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October 27, 1965 - Image 2

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The Michigan Daily, 1965-10-27

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PAGE TWO

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965

PAflE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965

Dunbar, Discusses Role of
GovrmnnCivil Rights

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A cross
Campus

DAILY OFFICI

(Continued from Page 1)
segregationist housing ordinances,
and much discrimination exists in
employment practices.
The interesting result is that in
place, of the former lack of vocal
support for the rights drive, im-
portant figures are now advocat-
ing even stronger policies than
the people they represent.l
Commenting on figures in the
government, Dunbar said that
many of the Supreme Court judges
share the same partiality on the
liberal side (in contrast though,
there are lower court federal judg-
es in the South, even ones ap-
pointed since 1961, that are seg-
regationist).
Where a few years ago there
was no unit in the government's
structure set up to deal with civ-
il rights problems, there now ate
several, Dunbar said, giving the
Community Relations Service and
the Equal Employment Commis-
sion, both created in last year's
Civil Rights Act, as two examples.
Even the secretary of defense now,
enforces civil rights laws, as he
must insure that defense contrac-
tors do not discriminate in their.
employment practices.
Danger
But there is a danger, Dunbar
warned, that rights enforcement
will become an independent bu-
reaucratic function, the specialty
of a self-sustaining department,
where it should be the task o all,
government units.
Commenting on the rights pro-
testors' methods, Dunbar said that
"public demonstrations are valid
actions," as they serve to show
vividly the consensus of groups
whose feelings might otherwise be

buried in our complex society. But.
he added, they have no place if
they just stir up emotions; he not-
ed also that the demonstration is
not a stable method for achieving
goals, for "every victory it wins
decreases its validity," as the pro-
testors are moved closer t6 the
power structure they are protest-
ing against.
Replacing the protestors in the
South will be a new group of Ne-
gro political leaders, who will har-
ness the voting power won by the.
rights drive. Legal redress, which
is creating an overload of civil
rights cases in the courts, will
also diminish as a tool to get the
Negroes what they want, it too
being replaced by Negro political
power, he predicted.
Equitable Federalism
Concluding, Dunbar claimed
that an equitable federalism is
workable in this country. Federal-
ism has the powers of adaptabil-
ity that allow the national gov-
ernment to function where It
must, and it also allows the state
and local governments enough
power (in education, for example)
so that each area may be an en-
tity.
(And interestingly enough, while
liberals are unanimous in their
support of the civil rights move-
ment, on the important issue of
state and local power they are
rigid and often conservative.)
But Dunbar denied the tradi-
tional "states'-rights" argument
used to exclude federal involve-.
ment: "there is no such thing as
'state sovereignty,' and never has
been," and "let us say flatly
'states'-rights' is meaningless, for
only individuals have rights."

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WEDNESDAY, OCT. 27
Noon-William Stringfellow will
speak on "A Private and Public
Faith" in Room 2 Michigan
League.I
4:10 p.m.-The Department ofl
Speech Student Laboratory Thea-
tre will present G. B. Shaw's
comic one-act play, "Press Cut-
tings," in the Arena Theatre of
the Frieze Bldg. Admission is free.
7:30 p.m.--The Law School will
present "Aspects of Law Prac-
tice: Rural, Urban, Corporate and
Governmental" in the Lawyer's
Club Lounge of the Law Quadran-
gle.
8 p.m.-The Professional Thea-
tre Program will present the APA
in "Harakles" at Lydia Mendels-
sohn Theatre.
THURSDAY, OCT.28a
1 p.m.-George L. Geis, direc-
tor of the Center for Research on
Learning and Teaching, will speak
on "Revision and Evaluation" in
the North Campus Commons.
2:15 p.m.-Bruce Russett, visit-{
ing research political scientist, will
speak on "Identification and In-
terpretation of International Re-
gions" in 1057 MHRI.
4:15 p.m.--Prof. Jerzy Kurylo-'
wicz of Harvard University will
speak on "A Balto-Slavic Prob-
lem" in the East Conference Room
of Rackham Hall.
7 and 9 p.m.-Cinema Guild will
present "Footlight Parade" at the
Architecture Aud.
8 p.m.-The Professional Thea-
tre Program will present the APA
in "Herakles" at Lydia Mendels-
sohn Theatre.
8 p.m.--Young Socialist Alliance
will present a discussion of "A
Hidden Chapter in the Fight
Against War" with Mary Alice
Styron of the YSA national execu-
tive committee, ii Rm. 3D of the
Union.

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 TYPEWRITTEN form to
Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be-
fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding
publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday
tor 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.

a

in Wildlife Mgmt. All degree levels in geol. & math, PhD's in geol. for prod. Dev.. Des.. Prod., Field.
Inorg. & Physical Chem. & computer application & geophysical S. C. Johnson & Son, Inv., Racine,
Humble Oil Co., Houston, Tex.-De- work. Located in Dallas, Tex. Wis.--BS-MS: ChE, 1E. BS: ME. Dev,
grees in Econ. & Gen. Lib. Arts for Michigan National Bank, Lansing,, & Prod.
sales, mkt. res., and retailing. Oppor- Mich.-Degrees in Econ. & Gen. Lib. Socony Mobil Oil Co., Inc. - BS-MS:
_ _t tiesto advance to staff work & Arts for Mgmt. Trng. ChE, CE. EE, ME, Naval & Marine.
mgmt. Throughout U.S. Booth Newspapers, InC., Detroit - MS: Constru. BES: IE. R. & D., Prod..
1965-1966 Werner E. Bachmann Me- Young Men's Christian Assoc., Lans- Men & women. Degrees in Econ. Gen. Sales.
morial Lecture: Prof. Karl Ziegler, di- ing, Mich.-Men & women. Dec. grads. Lib. Arts, Poll, Sci., Speech for post- Tennessee ValleyAuthorit
rector Max Planck, Institute fur Koh- Major In any field of study. Posi- tions in advtg.. mgmt. trng, territorial Ty uo -Knoxville
lenforschung, will speak on "Fifty tions as Program Directors with Young sales, reporters, desk men & editors. &Cattanooga, .TennM,:&SilsoNDa
Years from Triphenylmethyl to Poly- People & Adults, Health, Phys. Educ., Located in 9 Michigan cities. clear. BS: EE. Mat'ls. ME. U.S. olti-
ethylene," on Wed., Oct. 27 in Room &, Recreation Program Dir., and Exec. FRI., NOV. 5-- ens & some citizens of countries allied
182 of the Physics-Astronomy Bldg. at Dir. (p.m. only). Bureau of the Budget, Wash., D.C.- with U.S. Dev., Des., Prod.
4 p.m. WED., NOV. 3- (See above).
Aluminum Co. of America, Pittsburgh, Watkins-Johnson Co., Palo Alto &
Student Government Council Approval Pa.-Majors in Arch., Econ., Gen. Lib. TEACHER PLACEMENT: Santa Cruz, Calif.-Any Degree: EE.
of the following student-sponsored Arts, Geog., Geol., Nat. Res., Speech & BS: E Physics. R. & D., Des.
events becomes effective 24 hours after Chem., etc. Mgmt. trng. program. Must Britton, Mich.-Has a 6th grade vac- MON.-TUES., NOV. 1-2-
the publication of this notice. All be in upper 1, of class & draft exempt. ancy to be filled as soon as possible. General Tire & Rubber Co., Aerojet-
publicity for these events must be General Foods Corp., White Plains, Anyone interested write: Britton-Ma- General Corp.. Van Karman Center,
withheld until the approval has become N.Y.-Men & women. Sound academic con Area School, William Saxton, Supt. Azuza. Space General Corp., El Monte
effective. record plus aptitude for getting things of School.-, & Sacramento. Calif.-Any Degree: AE
Approval request forms for student accomplished through people. Educ. & Astro. BS & PhD: Chem.-(Anal., In-
sponsored events are available in Room bkgd. not as vital as personality, ambi- For additional Information contact org. & Physical). MS-PhD: ChE, EE, EM,
1011 of the SAB. tion, leadership, etc. for sales mgmt. the Bureau of Appointments. Educ. Info..& Controls, Mat'ls., ME, Met., Nu-
International Center. International with Post Div. Located throughout U.S. Div., 3200 SAB, 764-7462. clear. R. & D., Des.
Ball, Nov. 12, Michigan Union Ballroom, Allstate Insurance Co.SouthfieldPhilco Corp., Aeronutronic Div., New-
8:30-12:30 a.m. Asch -Asurnc . SENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER- port Beach, Calif.-Any Degree: AE &
Challenge, Lecture. Oct. 31, Union Soc.VWork, et. Gon L Ar- ;VIEWS-Seniors & grad students, please Astro., EE, ME, Math grads in com-
Psych., Sc ok t.for pstosi i ceuepse t18HWs
Ballroom, 2 p.m. HoeOfc lis pstos Isgn ceuepseda 2- etputer programming. Prof.: Applied
Ballre naeLecture, Nov. 7, Union Home Office & Claims Insurance, Man- Engrg. Mech. PhD: ChE, Mat's., Met. MS: Cam-
Ballroom, 2 p.m. aes. Trng., Personnel & Territor- MON., NOV. 1- munic. Sci., Info. & Controls. BES: E
Public Health Club, "Continental ial Sales. Toughout Mich.orp., Evan Analytic Services, Inc., Falls Church, Math, E Physics. BS & PhD: EM. R. &
Adventure, Oct. 29, Hodges Travel ston p 1.-Dec. grads. BA's & MA's in Va. - MS-PhD: AE & Astro., Com- D., Des.
Agency, 5-11 p.m. Econ. & Gen. Lib. Arts. Also BS's in munic. Sci., EE, EM, IE, Nuclear. Shell Development Co., Oil, Chemi-
Scabbard and Blade, Traditional cere- Gen. Chem. Mgnt. Trng. & inside & Prof.: Applied Mech. R. & D., Oper. cal & Dev. Co.-PhD: ChE. Citizens &
many, Oct. 26, Diag, Gn hm gn.Tn.&isd 12 noon. sls hruhu SRes, non-citizens becoming U.S. citizen. R.
rtiss. rg U.Beloit Corp., ;Beloit, Wis.BS: EE & & D., Des.
4 o nNational Labor Relations Board, ME. MS: Info. & Controls. R. & D., MON.-FRI., NOV. 1-5--
Wash., D.C.-BA's & MA's in Econ., Des., Prod., Sales, Trng. Program. General Motors Corp., Midwest &
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: Bureau Law, Poli. Sci. & Soc. Work for mgmt. Cit of Detroit S-MS: EE Eastny egree: CE, XE, M
of Appointments-Seniors & grad stu- trng., personnel, public admin., in- Chem, ES: CE, E Math, EM, E Physics, uerials. BS-MS: EE, EM, Met. MS: Cm-
dent, peas cal 74-760 or ppont-dus. &labr rl. p~m ony).Mat'is., Sol. Engrg. MS: Constru., Public munie. Sci.'ES: E Math, Sci. Engrg,
ments with the following: Xdut.oabxrCorp., Birmingham, Mich. - Works Admin., Sanitary. Citizens & R. & D., Des., Prod., Sales, Computer
MON., NOV. 1- Degrees in Econ., Gen. Lib. Arts, Journ., non-citizens becoming U.S. citizen. Programming.

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Full Time & Evening Employment
If you are free four evenings each week and Saturdays, you can
maintain your studies and still enjoy a part-time job doing special
interview work that will bring. an average weekly income at $67.
If you are neat appearing and a hard worker call Mr. Adams at
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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27
Day Calendar
Office of Religious Affairs Book Dis-
cusson-"A Private and Public Faith"
by William Stringfellow: 2 Michigan
League, 12 m.
Short Course for Assessing Officers-
Rackham Amphitheatre, 9 a.m.
Dept. of Chemistry Bachman Memor-
ial Lecture-Karl Ziegler, director, Max
Planck Institut fur Kohlenforshung,
West Germany, "Fifty Years from Tr-
pehnylmethyl to Polyethylene"; 182
Physics-Astronomy, 4 p.m.
Dept. of Zoology Seminar Kenneth
Cunmmins, Department of Biology, Uni-
versity of Pittsburgh. "Trophic Rela-
tions in a Small Woodland Stream": 231
Angell Hall, 4 p.m.
Professional Theatre Program Per-
formance-APA Company in Archibald
MacLeish's "Herakies": Lydia Mndels-
sohn Theatre, 8 pam.
Law School Panel Discussion "As-
pects of Law Practice: Rural, Urban,
Corporate and Governmental": Law-
yer's Club Lounge, Law Quadrangle,
7:30 p.m.
IGeneral Notices
Final Payment of Fall Winter Term
Fees is due and payable on or before
Oct. 29, 1965.
If fees are not paid by this date:
1. A $10 delinquent penalty will be
charged.
2. A "Hold Credit" will be placed
against you. This means that until
payment is received and "Hold Credit"
is cancelled:
1) Grades will not be mailed.
2) Transcripts will not be furnished.
3) Yo may not register for future
terms.
4)A Senior may not graduate with
his class at the close of the current
term.
3. The Dean of your school or co-
lege will be given a list of delinquent
accounts.,
Payments may be made in person
or mailed to the Cashier's Office, 105
Administration Bldg., before 4:0 p.m.
Oct. 29, 1965.
Mail payments postmarked after du
date, Oct. 29, 1965, are late and sub
ject to penalty.
Identify mail payments as tuition anc
show student number and name.
Regents'-Meeting: Fri., Nov. 19. Com
munications for consideration at th
meeting must be in the President's
hands not later than Nov. 5.
Sports--Women: Women students wh
have completed the physical educatior
requirement who wish to register elec
tively may do so in Barbour Gymnas
ium (main floor) on Thurs. and Fri.
Oct. 28 and 29. Registration hours ar
8:30 a.m. to 11:45 a.m.
American Chemical Society Lecture
Prof. Kenneth Rinehart, University o:
Illinois, will speak on "Recent Studie
on Natural Products," on Thurs., Oct
28, in Room 1300 of the Chemistr
Bldg. at 8 p.m.
Zoology Seminar: Oct. 27, 4 p.m.
231 Angell Hall, Dr. Thomas E. Moor
will speak on "The Evolution of Acous
tical Communication in Cicades."
ORGANIZATION
NOTICES
USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN
NOUNCEMENTS is available to official
ty recognized and registered studen
organizations only. Forms are avail
able in Room 1011 SAb.
#*#
Cercle Francais, Baratin, Thurs., Oct
28 3-5 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg.
Joint Judiciary Council, Meetin
Wed., 7:15 p.m., Council Room, SAB.
Lutheran Student Chapel, Bibl
study, 9 p.m.; vespers, 10 p.m., Oct. 2'
Lutheran Student Chapel, Hill St. a
Forest Ave.
Near Eastern Studies Club, "Crusade
Castles in the Near East," Dr. Ehren
kreutz, Dr. Orlin, Commons Room, Lan
Hall, Wed., Oct. 27, 8 p.m.
Quarterdeck Society, Noon luncheor
Prof. W. C. Nelson, Aerospace Dept
speaker, Oct. 28, 12 noon, 311 W.E.
Unitarian Student Group, Dr. Morri
Foster will speak on "Social Aspect c
Human Genetics" on Oct. 29, 7:30 p.n
Rides at Union and Markley.
Univrsity Lutheran Chapel, Eveni
devotion, 10 p.m., Oct. 27, Rev. Joh
Ribar, pastor of St. Thomas Church i
southwest Ann Arbor, will be speake
all welcome, 1511 Washtenaw Ave.
Newman Student Association, Ecu

menical supper, discussions on th
changing church, 6-8:30 p.m., Oct. 27
331 Thompson St.
DIAL 8-6416
HOLDING OVER
Record
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"YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO
MI1 ITI"-New York-e
MISS Magazine

City of Detroit, Mich.-Men & wom-
en. Degrees in Econ., Gen. Lib. Arts,
Journ., Math, Nat. Res.,. Pharm., Phys-
ics, Public Health, Soc. Work, etc. Also
BA & MA in Arch. & Chem. & Bus.
Admin. Positions in Art & Des., Biol.,
nel, Public Admin., Statistics, Trans-
port, Writing, etc.
Elec. computing, Mgmt. Trng., Person-
TUES., NOV. 2-
Socony Mobil Oil Co., Niles, Ill. -
BS & MS's in Econ. & Chem. MS in
Geol. Positions in prod. & territorial
sales lead to mgmt. Various locations.
Tenn. Valley Authority, Knoxville,
Tenn.-Men & women for positions in
Art & design, Chem. Lab. Res., Forestry
Dev., & Health & safety. BA Arch.,
MA in Forestry & Public Health, PhD's
LOUIS LOMA]

Petitioning for
WRITER IN RESIDENCE COMMITTEE
Petitions available Monday, Oct. 25 through Friday, Oct.
29 at front desk of UAC main office, 2nd floor Union.
People needed for Scheduling, Treasury, Publicity, Book-
let, Special Events.
GI RLS !
GET YOUR DATE NOW!
L' AMOUB.
MICHIGAN UNION
November 12th ... 8:30 P.M.

Psych., etc. for territorial sales. De-
troit location (a.m. only).
THURS., NOV. 4-
Bureau of the Budget, Wash., D.C.
-Grad Students only. MA's in Gen.
Lib. Arts, Geol., Public Health & Soc.
MA's & PhD's in econ.,. Nat. Res. &
Poll. Cci. Also LLB. Mgmt. trng., Public
admin. & statistics. Men & women.
Burroughs Corp., Jackson, Mich. -
Degree in any field with 1 yr. acctg.
req. Sales trng. prog. & mktg. of data
processing equip. Various locations.
West Virginia Pulp & Paper Co.,
N.Y.C.-Degrees in Econ., Gen. Lib. Arts,
Journ., Speech, etc. Mgmt. trng. &
sales (inside & territorial). Through-
out U.S. (p.m. only).
Sun Oil Co., Phila., Pa.-BS & MS in

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