POge. Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February 13, 1976 ; ..,, Pge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Lincoln's po NORFOLK NAVAL Confederage -SH IPYA RDWASHINGTON (P) - A mys- annivers tery box containing the things Fords PORTSMOUTH, VIRGINIA Abraham Lincoln carried in his Lincoln pockets when he was assassi- faith in offers nated was opened yesterday, people" and the most intriguing item worth a ( turned out to be a $5 Confeder- ernment OpaontUnitie5ae bill. .nd assa Engineering OpportuThere was no other money in The b the box, opened at a ceremony coln iten Entrance salaries range from $11,607 to $12,518 with regular annual at the Library of Congress. 0th- I brary of increments to average salary of $16,255 after three years. er items were favorable news- NO0 Benefits andSecuritysEarry Rfetiree-Liyear PaidVaca)paper clippings about LincolnN Attractive Benefits and Security-Early Retirement-Liberal Paid Vaca- and the conduct of the Civil ed the it tion and Sick Leave Policy-9 Paid Holidays-Group Insurance-Excel- penknife and a large handker- Wilkes lent Promotion Opportunities Nationwide Under Federal Merit Program, chief embroidered "A. Lin- April 14 coln" and what appeared to be I owing NUCLEAR-Involved with directing and inspecting all ship and shop } a watch fob. .across work on nuclear reactor plants. AT THE Lincoln Memorial, attendin MECHANICAL-Involvedwith modernization plans for everything from President Folnt Form -CN Av Pident Ford placed a wreath in the submarine periscopes and diving planes to missile launches and main to honor Lincoln on the 167th Robert engine reduction gear mechanisms. after in ORANGEL i n c o ELECTRONIC/ELECTRICAL-Involved with electrical controls for pro- *Charles pulsion machinery, motors, communications systems, gyro compass sys- * The i tems and guided missile control. Specializing in CIVIL.-Involved with maintaining 700 acres of land and facilities, 30 Refreshing Drinks! miles of roads,400 cranes, private rail system. ORANGE NAVAL ARCHITECT--Involved with basic submarine and surface ship PINEAPPLE structural design. Including experiments and studies relating to special * STRAWBERRY stability and ballasting problems are of special. concern to those naval JULIUS architects interested in research. ALL MADE WITH EDUCATION-BS degree in Engineering. ACTUAL FRUIT! C \,CTINB dge FEATURING ... Ind REPRESENTATIVES ON CAMPUS THURSDAY 26 FEBRUARY 1976 %/s LB. GROUND * fers For Appointment Call Ms. Glazier, Telephone 764-8483 * ROUND 95c EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER * BRIARWOOD MALL * S. UNIVERSITY ckets emptied; money found ary of his birth. bore a label reading, "Handed said the nation honors to the librarian by Mrs.' "for the force of his Charles Isham . . . To be per- I American and in the manently held in the librarian's i at a time when the safe, Oct. 28, 1937. Strictly con- 1 id the will of the gov- fidential." 1 was being questioned . .Bi aied. sanieleBoork w in box containing the Lin- said he does not know why none l -ns has been at the Li- of his predecessors opened the SCongress for years. metal box, which was wrapped in brown paper and tied with NE knows who remov- a string. ems from Lincoln's poc- Boorstin saidhe thought it r he was shot by John appropriate to unveil the con-. Booth on the night of tents on Lincoln's birthday in , 1865. He died the fol- he Bicentennial year. morning in a house He has been librarian for only 10th Street from Ford's a few months and said he found where he had been the box in a vault which adjoins g a play. his office. nany years the box was The items are being placed possession of his son, on public view in the great hall Todd Lincoln, and there- of the Library of Congress. the keeping of Robert a 1 n 's daughter, Mrs. Argentina consumes 95 per Isham. cent of its own wine, even tems were in a box the though it'shthe fifth largest pro- a small shoebox, which ducer in. the world. UFW plans boycott of 8 frut growers SACRAMENTO, Calif. OP) - ganizers to enter growers', pro- Cesar Chavez, angered by perty and on the board's right browers who succeeded in cut- to intervene in contract talks. ting off money to California's farm labor board, says his United Farm Workers union will "pin them to the wall" with a new boycott. The boycot announcement was greeted with surprise by Frank Light, president of the Sunmaid cooperative that markets raisins for 2,000 Central California The board, which enforced growers. California's five-month-old elec- tions law for farm workers, "SUNMAID HAS never been shut its doors last week be: involved with the U farm work- cause it ran out of money and ers, and has never had a com- the state legislature refused to pany positiononany of' this," approve more. he said in an interview. But UFW spokesman Marc CHAVEZ SAID Wednesday| Grossman said Sunmaid "has that the UFW plans a consum- to take a great deal of respn- er boycott against Sunmaid rai- I sibility for their members who sins, Sunsweet prunes and dried I use their label." He said many fruits, and eight major grae of Sunmaid's growers were In- and tree fruit growers in the fluential in blocking the appro- Fresno area. priation. The campaign to revive the IF LAWMAKERS continue to state's landmark farm labor hold up the money, Chavez said, law will also include election the UFW will try to put an pressure on rural, legislators teVWwl rt u r an erhaps an attempt t ae initiative on the November state the issue to the voters, Chavez baor law. said at a news conference.: br"lW. hn twud.gta C havezsaid theboyrottouldleast 60 per cent of the vote," be aimed at growers who led he said. the fight against a $3.8 milliod Chavez said the OF,., was appropriation to keep the farm particularly upset by rural labor board alive through June. Democrats who opposed the ap- R E P U B L I C A N S and pmp ack he said tpentFi farm-belt Democrats, accusing the June primaries. the board of pro-FW bias, blocked the appropriation after "THEY'RE going to have a Gov. Edmund Brawn refused heck of a time in Juneand No- their demands for changes in vember explaining why they the aw.xtrnpe onr~ ,t_' hft said. TAKE A BREAK. . in the BAHAMAS Dates of Trip: MARCH 6-13 Destination: FREEPORTCBAHAMAS Stav in the CASTAWAYS HOTEL $229.00 +Io0% + $3.00 NON-STOP on Northwest Orient, Hotel, Trans- Handling, & Meals in Flight. Limited Spaces Still Available S25.00 Deposit to hold reservation CAMPUS INTERNATIONAL CONTACT: ROSANNE AT 761-4965 )NLY ludes Air s, Baggage I1 The demands included restric- E.1eons5on theULVignt of lL anion orlk- -T "- _ _ _ __"-- "-- -"'-"- - . - . -7f7 11 7 [7 7 7 [7RT {7'" JI '"76 IFN p- A.- le -S HEALNG RESTORING HEALTH, WHOLENESS, HARMONY, JUSTICE In our culture, healing of mind, body. spiirt and community are most dften considered separately, for instance, through psycholoov. medicine, religion, and politics. Are there' principles, processes, images, forms on which seemingly diverse kirds of healin .Ore based? Canterbury House invites you to a series of discussions this term on "The Connections Among Physical, Psycholoqical, Spiritual and Political Healinq." Friday, February 13, 1976 "NON-WESTERN MEDICINE" Max Heirich U. OF M. SOCIOLOGY PROFESSOR 8:00 P.M. HERB TEA, 8:30 DISCUSSION, NTElBURY OUSE 218 N. DIVISION ST.-corner of Catherine and N. Division.. want[ votes Zrom us, I ai. State AFL,-CIO chief :John Henning, also at the news con ference, said his group might also campaign against legisla- tors who opposed the appropria- t ion1. Gilfstream Park's 1976 win- ter racing thoroughbred , meet- ing will run from March 6 through May 11. Phil Esposito of the New York Raneers scored 61 goals in 79 g'imes for the Boston .Bruins of National .Hockey League last season. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVI, No. 115 Friday, February 13, 1976 Mts edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a iil y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru Apl (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail o tside Ann arbor. Summer session published Tues- day Shrough Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann fArbor;' $7.50 ;by mail outside Ain Arbor._ 111 1 A A\I Orr ,. 111 .III ,''I. 11 111 X111 1%1 1111 I'- " T 1A' T ' '"' Engineers and Scientists with advanced deg rees Here are 7 reasons- Uy U to join a company you probably never heard of Fifteen years ago, we decided to make our reputation first and talk about it later. -Now .it's. "later"-following years of unprecedented growth and achievement. Today The BDM Corporation.14 operating at a $20-million annual level with 700 people in four Scientific and Technical Centers and 11 other locations across the natlon and in Europe.i What do we do, and why Is It Important to you? BDM applies modern methods of science and-systems technology to military, governmental, and industrial planning, policy-makIng, and problem-solving. We're talking about major national programs. Study- ing the impacts of U.S. offshore oil development. Confronting a multi- tude of tasks involving the worldwide command/control/communica- tions system known as WWMCCS. Performing long-range applied re- search. Defining some of tomorrow's national goals and. priorities. Getting our feet dusty directing operational tests and evaluations. And these are just'a.few random examples. Yes, we perform most of our work for the government and the "de- fense establishment." If this turns you conipletely off, read no further. But if you are intrigued by the chance to make positive and substan-. tive contributions to solving some of today's biggest and knottiest problems, we can keep you happy and busy. You'll be doing ,im- portant things almost from the start. You'll be. working with col- leagues you can respect, in an atmosphere that may be casual one minute and supercharged the next, but is always professional. The people we need To help meet our growth objectives, BDM is now seeking- ENGINEERS PHYSICISTS APPLIED MATHEMATICIANS COMPUTER SCIENTISTS I CAMPUS NTERVIEWS SOON NO RATE INCREASE FOR FALL '76. REDUCED SUMMER RATES. We offer you 2 and 4 month summer leases, 8 month Fall/Winter leases, furnished apartments, weekly maid service, a heated swim- ming pool and much more-all within a 3 minute walk from the Diag. Call us at 761-2680 for rental information. q. I. ~ 00stYz f~ Among the engineers and scientists, we're looking for education and career interests in communications, data processing, electro-optics, sensor'systems, nuclear effects, statistical test design, mathematical modeling, and operations research specialties. We should point out that one-dimensional "purists" will not be com- fortable at BDM. But men and women who have demonstrated an in- terest in the world outside the classroom and laboratory-along with superior academic achievement-will find as much opportunity and challenge as they can handle. Growth in a matrix organization Are you familiar with the matrix organization concept? If not, our or- ganization chart-and its frequent changes-will look odd to you. We don't have space to explain it here, but adaptable, multi-aceted scientists and engineers will find that our matrix organization con- stantly opens up new growth opportunities. The rigid traditionalist, on the other hand, won't like it. Don't say we didn't warn you. Money and all the rest Naturally we're going to offer you a competitive salary ,(which won't be tied to some rigid nomogram devised by our accountants), plus a package of competitive fringe benefits including. educational as- sistance and the other usual goodies. Where you'll start You will probably spend at least the first year at our headquarters location in Vienna, Virginia (a pleasant. residential suburb of Wash- ington, D.C.). After that, the location will depend on the shape of your interests . .. and ours. To recap the reasons why you should think about a BDM career, consider: (1) the opportunity quickly to play key roles in nationally significant programs, (2) BDM's demonstrated technical excellence in ever-widening program areas, (3) your own freedom to excel, per- sonally and professionally, to grow as quickly as your talents allow, (4) attractive remuneration and benefits programs, (5) a professional Visit Placement Office Now! I. I la ! i . . . m