was
there is a more "head-on con- admitdly small, the ISR report
frontation" with "their own age claims that had it not been for
mates who had gone from high the "political stodginess so de-
school to the factory instead of cried by campus activists," those
college." over 30 would have dropped con-
At the polls, the report states, ventional party ties and moved
the politicized vanguard of col- "with greater frequency" into the
lege youths is "numerically Wallace camp.
swamped" even within its o w n "Only now is the incongruance
generation. between the 'white majorities'
Whether this segment s t a y s conservatism and their democratic
with Wallace, Converse says, de- loyalties coming to the surface,"
pends on Wallace himself. "If you says Converse.
want to know the future of the
Wallace vote, you had better first ern Wal ceithe youviolenlNort
find out whether Wallace will be the disruption on campuses and in
running agains i the streets, a concern for "law and
Regardless of Wallace's candi- order" ran through the responses
dacy, Converse says, this vote of a maortyrof r espons
may appear lucrative to Nixon. "If

Correction
In an article in yesterday's
Daily, Vice President for State
Relations and Planning Arthur
Ross was reported to have de-
nied charges that the Dearborn
campus library facilities were
so inadequate that books were
being stored in cartons in li-
brary corridors. Actually, Ross
had declined to comment on
the charge.

Responses to an extended set of
times on forms of dissent, t h e
report states, are "appalling from
a civil libertarian's point of view."
"The American public seems to
have a very low tolerance for un-
usual or 'showy' forms of poli-
tical dissent," the report states. I
If the "young and well-educat-
ed elite-to-be" fail to undertake
the tedium of actively working to
"persuade" rather than to con- t
front conservative public opinion,.
the ISR study warns they "mayt
find their political efforts worse
than wasted.,"

JWallae ton c

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Steamy winter ahead
(Continued from Page 3 es futile for either one of two
the entire process !n motion things happens. The ventilation is
again, Stewart conch des. What too poor to move even one mole-
causes problems are leaks in the cule of air.
valves or water in the pipelines. Or as soon as a tiny bit of
"This must be the oldest sys- breeze appears, some mainten-
tem in the state, maybe," Ste- ance or sanitation truck f r o m
wart adds. "But it's not as much the University comes roaring by,
trouble as the newer systems - and covers up the profesor's most
not as many things to go wrong." lucid point of the hour.
Stewart and other plant de- The window invariably g e t s
partment workers spend much of slammed after such an occurrence
their time patching the leaks and or the professor gets laryngitis
draining the pipelines in an ef- with six points left to make.
fort to beat the system. But try Currently no solution s e e m s
as they may, the heat persists. imminent except the usual - get
Some individuals have suggested ' dressed, undressed and dressed
opening the windows to relieve the again or stay home and hibernate
heat. But alas and alack, it prov- until spring.
1-
EUROPE $189
ROUND TRIP BOEING 707 JET
* $50 deposit reserves seat
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STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL
1231 South University--769-6871
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I dj

From the producers of last year's "Moses Gomberg Swimming Party"

The New

TAYLOR Production of

"The Greatest Story Ever

Told"

Come as you are!

NOVEMBER 5,

1969

Now's the time to sign up at your placement office for an Interview with the Bethlehem Steel Loop
Course recruiter. This could be the start of something big!
And just what IS the Bethlehem Steel Loop Course? Glad you askedI It's our management
development program for graduates with bachelors' or advanced degrees.
Bethlehem loopers (150 to 200 every year) spend four swinging weeks at our home offices in
Bethlehem, Pa. Then, primed with information about the entire corporation and rarin' to go, they re-
port to the appropriate plants or departments for their first assignments. Then, onward and upward!
Where would YOU fit into the Loop Course? Check your degree or the one most similar to it:

MECHANICAL ENGINEERING-Engineering or me-
chanical maintenance departments of steel plants, fabri-
cating works, mining operations, and shipyards. Fuel
and combustion departments. Supervision of production
operations. Marine engineering assignments in Ship-
building Department. Also: Sales or Research.
METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING-Metallurgical de-
partments of steel plants and manufacturing operations.
Engineering and service divisions. Technical and super-
visory positions in steelmaking departments and rolling
mills. Also: Research or Sales.
CHEMICAL ENGINEERS-Technical and supervisory
positions in coke works, including production of by-
product chemicals. Fuel and combustion departments,
including responsibility for operation and maintenance
of air and water pollution control equipment. Engineer-
ing and metallurgical departments. Steelmaking opera-
tions. Also: Research or Sales.
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING-Positions in steel plants,
fabricating works, shipyards, and mines. Engineering
and maintenance departments. Supervision of steel-
making, rolling, manufacturing, and fabricating opera-
tions. Also: Sales.
CIVIL ENGINEERING-Fabricated Steel Construction
assignments in engineering, field erection, or works
management. Steel plant, mine, or shipyard assign-
ments in engineering, construction, and maintenance.

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING-Steel plant, fabricating
works, mining operations, and shipyard electrical en-
gineering, construction, and maintenance departments.
Technical and supervisory positions in large production
operations involving sophisticated electrical and elec-
tronic equipment. Also: Research or Sales.
MINING ENGINEERING-Our Mining Department op-
erates coal and iron ore mining operations and lime-
stone quarries, many of which are among the most
modern and efficient in the industry. This 10,000-man
activity offers unlimited opportunities to mining en-
gineers. Also: Research.
NAVAL ARCHITECTS AND MARINE ENGINEERS-
Graduates are urged to inquire about opportunities in
our Shipbuilding Department, including the Central
Technical Division, our design and engineering organi-
zation. Also: Traffic.
OTHER TECHNICAL DEGREES-Every year we recruit
loopers with technical degrees other than those listed
above. Seniors'enrolled in such curricula are encour-
aged to sign up for an interview.
ACCOUNTANTS-Graduates in accounting or business
administration (24 hours of accounting are preferred)
are recruited for training for supervisory assignments
in our 3,000-man Accounting Department.
OTHER NON-TECHNICAL DEGREES-Graduates with
degrees in liberal arts, business, and the humanities are

SEE God close the waters on Moses Gomberg
SEE Moses Goberg swim for the Promsed Land
SEE Moses Gomberg walk under waler
JOIN THE CAST OF THOUSANDS
VIEWING THE ANNUAL

Frederick

Moses

TAYLOR- Gombera

Tu W

I

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