4 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Monday, February 26.1968 Coast Guard lets Soviets in U.S. water HEMPSTEAD, N.Y.—(UPI)—A Russian fishing trawler towed an East German trawler to about 1,000 feet off Jones Beach for repairs Sunday while a U.S. Coast Guard cutter and helicopter stood guard. The Coast Guard said the Soviet trawler Uragan asked permission to bring the East German fishing boat Orkney inside U.S. territorial waters. Permission was granted after the Orkney's report of having a net caught in her propeller was verified by Coast Guardsmen who went out to meet the two trawlers. The trawlers anchored about a mile south of Jones Beach, sending down repair divers while the Coast Guard cutter Tamaroa and the helicopter stood by. The Coast Guard said the operation was "fairly routine" but it would stay with the ships until they returned to international waters. AWS will charge for later closing Extended closing hours March 2 will be given to all undergraduate women who purchase a special ticket from the Associated Women Students (AWS) Memorial Scholarship Committee as part of its annual SMOP (Scholarship Money is Our Purpose) campaign. Closing time will be 2 a.m. instead of the usual 1 a.m. Saturday closing time. Juniors and seniors having keys or card-keys will not have to pay for the late privilege unless their living group votes that they should, said Sharon Watson, Emporia junior and scholarship committee members. They will be asked however to donate 50 cents when they pick up their keys or card-keys that night she said. Tickets will be distributed by AWS representatives in every living group Monday night for 50 cents. Sales will continue all week. The $300 scholarships will be awarded on AWS Honors Night, May 6. The number of scholarships to be awarded varies with the amount collected through the SMOP projects held throughout the year. Book debates future "Man and the Future," a book based upon discussions of this nature at the Inter-Century Seminar during the 1966 KU Centennial celebration, will be published by the University Press of Kansas, May 27. Among contributors are Loren Eiseley, Dr. Karl Menninger, R. Buckminster Fuller, Arthur Larson, Arthur C. Clarke, Philip Abelson, Charles Whittaker, Harold Clurman and Franklin D. Murphy, Ashley Montagu, Harlow Shapley, Robert Lewis Shayron, Alton Blakeslee, Waldo Bowman and Eric Larrabee. The contributors raise questions about fundamental social and political issues such as civil rights, governmental responsibilities and the role of education in future years. Orders for the volumes may be placed with the University Press of Kansas, 358 Watson Library. Lindsay says he will back Rocky NEW YORK — (UPI) — Mayor John V. Lindsay, whose long political rivalry with Gov. Nelson Rockefeller broke into an open breach during the recent city garbage strike, made a gesture of conciliation Sunday. "Of course, I would support him," Lindsay told reporters who met him at Kennedy International Airport after his return from a four-day visit to Oregon. He said Rockefeller's agreement to accept a Republican draft for president "was welcome news." Rockefeller said Saturday he would accept a draft at the Republican national convention, if he were offered the nomination, but said that was unlikely. Mental patients killed in fire SHREWSBURY, England—A fire swept one wing of a mental hospital early today, killing 21 patients and injuring 14 others. Police said all the victims were women aged 60 years and older. The fire was confined to one wing of the Shelton Mental Hospital, located in an 80-year-old building. AFL-CIO seeks more pay raises MIAMI BEACH—(UPI)—The AFL-CIO's powerful Executive Council, ending its mid-winter meeting here, has left no doubt it will seek wage and salary increases this year. In a major economic policy statement, the council called on the Johnson administration to press for a "temporary war surtax" to meet U.S. budget deficits caused by the Vietnam War. The position differs with President Johonson's program. The council warned there must be no cutback or cutoff of federal aid for education, health care and urban affairs. While the council turned down administration pleas for voluntary wage "restraints," the AFL-CIO chieftains said the day Johnson decides on "even-handed restraints" on all and every phase of the economy he will "have the support of the AFL-CIO." Official Bulletin TODAY English Lecture; 4 p.m. "Criticism and Medieval Literature." Prof. E. Talbot Donaldson, Columbia University. Pine Rm., Union. Graduate Physics Colloquium. 4:30 p.m. "Isobaric Analogue State Studies," Dr. G. I. Harris, Wright-Pattern AFB 232. Mallett 132. French Film Festival. 7 p.m. "My Life to Live." Dyche Auditorium. Faculty Recital. 8 p.m. James Moeser, organist. First Baptist Church. TOMORROW Art Lecture. 8 p.m. "Art Criticism." Alfred Frankenstein, San Francisco Chronicle. Forum Room, Kansas Union. Religion Forum. 7:30 p.m. "On Civil Disobedience." Profs. Pickett, Lujan, Burgstahler. Forum Room. Kansas Union. Basketball. 7:30 p.m. Nebraska. There. If you see news happening call UN 4-3646 Depends on the giant. Actually, some giants are just regular kinds of guys. Except bigger. And that can be an advantage. How? Well, take Ford Motor Company. We're a giant in an exciting and vital business. We tackle big problems. Needing big solutions. Better ideas. And that's where you come in. Because it all adds up to a real opportunity for young engineering graduates like yourself at Ford Motor Company. Come to work for us and you'll be a member of a select College Graduate Program. As a member of this program, you won't be just another "trainee" playing around with "make work" assignments. You'll handle important projects that you'll frequently follow from concept to production. Projects vital to Ford. And youll bear a heavy degree of responsibility for their success. You may handle as many as 3 different assignments in your first two years. Tackle diverse problems. Like figuring how high a lobe on a cam should be in order to yield a certain compression ratio. How to stop cab vibration in semi-trailer trucks. How to control exhaust emission. Soon you'll start thinking like a giant. You'll grow bigger because you've got more going for you, A network of computers to put confusing facts and figures into perspective. Complete testing facilities to prove out better ideas. And at Ford Motor Company, your better ideas won't get axed because of a lack of funds. (A giant doesn't carry a midget's wallet, you know.) Special programs. Diverse meaningful assignments. Full responsibility.The opportunity to follow through.The best facilities.The funds to do a job right.No wonder 87% of the engineers who start with Ford are here 10 years later. If you're an engineer with better ideas, and you'd like to do your engineering with the top men in the field, see the man from Ford when he visits your campus. Or send your resume to Ford Motor Company, College Recruiting Department. You and Ford can grow bigger together. THE AMERICAN ROAD, DEBARON, MICHIGAN AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER. What's it like to engineer for a giant? Rather enlarging!