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December 20, 1962 - Image 5

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The Michigan Daily, 1962-12-20

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, DECEMBER 20, 1962

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGR:I

TUE MICHIGAN flATLY PA lu! - ~ amy a

K aavrL r l v j§

'NOBLE' SUFFERING:
Dumond Notes Negro Plight

west Indian University
Aids Mental Awakening

IREr

By MARTHA MacNEAL
"We have waited so long-too
long--to behave decently, justly
and honorably towards the Ne-
gro, that our loss has been very
great," according to Prof. Dwight
Dumond of the history department.
"The greatest loss is seen in
what the situation has done to
the charcter of whites all over the
country-it has warped our vi-
sion.
"The Southern whites, in par-
ticular, have never been able to
learn that in a very real sense
the Negro has been behaving in a
difficult situation much more no-
bly and with much greater wis-
dom than the whites," he stressed.
Not Optimistic
Prof. Dumond, who will lecture
on "The Emancipation Proclama-
tion-Freedom in the Fullness of
Time" Jan. 9 as past of the Uni-
versity's observance of the centen-
nial of that document, admits that
he is pessimistic about the pres-
ent problems facing the American
Negro.
"I feel very strongly that any
violence growing out of the cur-

rently tense situation will result
in a great loss to the Negroes
themselves, a loss of their dignity
and nobility; and yet it is beyond
their control," he said.
Prof. Dumond feels that "the
lynchings, the beatings, the injus-
tices and the indignities that went
with the Ku Klux Klan and con-
tinue now in the white citizens'
councils" did not come from re-
construction, but from slavery, it-
self "the epitome of cruelty."
In the times surrounding the
Emancipation Proclamation, slav-
ery was viewed in very narrow
terms as simply the ownership of
people, just as livestock might be
owned, he: says.
People, therefore, thought that
freeing the slaves from obligation
to their masters was all that had
to be done.
Complete Subjection
But slavery involved two
things," Prof. Dumond stresses. "It
was the complete subjection of the
individual, and likewise the com-
plete subjection of the Negro peo-
ple by the whites. The Southern
whites never accepted emancipa-

By DAVID FAINBERG
One of the most interesting uni-
versities in the western hemis-
phere, the University of the West
Indies in the Caribbean, is making
a very significant contribution to
the new intellectual awakening
in the island community.
As reported in The Christian
Science Monitor, the university
has grown in a short decade to
international stature due to the
fine research being carried out by
its laboratories of tropical studies
and its social and economics re-
search institute.
The university, whose main
campus is at Kingston, Jamaica,
was established 14 years ago, fol-
lowing a study of a joint British-
West Indian commission as a "col-
lege of higher education for quali-
fied students from all of the scat-
tered former British possessions in
the Caribbean area."
Today the university extends
nearly 1,000 miles from Kingston
to the islands of Trinidad and
Tobago, where its engineering and
agricultural departments a7e lo-
cated, a few miles off the coast
of South America. It has grown
to such an extent that it present-
ly enrolls some 1,300 students
from the Caribbean area and a
few from Africa also.

As vice-chancellor of the uni-
versity, Prof. Arthur Lewis reports
UWI has been carrying on re-
search in such areas as experimen-
tal field work in developing a new
and better tropical agriculture; in
the field of animal husbandry; and
in the area of botany and plant
pathology where a herbarium with
some 24,000 specimens has been
organized.
Team Gains
Court Victory
A University Law School team
defeated Washburn University at
Topeka Tuesday night in the first
round of the 13th annual Nation-
al Moot Court Competition, spon-
sored by the New York Bar Asso-
ciation.
The team consisted of Law
School seniors Gerald Jordan,
Thomas McCarthy and Michael
Metzger.
The arguments involved the
right of an accused to counsel at
all stages of a criminal case, and
the legal consequences of the Sen-
ate's failure to confirm President
John F. Kennedy's recess appoint-
ment of a federal judge.

the QU3L.
S320 S O UTH ST A TE ST RE ET, A NN A RBOR, M IC HIG A N
~Og1
-S '
ofC riend
e oe ,
\ 4
It is pleasuret e xtend
BEST 3ISHES OF THE SEASON
oland
Ma you Tow erihed on,
of Haoieess!
of
I' s'a.peasr t exe '4
~ ~ ~~ ~'-

PROF. DWIGHT DUMOND
. . , great loss
tion in the sense that it made the
Negro a free citizen
"They conttnued to feel that
the Negro should not make deci-
sions on his own, that he should
not take part in political life and
that he should hold no position
in society except a subordinate
one. Thus freedom, while a great
blessing, became also a disappoint-
ing and disillusioning thing to the
Negro after a while."
Considering the value of con-
temporary student movements to
aid the Negro population, Prof.
Dumond notes that there never
has been any progress in securing
decent treatment of the Negro by
Southern whites except under tre-
mendous pressures from the out-
side.
Vital Problem
He feels that Southerners have
refused to recognize treatment of
the Negro as a vital national prob-
lem, extending from our own in-
stitutional life through foreign re-
lations.
"'Interference' is inevitable," he
nmaintains. "The wisdom of what
to do and how and where to do it
is always open to question, but
there can be no argument about
the necessity for the federal gov-
ernment to afford protection for
United States citizens under all
circumstances. If people are not
protected against injustices, then
citizenship is a mockery."
'O 00
AUSTIN
DiAMOND
CORPORATION

USED CARS
NEED CASH-1962 VW, good condition.
Call NO 2-2354 around 5 p.m. N4
'55 2-DR. CHEV. Good clean car, stand-
ard trans. $325. HU 2-9425.
MUSICAL MDSE.
RADIOS, REPAIRS
FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY on
radios, phonos, tape recorders and TVs
with this ad. Campus Radio & TV,
325 E. Hoover .X9
A-1 NEW AND USED INSTRUMENTS
BANJOS, GUITARS AND BONGOS
Rertal Purchase Plan
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
119 W. washington
GUITARS ETC.
Make, Repair, Buy and Sell
Private and Group Instruction
Hoots Daily
Herb David Guitar Studio
209 SO. STATE
NO 5-8001
X5
MISCELLANEOUS
WHY STUDY? Your friends await you
at the Schwaben Inn, 215 Ashley.
Join them for a gigantic SCHWABEN
burger (just 50c) and a cold drink.
Ya'll come. M2
WASHTENAW CAFE
GERMAN AND AMERICAN CUISINE
We specialize in
German foods.
STUDENT SPECIALS DAILY
211 N. Main
FEELING CHUBBY?
Stay happy yet slim with Mott's
Figure Control Strawberry a n d
Apricot Preserves
at
RALPH'S MARKET

LINES
2
3
4

.70
.85
1.00

1.95
2.40
2.85

1 DAY 3 DAYS

Figure 5 average words to a line.
Phone NO 2-4786

r

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

The Daily Bulletin is an official
publication of the University of
Michigan for which The Michigan
Daily assumes no editorial responsi-
bility. Notices should be sent in
TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564
Administration Building , before 2
p.m. two days preceding publication.
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20
Day Calendar
9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.-Univ. of Mich.
and Bendix Systems Division of the
Bendix Corporation International Arms
Control Symposium.
General Notices
Tickets Now Available by Mail for the
U-M Players production of the new Paul
Mayer translation of Luigi Pirandello's
"Six Characters in Search of an Au-
thor." Performances 8 p.m., Trueblood
Agxd., Frieze Bldg., Jan. 9, 10, 11 & 12.
Wed. & Thurs.: $1.50, .00; Fri. & Sat.:
$1.75, 1.25. Enclose self-addressed stamp-
ed envelope. Checks: U-M Players.

MICHIGAN DAILY
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES

6 DAYS
3.45
4.20
4.95

Foreign

Visitors

Following is the foreign visitor who
will be on campus during the holidays
on the dates indicated. Program ar-
rangements are being made by the In-
ternational Center, Mrs. Clifford R.
Miller, Ext. 3358.
0. L. A. Trinidad, Secretary-General
of the Ministry of Public Health & So-
cial Welfare, Asuncion, Paraguay, Dec.
29-Jan. 1.
Events
Doctoral Examination for Leland Earl
Bartholomew, Music; thesis: "Alessan-
dro Raueriji's Collection of Canzoni
Per Sonare (Venice, 1608): Historical
and Analytical Study," Fri., Dec. 21, E.
Council Rm., Rackham Bldg., at 10:06
a.m. Chairman, H. T. David.
.Placement
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
The Central Intelligence. Agency will
interview at the Bureau of Appts. on
Thurs., Jan. 10. They want people for
the following areas: 1) Jr. Officer Trng.
Prog. 2) Geographic Research & Cartog-
raphy. 3) Economic Research. 4) General
Research. 5) Clerical & Secretarial. 6)
Editorial. Call the Bureau, Ext. 3544,
for appointments. We have a new book-
let from the CIA & you must read it
before you interview.
U.S. Navy Officer Recruiting Team will
be in the Lower Lobby of the tMich.
Union on Jan. 14-16 They will discuss
all Navy programs: flying & others,
with any interested candidates.
POSITION OPENINGS:
City of New York Civil Service-Mahy
openings including: 1) Mechanical
Engnr.-BS plus 4 yrs. exper. OR PhD
plus 1 yr. exper. 2) Jr. Landscape
Architect-BS in landscape arch. 3) Re-
habilitation Counselor-BA including
18 credits in vocational guidance, vo-
cational rehab. or related field plus
1 yr. exper. OR MA. 4) Jr. Architect-
BS in Arch.

General Atomic, Div. of General Dy-
namics, San Diego, Calif.-Openings for
Reactor Physicists. BS in Engrg. or
Physics & a MS in Nuclear Engrg. with
emphasis on Reactor Physics. Familiar-
ity with diffusion theory & transport'
theory calculations, reactor kinetics &
heat transfer is desirable.
Model Engrg. & Mfg. Corp., Hunting-j
ton, Ind.-Openings for Electrical, Elec-
tronic & Mech. Engnrs. at the BS level.
Brochures in Room 128-K, West Engrg.
Bldg.
Mich. State Employment Service-An
Electrical Engnr. for Research & Dev.
firm specializing in Ultrasonics. Stu-
dent near completion of BS degree or
just completed BS degree. Male only.
With summer. exper. only. Contact
Engrg. Placement forgfurther infor-
mation, 128-H W. Engrg.
S * *
For further information, please call
General Div., Bureau of Appts., 3200
SAB, Ext. 3544.
SUMMER PLACEMENT:
412 SAB-
Marshall Field & Co's Oakbrook Store'
will conduct interviews for positions
on its 1963 College Board during Christ-
mas vacation. Dec. 19-21, 27-31, & Jan.
2-3 have been set aside for these inter-
views. Appointments are necessary &
may be obtained by writing to Mrs.
E. Beaudette, Employment Office,
Marshall Field & Company, 1 Oakbrook
Center Mall, Oak Brook, Ill. Only girls
who will be continuing here next year
as sophomores or juniors are eligible.
Part-Time
Employment'
The following part-time jobs are
available. Applications for these jobs
can be made in the Part-time Placement
Office, 2200 Student Activities Bldg.,
during the following hours: Mon. thru
Fri. 8 a.m. til 12 noon and 1:30 til 5 p.m.
Employers desirous of hiring students
for part-time or full-time temporary
work, should contact Bob Hodges, Part-
time Interviewer at NO 3-1511, Ext. 3553.
Students desiring miscellaneous odd
jobs should consult the bulletin board
in Rm. 2200, daily.
MALE
2-Russian Voicers. 10 to 15 hours per
week.
1-Dishwasher in exchange for lunch
and dinner.
12-Registered Ann Arbor voters to
circulate petitions door-to-door 4
to 5 hours per day. Starting as soon
as possible thru Jan. 1st.
FEMALE
1-Steno-typist to work Tues. evenings
from 4 to 5:30 or 6:00 p.m.
ORGANIZATION
NOTICES
Graduate Outing Club. Hiking, To-
boganning, etc., Every Sunday thru va-
cation, 2 p.m., Rackham Bldg., Huron
St. entrance.

HUNGRY? SUFFERING from study eye
strain? Need companionship? Come to
SCHWABEN INN, 215 Ashley, for a
POOR BOY sandwich and a visit with
good friends. M2
TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED to Philadelphia via
turnpike. Lv. Dec. 21. Ret. Jan. 3.
Round trip $20. Call 449-2509. 07
RIDE WANTED to Traverse City area
on Thurs., Dec. 20. Call NO 3-1561,
Ext. 921.1 G3

709 Packard

Avis. _

M1)

CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
DISCOUNTS ON NEW TIRES
(With trade-in). Get our price before
you buy! Life-time guarantee. No
money down. Up to one-year to pay.
Specializing in brake service and
motor tune-ups.
HICKEY'S SERVICE STATION
Main at Catherine. NO 8-7717
S1
FOREIGN CAR SERVICE
We service all makes and models
of Foreign and Sports Cars.
Lubrication $1.50
Nye Motor Sales
514 E. Washington
82
C-TED
STAN DARD
SERVICE
FRIENDLY SERVICE
IS OUR BUSINESS
It's time for FALL CHANGE OVER.
Let us put ANTI-FREEZE in now
before winter sets in.
"You expect more from
Standard and you get It."
SOUTH UNIVERSITY & FOREST
NO 8-9163
82
FOR RENT
APT. TO SHARE with female during
second semester. NO 5-0393. 015
1326 GEDDES (Geddes near Forest).
New 2-bedroom apt. completely furn-
ished. $185. Call NO 3-8866. Mr. Skol-
nik. 016
ROOMMATE for new 4-man apt. 629
B. Forest. 2-4044 or 5-9893. 017
2 14-story towers overlooking Huron
River. Game Room. Swimming Pool.
Balconies and covered parking. Stu-
dio, 1, 2, 3-bedrooms. $113-312.
HURON TOWERS
2200 Fuller Road

A

I

ow

Call NO 3-4165
Special weekend rates from 5 p.m.
Friday til 9 a.m. Monday . . . $15.00
plus 9e a mile. Rates include gas, oil,
insurance.
514 E, Washington St.
FOR SALE
GLEE CLUB RECORDS ON SALE TO-
DAY IN THE FISHBOWL.
LARGE, HEAVY-DUTY wooden tables,
suitable for housing unit dining or
private work tables. Call Don Mac-
ritchie, 5-9193. B21
CHRISTIAN ENTERPRISES
STORE
3650 CARPENTER ROAD
PHONE-NO 8-9629
Open: Mon., Fri., Sat.-8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Tue., Wed., Thurs.-8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Furnishings for home or apartment.
PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE
10% off on all furniture and appliances
TVs from 22.50 up
Refrigerators 29.50 up
Studios 39.50 up
reupholstered
Hide-a-Beds 64.50 up
reupholstered
Washers 22.50 up
We have all kinds of chests, desks,
china cabinets, antiques, brie-a-
brac, toys, lamps, tables, clothing.
BARGAIN CORNER
ATTENTION ROTC
Officers' Shoes
Army-Navy Oxfords-$7.95
Socks 39c Shorts 69c
Brasso 69c
SAM'S STORE
LOST AND FOUND
LOST: BROWN LEATHER PURSE.
REWARD, CALL 3-1561 Ext. 201. A16
GOLD Helbrose Invincible Watch with
black band. Lost in S. Univ. Area.
REWARD call 31268. A15
LOST-I. Sc. and B. Soc. C. Parkhani,
Phone: 662-9886 A13
LOST- Light brown glasses, orange
case. 333 Mosher, NO 3-1561, Ext. 1041.
A12
FOUND-Black girl's glasses Thurs.
nite front of Angell Hall. Call 3-2870
A14

PERSONAL
SELAGINELLA and ALLOMYCES wish
ALYSSA KAHN a Happy Birthday P27
CO-EDS HATE YOU, Wexner
Ps
SALLY JO SORORITY-I don't know
what's wrong with stick shifts. Have
a good vacation! John F3
TO: S.J.R. (MD.) Wait and see what
else is up my sleeve. Love, SANTA Fl
KAY: Sorry I am late with my birthday
wishes, but just wait until next year!
Have a happy, Ronni P2
TUTO: Get out from under that mistle-
toe and have a great vacation-your
roommates, too. The girls on Hill 24
AUSTIN DIAMOND CORPORATION -
"Where marginal prices buy quality
diamonds!" 1209 S. University. 63-
7151. 43
WANT TO ESCAPE? Try art. Try Gen-
eration staff. We need you. For infor-
mation call John Herrick editor, NO
3-2273 or NO 2-3241 You too can
speak for your generation. **-
GLEE CLUB RECORDS ON SALE TO-
DAY IN THE FISHBOWL. P12
LOOKING FOR Christmas gifts? Why
not give Glee Club Records (and keep
one for yourself)? Michigan Mena
Glee Club records, "On Tour" and
"White Tie and Tails" are on. sale
today through Thursday, 8:00-5:00. F11
WANTED TO RENT
WANT TO RENT GARAGE for 1 week
starting Dec. 22 NO 2-5152 L3
GARAGE WANTED
Vicinity of Canterbury Rd., Ann Arbor
Woods, John Allen School or South-
east Ann Arbor area. Phone NO 5-9429
after 5 p.m.
WANTED TO BUY
WANTED TO BUY: Raccoon coat. Call:
NO 3-0787. Xi6
BUSINESS SERVICES
NEED TYPING DONE? Excellent typist
will do it for you at low rates. Call
NO 2-4782 for information. J24
FOR THE FINEST SELECTION of party
favors and unique gifts contact Bud-
Mor Agency, 1103 S. University, NO
2-6362. 4
ANY MOTH HOLES, TEARS, or BURNS
in your clothes. We'll reweave them
like new. WEAVE-BAC SHOP, 224
Arcade. J2
MANUSCRIPTS, TERM PAPERS typed,
Mutlth Offset for reproduction
Photo copy, mailings. Gretzingers
Business Service, 320 S. Huron. HU
2-0191, i3
DOES FOOD leave you listless? Is that
your problem. Bunky? Then try a
Schwabenburger. You haven't tasted
anything until you have one at
Schwaben Inn. J71
665-8184
Manuscript typing, transcription, medi-
cal, legal, technical conferences,
mimeographing, offset. Quick, accu-
rate, experienced. Professional Service
Associates.334 Catherne. J11
ATTENTION COEDS:
Enjoy a fall pick-up with the
latest in hair styling from
VOGUE BEAUTY SALON
300 S. Thayer in the concourse
of the Bell Tower

NO 3-0800

NO 5-9162
C14

SPACIOUS one bedroom apt. for 2
available Feb. Very quiet. Call Larry
at NO 2-1149. C12
APARTMENT available for Jan. 27.
Suitable for 1 or 2. 663-1692. C40
NEW FOUR Person Apt., ultra-modern.
1000 Oakland. Ideal location. NO 5-
8928. C1
ACT NOW
Studios from $111.00
1-bedroom from $130.00
Bus transportation to campus
and Ann Arbor business district.
HURON TOWERS
NO 3-0800, NO 5-9162
STUDENTS
Several apartments available to
'share in campus area

1209 South U.

663-7151

m

0

I

FOR $60.00

APARTMENTS, LIMITED
NO 3-0511 Evenings
NO 5-9271

045

YOU CAN BUY A PORTABLE, TRANSISTORIZED, PEN-
TRON (AMERICAN-MADE) BATTERY-OPERATED TAPE RE-
CORDER, CAMERA-LIKE IN SIZE (2 7/8 x 61/ x 9 3/4) AND

RAMSAY PRINTERS
119 East Liberty St.-(across from P-Bell)
wishes you a Merry Christmas
and a Happy New Year
-~~- ---- ~ ~ ~----~ ~-~~ ~ ~-- ~ ~ ~- - '4

BIKES and SCOOTERS
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL-New Lambretta
or Vespa Scooter, $365. Free delivery.
Detroit Scooter, 7343 W. Eight Mile
Road, 31%j blocks west off Livernois.
DI 1-3197. Z27

Fee coffee served to our
patrons.
Call NO 8-7384, also evenings
by appointment.
EXPERIENCED HAIR
STYLISTS

WEIGHT

(61 lbs.).

TAKE IT TO CLASS and replace your pencilled notes with
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THE MEMORY.

(Tape can be erased and used again and again

or kept as a perranent records.)
RECORDER COMES COMPLETE WITH BATTERIES, TAPE,
AND SHOULDER-STRAP FOR EASY CARRYING, ready to re-
cord with a flick of the start-and-stop switch for one minute
or solid hour.

.LN LL L, L
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EXTRA REELS of

(one-hour) tape cost 60c each, for re-

cording entire course of lectures FROM YOUR SEAT, if desired.
CLIP YOUR CHECK TO THIS AD and mail both to PEN-
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