PAGE TEN DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN' THE MICHIGAN DAILY TTESDAY MRCH "7 199 .UU.7LrAZ iKl [intrtl I 1 JY?.7. i ' Across Ohio Plane 'Crash Kills /'Y '/33 'h 1Er £ Another Musket: 'Anything Goes 0 (Continued from Page 3) Chemical Abstracts Service, Columbus, Ohio-p.m. only. Male & female. BA/I adv. degrees Libr. Sci., aMth. Biochem. i.nd all fields of Chem. for Computing, Libr., Tech. Writing, Editing & Syst. Analysis. Phillip Morris International, N.Y.C. -a.m. only. Male & female. BA/adv. degrees Math or Bus. for Corp. Fi- nance, Econ. Anal., International Bus., Adv., Mktg. Res. & Retailing. U.S. Army Tank Automotive Center, Warren, Mich.-BA/adv. degrees Econ., Gen. Lib. Arts, Math, Poll. Sci., Psych. for Computing, Mgmt. Trng., Personnel, Production & Purchasing. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE: 212 SAB- ANNOUNCEMENTS: ColilegeInterview Forms. Please come in and pick up your Mutual Life Insurance Co. of N.Y. -Interviewing at the Bureau of Ap- pointments, summer trainee program for actuarial science majors. COMING INTERVIEWS: TUES., MARCH 7-- Camp Ohiyesa, Mich.-Boys. YMCA. Detroit, 1-5 p.m. WED., MARCH 8- Jack Roberts Pool Service, Marming- ton, Mich.-Car necessary, mainten-, ane work on pools, good outside work all summer. Camp Dunmore, Vt.-Coed. 3-5 p.m. Mi. age 20, counselors waterfront, trips, nature, land sports,d ramatics and mu- sic. THURS., MARCH 9- Camp Fiesta, Wis.-Girls. 10 a.m. -5 p.n. 20 or over, 2 riding inst.,1spec. in archery, tennis, sailing, skiing and pro- gram director. Pine River CanoeCamp, Mich;-Boys. 1-5 p.m. 20 or older, with Sr. Life Sav- ing Certificate. FRI., MARCH 10- Camp Rockwood, Canada-1 0a.m.-5 p.m. Coed. Counselors male & female. Swimming instr., sailing, riding, radio ;tation, science, music director, male or female.3 Browns Lake Resort, Wis.-Waitresses, maids, playground inst., female swim- ming inst., male or female bellhop, barboy. NOTICE OF OPENINGS: Ford Motor Co., Saline, Mich.-Jr./. Litton Systems, Inc. - Guidance & Controls Systems Div. Melpar, Inc. Page Communications, Inc. Pan American Petroleum Corp. Sanders Associates, Inc. I Symington Wayne Corp. 5. (, rrLE) (,p f United Airlines. .... Universal Oil Products Co. U.S. Govt.-Federal Water Pollution TUESDAY, MARCH 7 U.S. Govt.-Naval Ship Systems Com- 4:15 p.n-William H. Marsh, mand. Colonel USMC, United Nations Sr./Grad in EE, ME or IE, work im- Truce Supervisor Organization, Three students returning to the mediately at close of school. JwUniversity after spring break were One Male Student Needed-AssistantJerusalem164-66, will speak on editorial work in Europe an dIsrael "Keeping the Truce in the Middle among the seven Michigan resi- for summer, travel expenses paid. East" at Lane Hall Auditorium, dents who died in Sunday night's Univ. of Pacific, Stockton, Calif. - 7:00 and 9:05 p.m.-The Ann crash of a Lake Central Airlines Mental Health Summer Work-Study program, ary upperclassman, applica- Arbor Film Festival will be held plane near Marseilles, Ohio. tions close March 31. in the Architecture Aud. The students were: Miss Cheri Washtenaw County Citizens' Commit- 8:30 p.m.-The School of Music'Lynn O'Brien, '70 (A&D): Miss tee for Econ. Oppor.-Seeking director Martha Muenzer '70; and Michael for Head Start Program. Contact of- willpresent a concert by the Um- tne ahe fice at 515 Catherine St. versity Woodwind Quintet at Melton, '69. Investigators for the Glacier National Park, Mont.-Appli- Rackham Lecture Hall. Civil Aeronautics Board and the cations now available at Summer Place- 8:30 p.m. - The Professional Federal Bureau of Investigation' ment Service. 83 ~. -TePoesoa Hamilton Stores, Yellowstone Park, Theatre Program will present the dug through the mud to try to find Wyo--Director of Summer Placement Play of the Month Performance an explanation for the crash! Service will interview students inter- "Half A Sixpence" at Hill Aud. which killed all 38 aboard. ested. ,-. . Forestrand Conservation Students Five minutes before the crash -Opening for summer in boys' N.Y. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8 the pilot, Capt. John Horn, had camp, counselors also.eh Lodge of the Four Seasons, Lake 4:10 p.m.-Hans Apel, professor radioed he was Climbig from Ozark, Mo.-Male & female openings, emeritus of economics, University 8,000 to 10,000 feet, apparently to good pay. Life guards, waiters, wai- of Bridgeport, will speak on "Ger- avoid storms which swirled sleet tresses, marina, stables, landscaping. man Reunification as a Problem and snow over the northwest Ohio. Applications and details at Summer for U.S. Foreign Policy" at 200 The air traffic control center in Placement Service, 212 SAB, Lower Level. Lane Hall. Clevelan lost control just before ENGINEERING PLACEMENT INTER- 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-The Ann the estimated time of the first ex- VIEWS: Make interview appointments Arbor Film Festival will be held plosion in the plane. The cockpit at Room 128-H, West Engineering Bldg. in the Architecture Aud. voice recorder found in the wreck- MARCH 13- 8:30 p.m.-University Musical age and the flight recording head- E. W. Bliss Co. , Society will present Jose Greco ing, altitude, speed and other in- cific R.R. aand Spanish Dance Company in formation are expected to help de- CTS Corp. Hill Aud. I termine the cause of the crash. Detroiter Mobile Homes (Bureau of __------~----------- Appointments.). Federal-Mogul Corp.> Pg Foster-Wheeler Corp. Jervis R. Webbb Co. Kellogg Co.b o. Sparton Electronics Corp. U.S. Govt.-Air Force Recruiting.C U. S. Govt.--Nvy-Bureap of Shisa. aI U.S. Govt.-NaBureaf bipoas. U.S. Govt.-Naval Ship Systems Com- mand. U.S. Govt.-Norfolk Naval Shipyard By NEAL BRUSS said in an alumni celebration topic (Nuclear Power Div.).ky The $5 billion the government session over the weekend. MARsChalmers Manufacturing Co. spends on the space program an- White said that the money has Boise Cascade Corp. (Brueau of Ap-. nually is a good investment and returned several valuable benefits: pointments). not a waste of taxes, Gen. Ed --a communications satellite Bristol Laboratories, Inc.w d White father of the late network. Continental Aviation & Engrg. Corp. war , interstate Electronics. astronaut and University alumnus, -a developing weather-fore- - -- - -w-a- -her -- casting satellite system . a s s, s I e 1 I z i t i t By JILL CRABTREE . Chinamen with long pointed mustaches are scurrying around in jeans and sweat shirts, and'sailors with toothpaste-ad grins are tap- dancing with ladies of "dubious reputation." It's a MUSKET re- hearsal, and it has been going on nearly every night for months in the basement of the Michigan Union. Last Friday was especially hec- tic, because photographers were trying to take pictures of people in only half-finished costumes, at the same time that the cast was rehearsing the title number of MUSKET's production of "Any- thing Goes" which will be pre- sented March 8-11. Seated between racks of sailor's blouses and multi-colored dresses, director - choreggrapher .,Jack Rouse, grad, waxed vocal about MUSKET in general and some of the special problems which have come up in connection with the present production. "This isn't the standard colle- giate rah-rah kind of thing," he began. "I'd say about 50 per cent of the kids have professional goals (in music or the theatre.) Many of them have already iad some training when they come here." He went on to say that one of the big problems MUSKET has had with "Anything Goes" is that it follows so closely on "Out of Our Minds," an original musical show put on by MUSKET last month. There are only eighteen students in the cast, and many of them were in the previous produc- tion. Rehearsals for "Anything Goes" had tb be started even be- fore "Out of Our Minds" went on stage, but concentrated' rehear- sals of the new production couldn't begin until the winter term. "Uncle Jack" went off to confer with members of the crew, and the cast gathered around bearded Bruce Fisher, grad, MUSKET's music director. Seated at the pi- ano, he guided them painstakingly through the complicated arrange- ment of the show's title song, "Anything Goes." Meanwhile, two boys were ex- perimenting with makeup, trying to make themselves look as much like Chinamen as possible. They were using everything from putiy to scotch tape in an effort to make their eyes look slanted. One was valiantly trying to plaster down his bushy, very un-Chinese hair. Bruce had just managed to bring an harmonious sound out of four sopranos with voice quali- ties as different as Barbra Strei- sand and Leontyne Price, when Jack demanded some time for a run-through of "Blow, Gabriel, Blow." one of the show's biggest production numbers. For The Daily's benefit, every- one put on their tap-dancing shoes and got into position. Then the junk-filled room exploded with some very dramatic and exuber- ant choreography. In the little room the dance was almost over- powering. But- Jack himself has said that he is a "balcony chore- ographer," and from the balcony this number should look very good, indeed. As the rehearsal was breaking up, the Chinamen reappeared, this time sans mustaches. One of them had the , legend "MOM" scribbled in grease, pencil across his forehead. To paraphrase a song in the show, "It's a Shake- speare sonnet . . . It's Mickey Mouse." I LAW SYMPOSIUM: Alumni Debate Legal Aspects Of Negro 'Civil Disobedience' -instruments developed f o r! aerospace work which have been adapted for health, including radio transmitters to aid the blind, pressurized space suit pants to mobilize persons who have dif- ficulty walking, and small, high- power batteries for hearing aids and "pacemaker" hearts. and "pacemakers" mechanical hear-ts. _.____ _. __. _r .. _ _ r. ____ __i r________l. j By MICHAEL DOVER Wasserstrom charged the feder- director of the Export-Import -an industry employing twice In a symposium on "Law and al government with operating un- Bank, and Federal Circuit Court as many persons as the automobile the Public Order" last week, three der a "double standard" of law Judge John R. Brown. All three industry, according to White. He University alumni took differing enforcement which "tolerates and are graduates of the Law School, said that government revenues stands on "civil disobedience" and permits lawlessness." He cited Taylor said that the courts can- from aerospace production help the function of the law in main- federal government has made not in all cases "alleviate the finance anti-poverty, slum clear- taining the balance between the virtually no effort to enforce the evils" which exist in our society. ance, and education projects. rights of the individual and those federal criminal laws" in the He said that the ethos of the White. said that because the of society. South.. protest movement is: "That which aerospace industry provides many Dean Richard A. Wasserstrom, He said the lack of sufficient is not just seems to be no law at jobs and sources of revenue for of the Tuskegee Institute, spoke redress of grievances through the all," and took the stand that this such government programs, it can- of an "institutional injustice" institutional process makes "Watts, attitude is often necessary. not be criticized for taking ap- which he said is -one of the "rea- as well as Birmingham and Selma, Brown, however, expressed fear propriations from other programs. sons why Negroes are entitled . . . both intelligible and defensible." I that "civil disobedience" involves to opt out of the system . . . and Dean Francis A. Allen of the a general disrespect of the law White also said that these do- to say that the price of public Law School presided over the ses- He advocated the pursuit of social mestic programs would not get the peace and order is just not worth sion, whose speakers included change through the institutional funds freed by any cutbacks in paying." ' Wasserstrom, Howard Taylor Jr., process, but emphasized a di t inc- aerospace spending because the tion between "civil disobedierce" programs have weak popular sup- and legitimate protest-that which port in comparison to other gov- violates no law, ernment programs. Brown said the recent Supreme White and alumnus Joseph F. P R UIT Y IR T$E Court decisions restricting the ac- Shea, program manager of the tions of police in interrogati.ig Apollo project discussed "Mich- suspects, and other such decisions igan in Orbit" before a group of limiting police power, wouli inev- over 200 alumni and students. itably "reduce the deterring effect Presiding at what was the last ::::".- of punishment and must, per- of the topic sessions held last week - z, force, increase the v.lume of was Prof. Wilbur Nelson, chairman S.. .crime." of the aerospace engineering de- ° He added that the decisions partment. 'might increase the percentage (f White said that, there will be _ criminals who will remain unap- flights to the moon in two years. .prehended or unconvicted.r , Using a set of slides illustrating .........-~ii~ Wasserstrom had sa =d earlier, stages of the proposed Apollo pro- UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL New Hospital "We have a system which allows, ject, While described such a flight. University of Kentucky Medical Center, New Positions of necessity, for some who are "We can't let our space program Uguilty to go free in the hope that slip," White said. "If we do, we'll Lexington Moving Allowance we can minimize as muca as is be in a second rate position. We Tuituion Free Benefits possible, the conviction of the in- must beat the Russians to the An equal opportunity employer nocer t " moon." Located On University Cam'pus Write: Director of Nursing Services NAME .,.l....,....................... ADDRESS. ...................................... CITY .................................... STATE................................ZIP .......... GRADUATION DATE... ............. ---- a' IT'S NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS... BUT IT COULD BE!, join the Daily Business Staff DROP BY 420 MAYNARD STREET /'111 / A 1 1 Naval Research WASHINGTON, D.C. An Equal Opportunity Employer The Navy's Corporate Laboratory-NRL is engaged in research embracing, practically all branches of physical and engineering sci- ence and covering the entire range from basic investigation of fundamental problems to applied and developmental research. The Laboratory has current vacancies and a continuing need for physicists, chemists, metallurgists, mathematicians, oceanogra- phers, and engineers (electronic, electrical, mechanical, and civil). Persons appointed receive the full benefits of the career Civil Service. Candidates for bachelor's, master's and doc- tor's degrees in any of the above fields are Photographed by Thomas R. I m