100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

February 09, 1967 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1967-02-09

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAGE EIGHT

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1967

PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1987

HOOVER CLAIMS CONSPIRACY:
Charge Communists Disrupt Universities

Collegiate Press Service
WASHINGTON-FBI Director J.
Edgar Hoover announced recent-
ly that "the Communist conspir-
acy is reaping large dividends from
its persistent efforts to gain a
toehold on college and university
campuses."
In a statement for the FBI Law
Enforcement Bulletin, Hoover
charged "Communist" groups with
a "dogged determination to dis-
rupt, thr6ugh mass agitation, the
orderly processes of our education-
al system."'
Hoover said student idealism was
being exploited for Communist
purposes by a number of organiza-
tions operating on campuses. Ie
specifically named the W. E. B.
Dubois Clubs of America, Stu-
dents for a Democratic Society
(SDS), the Progressive Labor Par-

ty (PLP), and the Socialist Work- hearings on the so-called
ers Party (SWP). bill."

"Pool

An FBI spokesman said the bu-
reau could not comment on what
steps were being taken to reverse
the trend seen by Hoover.
Meanwhile, staff director of the
House Un-American Activities
Committee (HUAC) denied that
the committee had ever subpoen-
aed membership lists of campus
organizations opposed to the wa'r
in Viet Nam.
Committee director Francis B.
McNamara said in an interview
that the "official applications for
campus recognition" of student
groups at Stanford University, the
University of Michigan, the Uni-
versity of California at Berkeley,
and Haverford College were sub-
poenaed prior to last spring's

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Joe
Pool (D-Tex) would have made it
illegal to send aid to the enemy or
interfere with military troop and
material movements during a per-
iod of undeclared war. It passed
the House but did not receive Sen-
ate action.
McNamara said HUAC was not
interested in lists of general mem-
bership, since most members would
not have the knowledge of activi-
ties in which the committee was
interested.
Those groups whose applications
were subpoenaed were reportedly
engaged in activities which would
have been made illegal under the
"Pool bill."
At present, McNamara stated,

HUAC has no hearings planned in-
volving campus groups.
The subpoenas of the applica-
tions lists at the four schools be-
cause of the "Pool bill' caused a
furor within the academic com-
munity.r
LastyNovember, the American
Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) sent
a letter to 900 college and univer-
sityp residents urging them to re-
sist HUAC subpoenas " in every
possible legal manner."
In January, the U.S. National
Student Association (NSA) an-
nounced it was sending a letter to
all university presidents and stu-
dent body presidents supporting
the ACLU statement.
The ACLU called the "Pool bill"
subpoenas "one of the most seri-
ous breaches of academic freedom
of students in recent decades.

chemical, civil, electrical, electronics,
industrial, mechanical, metallurgical, welding
engineers and naval architects
investigate career opportunities at
San Francisco Bay Naval Shipyard,.
the Navy's largest industrial activity.

". .... ...... .... ... ~ ,, g.. 4~.. 4,, , 4 C .444~ ..., ..t.,..A.~)4M1V . . . . . . . .. ... . . ..:::>J:.Y: '. ....,,,....:n:Jlff li .:,:n... ".... ..Nf~Y
y4 ,fr{,. . n r.. . . .n..r 4. . . . . .":.. . . ....,.. ...,... ..44. .. . . . . . . . . . . . ....... ........................

The Daily Offilcal 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.rFriday
for Saturday and Sunday. General
Notices may be published a maxi-
mum of two times (in request; Day
Calendar items appear once only.
Studentorganization notices are not
accepted for publication. For more
information call 764-8429.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9
Day Calendar
Cinema Guild-Orson Welles's "The
Trial": Architecture And., 7 and 9:05
p.m.
Dept. of Speech University Players
Performance-Arthur Miller's "Incident
at Vichy": Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre,
8 p.m.
College Band Director's National As-
sociation Convention Concert-Michigan
State Concert Band. Leonard Falcone,
conductor; University of Minnesota
Concert Band; Frank Bencriscutto, con-
ductor: Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m.
ACS Lecture-Dr. J. J. Katz of the
Argonne National Laboratory, Chicago,
Ill., "N. M. R. Studies on, Chlorophl,"
8 p.m. in Room 1306 Chemistry Bldg.
General Notices
Southern Asia Club: There will be a
bag lunch on Friday. at noon in the
Commons Room of Lane Hall. Prof.
William Malm will speak on "The
Music of Southeast Asia." A Ifim, "The
Music of Thailand," will follow the lec-
ture. The public is invited.
Psychology Colloquium: Dr. Martin
Seligman, University of Pennsylvania,
will speak on "Learned Helplessness in
the Dog," Fri., Feb. 10, 4:15 p.m., And.
B, Angell Hall. Coffee will be served
from 3:45 to 4':15 in Room 3417 Mason
Hall.
Student Government Council Approval'
of the following student sponsored
events becomes effective 24 hours after
the publication of this notice. All pub-
licity for these events must be with-
held until the approval has become ef-
fective.
Approval request forms for student
sponsored events are available in Room
1011 of the SAB.
Gomberg House, South Quad, TG,

Feb. 10, 3:30-5:30 p.m., South Quad
Party Room.
Placement
POSITION OPENINGS:
YM-YWHA and Jewish Commnunity
Centrs, Throughout U.S. and Canada-
Opportunities for professional advance-
ment in Health and Physical Ed. Dept.
of Personnel and Trng. Services of
National. Jewish Welfare Board. PhEd.
and Recreation majors.
Standard Oil Co., Ohio, Cleveland,
Ohio-Bachelors levels in Econ., Engrg.,
Chem., Bus., and most technical fields
for numerous positions.
Office of Planning Coordination, State
of N.Y., Albany, N.Y.-Cartographer, re-
sent grad or sr. available in Feb. or
June. BA in Cartog., Geog., or Graphics
with fin. 1 course in cartog. Knowl.
of aerial photography useful.
Vestal Laboratories, St. Louis, Mo. -
Research Chem.. Organic Chem. BS/MS.
Research Microbiologist, BS/MS, R. & D.
in Biocidal agents.
Atlas Press Co., Kalamazoo, Mich. -
Assistant to sales manager, expanding
metalworking industry.
Tech Netics (Manufacturers Agents),
Clawson, Mich.-Two openings, one De-
troit, otller in Mich. for sales and pur-
chasing exper. Man 24 yrs. & up, shop
or tooling exper. helpful.
Naval War College, Newport, R.I.-
Reference Librarian, submit form 57,
closing date Feb. 13.
Colonial Products Co. (Yorktowne
Kitchens), Dallastown, Pa. - Manage-
ment positions, BS Forestry or Wood
Products, relocate center Pa.
Falconbridge Nickel Mines; Ltd., Tor-
onto, Canada-Transportation planning
specialist. Post-grad in trans, mgmt. or
engineering-bus. admin. bkgd. 10 plus
yrs. exper. required.
Ohio Chemical & Surgical Equipment
Co., Madison, Wis.-Acctg., Expediter,
Meth. & Plan. Engr., Product. Engrg.,
Asst. Prod. Mktg. Mgr. Appropriate
Bachelor level degrees and 2 yrs. exper.
Riverdale Country School for Girls,
Bronx, N.Y.-Administrative Asst., de-
gree any field and some office exper.
with typing.
Local Psychiatric Foundation - Ad-
ministrative 'Asst. to president, handle
membership and chapters, quarterly
newsletter and magazine and write
booklets. BA Engl., Psych, or Journ.
*M * *
For further information please call
764-7460, General Division, Bureau of
Appointments, 3200 SAB.
SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE:
212 SAB--
U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, Sche-
nectady, N.Y.-Jr., Sr. & Grads in Bus.
'Ad., Public Ad., Econ., Hist., Poli. Sci.,

Acctg., Law, Chem., Civil, Elect., Indust.,
Mechanical, Metallurgy and Nuclear En-
gineering, Phys. Chem. and Math. Ap-
plications due before Feb. 28.
Parks and. Recreation, Skokie, Ill. -
Male & female for swimming inst., play-
ground leaders, bathhouse attendants,
iay camp counselors and pool life-
rmU4rLa , i YP in i rnlUin4 Park- That1

13, 1:30-4:30 p.m. to interview interest-
ed students. Please call the Buerau for
an appointment, 764-7460. Three plans
for gaining necessary teaching exper-
ience. 1. Internship with salary. 2.
Inner-city fellowship with stipend. 3.
Student teaching. Tuition scholarships
available.

ENJOY UNMATCHED POTENTIAL FOR PRO-
FESSIONAL AND PERSONAL GROWTH. You'll
be challenged by the variety offered in the de-
sign, construction, overhaul and conversion of
Polaris missile submarines, guided missile frig-
ates, destroyers, aircraft carriers, deep sub-
mergence craft, Sea Lab II, etc.
APPLY YOUR TALENTS TO IMPORTANT PRO-
GRAMS: Nuclear power, ship structures, elec-
trical/electronic systems, missile systems, ma-
rine/mechanical design, welding, chemistry

(analytical) and metallurgical inspection and
test, quality assurance, process methods and
standards, tools and plant utilization.
LIVE IN THE FAMED BAY AREA. San Fran-
cisco Bay Naval Shipyard has two work sites
located 40 miles apart: Hunters Point in San
Francisco and Mare Island in Vallejo, Cali-
fornia. Each location has ready access to the
cultural advantages of San Francisco. All types
of recreation from ocean surfing to skiing on
the slopes of the Sierras are within easy driv.
ing distance.

guards, must ixe in ;5ox eark ust.
National Y.W.C.A. Recruiter - Here ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER-
Feb. 10 in the afternoon. VIEWS: Make interview appointments
Children's Aid Society, New York - at Room 128-H. West Engineering Bldg.
Social work coed camp. Counselors and FEB. 16- H
unit leaders, program specialist in arts American Oil Co.-Res. & Dev.
and crafts, forestry-conservation, music Control Data Corp.
and nature, interviewing Feb. 10 a.m. Crane Co.
& p.m. Dow Chemical Co.
* $°*IBM Corp.-BS & MS.
Further information and details at IBM Corp.-PhD's.
Summer Placement Service, 212 SAB, Lockheed Aircraft Corp.-Georgia Div.
Lower Level. Magnavox Co.
Standard Oil Co. of Calif. & Chevron
ANNOUNCEMENT: Res. Co.
Attention Seniors Interested in MAT Union Carbide Corp.-Mining & Met-
Program, Reed College, Portland, Ore. als.
-The director of the Master of Arts United States Steel Corp.
in Teaching Program at Reed College U.S. Navy-San Francisco Bay Naval
will be ' at the Bureau on Mon., Feb. Shipyard.
UNION-LEAGUE
II LITTLE CLUB
AZ - Kinvades G
{ NORTH CAMPUS t
JAZZ-FOLK SINGING

Representative on campus
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16
for interview, contact your placement office
An Equal Opportunity Employer. U. S. Citizenship Required.

COMMONS
SNACK BAR

FRIDAY, 9-12 P.M.
FEBRUARY 10

r

FLORENCE Bridal Shop
Selection of Bridal
& Cocktail DRESSES
Custom and Ready-Made Gowns
For Bride and Bridesmaids
Also After 5 Gowns
662-5878
303 S. Main
Corner Main & Liberty
Open Mon. & Fri. evenings til 9

BOUGHT ANY EARRINGS
LATELY ?
for THE GROOVIEST selection
of unusual pierced earrings
come to
ca- a - Pea

*only $70 O
HURRY UP-SIGN NOW
SPECIAL
* ROUND TRIP-Willow Run-Freeport
DC9 Pan Jet
* FIVE NIGHTS-New "Freeport Inn'
(3 per room)--Pool-Scuba Diving-
Golf, etc.
* GROUND TRANSPORTATION-Airport
to hotel
includes luggage and tips
and back to airport
* KITCHENETTES-Save money on your
own meals and beverages if you wish.
* MUSIC & DANCING-In your hotel
or a few feet away.
* CASINOS-Duty free shopping
* DEPART-Wednesday evening, March 1
* RETURN-Early Monday morning,
March 6
Sponsored and escorted by
UNIVERSITY SERVICES ASSOCIATION, Inc.
A not for Profit Corporation,
Qualified in the State of Michigan

Quo Vadis*?

I!

Plum Street
Detroit

109 S Fourth Ave.
near Huron, *in Ann Arbor

Open Monday-Saturday 10 A.M.-6 P.M.

You know it.

After graduation you'll have

THE INDIVIDUAL AND HIS RELIGION
(A PSYCHOLOGICAL INTERPRETATION)

many paths to follow. And the path you
could affect the rest of your entire life.

a take

A seminar in religion, sponsored by the Office of Re-
ligious Affairs, and open to all students. The six
seminar sessions, led by Lloyd W. Putnam, will be de-
voted to a psychological understanding of the nature
and functioning of religion in the mature personality.
Basis for the presentations and discussions will be Gor-
don W. Allport's book, "The Individual and His Reli-
gion" (MacMillan paperback).

Right now you're probably looking for all the
information about these paths that you can
find. So here's some about IBM-and you.
The basic fact is simply this: Whatever your
area of study, whatever your immediate com-
mitments after graduation, chances are there's
a career for you with IBM.

That's it. Whether you're interested in Com-
puter Applications, Programming, Finance
and Administration, Research and Develop-
ment, Manufacturing or Marketing, there
could be a career for you with IBM.
Another important point to consider: IBM is
THE leader in THE major growth industry:
information handling and control. The indus-
try itself may not mean much to you, just yet.
But let us tell you about it.

Call or See Our Campus Representative:

II

I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan