Seventy-First Year
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PRIL 11, 1961
NIGHT EDITOR: SUSAN FARRELL
EichmaniiSJetacn
Jnlikly To Effect. Justice
a
IE TRIAL OF Adolf Eichmann, which be-
g-ns today in Jerusalem, promises to be a,
plete and detailed recounting of the in-
ous concentration camp atrocities, but
ns highly unlikely to benefit mankind in
moral sense.
he legal hearing of the ex-Nazi who has
ie, to personify the insane murder of the
man Jews has thus far engendered only
h pitched emotion and unbelievable com-
'cialization. Eichmann's trial is perhaps
biggest attraction the Holy Land has had
b0&0 years, and no one is failing to take
antage of it.
le world's press has sent more correspon-
tU to the trial than reported on World
r II and twice as many as visited the Kor-
wa theatre. Israel has sunk thousands
dollars into preparations, collecting wit-
ses, compiling 4,000 pieces of documentary
fence, erecting a nine foot high wire fence
grd the courthouse and a glass-enclosed,
.et-proof prisoner's dock inside it and aiding
press by providing simultaneous transla-
s of 'the proceedings in five languages with
lities for tape recording them or sending
n out over 20new teleprinters.
RLINES ARE ADVERTISING flights to
Israel as "especially appropriate" for the
imann hearing. Ever since the Nazi's arrest
months ago, countless books and maga-
ls have appeared documenting the case
Inst him, recalling the horrors of the prison
.ps and crematories where 6,000,000 in-
ent victims were tortured and killed. In
auseating series of novels, realistic ac-
nts and private "confessioris" the rise and
of the' Third Reich has oncei again been
gged through public consciousness.
s the newspaper datelines switch to Jeru-
im for what has already been labeled the
r'a "big story," we must realize that the
sing Eichmann is going to receive ,will
dly be a "trial."
everal objections to the trial arise from
point that Eichmann was illegally abducted
i Argentina. One of the three judges who
p decide his innocence or guilt has already
licly proclaimed Eichmann guilty in an
ler trial involving an alleged collaborator,
all three judges are originally from Ger-
ay.
he major point of contention, however, is
with moral implications. Many charge
t the "right" or "duty" to try Eichmann
e not rest with Israel, that Eicmann's
ae is one against humanity and thus he
dld be tried by an international body such
he United Nations.
IAEL REPLIES THAT Eichmann's crime
ras not directed against humanity in gen-
, but very specifically at the Jews. Israeli,
'ever, is not synonomous with Jewish as
'Vatican is with Catholic. True, Israel has
=me the Jewish homeland, but it .is the
ish homeland in the historicaland cultural
e than the religious sense and thus Israel
riot act in the name of all Jews any more
n Franco can act in the name of all Cath-
, even though the vast majority of Span-
s adhere to that faith.,
hie Judaic tradition does not include a
ctured hierarchy of religious administra-
. Six centuries of Jews have maintained the
cept of the Individual interpreting his
Li for himself, and it is only a pride in com-
1 ancestry and history that have preserved
Jewish religion as such in so many in-
ual Jewish communities scattered all over
world through so many centuries.
T EVEN IF Israel were a Jewish state in
the sense that the Vatican is Catholic,
even if the 400,000 Israelis (one fifth of
country's population) who lost blood rela-
s in the Nazi nightmare had the most
eccable legal grounds for bringing Eich-
Wn to justice, the question would still arise
ther Eichmann's crime was one committed
ly against the Jewish nation or against all
anity. Eichmann's crimes, although they
e directed specifically against Jews, defied
moral dictates of every religious faith and
lenged the common denominator of de-
y of every human conscience,.,
i claim that . Eichmann's acts are only
nst the Jews is to reduce the enormity of
actions. It is to say, that when one man
ders another his debt is not to society, but
that man's family, and it is to relieve
ety of its share of the responsibility for
crime itself,
AELI PRIME MINISTER David Ben-
'urion has countered this argument by say,
that anyone who claims Eichmann's crime
not strictly a crime against the Jews is
er an anti-Semite or a Jew with an in-
>rity complex. He is thus setting the Jews
t from humanity in a manner opposite
parallel to Hitler's and refuting all the
d's obligation to stand u fnf an nnnraer1
collective conscience to a small group of fana-
tics who promise it the world.
One wonders, however, just which people
Ben Gurion feels need to be reminded. Our
parents lived through the war; some of them
did not survive. They will not forget. The
survivors of the concentration camps still have
blue-purple numbers on their arms, or have
gone through painful and expensive operations
to have them removed. ,They will not forget.
THE LEADERS OF our country who turned
away ships carrying Jewish refugees and
the British who barricaded Palestinian ports
and slaughtered hundreds of Jews during their
mandate know what happened. They will not
forget.-
The ex-Nazis now holding top positions in
the German government know what happened
to the Jews, and so do those who are now
designing weapons for the American govern-
ment and teaching in American universities.
They were there. They will not forget.
And we, the students who came into co-
sciousness as our fathers were returning from
war, who bartered storm trooper boots for
Nazi knives, who watched "Stalag Seventeen"
and read Anne Frank's diary know what hap-
pened. We don't need to be reminded yet
either.
The Israeli youth, the Sabras who are named
for the cactus plant "tough and strong on the
outside and wonderfully sweet and tender
underneath" are the sons and daughters of
survivors. Their lives are a daily contrast to
the horror the last generation lived. They are
proud and secure and prepared to defend their
country. They are very much aware of their
role in history, and in case they were in any
danger of forgetting, their Arab neighbors,
leering across the borders on three sides 'of
them should prove a sufficient reminder.
THE ONLY YOUTH then, who will hear the
story for the first time are those who are
really too young to understand the implica-
tions and to whom it will only be a gruesome
horror story with little application to real life.
The most likely motive for such a trial, the
one' Israel insists has nothing to do with it, is
revenge. Ben Gurion says the trial has nothing
to do with revenge. Israel holds no grudge
against either Germany or the German people.
The Germany of today is not the Germany it
was under Hitler, and for some time Israel
has been carrying on an expanding trade pro-
gram with West Germany.
CLEARLY, BEN GURION has not put Ger-
many itself on trial. He has chosen to ig-
nore the fact that a fanatical group does not
come into power unless a considerable propor-
tion of the population is willing to let them
.By seperating "today's Germany" from the
Germany under the Third Reich and by using
Eichmann as a symbol of all the atrocities
committed, Israel is taking into its hands in
punishing him the power of vengeance which
the Bible clearly forbids man. Israel is implying
that earthly retribution can be dispensed for
a crime whose monstrosity leaves the human
imagination powerless to extend.
If Eichmann dies, the score, objectively will
stand like this: Eichmann killed six million
Jews. The two million 'Jews of Israel acting in
the name of those six million and all other
Jews in the world today killed Eichmann in
return. Symbolically the slate is clean, and
Israel, by taking into human hands the re-
sponsibility for punishing an inhuman crime,
has wiped it clean.
UNDER THESE CIRCUMSTANCES the world
is morally entitled to forget and Israel will
have negated the infinite monstrosity for which
not only Eichmann, but all of Germany by its
complicity and all the Allies by their refusal to
see the danger or interfere when they might
have prevented the holocaust.
From the illegal arrest of Eichmann and
the commercialism of the trial, and from the
spirit of revenge which prevails, a new image
of Israel has emerged which is disturbing to
those who had considered the tiny nation the
one truly idealistic and humanistic nation left
on earth.
No one could ask Israel to forgive a crime
which has never been equaled in human his-
tory, but by the same token, Israel should
realize that dragging the world through one
more blood-chilling recitation of the atrocities
is not the way to end them forever.
IF AN EXAMPLE is necessary of the horrors,
of prejudice and intolerance, let all of to-
.day's youth look at the attitude of Egypt
toward Israel and the attitude of the South
African and southern Amercian whites toward
the Negroes. If the world needs an example of
fascism, let it look at Franco's Spain and
America's House Un-American Activities Com-
mittee and the John Birch society. If the world
needs an examnie of the nightmare nf .
Which
(EDITOR'S NOTE: Tomorrow Te
Daly will publish excerpts from
the several resolutions passed at
the recent Conference on Youth
Service Abroad in Washington, a
D.C.)
By THOMAS HAYDEN
Editor
and NAN MARKEL
City Editor
STIFF CONTROVERSY AND no
little unclarity has and still
does surround Mr. Kennedy's
Peace Corps.
The immediate response from
the People's Republic of China
was militant denunciation of "im-
perialist expansion". In more so-
phisticated terms, many persons
have watched the Peace Corps
with extreme concern that It not
be a pawn of any sort in the
mechanics of the Cold War. Such
a response is perhaps the con-
sequence of a continuing, if not
rising, mistrust of American in-
tentions in its international op-
eration, perhaps also the conse-
quence of an emotional hopeful-
ness or new faith that the Peace
Corps has instilled in certain per-
sons otherwise depressed by past'
and present U.S. support of colon-
ialism, vested economic interests
overseas, failure to support and
identify with the revolutions of
Latin America and Africa, and
often inflexible approach to the
question of Communist activity.
Other progressives express fear
that an influx of Peace Corps
personnel, particularly teachers,
into underdeveloped communities
will dull, misdirect, or interrupt
the development of change-orient-
ed movements which are now led
largely by the indigenous intel-
lectuals and teachers.
SPeaPeace
BY NO MEANS HAS all think- fective
ing been along these lines. A ject, A
number of Republicans, including ne"l
politicians and the press, have nwl,"
variously opposed the Peace Corps middle
as a havenfor beatniks, a waste-Ade
ful and useless rebirth of' the peace c
"Children's Crusade," an unneces- ment I
sary duplication of present pri- fillingt
vately-sponsored or governmental and th
technical assistance programs, an train
untrained, unsophisticated group their f
of idealists who'll do no practical Also
good and who might in fact alien- gramsi
ate foreigners, or who will be un- power
able to meet effectively Commun- private
ist propaganda or agents, and unions;
thereby complicate and even hurt other
the progress of more mature agen- as ICA
cies such as the Department of other
State, United States Information Peace
Agency, and International Co- Corps
now to
operation Association, fact, a
At a Washington, D.C., Peace what t
Corps Conference sponsored two hthsw
weeks ago by the National Stu- this we
dent Association, a dedicated In lit
minority, primarily composed of ationis
Young Americans for Freedom, naion
explicitly pronounced the Peace unwilli
Corps a part of America's foreigund ief:t
policy offensive. As such, YAF nd un
national chairman Robert Schuch- not un
man argued, the Peace Corps studen
should be humanitarian in its in
outward face so that it might je n
effective in entering countries, but Unit
at the same time it should never desir
swerve from effective implementa-- esor
tion of the present economic and beco
political national interest of the orga
United States overseas. shou
YAF spokesmenalso oppoed supe
transferring of the Peace Co~ps to Unit
any "supranational" body, such supr
as the United Nations; supported the C
stringent security checks on Corps- State
men; suggested intensive training gani2
in Cold War tactics as a pre- Peac
requisite to overseas duty in the cour
Corps. with
. tual
natio
ALL 'THESE OPINIONS, ierl
socialist, communist, Democrat, THEI
conservative, idealistic, realistic, in whit
Republican, agree at least to ac- drawn,
cept the principles of overpas as- do not
sistance. To be fair to all opinions,
one should point out that there
still are others-a minority to be
sure-who just don't pprove of
appropriating money for purposes
of foreign aid. The Peace Corps r
to them appears as the culmination
of America's disregard for its Con-
stitution, and disrespect for its
John Birch societies.f
Admist all of these opinions,
some have surely emerged as dom-
inant.
* * * Mathe
CERTAINLY THE majority of of Prin
students concerned enough ta ex- goca ll
press opinions on the Peace Corps, the Rac
and particularly those hundreds Mi, at 8
at the Washington Conference re- derved
cently, assume altruism as the
basis of their action. Their ap- Guest
proved resolution on the purpose 'coi
of the Peace Corps reads in part lectureo
"The ultimate basis and just"fi- er"' onI
cation of the Peace Corps, then, Rackhar
is the acceptance of a reverence ues.,A
for man and his labor, and of hu-
man responsibility to work with Aerona
those who need and desire ser- gneerin
vic."quist,.;E
vice. and Swe
So far the national administra- holm, S
tion seems in agreement with the ture on
position taken by the students. R. in Audit
Sargent Shriver, director of the Doctor
Peace Corps, talks of purpose in ganist, v
these terms: day, Apr
"The Peace Corps should not be toriumof
advanced as an arm of the Cold gree Do
War but as a contribuation to the H. Raok
world community . . . not a dip- les. Mby
lomatic or propaganda venture but Roger-D
Way the Peace
Gor
-Daily-David Giltrow.
Corps. By means most ef-
for each particular pro-
mericans are to be placed
tual operational work in
developing areas of the
according to Shriver. As
level technical assistants,
corps members will imple-
,he programs of experts, thus
the gap between the experts
e unskilled nationals, while
g the, nationals to teach
ellow countrymen.
clear is support for pro-
which provide skilled man-
through many sources-
agencies like the trade
colleges and universities;
government ggencies such
k; the United Nations and
international agencies; the
Corps itself. The, Peace
administration is working
further such programs; in
booklet advising schools on
hey may do will reach them
eek.
ght of the Peace Corp's ad-
ration's stress on the inter-
al aspects of the Corps, its
ngness to proselytize, its
the multiplicity of sources
fects of the program, it is
realistic to suppose even-
ministrative support of the
t resolve that:
the short run complete
ed Nations control may
be feasible, but it is highly
able that the Peace Corps
me a truly international
nization. Ultimately it
ad be placed under the
rvision or control of the
ed Nations and/or other
anational agencies (e.g.
Organization of American
es). Development of or-
nations similar to the.
* Corps should be en-
aged in other nations,
a view, toward their even-
integration into an Inter-
nal Peace Corps.
* * *
RE IS ONE policy question
ch lines are almost clearly
yet Peace Corps backers
stand firm on it, but are
.+)
divided on either side: the ques-
tion of loyalty investigations.,
The students, who after all will
be providing the bulk of support
and staff fdr' the Peace Corps
(Shriver says "most Peace Corps
volunteers will probably be, young
college graduates"), protest "spe-
cial political tests of oath, affida-
vit and security investigation" in
selection.
"A corpsman will not be a poli-
tical agent and should not be re-
quired to make any particular af-'
firmation of loyalty, beyond the
standard passport requirements
for any American traveling.
abroad," another resolution from
the Washington conference states.
* * *
"WE RECOMMEND, AS an al-
ternative that a positive state-
ment be formulated relating the
purposes of the program, the hu-
man values it seeks to serve and
the standards of conduct expected
of its members . . . the real meas-
ure .. . can only be found in the
total prodess of evaluation and
selection."
On the other hand, Shriver and
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover are
working out methods whereby.
Hoover would determine what
checks are needed and make them.
This stands in basic opposition to
that part of the student resolution
which maintains "FBI or other
security checks on the applicant's
political activities do not get at
the central questions."
Students have reason to dis-
trust Hoover's judgment on when
and how to check (they allow that
in some individual cases, if a
check is indicated, it might be
made after the individual has been
found otherwise acceptable), since
Hoover has reported that student
demonstrations against the House
Un-American Activities Committee
in San Francisco last spring were
Communist-inspired. What if one
of those demonstrators, who was
motivated by sincere distaste for
HUAC's procedures, wished to
serve in the Peace Corps?
* * *
LATENT IN THE glowing
speeches, the discussions, the
executive orders, in the student
concern that the Peace Corps be
formulated according to their
ideals, has been something else:
partially articulated feelings about
the implications of this for the
younger generation, for its govern-
ment, for twentieth century poli-
tics.
First of all, the Peace Corps
movement represents this year's
only major "liberal"--though cer-
tainly neither very militant or
radical-student action directed at
existing channels, trusting those
channels to respond to the wr-
gency of student desire. Demon-
strations in the street or at the
lunch counter imply some lack of
faith in the receptivity of exist-
ing institutions and channels. The
Peace Corps movement, springing
from this and other campuses last
fall and culminating in a Presi-
dential order last month, is per-
haps symbolic of a promising,
fruitful conjunction between
American students and their Presi-
dent.
* * *
PERHAPS, JUST perhaps, the
American government has moved
across \the shadowy lines from
isolationism toward international-
ism, from national self -aggran-
dizement to a broader, humane
concern for multi-national im-
provement, from an international
policy geared to the level of in-
stitutions, governments and na-
tions, to one operating on the level
of personal relations, from Dul-
lesian righteousness to tolerance
of diversity and disagreement.
Indications of this tendency are
slowly turning up. The President's
declaration, in his Inaugural Ad-
dress, that we should aid other
peoples" because it is right"h
Adlat Stevenson's UN vote against
Portuguese colonialism in Angola
. . and now the Peace Corps.
America has been plagued for
a long time by the broad cleavage
between the ideals of freedom and
self-determination by which it ex-
plains its democratic character,
and the pragmatic "'realism" that
has so often forced mere lip ser-
vice to our idealistic justifications.
The Peace Corps :seems to poten-
tially represent an attempt to re-
duce that cleavage, to inject some
utopianism into the so-called
"political reality."
THIS IS WHAT Shriver seems
to imply. This is what Maurice
Albertson, who researched the
Peace Corps idea for the admin-
istration, seems to be thinking
when he suggests the possibility of
"breakthrough" in international
relations. This is what local Peace
Corps leaders Alan and Judy Gus-
kin perhaps meant in their initial
statement of several months ago:
The spirit of this movement
cannot be found in the ship-
ment of machines and experts
abroad. It is to be found in
aid through relationship,
through personal participation
in the problems and needs of
the peoples of the world . .
we must not forget our re-
sponsibility at home; we must
not forget our respoisibility.
abroad. Those who go abroad
are striving for peace through
personal participation; those
who stay in the United States
must strive so that we can
offer the world's people new
inspiration for their own free-
dom-no matter what form it
may take .. .
Idealism and practicality are
not divergent or exclusive. By set-
ting an idealistic goal, one ex-
pands limited horizons and forces
open an increased number of al-
ternatives. If the Peace Corps
sticks to its idealism, then per-
haps people elsewhere will trust
it and find it helpful. If it is
helpful, it will be accelerating
social-economic-medical progress
around the world, thus establish-
ing not only a better basis upon
which people may make choices
about their future, but also es-
tablishing social and political sta-.
bility and improved communica-
tion and understanding. This is
eminently "practical" and per-
haps the only effective prepara-
tion for an orderly system of in-
ternational relations,
* * *
THE IDEALISM OF the Peace
Corps suggests, ever so slightly,
that we are to borrow Murray
Kempton's phrasing, "moving out
of the long night" of post-war
politics and ideologies, and into
new and hopefully better political
forms and frames of reference. We
can only do so if students main-,
tain their vigor and, more im-
portant, if our national leaders
can match the strong idealism of
the young in the complicated days
ahead, when a dubious Congress
must be battled, an American
people must be stimulated and a
multitude of nations must be con-
vinced of our willingness to join
them in the common task of hu-
man improvement.
AT THE STATE:
' Marron'
AmbigUOUS
"CIMARRON" offers the usual
Ferber fare. Her major theme
stands in the same relation to her
work as those "official paradoxes"
which plague sophisticated think,
ing in the intellectual disciplines,
e.g. supply-demand In economics
stimulus-response in psychology;
etcetera.
In the build up of any territory,
there are two basic types of
people-the hustlers and the set-
tiers. Another variation on this
theme was,the grasping industri-
alist vs. the compassionate man of
the people in "Ice Palace."
The question raised aid -never
really answered is whicll are the
most important. Homage was paid
to the creative adventurers in this
movie. Cimarron started e y e r y -
thing, then his wife completed the
good work.
* * *
WHILE THERE was conflict
between these two, there is no
examination in depth of the char-
acters themselves. Cimarron's a
wonderfully creative man, and
isn't creativity wonderful. It re-
mains merely unfortunate that he
couldn't treat his women better.
And there the questionremains.
What is missing in this picture
is the more or less succesful stud-
ies of the degeneration of a good
man, of which Edna Ferber is
capable. Remember James Dean
in'"Giant." In "Cimarron" there
is a man of great cruelty, but he
is bumped off early.
* .* *
BECAUSE THE story sweeps
across two generations, from' the
opening up of Oklahoma to the
Great War, the movie is neces-
sarily episodic. This in itself is
okay, but midway through the
movie the episodes lose their co-
hesion.
One gets the impression that
half way through, the director lost
interest in the story and quickly
threw together some scenes to
let us know what happened to
these people as the years passed.
Finally the movie ends with
an unabashed steal from "This
Is Your Life," which is awfully
awfully, sticky.
-Thomas Brien
DAIlLY O FFICI AL BU LLIETINf
$'!D :e~f f. S'r~i " s " {' " f h f .
(Continued from Page 2)
ents Tuesday
matics Club: Dr. Herman Gluck
ceton University will speak on
FFlat Manifolds in E-4." Meet-
be in the Amphitheater of
kham Building, Tuesday, April
:00 p.m. Refreshments will be
fter the lecture. Graduate stu-
*e invited.
Lecturer: Erich Hertzmann,
ogist and Professor of Music at
a University in New York, will
on "Mozart as, Pupil and Teach-
Monday. May 15, 4:15 p.m. In
m Amphitheatre rather than
April 11 as previously sched-
autical and Astronautical En-
g Lecture Series: Dr. Stig Lund-
Royal Institute of Technology
dish State Power Board, Stock-
weden, will give his first lec-
"Plasma Models" at 4:00 p.m.,'
torium C-Angell Hall.
'al Recital: Grady Wilson, or-
will be heard in a recital Tues-
ril 11, 8:30 p.m., in Hill Audi-
presented in partial fulfill-
the requirements for the de-
ctor of Musical Arts, Horace
ham School of Graduate Stud-
,Wilson will perform composi-
Du Mage, Buxtehude, Bach,
ucasse, and Durufle. Marilyn
Ohio Boxboard Division, Rittman, Ohio
-Man with degree in Econ., Fine Arts
(Design), Gen. Lib. Arts or Bus,. Ad.
for Sales-Territory, Sales Promotion, &"
Production. Plants & sales offices from
coast to coast.
Beginning Wednesday, April 12, the
following schools will have representa-
tives at the Bureau to interview for the
1961-1962 school. year.
WED., APRIL 12-..
Arlington Heights, M.-Elem.; Jr. HS
Lang Arts/SS, Library, Set, Math, Voc
Mus Fre/Span.
Belleville, Mch.--Elem.; Eng, Math,
Phys, Gen Sci, Girls Swim, HS Basket-
ball Coach.
Flint, Mich. (Kearsley Sch)-Elem.;
HS Eng/Fre or Span; 9th Or. Math.
Glencoe, il.-Primary, Intermediate,
? & 8th Or. Tchr., Jr., HS Sei.
Highland Park, Ill. - Biol, Physics,
Math, Swim.
THURS., APRIL 13-
Caro, Mich. -- Elem.; Eng, Comm
(Shorthand, typing, bookkeeping).
Davison, Mich.-Elem., vocal; Jr. HS
Eng, SS, Speech; HS Eng.
Grosse Pointe, Mich.-All Fields.
Kalamazoo, Mich.-Elem.' PE; Music;
Art; Eng; Math; Visiting Tchr, Sp.
Corr.
Livonia, Mich.-All Fields.
Northville, Mich.-Elem., Art; Jr. HS
Home Ec, Shop, Fre/Eng, Math/Sci;
Speech Corr., Guid.
FRI., APRIL 14-
Oak Park, 111-Elem.; Jr. HS Math,
SS, Set, Library, Graphic Arts, Span,
Girls PE, E.M.H., Visually Hdcp., Cons
Appointments,3 528 Administration
Building, NOrmandy 3-1511, Ext. 489.
PERSONNEL REQUESTS:
North Bennet Street Industrial
School, Boston, Mass.-Program Direc-
tor for Girls & Teenage Dept.-MA in
Social Work preferred. In addition to
settlement house program, school oper-
ates trade classes,rrehabilitation pro-
gram &, 4 summer camps. WOMAN;
immed. opening.
Atlantic Refining. Co., Philadelphia,
Pa.-Graft in ChemE or Chem. for 5-7
openings in Economic Evaluation &
Planning Group of Res. & Dve. Dept.
Adv. degree in Bus. Ad. or equivalent'
18 desirable.
DK Manufacturing Co.,,Dunbar Rap-
ple Division, Batavia, Ill. - Welding
Bngnr.-BS in ME or MetE & several
years welding and/or Fabricating ex-
periene. To develop welding & fabri-
cating processes for exotic, metals.
Coleman Instruments, Inc., Maywood)
11.-June grad. in Chem., Physics or
Chem. E. for Technical Sales position.
Minor or at least several courses in
Bus. Ad. necessary. After 1 yr. trng.,
will be assigned to either Midwest,
Southwest or West Coast territory.
General Motors Styling Staff, Detroit,
Mich.-Secretary to Personnel Director.,
WOMAN with college background -
any field. Typing & shorthand requir-
ed. Work also involves some admin.
work in various employee programs.
Experience not essential. starting date:
now-up to mirddle of June.
Jewish Community Center, Detroit*
Mich.-Grad.-BS or MS-in Phys. Ed.
&/or Recreation to work with elemen-
setts coed camp. Nils Predeiicksen in-
terviewing men & women for all types
of counseling positions Wed. & Thurs.
afternoons from 1:30 to 4:55.
Camp Douglas Smith-A Mich.'coed
camp sponsored by Winnetka Commu-
nity House, Winnetka, Ill. Robert Os-
trander interviewing Wed. & Thurs.
from 1:30 to 4:55 p.m. for counseling
positions. Men & women.
REQUEST:
Wolverine Boys' State, East Lansing,
Mich.-Counseling positions; June 13-
22, 1961..
Part-Time
Employment
The following part - time jobs are
available. Applications for these lobs
can be made in the Non-Academic
Personnel Office, 1020 Admin. Bldg.
Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to
12:30 p.m.
Employers desirous of hiring part-
time or temporary employes should
contactJack Lardie at NO 3-1511,hext.
2939.
Students desiring miscellaneous jobs
should consult the bulletin board in
Rm. 1020 daily.
MALE
1-Laboratory assistant, with natural
science background 20 hours per
week, all mornings or all after-
noons.
7-Psychological subjects, under 25
years of age. 1 hour per day, 5-6
days per week, thru summer also.
I