Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 19, 1968 MS U VICE-PRESiDENT: AMSU VICE-PRESIDENT Attrn 70 Genral DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ""' i' 7 '"> j.iri ai?'r:,"};,o{.iiill^.":vx.o: ;+,"li s ;.};p":+"y i Kelley rule 71 May in conflict of in (Continued from Page i ) reach a politically conceived con- clusion." May, on sabbatical le a v e through August, had no com-' ment on Harlan's call for his resignation. "Faithful service is not enough,"' Harlan told the news conference. "If one makes a mistake, one must pay the penalty.- "If I am found guilty (on con- flict allegations), I will resign as a Trustee and not seek re-elec- tion," he said, adding he plans to seek another term on the MSU board when his current one ex- pires at the end of the year. Harlan said he previously had recommended firing May to both the board and Hannah, with no results. "I talked with (Provost Howard) Neville this afternoon and said I thought he should ask Hannah to initiate action," May said. Hannah w a s vacationing ini Canada until July 5. Neville had no comment. " 4think this (conflict) decision proves Dr. Hannah has lost con- trol of his staff," Harlan added. "May's actions are "detrimental to the best interests of the total team" at the university, he said. PUBLIC OFFICIAL In an earlier opinion Kelley ruled that executive officers of univeristies are considered public officials and come under the Michigan conflict of interest law. At that time May resigned as a member of the board of directors of Michigan National Bank. Financing for the IBM build- ing, located directly across from the MSU campus, Was secured in August, 1967, from the Michigan National Bank for the Philip Jesse Co. Philip Jesse May was then president of the Philip Jesse Co. The construction loan was in the amount of !$1.1 million. Ralph Calder and Associates, an teresta architectural firm that Kelley described as "the principal archi- tect for Michigan State Univer- sity" was retained by the Philip Jesse Co. to design the IBM building. The architectural firm has done $3.6 million in business with MSU during the past ten years. 'LESS THAN NORMAL' Kelley said the architect received' a fixed fee "which is less than that normally paid for architec- tural services in designing a building costing some $967,000." Three contractors employed to perform construction work on the IBM building had conducted con- siderable business with MSU over a long period of time. Between them they had done nearly $10 million in business with MSU during the past ten years. "Each of these contractors were hired by the Philip Jesse Co.; without advertising for bids and without seeking prices of competi- tors for the same work," 4elley's opinion stated. The principal tenant of the building isIBM which occupiest approximately 44 per cent of the building and pays about $50,000 aI year in rent. Subject of Kelley's opinion on, Han ah are the president's busi- ness dealings, including the sale of a farm he had owned near MSU for a reported $1 million. 3 Harlan's alleged ties to the Har- lan Electric Co. of Southfield and -The Daily Official Bulletin Is aa 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 3528 L. S. & A. Bldg., be- before. 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 only once. Student organization noticesare not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar - "The Management of Managers No. 61, North Campus Commons, 8:15 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Annual Meeting of the American So- ciety of Ichthyologists and Herpetolo- gists - Registration, Lobby, Rackham Building, 8:00 a.m. Center for 'Programmed Learning for Business -- "Training Systems work- shop": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m, to 5:00 p.m. 1968 Biennial Conference of the Amer- ican Civil Liberties Union - Registra- tion, Lobby, Michigan Union, 6:09 p.m. THURSDAY, JUNE 20 Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar - "The Management of Managers No. 62", North Campus Commons. 8:15 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Annual Meeting of the American So-1 riety of Ichthyologists and Herpetolo- gists - First Session, Lecture Hall, Racigham, Bldg., 8:30 a.m. Center for Programmed Learning for Business - "Training systemsaWork shop" Michigan Union, 8:30 am. to 5:00 p.m. Sears, "The Toronto Lectures on Stellar Evolution," 296 Physics-AstronomyI Bldg., 4:00 p.m. Cinema Guild - Marlene Dietrich and James Stewart in "Destry Rides Again," Architecture Aud., 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. SATURDAY, JUNE 22 1968 Biennial Conference of the Amer- ican Civil Liberties Union - First Ses- sion, Ballroom, Michigan Union, 9:00 a~m. Cinema Guild - Marlene Dietrich and James Stewart in "Dettry Rides Again", Architecture Aud., 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. SUNDAY, JUNE 23 time of application, have a Bachelor's Degree or its equivalent by the be-g ginning date of the grant, and in mostc cases, be proficient in the language ofe the host country. Selections will be! made on the basis of academic record,& the feasibility of the applicant's pro- posed study plan and personal qualifi- cations. Preference is given to candi- dates who have not had prior extended study or residence abroad, and whoE are under the age of, 35.- Application forms and informationa for students currently enrolled at the University of Michigan may be obtainedj from the Graduate Fellowship Office, 1014 Rackham. Deadline for filing com-t pleted applications is Oct. 7, 1968.E Qualified and interested students are urged to act expediently in order that necessary procedures may be completed by the deadline. Mo sI UREAU OF APPOINTMENTS of Best Weighted Tschebyscheff Ap- 3201 SAB proximations," on Fri., June 21 at 2 GENERAL IVISION p.m. in Rm. 311 W. Engrg. Chairman: Current Position Openings Received A. B. Macnee. by General Divisi6n by mail and phone --please call 764-7460 for further infor- Gary Alan Wright, Anthropology, mation: Dissertation: "Obsidian Analysis and Announcements: Call 764-4760, Gen- Early Trade in the Near East 7500 to eral Division, for .further information. 3500 B.C.", on Fri., June 21 at 2 p.m. June Graduates, Please notify the at 4017 Museums. R. E. Whallon. Bureau of Appts. of your status; if still seeking a position let us know your Michael Allen Stoner, Civil Engineer address, and update your. reume; if ing, Dissertation: "Analysis and Con- you have secured a position report it trol of Unsteady Flows in Natural Ciasto us, also any offers, this information Piping Systems," on Fri., June 21, at used for statistics used in con- me inV L StreetW. Engrg. CoChair- Peace Corps Week, July 22-26, further arrangements to be announced later, Vista Week, July 9-12, further infor- Charles Ellis Lindahl, Electrical En- gineering, Dissertation: "Time Domain s nthesis of Linear. Svstems by Mean Placement oy tn eun. t 1968 Biennial Conference of the Amer- ican Civil Liberties Union - First Ses- Grade Sheets for spring, 1968, have sion, Ballroom, Michigan Union, 9:00 been sentin trodepartments foradelsteets a .m. ti1t ntutr.Algaeset should be submitted to the Office of Center for Programmed Learning fOr the Registrar within 48 hours follow- Business - "Advanced Programming ing the examination.Torassist in the Buiness,-i"Avancedno grammingo8:00submission of grade reports, the Offi^,e Clinic, Michigan Union, 6:00 to 8:00 of the Registrar w4il provide a grade messenger service to departmental of- [ices on the Central Campus beginning Center for Programmed Learning for Thurs., June 20, and continuing Business - "Instructional Design through Wed., June 21. Grades may Workshop", Michigan Union, 6:00 to also be submitted directly to this of- 8:00 p.m. fice at "Window A," in the Admin. Bldg. during working hours. Questions j # " !pertaining to grade reports may be General Notices J "* 42 "" ' Gene al t of ces directed to 764-6292. Applications for U.S. Government Scholarships for 1969-70 under the Ful- bright-Hays Act: Must be completedOClOrat Exam s and filed with the Graduate Fellow- Jay Hillel Levin, Economics, Disser- ship Office, 1014 Rackham Bldg., by tation: "Forward Exchange and Intern- Oct. 7, 1968. Under the Fulbright pro- al-External Equilibrium," on Thurs., gtam, over 950 American graduate stu- June 20 at 9 a.m. in Rm. 221 Econ. dents will have an opportunity to Bldg. Chairman: R. M. Stern. study in any one of 50 countries fori one ear.Raymond Francis Madigan, Educa-j Candidates who wish to apply .for tion Dissertation: "Central Administra- an award must be U.S. citizens at the tive'Staffing in Michigan School Dis- r . tricts," on Thurs., June 20 at 3 p.m. GA in Conference Rm., Bureau of School h 6 _d 117 A d ' I r Services. Chairman: D. H. Cooper. Poor ..campaigners converge on Capital Marshall Hilford Becker, Publicr Health Administration, Dissertation: "Patterns of Interpersonal Influence and Sources of Information in the Dif- fusion of, Two Public Health Innova- ,itions," on Mon., June 24 at 3 p.m. int Rm. 4, Public "Health Practice Research, Program, 122 S. First St. Chairman: I. M. Rosenstock. Jack Edward Boers, Electrical Engi- neering, Dissertation: "Computer Sim- ulation of Space-Charge Flows, on Mon., June 24 at 3 p.m. in Rm. 3513 E. Engrg. Chairman: J. E. Rowe. Ernest Tawfik Abdel-Massih, Lin- guistics, Dissertation: "Tamazight Verb Structure: A Generative Approach," on Mon., June 24 at 5 p.m. in Rm. 210 Gunn Bldg. Chairman: E. N. McCarus. John Henry Spriggs, Aerospace En- gineering,=Dissertation: "AI Appli- tion of Singular-Perturbation Theory to Panel Flutter," on Tues., June 25 at 1 p.m. ni Rm. 1500 E. Engrg..Co-Chair- men: W. J. Anderson and A. F. Messiter. Robert Frederick Woods, Environ- mental Health Sciences, Dissertation: "A Study of Allocation: The Distribu- tion of Public Housing Units among the Provinces of the Netherlands, 1958- 1965." on Tues., June 25. at 1 p.m. In Rm. 3008 S.P.H. Chairman: M. S. lEHilbert. William Ray Mann, Education, Dis- sertation: "Changes in the Level of Sophistication of Attitudes of College Students as a Measure of Teacher Ef- fectiveness," on Wed., June 6 at 10 a.m. in Rm. 6006 I.S.R. C airman: R. T. Blackburn. The CHARGING. RHINOCEROS of SOUL Sat., June 22 Canferbury House $1.00 9:00 P.M. After "A MAN AND A WOMAN" the new love story by Claude Lelouch i mation to be announced later. Hartford Board of Education, Hart- ford, Conn. - Two High School Dieti.- tians, Bach, degree in institutional management, members or eligible for Amer. Dietetic Assoc. (Continued on Page 6) (Continued from Page 1) no fears whatsoever. I feel to- morrow will be a fine support- ing march in the finest nonvio- lent sense." Nevertheless, District of Co- lumbia officials announced they would deploy about 4,300 police and National Guard troops - about the same number used for the march five years ago. Army troops in the Washington area will be on alert. War; Abernathy, King's suc- cessor as president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference; Roy Wilkins, exec- utive director of the National Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People; and Whitney M. Young Jr., execu- tive director of the National Urban League. Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy (D- Minn.), seeking the Democratic presidential nomination, will take Dart in the rally his cam- Central Electric Co. of Lansing 1968 Biennial Conference of the areub.o.H American Civil Liberties Union - Reg- are subject of that opinion. Har- iistration, Lobby, Michigan Union, 9:00 lan said he divested himself of am. interest in Central Electric before being named to the MSU Board FRIDAY, JUNE 21 in 1957. He gave up interest in Harln Eectrc "boutsixyears" Bureau of Industrial Relations sem- Harlan Electric "about six yara "The Management of Managers after joining the board, he said, No. 62", North Campus Comons, 8:15 "and that had nothing to do with a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. my office." Center for Programmed Learning for Business - 'Training Systems Work- Second class postage paid at Ann shop", Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. to Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann 13:00 p.m. Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Daily except Monday during regular 1968 Biennial Conference of the Amer- academic school year. ican Civil Liberties Union - First Ses- Fall and winter subscription rate.: sion, Ballroom, Michigan Union, 9:00 $4.50 per term by carrier ($5 by mail) a a.C. $8.00 for regular academic school year Atooia olqim -Wye (S9 by mail}.AsrnmclCloum -Wae NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to offically recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Forms are available .in room 1011 SABB. * * * UM Rifle Club, Wed., 7-9 p.m., ROTC Rifle Range, shooting open to students and faculty. * * * Baha'i Student Group, informal dis- 'ussion' "The Need for a World Re- ligion," Fri., June 21, 8:00 p.m. at 520 N. Ashley. 'All welcome. Call 662-3548 if you need transportation. John Edwin Minnich, Zoology, Dis- sertation: "Mirgntenance of Water and Electrolyte Balance of the Desert Iguana, Dipsosaurus dorsalis," on Thurs., June 20 at 3 p.m. in Rm. 2111 Nat. Set. Chairman: W. R. Dawson. Enoch Chi-Wah Tse, Mathe:natics, Dissertation: "On Two Special Sub- classes of Positive Real Functicns," on Fri., June 21 at 9 a.m. in Rm. 2419 Mason Hall. Chairman: J. L. Goldberg. Sandra Ruth Lipsitz Bem, Psychology, Dissertation: "The Role of Task Com- prehension in Children's Problem-Solv- ing," on Fri., June 21, at 1:30 p.m. at 3419 Mason Hall. Chairman: J. D. Birch. Today's march will follow paign headquarters said. the format of the 1963 rally, Mrs. King serves as vice which since has come to be chairman of the march along viewed as a shining moment in with the widow of another civil the civil rights movement. rights martyr, Medgar Evers. The marchers will gather at For the campaign, the march 10 a.m. beneath the slender comes at a crucial time. It white spire of the Washington desperately needs emotional Monument. At 'noon they will and physical replenishment. march en mgasse about a mile Though the campaigners man- to the stately columned me- aged to increase the pace of morial to the President who their demonstrations in the last freed the slaves a century ago, week, their movement has Abraham Lincoln. failed to regain the thrust it On the way they vill pass the had at the start. encampment of plywood huts IFired in mud left by weeks where the Poor People's Cam of incessant rains, often left paigners settled five weeks ago unguided during leadership to start their siege of the na- lapses and disputes, the cam- tion's government. paigners dwindled in numbers At the Lincoln Memorial the from more than 2,000 to around speakers will include Sen. Ed- 500 this week. And although ward W. Brooke (R-Mass.), the they won some concessions from first Negro elected to the Sen- the government their major de- ate since Just after the Civil mands remain unfilled, EVES MONIANd CANdICEbEqEN ANNIE qIRARdOT LIFE" ckudE [ELOUCki COlOR byddUXE Saturdad 4k #1 NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORAT'ION HELD OVER FOxEEASTERNT .ieA.T'RE S BY DEMAND FQH VILLaGE -375 No.MAPLE RD. -769-1300 FEATURE TIMES 2-:20-4:30 7:00-9:25 Fullerton, Dennis Marks and Richard Friday & Saturday at Cinema Guild MARLENE DIETRICH 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor I _OOSI EXCLUSIVE SHOWING WED.-SAT.-SUN. 1:10-3:50-6:30-9:10 OTHER DAYS 7:00 and 9:18 in DESTRY RIDES AGAIN With JAMES STEWART and JACK CARSON' 7:00 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 75c CONTINUOUS SHOWINGS DAILY/ "PLANET' OF THE APES" IS A BLOCKBUSTER. 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