Page Six . THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February t, 1912 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~5unday, Fdbruary ~i, 19(2 ~i1 Still (Contin more. Edgars .. . ued from Page 4) I i { I I The First Annual Pass the Buck Cop-Out Edgar to the State Board of Education, which submitted six dif- ferent integration plans for Detroit schools and then supported none of them. The Second Annual Chicken Little The Sky is Falling Edgar to Mayor Robert Harris, for convin- cing city voters that re-electing him was the only way to avoid a The Michigan Daily N a z i takeover by last year's Chicken Little winner, Republican conservative Jack Garris. * * * The Nikita Khrushchev Shoe on the Table Edgar, also to Mayor Harris for exploding at a city council meeting, promising to "teach the people of this city that they have a bunch of Repub- lican councilmen who are too yellow to place the issues before them-cheap penny-pinching Republicans who will not face the music." * The Archie Bunker All-Amen- can Edgar to Republican city councilman Lloyd Fairbanks for trying to block the Ozone House appropriation because he didn't want "those kind of people" in the city business district. * * * The First Annual Tricky Dicky Ed- gar to the one and only Tricky Dicky, for his cleverly-timed appearances on national television in which he pre- sented magical solutions to the coun- try's problems with the true magi- cian's flair-pulling such astounding rabbits out of the presidential hat as the trip to China, the wage-price f r e e z e and the secretly-negotiated Vietnam peace proposal. * * * The Pinocchio Nasal Extension Edgar to Supreme Court Justice William Renquist, who said that a memo opposing court-ordered desegregation he wrote in 1954 summarized the views of his lib- eral boss, Justice Hubert Jackson. The Issue in Every Pot Edgar to campus activists, who in a clever move, held the Administration Bldg. last spring, demanding resolution of six issues, including an end to war re- search, an end to the war, use of Uni- versity facilities for anti-war activi- ties, continuance of Course Mart course 327, the support of child care facilities, and an end to ROTC. * * * The Ghost of Christmas Present Edgar, for a magnanimous decision, after months of feuding with the na- tion's labor leaders, to ffee impris- oned Teamsters leader Jimmy Hoffa just before Christmas. I The Ladybird Johnson Beautify- :40 America Edgar to Gino's, the plastic wonderland hamburger joint which replaced an historic building at the corner of State St. and Washington. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ..... '...... F: :y .:.".": vy;:{:Sr:".:?.. .. . . . . . .tf"f;:g,4FL'?i?:":::ir.,;:..i:{} STUCK WITH AN APARTMENT TO SUBLET .FOR THIS SUMMER? The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Plichigan. Notices should be sent in TYPS WRITTEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6 TV Center Film: "Girls and Women: Girls in noon. School," WWJ-TV, Channel 4. Family Recreation Program: for fac- ulty, staff and married students, all sports bldg. facilities, 1:30-5:30 pm. Music School: SAI American Musi- cale, Sch. of Mus. Recital Hall, 2:30 pm. Music School: M. Gunning, piano, and L. Lynch, piano, Sch., of Mus. Recital Hall, 4:30 pm. Music School: M. Bowman, trumpet, Sch. of Mus. Recital Hall, 8 pm. i I RENT IT .EASILY through the Michigan D a I I yrs Summer Sublet Supplement appear- ing MARCH 19. FOR ONLY s6 you can place a 1 col. x 4 " ad TODAY! MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7 SACUA Meeting: 4079 Admin. Bldg.,' 3^pm. Physics Seminar: E. Eisenhandler, Univ. of London, "pp Interactions at 0.8-2.4 GeV/c," P&A Colloquium Rm., 4 pm. Music School: Japanese Gamelan Mu-j sic and Dance, Hilf Aud., 8 pm. SUMMER PLACEMENT1 3200 SAB ANNOUNCEMENT: Lower Huron Metropolitan Park,: Belleville, Mich., summer openings in4 following categories, grounds mainte-1 nance, counter girl, park attendants, lifeguards, cashiers, further details and applications avail., 76417460. INTERVIEW Camp Mataponi, Maine girls, will in- terview Feb. 8, 10:30 to 4:30 p.m.; open- ings include supervisory asst. (25 or up), waterfront, landsports, arts, na- ture, campcraft and tripping- (20 and7 up). Register in person or by phone. Further details avail. 764-7460. INTERVIEWt Miss Liberty: London, Eng., clerical openings in London, typing must be 50 wds. perm.; will interview Feb. 7, 3 to 5 p.m.; register by phone or in per- son. INTERVIEW Camp Tamarack, Detroit Fresh Air Society; will interview Feb. 8/9 from 9:30 to 5; gen. counselors, specialists in waterfront, arts and crafts, supervisors and service staff, CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT I 3200 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG. INTERVIEWS: Sign up for the follow- ing recruiters beginning tomorrow, Feb.4 7, at our office or by phone, 763-1363:a Feb. 14. Blevins Realty-seeking all majors; U.S. Social Security Admin., all majors. Feb.15, Aetna Life & Casualty - all majors; Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. - B. in B.M. in finance, math, stat., bus.. econ~, math;, Lincoln National Life - Xerox Corp. - all majors. Feb 16, U.S. Atomic Energyy Com- mission - M. in C.C.S., econ., nuclear physics, pol. sci., pub. adm., soc.: Foote, Cone & Belding Advertising-B in Journ., math., B.M. PhD. in psych, soc., stat.; PhD in econ.; Howard Univ. Grad. Sch in History and Poi. Sci., mi- nority students only; Michigan Dept. of Civ. Service-B.M. in psych., soc., soc. Wk.; B. in occupational therapy, phys- ical therapy; M. in speech therapy. Feb. 17, Bureau of the Census-B., M. in econ. (must have at least 6 hrs. in stat. & 9 hrs. in math) B., K. in C.C.S.; The Chicago Payment Center of The Soc. Sec. Adm., all majors; The Pru- dential Insurance Co. of America, all majors. Feb. 18, General Services Admin., B. in econ., engl., Hist., math, physics, psych.; Northwestern Mutual Life In- surance Co.-all majors; The Port of New York Authority, B., M. In C.C.S., econ, math,Apor. sci., liberal arts, arch. & design, city planning, urban plan- ning, pub. adm. EDUCATION DIVISION The following schools will send reps to our office to interview prospective teachers for 1972-1973 school year. Make appointments through Educ. Reception- ist, or call 764-7459. Make appts. beginning Mon., Feb. 7; Feb. 15, Battle Creek, Mi., for specific vacancies contact our office; Feb. 17, Santa Ana, Calif., applicants who have had experience and/or training in edu- cating "inter-city children." Teachers with bilingual (Spanish/English) abili- ties and those who have had exper. and/or training in intercultural aware- ness. City Council Nominations Human Rights Party Convention Anderson Room, Michigan Union 1-4 p.m. ALSO: CAMPAIGN STRATEGY STEERING COMMITTEE ELECTIONS PLATFORM FINALIZING MORE INFORMATION: 761-6621 that will reach over 33,000 readers \ " Here's an example: I I * NAME_______ t ADDRESS; I E ACTION FOR A CHANGE BEDROOM BI-LE VEL Air-Conditioned 3 minutes from Diag and Hospital .Garbage Disposal Dishwasher CORNER GEDDES & FOREST Call Peter 769.5941 1 t e PHONE Print or Type Copy Legibly in Space Provided as You Would Like it to Appear. 1 1 1 i R r I R R , f Can you dig it?, , U , I 'STEAM I f f 1 I i ~G o underground t h is *summer! R i g ht under ' *campus, several e x i t s,; * convenient to all Univer-I sity buildings. Spacious- 10 feet by 2000 yards.; Never any heating prob- * lems. , R , r Out of Sightj , f Its #for sure? ' f R U # --MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE To: ' THE MICHIGAN DAILY- , f MAIL or BRING IN PERSON To 420 Maynard St., I I * U r-rrmmumrmmmrmrmrmrmmrmmmrrrmmrmm rrrm rrrrrrrrrr mm (Public Interest Research Group In Michigan) PETITION DRIVE STARTS TOMORROW- Show you're in favor of creating and funding a Public Interest Research Group for the state of Michigan. pirgim student volunteers will work with professionals to terest problems such as: deal with public in- You can place your ad in person at 420 Maynard Street Mon.-Fri., 8 a.m.-4:40 p.m. OR mail attached coupon with check. SORRY, NO ADS WILL BE ACCEPTED BY PHONE " Environmental Destruction " Racial and Sexual Discrimination " Consumer Frauds " Unsafe Housing and Working Conditions m I