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November 02, 1965 - Image 6

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The Michigan Daily, 1965-11-02

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r
PAGE SIX-

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

TUEADAY, NOVEMBER 2.1965

Across Campus

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DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
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TUESDAY, Nov. 2
4 p.m.-Prof. Evelyn B. Harri-
son of Columbia University will
lecture on "New Sculpture from
Ancient Athens" in Aud. B.
4:15 p.m.-C. Eric Lincoln of
Portland State College, Ore., will
speak on "Black Nationalism,
Black Chauvinism, and Negri-
tude" in the Multipurpose Room
of the Undergraduate Library.
4:15 p.m.-Leslie W. Dunbar of
the Field Foundation will lecture
on "Public Policy and the Art of
Peace Making" in the Rackham
Amphitheatre.
7:30 p.m.-Jack W. White of
the Continental Illinois Bank and
Trust Co. will lecture on "The
Financial Institution and the
Community" in 131 Business Ad-
ministration.
8:30 p.m.-The Poznan Choir

will give a concert in Hill Audi-
torium.
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 3
Noon-C. Eric Lincoln will dis-
cuss his book "The Black Mus-
lims" at the Michigan League.
3:30 p.m.-H. L. Logan of the
Lighting Research, Holophane Co.
will lecture on "Lighting and the
Controlled Environment" in the
Architecture Auditorium.
7:30 p.m.-C. Eric Lincoln will
give a lecturehon "The Recon-
struction of the Negro Family:
A New Tack for the Civil Rights
Movement" in the Multipurpose
Room of the Undergraduate Li-
brary.
8 p.m.-The Professional Thea-
tre Program will present the APA
in "Herakles" at Lydia Mendels-
sohn Theatre.
8:30 p.m.-The School of Music
will give a concert at Recital Hall,
School of Music.

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
for 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.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2
Day Calendar
University Management Seminar -
"Orientation to Supervisory Practices":
4558 Kresge Hearing Research Institute,
8:30 a.m.
University Management Seminar -
"Managing the Departmental Office":
4558 Kresge Hearing Research Institute,
1:30 p.m.
Office of, Religious Affairs Lecture -
C. Eric Lincoln, Portland State Col-
lege, Oregon, "Black Nationalism,
Black Chauvinism, and Negritude":
Multipurpose Room, Undergraduate Li-
brary, 4:15 p.m.
William W. Cook Lectude on American
Institutions-Leslie W. Dunbar, Field
Foundation, "Public Policy and the
Art of Peace-Making": Rackham Am-
phitheatre, 4:15 p.m.
Graduate School of Business Admin-
istration Lecture - Jack W. Whittle,
Continental Illinois Bank and Trust
Co., "The Financial Institution and
the Community": 131 Business Admin-
istration, 7:30 p.m.
University Musical Society Concert
-Poznan Choir: Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m.
Illustrated Lecture: The Dept. of
Classical Studies and the Ann Arbor
Society, Archaeological Institute of
America, present an illustrated lecture
by Prof. Evelyn B. Harrison, Colum-
bia University, "New Sculpture from
Ancient Athens," Tues., Nov. 2, 4 p.m.,
Aud. B, Angell Hall.
General Notices
Admission Test for Graduate Study
in Business: Candidates taking the Ad-
mission Test for Graduate Study in
Business on Sat., Nov. 6, are requested
to report to Rackham Lecture Hall at
8:45 a.m. Saturday.
Mathematics Colloquium: Prof. E.
Floyd of the University of Virginia
will speak on "Report on Differen-
tiable Cobordism," 'Tues., Nov. 2, 4
p.m., Rnm. 3201 Angell Hall.
Placement
ANNOUNCEMENT:
New York State, Albany-Dept. of
Civil Servicerannounces Public Admin.
Internship Program. MA in public ad-
min., poli. .sci or rel. or LLB req. 1
yr. Internship beginning July 1966 in-
cludes work in state dept. or agency,
group trng. & grad study and leads
to permanent position. Details at Bu-
reau.
POSITION OPENINGS:
McGraw-Hill World News Bureau,,
Detroit-Tech. Writer, BS Engl. or
Journ. with science major; or science
major with writing ability. Exper. pref.
Write tech, material on mktg. in
auto., construct. & elect, industries.
City of Benton Harbor, Mich. -
Ass't. City Engr. Degree, Mich. regis-
tration desirable. Gain exper. in muni-

cipal engrg. including urban renewal, Marcus Hook, Pa! (a.m.) - MS-PhD: Island, N.Y.-BS-MS: ChE, ME. MS-
etc. ChE. MS. ME. R. & D., Mig. PhD: Chem.-Inorg. & Phys. MS: Con-
Johnson & Johnson, Birmingham, MON., NOV. 8- struc. BS: CE, EM. Can consider non-
Mich.-3 sales repres. Degree pref. Sales Los Angeles County, Calif.-BS-MS: citizens becoming U.S. citizen. Res.-
exper. desirable. Married men, age 22- CE. Citizens & non-citizens becoming (Chem. & Physics).
34. Positions in Hospuital, Athletic & U.S. citizen. Civil Engrg. Asst. Union Carbide Corp., N.Y., N.J., W.
Disposable pack sales. The Mitre Corp., Bedford, Mass.; Colo. Va., Ill. Ind. Ohio-PhD: Chem. En-
* * * Springs, Colo., Wash., D.C.-MS-PhD: grs. R. & D., Prod.
For further information please call Communic. Sct., EE. Dev., Des.
764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap- RCA-PhO, Burlington, Mass.; Lan-
pointments, 3200 SAB. caster, Pa.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Prince-
ton, Camden, Cherry Hill, Morrestown,
PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS: Bureau Somerville, Harrison, N.J.-PhD: ChE, 1
of Appointments-Seniors & grad stu- Communic. Sci., EE, Info. & Controls d n , e e l 7 4 0 r p t & t C i s &- t n f
dents, please call 764-7460 for appoint- I& Met, Citizens & non-citizens for C
ments with the following: temp.tpjractical trng. & if becoming The following part-time jobs are
THURS., NOV. 4- U.S. citizen. R. & D. available. Application for these jobs
Bureau of the Budget, Wash., D.C. Rockwell-Standard Corp., Total Corp. can be made in the Part-Time Em-
-Grad Students only. MA's in Gen. -BS: ChE, IE, ME, Met. Dev., Des., ployment Office, 2200 SAB, during the
Lib. Arts, Geol., Public Health & Soc. Prod., Sales. following hours: Monday through Fri
MA's & PhD's in econ., Nat. Res. & Sperry Rand Res. Center, Sudbury, day, 8 a.m. until 12 noon and 1:30
Poli. Cci. Also LLB. Mgmt. trng., Public Mass.-PhD: Communic. Sci., EE, Ma- until 5 p.m.
admin. & statistics. Men & women. terials, Meteor. R. & D. Employers desirous of hiring stu
Burroughs Corp., Jackson, Mich. - H. O. Arerice Co., Detroit, Mich. - dents for part-time or full-time ten
Degree in any field with 1 yr. acctg. BS: EM, E Physics, IE, ME, Sci. Engrg, porary work, should contact Robert
req. Sales trng. prog. & mktg. of data MS: Instrum. Dec. grads. R. & D., Parker, part-time interviewer, at 764-
processing equip. Various locations. Des., Prod. 7283.
West Virginia Pulp & Paper Co., Xerox Corp., Rochester, N.Y.-BS-MS: Students desiring miscellaneous ode
N.Y.C.-Degrees in Econ., Gen. Lib. Arts, ChE, EE & ME. BS: E Math, E Physics. jobs should consult the bulletin
Journ., Speech, etc. Mgmt. trng. & R. & D., Des., Prod, board in Room 2200, daily.
sales (inside & territorial). Through- MON.-TUES., NOV. 8-9- The University of Michigan has Im-
out U.S. (p.m. only). Calif. Institute of Tech., Jet Pro- mediate openings for Interviewers with
Sun Oil Co., Phila., Pa.-BS & MS in pulsion Lab., Pasadena-PhD: AE & the Survey Research Center of the In-
geol. & math, PhD's in geol. for prod. Astro., CE, EM, ME. MS-PhD: Com- the frScy Research.
& computer application & geophysical munic. Sci., EE, Info. & Controls, Full-time help needed until the
work. Located in Dallas, Tex. Math &'Physics. Orbit determ., trajec- middle of December to work in Jack-
Michigan National Bank, Lansing, tory anal., programming, Systems de- son, Mich. area. No experience required.
Mich.-Degrees in Econ. & Gen. Lib. sign & integration, instrum., commu- Must have available transportation. All
Arts for Mgmt. Trng. nic., elect.-chemical power, structures. travel expenses will be paid for. At-
Booth, Newspapers, Inc., Detroit - Chevron Res. Co., San Francisco & tractive hourly salary.
Men & women. Degrees in Econ., Gen. Los Angeles areas-PhD: ChE. Can For further information call 764-
Lib. Arts, Poll. Set., Speech for posi- consider non-citizens with permanent 8356,
tions in advtg., mgmt, trng., territorial visa. R. & D., Des.
sales,reporters, desk men & editors. M. W. Kellogg Co., N.Y.C.; N.J.; Long ______________
Located in 9 Michigan cities.
FRI., NOV. 5-
Bureau of the Budget, Wash., D.C.-
(See above). TUESDAY A
New Experimental College, Copen-
hagen, Denmark-Information on study
abroad program given at interviews be-
tween 2 & 4 p.m. Group meeting at 4 NOTICES C. ERIC L INCOLI
p.m. Students & teachers for 6 mos.
semester to study process of learning
and related areas.
USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN-
ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially
VIEWS-Seniors & grad students, please recognized and registered student orga-
sign schedule posted at 128-H West nizatLions only. Forms are available in
Engrg Room 1011 SAB.

Nuelear Weapons No
Real Threatt India,
By CONRAD FINK clear arming of India and allow-
Associated Press News Analyst ing leading members of the rul-
NEW DELHI - India's strate- ing Congress party to sign peti-
'dtions demanding Shastri take the
gi2ts apparently have decided step
Communist China poses no im-
mediate nuclear threat-and pos- Indiavs nuclear scientists are be-
sibly that the United States will lieved to have taken their tech-
i nkrniques to the point where a final,
atomic war on its Asian neigh- inexpensive push could produce

ow

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.
,
,
,
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nuclear devices.

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Tanis reasoning seems behind in New Delhi
Prime Minister Lal Bahadur The consensus in New Delhi
Shastri's reiteration that India's seemed to be that while it is cheap
policy is not to manufacture nu- and easy to set off a crude nu-
clear weapons. clear device, it would not be at
Re-examine Policy all easy or cheap for impoverished
It is authoritatively learned this India to reorient its military along
policy has been re-examined in nuclear lines.
recent weeks andrthat Shastri's Until last month, there had
government was split on the ques- been growing sentiment in New
tion of whether to take India Deln thtina ment to puw
into the nuclearcl. Delhi that China meant to push
nt the nuear club. India to the wall. Then Commu-
Anst the height of India's war with ni China withdrew several ulti-
Pakistan last month and simul- matums it had presented to In-
taneous confrontation with Com-dia.
munist China, right-wing pressure _
mounted on Shastri.
Public Opinion READ
His government sampled public
opinion, permitting one cabinet THE DA I LY
member to publicly call for nu-

ND WEDNESDAY, NOV. 2 and 3

N

He's a-'newspaper man
~he's on the way up"l
he isn't a writer
it's true.
You don't have to be a journalism major to carve
out a successful career in the newspaper business.
With the Booth Newspaper group, there are many
fine career opportunities available to college gradu-
ates who are not interested in writing. Among them,
for example, are openings in accounting and book-
keeping, finance and credit, retail, national and
classified advertising or in the circulation end of the
business.
Booth, with its nearly 2,000 employees and nine
newspapers in as many important Michigan cities,
offers an outstanding training program that takes you
through the entire "business side" of its organization.
Salaries, pensions, and medical benefits are fully
comparable with any other business field you may
consider.
You'll like the newspaper business. It can provide
you with challenging opportunities as big as you
desire ... with present and future financial stability
and all against an exciting backdrop of local and
national events.
When you work on a newspaper you never have
to ask, "what's new?" You know ... because you're
part of it.,
Ask your Placement Officer for the date and time of
Booth Newspapers' visit to your campus, or write
Coordinator, Training Program, Booth Newspapers, Inc.,
Suite 2100, 211 West Fort Street, Detroit, Michigan 48226.
BOOTH NE WSPAPERS
THE ANN ARBOR NEWS " THE BAY CITY TIMES " THE FLINT
JOURNALRTHE GRAND RAPIDS PRESS T JACKSON CITIZEN
PATRIOT " KALAMAZOO GAZETTE " THE MUSKEGON
CHRONICLE " THE SAGINAW NEWS " THE YPSILANTI PRESS

FRI., NOV. 5-
Air Reduction Co., Inc., East & Mid Society of Automotive Engineers,
west-Any' Degree: ChE, Mat'Is., ME, Meeting: Robert C. Stempel speaking
Met., Chem.-(Phys., Inorg. & Org.), on the Oldsmobile Tornado engineering
Physics. BS: E Physics, IE. MBA w/ design, Nov. 2, 7:30 p.m., Multipurpose
Tech. Undergrad. degree or bkgd. in Room, UGLI,
Finance or Marketing. R. & D., Des.,
Prod., Sales & Bus. or Financial Plan- Finance Club, Finance Club presen-
ning Analysts for MBA's. tation. Speaker, Jack W. Whittle, as-
sistant chairman of the board of Con-
Cornell Aeronautical Lab., Inc., Buffa- tinental Illinois Bank and Trust Co.,
lo, N.Y.-Any Degree: AE & Astro., EE, Chicago, will speak on "The Finan-
ME. MS-PhD: Math, Physics, Psych. R. cial Institution and the Community,"
& D. Tues., Nov. 2, 7:30 p.m., 131 Bus. Ad.
Diamond Alkali Co,, Hdqts., Cleveland,
Ohio & throughout U.S.-Any Degree: Graduate Student Council, Canadian-
ChE. BS-MS: EE & ME. BS: IE. R. & American relations seminar, Nov. 3,
D., Des., Prod., Sales, Tech. Serv., Trng. 5,1-8:30 p.m., University of Wind-
Program. sor. Barry Bluestone speaking Wed.,
Grumman Aircraft Engrg, Corp., Beth- Nov. 3 at 1 p.m.; Don Nulston speak-
page & Peconic, N.Y.-Any Degree: AE ing Wed. at 4 p.m.
& Astro., CE, EE, EM, & ME. Prof.: * * *
Applied Mech. BS-MS: IE. MS. Info. Guild House, Tuesday evening sem-
& Controls. BS: E Physics. No ROTC inar, "The Secular City," Tues., Nov. 2,
students. R. & D., Des., Prod., Test. 7-8:30 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe.
IIT Research Institute, Chicago - * 4
Any Degree: CE, EE, EM, Mat'ls., ME, La Sociedad Hispanica, Lectura por
Met., Math, Microbiol. PhD: Physics, Luis Emili Soto, "Coloquio Latin-Amer-
Nuclear. MS-PhD: Communli. Sci., In- icano en Italia," Miercoles, el 3 de
fo. & Controls, Meteor. & Ocean., An- Nov., 8 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg.,
alytical & Phys, Chem. BS: ChE, E * * *
Math. HR & D. Physical Therapy Club, Monthly meet-
International Nickel Co., Inc., Hunt- ing. Dr. Ray will speak on diseases
ington Alloy Products Div., Hunting- found in the school system, everyone
ton, W. Va.-BS-MS: Met. BS: ChE, welcome, Nov. 3, 7:30 p.m., Conference
EE, IE, ME. R. & D., Des., Prod., Sales. Room, Physical Therapy Department of
Parke, Davis & Co~ Detroit, Ann Ar- University Hospital
bor,Rochester, N.Y. (p.m.)-BS: ChE, Young Americans for FreedomMem-
CE, IE, ME. H. & D., Des., Prod.besi ne gsfrFednM
bership meeting, Nov. 3, 7:30 p.m.,
Sun Oil Co., Prod.-Dallas, Texas- Room 3-D, Michigan Union.
MS-PhD: ChE. R. & D.
Sun Oil Co., R. & D., Mfg. Div. -

TWO UNIVERSITY LECTURES:
TUESDAY, 4:15 P.M.:
"Black, Nationalism, Black Chauvinism,
and Negritude"
WEDNESDAY, 7:30 P.M.:
"The Reconstruction of the Negro Family:
A New Task for the Civil Rights Movement"
MULTIPURPOSE ROOM, UNDERGRAD LIBRARY,
3rd floor

Presently Professor of Sociology at
Portland State College, Lincoln is
known particularly for his two books,
The Black Muslims in America and
My Face Is Black. Lincoln has done
graduate work in Social Science, Law,
Religion and Philosophy, Social Ethics,
and Education and Guidance; has
taught, guest lectured, appeared on
radio and television, contributed to
professional publications, and has re-
ceived numerous honors and degrees.
In 1957 he also became an ordained
minister in the Methodist Church.

WEDNESDAY NOON BOO KDISCUSSION:
12:00 Noon, Michigan League, Room 2
C. ERIC LINCOLN will discuss his own work;
"THE BLACK MUSLIMS IN AMERICA"

4

Above programs part of Fall Program
sponsored by The Office of Religious Affairs,
The University of Michigan.

r

I

IQC-ASSEMBLY
SING,
Theme "The Four Seasons"
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5
8:00 P.M.
UNION BALLROOM
50c Admission

MAKE SURE YOU
DON'T MISS THAT
IMPORTANT
PHONE CALL!
Telephone answering service is now
within reach of every residential
phone! New, low rates based on
actual hours you use your answer-
ing service each month makes this
possible. Once you are connected to
the answering service, you just call
our answering service operator when
you go out for dinner, class, or for
the weekend and she takes all your
calls while you are away. The fol-
lowing low monthly rates'are based
on the average hours per day you
use the service:
2 hours per day or less-only $8
2 to 4 hours per day-only $14
4 to 6 hours per day-only $16
6 to 8 hours per day-only $18
24 hours per day-only $22
Call 665-8657
For Your Service To Begin!
AAA ANSWERING SERVICE, INC.
106'East Liberty

.1 1

*

0

11

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YOUR ARE INVITED TO ATTEND THE
Canda-mrcnRelations
Seminar
NOV. 3, 4, 5, at the UNIVERSITY OF WINDSOR

COLLEGE
TEACHING
COOPERATIVE
COLLEGE REGISTRY,
a free service of 10 de-
nominations to some 200
church-related liberal arts
colleges throughout the
United States. Adminis-
trative and faculty posi-
tions in all areas of cur-
riculum. Ph.D. level or
near desired. Salaries

THREE REASONS WHY YOU'LL LIKE OUR
Bachelor Bundle
1. Everything comes back to you clean and fresh and just
raring to be shown off.
2. Our sympathetic seamstresses, mindful that a needle is a
lethal weapon in the hands of a mere male, replace all
missing buttons and make minor repairs ... on the house.
3. You'll like our prices. You'll agree our Bachelor Bundle
is a best buy.
Just ask for Kyer's "BACHELOR BUNDLE." We'll do the rest.
*The cuties in the picture, we'll have to confess, were put in to catch
your eye. But girls do like men who are nicely groomed!

*
4

$6,000 $17,000

plus

I

SPEAK ING:

HARRY JOHNSON, new chancellor of'
Political Science: Wed., Nov. 3

The London School of Economics &
at 8:30

fringe benefits. Inquire
at Stanford University
Placement Services, rela-
tive to interview schedule
Nov. 8, 9, 10, 11.

BARRY BLUESTONE, speaking on Financial Aid To The University

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