t I J°H MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 25, 1958 'YOUNG TURK' GROUP: 4 I Triple Your Reading Efficiency With Comprehension and Recall NAACP faction asks convention meeting in Resurrection city 4r ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (M-A militant faction at the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's convention called yesterday for the meeting to adjourn and then reconvene at Resurrection City in Washington. Chester Lewis, leader of the so- called "Young Turk" group, sub- mitted a resolution in writing to the chairman calling for the ad- journment. It was scheduled to be presented to the convention later opened with moderates in con- yesterday. There also were reports that Lewis, president of the Wichita, Kan., NAACP chapter, said his militant group would leave the convention and go to the camp site of the Poor People's Campaign if the resolution was voted down. Police cleared the camp Monday and 'made scores of arrests. The second day of the meeting DAILY FFICIAL BULLETIN .,:f:;o.."v{i..:- s .:: :: ":i:4 }:"::.i::"}:j5j ';i4:":{: z >;1.}3"'{ :i:". ,o r " ,tE E Ea': r f J .S... :':iY"'":t{v "} 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 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 notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. WEDNESDAY JUNE 26 Day Calendar I.E.E.E. Joint Automatic Control Rackham Building, 8:00 A.M., Conference - Registration, Lobby, Center for Programmed Learning for Clinic": Michigan Union, 8:30 A.M. to Business - "Advanced Programming 5:00 P.M. Center for Programmed Learning for Business-"Instructional Design Work- shop": Michigan Union, 8:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar - "New Frontiers in Manage- ment": Statler Hilton Inn, 8:45 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. 1968 Biennal Conference of the Amer- ican Civil Libertiese Union-First Ses- sion, Ballroom, Michigan Union, 9:00 A.M. Audio-Visual Education Center Sum- mer Previews - Grizzly, I & II: Multi- purpose Room, Undergraduate Libra- ry, 1:30 P.M. Department of Speech University Players - William Shakespeare Troi- lus and Cressida: Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, 8:00 P.M. receive position openings, listed in this Daly Official Bulletin, n a current openngs notebook, and in a monthly bulletin. Literature pertaining to com- panies, opportunities in various fields of study, and government employment s open for browsing. Hours - 8:30-12 and /1:30-4:30 Mon.-Fri. Please inform the Bureau of your current address, and any changes in your data if you are registered. Register, for placement services now if you have not already done so. Please report any jobs taken, or offers, for statistical purposes° used in counseling. Peace Corps Week - July 22-26, ar- rangements tb be announced later. r Vista Week -- July 9-12, watch for further announcements. Current Position Openings received by General Dtvision by mail and phone, please call 764-7460 for further information: Air Force Aera Propulsion Labora- tory, Wright Patterson APB, Ohio - Chief Scientist, 10 yrs. exper. in major professional sci., or tech. fld, 3 of which must be in propulsion and power area. PhD : f engrg. or physical sei, publications, patents or sim. rec- ognition necessary. Edsel B. Ford Institute for Medical' Research, Detroit, Mich. - Full time, fractional time,. and or summer help, assistant in data collection, plotting data, graphing and drawing schematics for publication, for Department of physics and biophysics. International Atomic Energy Agency, request from government of Philip-! pines - Study of inelastic scattering of neutrons at low temperatures, 5 mo. tour, Sept. 68 on, English. Request from India, Food preservation. Request from Kenya, Atomic Energy Planning. Midwest Research Institute, Kansas City, Mo. - Petitions in Bacteriol., Vet. Med., Micro-biol., Virol., Immon., Phys- Idl., Biochem., Syn Chem, Anal. Chem., Chem. Engr., Polymer Sci, Regional Economy, Indust Econ., Chem. Econ., Microwave Engr., Engr. Analysis., En- gineer-Product and Process, Jr. Assoc. Operations Analysis, Sr. O.A., Military* O.A.,. Mgmt. Syst Spec, EDP' Anal, & Plan., Chep. Physicist, Bio- Stat, Hu- man Factors engineer or Experimental Psychologist Harvard University Staff, Holyoke Ctr., Cambridge, Mass. - Receptionist for admissions. Secretary for Law Prof, shthnd. optional. Library Asst in Museum of Comp. Zoo. Secretary for Biol. Prof. Department Secretary Math. Dept, exper neess. Secretary in Theatre Collection of Widener Lib. Research Assistant, 'mat major in Div. of Engrg. & Applied Physics, area of meteorology,' exper as programmer preferred. Execu- tive Secretary at Loeb Drama Center, typ. & shthnd. req. Bilingual Secretary, Span-Engl for Latin Amer. Scholarship program. Medical Record Intern, cert. as Med Record Librarian. trol. On Monday the delegates de- feated a resolution by the mili- tants that some termed "an en- dorsement of looting and burning." The militants had claimed that they had the support of three- quarters of the 2,000 delegates. But the vote against the move was 432 to 288. The resolution was sponsored by Fred Crockett, president of the NAACP Illinois delegation, . and a member of the group of militants calling themselves the National Committee to Revitalize the NAACP. STRESS CULTURE As introduced. by Crockett, the resolution called for establishment of five committees or commissions within the NAACP. These would study what Crockett termed the issues of 'black survival, economic and political power in the ghet- toes and the need for emphasis on African-American culture. Crockett said a Committee on the Survival of Black Americans Was needed because of what he called repressive measures being instituted against Negroes in the guise of an anti-crime bill and because of, the increased arming of police. The other study committees would have considered means of Negroes gaining economic and political power in ghetto areas through a series of boycotts and other methods, and ways of fos- tering a sense of pride in Negroes through emphasis on African- American culture. 'tJNCLE TOMS' Russel Abrahms, a delegate from Cleveland, declared': "If you don't vote for this, you're telling young people that you're the Toms they think you are." "We're no Uncle Toms and we don't have to riot in the streets to prove it," said Mary CaldWell, a delegate from Warrenton, Va. NAACP Executive Wilkins said the NAACP has always stood for change and predicted that the warring factions would eventually reach a compromise. ACCUSATION Meanwhile, two Atlantic City Negro businessmen have accused the NAACP of )discriminating against the Negro community by giving its convention business .to white-owned motels, hotels and restaurants. "The black business people in our community have supported'the NAACP throughout the years and can't understand why or how all the NAACP activities should be confined to the white community," said a telegram sent Monday night to NAACP officials. i~to j p Thousands of College and High School Students Have-You Can, Too- It's Guaranteed or You Don't Payl Students' Reading Speeds Soar; ,,,;, gr etter,,,,.. Pressure of Studies Eased School of Music Degree Recital Warren Bellis, Clarinet: School Music Recital Hall, 8:00 P.M. of of I General Notices, Regents' Meeting: July 19. Commu- nications for consideration at this meeting must be in the President's hands no later than July 3. Placement August Graduates, placement serv- ices in the summer at General Division do not include interviews, however, we, 4i went.''to Detroit, g r Cut down.your hours of study I Increase your income with greater knowledge s Improve your comprehensioni, recall and concentration f Our average graduate reads in 12 minutes what used to require an hour " More than 400,000 graduates in- cluding the staff of the late President Kernedy, members of Congress, business executives, doctors, law- yers, educators and housewives * Institutes in '108 cities throughout the U.S. Other Institutes in .ondon, Paris, Mexico City and Canada * Eveiyn Wood Reading Dynamics is a wholly-owned division of the Famous Artists Schools, Inc. and is listed on the American Stock Exchange c "lu JULIUS POLLARD, U. OF DETROIT..."I raised ry grade point average from 2.5 to 3.1 as a result of the course. I read a 15-hook annotated bibliography in 3 hours. Previously it would have taken me 3'2 weeks." CANDACE ROSAEN, ANN ARBOR MGH ... "I raised my grades and exams are now easier since I enrolled in the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course. I am much more confident ab)ou t taking my%,exa ms ,i n re my comprehension has increased along ith my-reading speed:. ROBERT DOUMA, U. of M. .. "The Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course enabled me to do my school work in half the time. The skills that are taught are of priceless value." FRASER COCKS, III, CRADUATE STUDENT, 1U. of M....."I can finish my necessary reading in much le-s. time; understand the subject matter better, and retain it much longer." JANET AND JOYCE KAISER, EAST DETROIT HIGH ... "We cut down our homework by two hours. We have much more time for school and social activitics because we do not have to spend as much time on our homework." SHIRLEY INTIHAR, OAKLAND COMMUNITY COL- LEGE . . . "Study time is at a premium. The course taught me how to cover much material in a short period of time, which of coirse, helped me in my studies." TERRY T.P. SER ENO, BOWLIN GREEN STATE U. "1 have been exposed to a logical and systematic ap- proziwh to studying which I had never received, even in a college setting. I have learned to read different matter at different rates depending on what I wanted to get from the material. It is a dynamic approach to a reading me thodology." SCOTTrI). lHACKETT, NORTHERN HIGH SCHOOL .. " ^ was never a very good reader and was having some difficulty getting my work assignments finished. Thanks to Reading Dynamics I am now able to pick out the information I need it very short order." )TICTTA E L E. W EYLER, EDUCATOR . . . "I found, after taking the course, that the amount of reference material I can read in a given amount of time has in- creased tremendously and my recall is amazing." \V RS. MARJORi E A. I1 ENDRICKS, SCHOOL TEACh. Eli ... Iincreasedm ny reading efficiency nine times with increased comprehension. I grade book reports, themes, essays, and other work written by students much faster giving me more time for pleasure reading." PTUL ANDERSON, EDUCATOR ..."I sincerely feel that the study techniques developed in this program can be of real value to students of all ages. I am able to do more reading of newspapers and magazines in much less time than I could before taking the course." For Further information Call Today Collect 962-7056 een 1101 Washington Blvd. Michigan's Home Office Detroit, Michigan 48226 In Principal Cities Throughout the World I ca9 or 0, bC fenton i ior N Free Demonstrations M You will see a Reading Dynamics graduate read at amazing speeds from a book he has never s before and then tell in detail what he had read. 6 You will.see a documented filmthat includes actual interviews with Washington Congressmenv have taken the course, * You will learn haw we can help you to faster reading, improved comprehension, greater concen tion arkd recall. WE CAN GET YOU THERE yboONbNTIMEi." Whether you're coming or going ... to any of these cities ... it's wise to get there on time. TIME Air Lines, that is. TAL has regularly scheduled flights connecting all four cities every day. 67 flights a week! One of them is sure to get you where you want to go. TIME flights operate in and out of Detroit Metropolitan Airport, make connections with major airlines for any place in the world. TAL Chicago flights land and take off from Meigs Field, right in the loop. You're just minutes from business, and entertainment. Next time you travel on business. . or for pleasure-.. . save time, fly TIME. i 1 Please send me complete information on A Wednesday, June 26 Howard Johnson Motor Lodge U.S. 23 & Washtenow 4 and 8:30 P.M. Thursday, June 27 YW-YMCA 350 5. 5th Ave. 6 and 8:30 P.M. J CLASSES START JUNE 29 AT THE YW-YMCA AND JULY 2 AT HOWARD JOHNSON'S ,. r