PANE SEA' THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1969 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. JANUARY 19. 1968 ... _... ,....ter, v .. vy +v vu u NOON-DINNER FORUM- Sunday, January 21 "Vietnam, A Conflict of Values" MRS. LE THI 'ANH Vietnamese writer and philosopher Dinner-75c Reservations-662-3580 or 665-6575 at the PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER 1432 Washtenaw SABBATH SERVICE. Tonight at 7:15 Torah Service and Oneg Shobbot Choir directed by Steven Ovitsky with Joan Spitzer, Organist Regents Hold Hours Discussion STIFF WARNING: (continued from Page 1) with an advisor in the OSA and one in, but how do you feel aboutB r sC orrespond ents issues which get at the economic that they "get along very well." hours?" Fleming asked. guts of the University and which He said "SC has probably "You know how I feel about are handled in secrecy." played more games than anyone hours. When do we get to talk 1 "Do you have any more com- else" this year. about research? The only reason I i ..- -JLRD--~1- -. in R Reb i u In elle tuals ments on the issues at hand? Fleming asked . "Yes," Kahn answered. "The Regents must realize that the di- rection of the University should be more than a product of the administration - the students should be included." Getzan was the next speaker, and, after noting that IFC "has been a semi-active group on the issue of women's hours," accused The Daily of dividing the issue into two camps - "with SGC on one side and the Office of Stu- dent Affairs on the other," and said that he was speaking on be- half "of a third group." Getzan described the problem as "one of academic concern, not political," and said that IFC makes its rules in conjunction "I don' twant to interfere with your comments on SGC and The Daily, but can you get to the point?" Fleming asked. Chester opened his speech by questioning the "secrecy" and "hypocrisy" at the University. "If you want to talk about se- crecy - talk about it in relation to visitation and hours," Fleming instructed. "The rules on hours and visita- tion are good examples of secrecy and hypocrisy. There has been a hypocritical attitude about those rules in the dorms for a long time -if a woman isn't going to make curfew she just stays out all night. There's hypocrisy in the dorms and hypocrisy on classified research . . ." Chester continued. "Well, you managed to slip that this meeting was held was be- cause there was a lot of pressure to have a public meeting," Chester claimed. "You are wrong, wrong, wrong," Regent Smith responded. "Then why did you hold this meeting?" Chester asked. "Can you tell me why?" "I don't have to tell you any- thing, but you are wrong," Smith answered. SGC member Sharon Lowen, '71, explained to the Regents why freshman women's hours were unwanted and unnecessary. "If we weren't at the University we would only have city and state laws to abide by, not rules gov- erning our personal lives." The rules are ineffective, she ex- plained, because women stay out all night if they can't be in the dorm by the curfew. "Where do they go when they stay out all night?" asked Regent William Cudlip. "Despite what the fraternities say about visitation rules, I don't think they consider it a violation unless the woman actually moves in. I know women stay there - it's kind of fun to stay in a fra- ternity for a couple of weekends, then you get tired of it - or they stay at their girlfriend's or boy- friend's houses," Miss Lowen said. MOSCOW (A) - The Soviet government tried yesterday to choke off news from rebellious intellectuals by warning foreign! correspondents not to contact them. The stiff warning of penalties for any contact with private So- viet citizens came on the eve of a news conference scheduled by relatives of two young rebels sen- tenced to prison last week. Apparently hearing of the news conference, planned for a private apartment, Soviet officials tele- phoned Western correspondents and warned them not to attend. The conference was planned by the mother of Alexander Gins- burg, whose son was sentenced to five years, and the wife of Yuri Galanskov, whose husband was sentenced to seven years at hard labor. The women were expected to reveal details of the trial, which Marcus Pleads Innocent 1429 Hill Street All Welcome I I_ ONWM GO GO ,BAHAMAS STU DENTOU RS SPRING BREAK SMASH! Feb. 28-March 3 $155 Call: John Gunning-761-8867 Claire Cantow-764-1943 Dick Rini-764-5689 Robbie Cantow-764-4253 11 ANN ARBOR VOTER REGISTRATION To N.Y., NEW YORK {P)-The the wake of a federal i just one month ago James L. Marcus yes peddling his influence City Hall aide in ano for a $10,000 bribe. The payment, Dist. A S. Hogan said, was p kickback arrangement t firm's contracts from water department, w Marcus' public preserve was a right-hand man to can Mayor John V. Lind OPEN NOW UNTIL THIS FRIDAY, 8 P.M., again FEB. 20, 2nd floor CITY HALL (Huron at Fifth) IF YOU ARE: 1) 21 2) More Than 50% Self-sufficient 3) In Ann Arbor Summers YOU MAY QUALIFY Sponsored by: VOTER REGISTRATION OF S.G.C. COLLEGE REPUBLICANS YOUNG DEMOCRATS .Bribe Charges e state, in But apparently, authorities said, ndictment the bribe was paid in vain and , accused the firm never got the contracts terday of it coveted. as a top Arrested with Marcus in the ther case widening water department scan- dal, the first of any consequence tty. Frank in the Lindsay administration, art of a was attorney Herbert Itkin, 41, o insureia reportedly marked for murderas the itya defendant and witness in the hich was federal kickback case. when he . Marcus, Itkin, racketeer Anto- o Republi- nio "Tony Ducks" Corallo and soy. three other men were indicted Dec: 18 on federal charges of ar- ranging a $40,00 kickback on an $800,000 water department con- tract for the cleaning of a Bronx reservoir. Soviet police agents had ket closed to foreign correspondents. Despite this, considerable news of the trial on charges of anti- Soviet activity reached correspon- dents from relatives and friends of the four defendants. One of the four cooperated with police and got two years; the other was sentenced to a year but was re- leased because of time served awaiting trial. Increased Daring In recent weeks, private con- tacts of correspondents here, plus information reaching the West through other means, have given a picture of increasingly daring defiance of Soviet police state controls by young intellectuals. The warning was telephoned to The Associated Press by Leonid M. Zamyatin, head of the Soviet Foreign Ministry's press depart- ment, which accredits foreign correspondents here. Other de- partment officials telephoned other correspondents. Regulations "I would like to remind you," Zamyatin told Henry S. Bradsh- er, AP Bureau Chief, "that regu- lations in the Soviet Union re- quire that all contacts of foreign correspondents with private per- sons should be arranged through the press department. We would take serious measures against" any correspondent who flouts the rule. 'A LSD Blindness Called Hoax; Commission Head Fired f IL WITHI SPEIAL IGUEST STARSK HARRISBURG, Pa. (A')-Penn- sylvania Gov. Raymond P. Shafer branded yesterday as a hoax, and completely false, the strange story of six Pennsylvania college stu- dents blinded 20 months ago while staring at the sun under the influence of the drug LSD. It Just never happened, Shafer told a hastily sumomned news, conference. He immediately sus- pended the man who first said it did. The governor said the case, clouded since disclosure a week ago in the kind of psychedelic trance LSD reportedly induces, was an invention of Dr. Norman Yoder, 53, Pennsylvania's com- missioner for the blind since 1959. Yoder, blind for 45 years from a blow from a baseball bat, was described as "distraught and sick" by Shafer-and he asked to be allowed to enter a hospital for immediate treatment. Shafer flew back from a brief winter vacation Tuesday and said Wednesday the LSD blindness story was true. But' he ordered a full state Justice Department in- vestigation on why the case was secret since April, 196, when it allegedly occurred near the cam- pus of a small western Pennsyl- vania college. Yoder refused to identify the u college or name the students, but said all had resumed academic studies at different schools. He said the six were receiving state rehabilitative aid and, under the law, their identies couldn't be dis- closed. Members of the Shafer admin- istration again and again con- firmed the incident did occur and supported Yoder's secrecy. Welfare Secretary Dr. Thomas W. Georges, Yoder's boss, said Yoder-pressed to have some sort of records ready-apparently took reports of six legitimate blind stu- dent cases and doctored them to fit the facts of his fabricated LSD incident. GRADUATING ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS BUILD YOUR CAREER IN FLORIDA WITH ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS, INC. FRIDAY, JANUARY 26 8:30 P.M. COBO ARENA-DETRO IT Tickets: $5.75, $4.75, $3.75, $2.75-at Cobo Arena, J. L. Hudson's (Downtown, Northland, Eastland, Westland) and all Grinnell stores. Mail Orders: Send checks payable to "Bill Cosby Show" to Cobo Arena, 1 Washington Blvd., Detroit, Mich. 48226, together with stamped, self-addressed return envelope. A SAH ENTERPRISES, INC. PRODUCTION ECI's ST. PETERSBURG DIVISION What the interviewers won't tell you about General Electric. 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