7th. THE MICHIGAN DAILY, FRID A'P..FTTV '. ''t _ 1099 '0 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 11.Tt' .Y, U ' TTTII' S, 1 n JbbUL,~LJ~~d~A~U 6 Ub.11 ~tay By The Associated Press ublic school teachers se underline labor contract .ds failed to report to< ns yesterday and para t schools and four subs isSchool Teachers' out in Detroit, Flint eking t de- class- .lyzed urban roit systems. )ne teachers' union official de- [bed the situation as a strike,1 lough such are prohibited byj lic employes in Michigan. But law was amended in 1965 to e them the right to organize; I bargain collectively. ismissal, loss of seniority and er automatic penalties under! previous law were withdrawn. Romney To Meet xov. George Romney said he lid meet with the State Labor' diation Board "to get a full ure of what's happening ... 1 to determine what steps, if ';are to be taken." You can't have law and order! ublic employes can strike with unity," Romney told a news ference Wednesday. icket lines manned by mem- s of the AFL-CIO Michigan eration of Teachers were up 38, schools in the Detroit area, Lading schools in Taylor Town- , Melvindale and North Dear- n Heights, with a total en- ment of about 24,500. dembers of the independent chigan Education Association ceted an estimated 55 schools Flint and forced the closing il secondary schools-four high schools and eight junior high schools. Tom Hill, an official of the AFL-CIO union estimated 400 members failed to report and an- other 100 called in sick in Taylor Township; 125 out of a total of 220 failed to report in Melvindale and' 55 out of 113 failed to show up in North Dearborn Heights. Union officials said at least one high school and one junior high school were closed in Melvindale and two high schools and three junior high schools were closed in Taylor Township. "The strikers are tremendously successful, with the results ex- ceeding our own prediction," said Hill. "A majority of the schools involved are educationally closed, with the remainder crippled." "There is no real education tak- ing place in any of the three school districts," Hill added. In Flint, Associate Superinten- dent Maurice Frost estimated only 150 of 800 secondary school teach- ers showed up for classes while about half the students stayed away. Elementary Schools Open Frost said all 43 Flint elementary schools were in operation, adding that some of the reporting sec- ondary teachers probably would be shifted to the elementary schools in an effort to keep them open. There was no immediate indica- tion how long the walkouts would last, "Our pos tion is the same as before the strike," said Hill. "We are willing to sit down and bar- gain." Petition Denied Four Genesee County circuit judges had denied a petition by the Flint school board to stop the planned "day of protest" walkout today by Flint area teachers. The Michigan Association of School Boards has urged local boards to impose penalties against strikers. These could include dis- missal, demotion and loss of ten- ure. But Hill declared that teachers would not be intimidated by the threats. Describing the school board group's statement as an unsophis- ticated approach to collective bar- gaining, Hill said: "I think it will give teachers a good deal more determination. To talk about blacklisting teachers is one of the most odious things I ever heard." At least one school board has come out in opposition to the Michigan Association of School Board's statement. Protest Due The Ann Arbor Board of Educa- tion Wednesday night said it would lodge a protest in the form of a letter to the Michigan School Board Association Journal. Ann Arbor board president Lloyd T. Williams Jr. was spe- cifically critical of a provision calling for the names of striking teachers to be placed on a list which would be made available to any future employer. A $444,800 pay raise was nego- tiated with Ann Arbor teachers this year. The school board in Dexter, a small community about 10 miles west of Ann Arbor, has unani- mously adopted the MASB reso- lution. All the suburban Detroit AFL- CIO groups are asking a base' salary of $5,700 to $6,000 for bachelor of arts degrees and a maximum in eight to 10 steps' of $9,400 to $9,700. Under federation proposals, teachers with masters degrees would start at $6,000 to $6,400, with a miximum of $10,000 to $10,500. FIL 'Bring Up 13 Off Dead Hui By BETSY COHN Unless the idea of humor has been drastically renovated since 1938, there is little comedy ob- vious in Howard Hawk's "Bring- ing Up Baby." Watching Cary Grant and Katherine Hepburn romp about in this farcical pro- duction, is like an endless tum- ble through an unending mass of scotch tape with nothing sub- stantial on which to cling. What cohesion there is, is a messy array of slap-stick, a gooey assortment of pat lines whose conclusions are easily predictable and a transparent plot that be- comes more annoying as its story- line becomes further entangled. Cary Grant plays an unconvinc- ing zoologist who spends his life piecing together fragments of dinosaurs. He works with his se- vere, sticklfigure-fiance, Nancy, who is the conventional staunch lady hero. She vows that nothing domestic will interfere with their careers and appoints a 400-boned double- IUUY IF UL4 mor Cliches mastodon as their "baby." Grant plays an emotionless role as he- watches his double jointed mastodon and single dimensioned life being laid out before him. Keeping within the cardboard framework of the character he has been portraying, Grant pro- ceeds in his usual jaw-hanging manner to become totally en- gulfed in the chaotic cosmos of lively double-jointed, Katherine Hepburn. She portrays a wealthy woman who has nothing better to do than devise schemes and snares in order to keep Grant close by her side. Hepburn takes him through a distorted maize of mock hilarity: the situaions are pointless and humorless and the amusement tries in vain to borrow from ab- surdity, flippant-back-and-forth dialogue and exaggerated situa- tions. "Bringing Up Baby" is somewhat of an overactive movie: too much physical action, though nothing strenuously mental. * JAZZ in the Sun SUNDAY, June 5, 5:00 P.M. FREE - West Park Band Shell - FREE * RON BROOKS QUINTET, VOCALIST * DETROIT CONTEMPORARY 4 -Less than a mile from U of M campus between Huron & Miller MS UAC presents J * m gi DID DID! YOU? 4 SLX WeEKS LATER: Detroit's Northern High Still 'Bears Marks of Rebellion I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN DETROIT (R) - Nobody paid much attention when a handful of dissatisfied students organized a boycott of classes six weeks ago at Detroit's predominantly Negro Northern High School, But within days, the handful had been joined by most of the school's 2,300 students in a four- day walkout, had won support from adult civil rights groups, set up a freedom school and won the apparent removal of their prin- cipal. Northern still bears the marks of the bloodless rebellion and stu-I dents, teachers and parents are attempting to resolve grievances in a move that could alter the Student leaders deny faculty members have been threatened or mistreated and counter with a charge that some teachers have been changing grades in reprisal' against the students. A 19-member committee com- posed of students, faculty and parents, is looking into grading standards, faculty qualifications, the physical plant, extra-curricular activities and other conditions at Northern. The president of the Detroit Board of Education, Dr. Remus G. Robinson, has asked the panel for+ a preliminary report by June 14, ten days before the last day of school. 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 3519 Administration Bldg. be- fore 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 once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. FRIDAY, JUNE 3I Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-"How to Plan, Install, Conduct, and Measure Management Training": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. Cinema Guild-"Bringing Up Baby": Architecture Aud., 7 and 9 p.m. Dept. of Speech University Players Production - George Bernard Shaw's "Misalliance": Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre, 8 p.m. General Notices Doctoral Candidates who expect to receive degrees in August, 1966, must have at least three bound copies (the original in a "spring binder") of their dissertation in the office of the Grad- uate School by Mon., June 20. The re- port of the doctoral committee on the final oral examination must be filed with the Recorder of the Graduate School together with two copies of the thesis, which is ready in all respects for publication, not later than Mon.; July 18. Doctoral Examination for Robert' Harold Rasche, Economics; thesis: "Bond Prices, Interest Rate Structure, and Debt Management Policy," Fri., June 3, 105 Economics Bldg., at 2 p.m. Chairman, R. L. Teigen. Doctoral Examination for Charles Daniel Johnson, English Language & Literature; thesis: "A Pedagogical Study in Contrastive Cultural Analy- sis Illustrated by Steinbeck's 'Travels with Charley in Search of America'," Fri., June' 3, 2601 Haven Hall, at 4 p.m. Chairman, C. F. Wells. Doctoral Examination for Dennis Pa- pasian, History; thesis: "Nicholas Ivan- ovich Kos tomarov: Russian Hlistorian. Assistant 'Investment and group staff Ukranian Nationalist, Slavic Federal- attorneys, Assistant medical director. ist," Fri., June 3, 3609 Haven Hall, All require appropriate degrees and no at 3 p.m. Chairman, H. W. Dewey. or limited experience. U.S. Army, Frankford Arsenal, Phila- Doctoral Examination for Mark delphia, ParyEngineering positions to Reader, Political Science; thesis: "The be filled by experienced engineers in Political Criticism of George Orwell," Metallurgy, Chemical and Mechanical Fri., June 3, 4609 Haven Hall, at 9:30 fields. a.m. Chairman, Frank Grace. Wayne County Juvenile Court, De- troit, Mich.-Several vacancies in June Doctoral Examination for Rodolfo for Casework Aides. BA in Soc. Sci- Gonzalez, Electrical Engineering; thes- ences or education with good academic is: "Synthesis Problems in Linear record, no experience required. Threshold Logic," Fri., June 3, 1028 E. Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Co., Engrg. Bldg., at 2 p.m. Chairman, E. L. .hiladelpnia, Pa.-Desire to fill imme- Lawler. diate vacancy in Law Dept. with young man of high academic standing in a Doctoral Examination for Charles top law school who has graduated Reading MacCluer, Mathematics; thesis: within the last three or four years. "On Exceptional Polynomials," Fri., Involves general corporate practice of June 3, 3015 Angell Hall, at 2 p.m. an insurance co. counsel, areas of taxa- Chairman, D. J. Lewis, tion, real estate, contracts, claims work, mortgages, and direct placement financing. Excellent opportunity for Plac m entadvancement in dept., or firm manage- ANNOUNCEMENTS:-et All members of law dept. are of- ANNONCEMNTS:ficers of the company. Federal Service Entrance Examina- fcr ftecmay tion ue e ceEntrnu ba n Management Consultants, New York tion-Due to the large number of po- Area-Auditor Mngmn for internal auditsYofk sitions still open in Ill., Ind., Kentucky, cororatiosdivsioinand darie Mich.,Ohio, and Wis. area the FSEE Grad with good record, major in ac- will remain open for applications un- cuni g odprefecPA, .10yeiar - til Aug. 31, 1966. Opportunities cover wide range of fields. Use application perience, some with public accounting - + - -.. . + firm , unless the school board tries to return Carty. Asked whether Carty would re- main as principal, Dr. Charles J. Wolfe, assistant superintendent for school administration, said, "I don't know of any plan to do otherwise." The freedom school, set up at St. Joseph's Episcopal Church and attended by an estimated 1,700 students during the boycott still is in operation. The boycott also led to a study of inner city schools by a citizens committee which reported finding that in 47 of 56 elementary schools, fourth grade students were read- ing at least eight months below grade average. In the same schools, sixth grade students in 51 schools were read- ing at least a year below grade average, the committee said. Come to aI CHILDREN'S CONCERT SAT., JUNE 4, 11 A.M. & 2 P.M. Slauson Junior High Aud. Children 50c Adults $1.00 FOLK SINGING & DANCING f r f f FRIDAY and SATURDAY FOCUS-THE AMERICAN FILM DIRECTOR: : r f r f r r f r HOWARD HAWKS af r r (1)938 ) f r f rM a Starring KAT HAR I NE H EPBURN, CARY GRANT, CHARLES RUGGLES & BA RY FITZGERALD SH ORT: "A LEXA NDE R CA LDE R: FROM T HE CI RCUS TO T HE MOON" L I r It,3~ 3 r IN T HE A RCH ITE CTUR E AUD 1TOR IUM fADMISSION: FIFTY CENTS r f r 4irass*r srrrs Irsr~~ssss~r ', city's entire educational setup. Questionnaires 'Wait and See' Some 250 students have been The student attitude is perhaps sent questionnaires asking them; best described by 17-year-old for their assessment of the situa- Charles Colding's comment that tion at the school before and after he is adopting a "wait and see the boycott. attitude" pending a final settle- "We're getting back into good ment of school problems. patterns of learning," said George Carty, who officially still is W. Donaldson, assistant principal. principal, has not been at the "Things are going quite smoothly." school since April 26. School board Donaldson said absenteeism is officials say he has not been re- running about 18 to 20 per cent, moved, but is studying Northern's which he said is normal. problems at the Schools Center A student-faculty council has Building 25 blocks away. been set up and is drafting a con- Discipline Breakdown? stitution for joint government. Several teachers have charged Colding, whose editorial in a that Carty's removal caused a student newspaper charging the breakdown in discipline and eroded school provided inferior education the student's respect for authority. touched off the controversy, said Two instructors said their lives students will not accept a per- had been threatened several times manent settlement that does not by students. include replacing Carty. "I'm so scared it isn't funny," However, he said he doubted said Mrs. Dimitra LeBeau. there would be further boycotts I i t t i L I I found at the Bureau of Appointments or on back page of the FSEE an- nouncement. Send it to U.S. Civil Serv- ice Commission, Main Post Office Bldg., Chicago, Ill.. 60607. Test dates for all cities in this area will be determined after sufficient applications are re- ceived. Applicants will be notified of time and place of exams. INTERVIEW: THURS., JUNE 9- Tulane University, New Orleans, La. -School of Business Administration. Dr. S. A. Zeff will interview prospec- tive students; especially interested in Engineers Science and L.S.&A. grads for work toward MBA and PhD degrees. Make appointments at Bureau of Ap- pointments, 764-7460. POSITION OPENINGS: Salt River Project, Phoenix, Ariz. - Seek recent grads with up to 2 yrs, exper. with electrical untility speciali- zation in BSEE degree. This is an im- mediate opening with possibilities for other contacts for those interested in electrical engineering in the Phoenix region. Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance Co., St. Paul, Minn.-Seeking grads for' openings in the following: Administra- tive agency supervisor. Statement Ac- counting. Group sales representatives,. Actuarial trainees. Programmer trainees. For further information call 764- 7460, General Div., Bureau of Appoint- menits, 3200 SAB. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE: 212 SAB- ANNOUNCEMENT: Harrah's Reno and Lake Tahoe, Nev. -21 or over, few 18 year olds. Openings in food department, bar department, gaming and miscellaneous. Details at Summer Placement Service, 212 SAB, Lower Level, For further information, Summer Placement, 212 SAB, Lower Level. Registration for UAC Summer Weekend TENNIS TOURNAMENT Fri. & Mon., 10 A.M.-2 P.M. SDIAG ALL INVITED i 4-= DIAL 8-6416 PLAYING THROUGH SATURDAY "AN EXCEPTIONALLY GOOD MOVIE! 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