PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, J t . .....r....._ U. S. Navy Marine Engineering Laboratory -on the waterfront at Annapolis opportunities for el1Iectrical engineers (POWER) Starting salaries begin at $6,387 If you are a candidate for a BS, MS, or PhD in Electircal Engineering (Power), we invite you to consider a reward- ing career in . the design and development of electrical power equipment and systems for Naval ships and spe- cialized vehicles. Work will include integration of the specific equipment into an overall-electrical power system, the system's per- formance and reactions to other systems in, the vehicle and required capabilities to accomplish the vehicles' over- all objectives. These systems will be applied to large surface vessels. nuclear submarines, small, deep-diving, special purpose vehicles, or vehicles for other special purposes. The technical equipment involved can include electric motors, A sC generators, motor generator sets and their associated speed and voltage controls, electric power control and conversion equipment. Each appointee receives the complete benefits of career Civil Service and regular salary increases in grade. Appli- cants must be college graduates. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color or national origin. Write to: W. M. SIESKO Head, Employment Branch U. S. Navy Marine Engineering Laboratory Annapolis,.Maryland 21402 ExCoillentalolege Seminar -PT--- Seeks Higher Education Value Wi By RITA DERSHOWITZ Collegiate Press Service SAN FRANCISCO - Ten stu- dents cluster around a seminar, table in a classroom. One man among them must be the profes- sor, but only because he is about 20 years older than anyone else in the room He does nothing to direct the discussion. At this third meeting of the class, officially titled Seminar in Higher Education, the members are still arguing with each other over what they should be doing. They finally decide that a class- room and class meeting times areI artificial ways of learning any- way; they will work with each other independently and come to-I gether when they have something to tell the others. A Free University course some- where? Not exactly. It's a regular course offering of the education department of San Francisco State! College, but it was organized be- cause of the Experimental Col- tege, a student-initiated education- al reform movement at State. Members of the seminar are all leaders in the Experimental Col- lege, receiving credit for the course from the education department. "I find it surprising," said Prof. Richard Axen, the seminar's teach- er, "that people who are com- mitted to a theory of non-author- itarian learning, and who have had experience with that method, still cannot take the freedom of this course and use it to do what they want." Paradox Professor Axen's seminar points up a paradox of the Experimental College, which operates on the as- students have the responsibility. sumption of student responsibility The result is that courses we de- for education. At the same time, however, the very existence of such a seminar in a"college department, indicates the extent to which stu- dents have raised important ques- tions about the quality of learn- ing and teaching to an entire campus. Initiated three semesters ago by1 the Associated Students, the Ex- perimental College currently en- rolls over 1000 students out of 18,360 at State, all of them com- muters. It offers about 70 courses, taught by students, faculty mem-1 bers and outside specialists. Cred- it is available in some courses for those who wish it through proced- ures in the regular College that allow faculty members to grantl credit for independent study. 1 velop here, and prove can work, are being incorporated into the regular curriculum." A non-protest stance is prob- ably the key to the EC's distine- tion from other "free university" movements. Although many of its organizers have been involved in civil rights or radical political ac- tivities, they have not created a new sounding-board for the Left. Nor do they define themselves as opposition to an enemy institu- tion. "We're trying to work in a real situation," Vozick explained. "You have to define politics by what you want to build, not just what Iyou oppose. The game is not be- Itween the bad guys and the good guys, but it involves a bad struc- *1 ,,,, II w Courses this semester include a ture in which everyone, faculty seminar in mass communication, as well as students, are bound in." organized by the staff of a local Political Base non-commercial radio station; classes in Non-Objective Litera- Jim Nixon, one of the founders ture; the College and War; Meta- of the EC and currently president Hamet:TheHisorial eveop-of the Associated Students, sees Ham~let; The Historical, Develop-thExeinalClgesapo ment and Social Significance of the Experimental College as a po- Black Power; Propaganda, Brain- litical base for changing the of- washing and the Political Meta- ficial college. phor; Gestalt Therapy; the Ken- "The Experimental College is a nedy Assassination, led by one of way of building an example of the growing band of "sleuths" in- what we want, and then using vestigating the assassination on that example to test our thinking their own; and Conscientious Ob- about education and also to in- jector counseling. fluence the regular college," Nix- In the campus bookstore, a on said. "We need allies wherever special section for EC courses of- they may come from; we can co- fers Bob Dylan's latest recording, operate with any elements of the poetry by John Lennon and the institution that help us and fight 1966 Popular Photography Annual. any parts that don't." Not Protest Movement The double role of the EC-as "The Experimental College is a testing ground for educational not a protest movement," said innotation and a political lever- notha protesk moveent"- sid- has provoked a debate among EC Michael Vozick, a scientist-turned- leaders. Cynthia Nixon, whose in- humanist who wasattracted to volvement as a founder of the Ex- San Francisco State by the EC perimental College stems from her and is now a graduate student academic interests in the psy- there. "We are intimately engaged cholog flann n ecig in craetingasiti olenewhich is battling to make educational in creating a situation in which'quality the first priority for the - -~- College. We have no political power un- less we do something good educa- S U B J ECTS tionally," she said. "What we've done is create an atmosphere in WANTED which people can organize new classes, and the range of choices is boradened. But it's a broadening forsimle xpeimet ivoling of the same kind of thing we've sensitization to e chemicalvNo always had; new classes are not systematically or characteristical- drugs or shots; drops of the ly different, We haven't yet creat- chemical ore put on the skin. eda nttto htmksi Chemistry students not eligible. easier to do whatever a student Must be 21 or over, and plan wants to do." to be in town for at least 3 Ao I I! WELCOME BACK OLD& NEW STUDENTS KEEP YOUR CAR CLEAN- DO IT YOURSELF I, . . . Don't Just Wash It-Wax It, Too! months. Male subjects only at this time. --- - ------ Attempt To Close Book Gap In Underdeveloped Nations OPEN 24 HOURS 25c HIGH PAY: $15-$50 for a series of 5-minute visits. (Depend- ing on length of series) This is especially lucrative if you are in the Medical Cen- ter area. If interested, send a post cord with name, address, age, and phone number to: Supplies of All Kinds S LATER'S LIBERTY CAR WASH. By RODNEY ANGOVE Associated Press Staff Writer PARIS - In non-Communist Asia, only one-ninth of a book is published per inhabitant per year compared to 7.7 in Britain-that's a rough idea of the "book gap" of the underdeveloped countries. The gap is even wider in Africa, according to statistics of the United Nations Education, Scien- tific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). South America is not quite so far behind. If imported books are counted for the same countries of Asia- 318 W. Liberty (3 blocks west of Main) Sensitization Study, Dept. of Dermatoloqy U. of M. Medical Center {Please do not phone) BOOK STORE 336 S. State Street ... .___ .._."_"Y. ... .... _ ....... .. _. .. ... .. Um JONES & LAUGHLIN STEEL CORPORATION Will Be Interviewing On BOOKS and SUPPLIES Jainuary 18, 1967 Candidates For Managerment Training Programs In Fields Of Industrial Engineering Industrial Relations Metallurgy Stainless Steel Sales Stainless Steel Production Design Engineering they amount to 25 per cent of local production - the consumption would be one book per person every six years. The "book gap" is measured mostly in terms of the number of titles published, an approximate figure in most cases. At any rate,the.UNESCO sta- tistics tend to show the "book gap' as closely interwoven into the circle of illiteracy and pov- erty. The countries with the low- est paper consumption generally have the highest illiteracy rate and the lowest school enrollment. But the local publishing industry forms an important element in the struggle to raise the educa- tional level and the standard of living. In Asia, local printers can sup- ply only about one-third of the current demand for textbooks. They will surely find themselves in even tighter straits as educa- tional efforts spread further through ever increasing popula- tions. Luckily, some form of the pub- lishing business exists already in most countries. The problem is to expand and modernize existing facilities, and widen distribution. The UNESCO study on Asia is most detailed yet on book publish- ing in underdeveloped countries. It was prepared for a Tokyo meeting in May of experts from 20 countries. Similar meetings are planned for other regions, the next being Africa in 1968. Communist China was not in- eluded in the study because it is sot a member of UNESCO. But it was believed that book produc- tion theie was much higher than the Asian average-possibly high enough to include - the country amongths world's top 10 book producers. The eyperts in Tokyo agreed that a "(rash program" is needed to increase production of textbooks for primary education and liter- acy courses. The program was not defieed but each country was asked to draw up a book develop- ment plan, and set up textbook and graphic arts organizations. The local printing facilities of Asia are generally creaking, un- der-utilized shops set up decades ago to l nt pamphlets and hand sewn beck: on religion, mythol- kV Isb 0'MEDICINE 0 DENTISTRY O USN Please Check With Placement Office For More Details An Equal Opportunity Employer Our store is specially R w___n._ equipped to fill your every need, and a well informed staff, including MEDICAL and DENTAL students, I I PUBLIC HEALTH '3 A 0. will serve you. I I Ia .-. .......................... .... - - -aam . ... ... a . .. U......I f) 11