FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE FRIDAY. JANUARY 26. 1968 TIlE MIChIGAN DAiLY SCIENCE FUNDS: Government Cuts H vt AId Rnc h+ Ae - TONIGHT and SATURDAY at BOB WHITE (from San Diego, California) returning by popular request to sing ballads, children's songs, love songs, blues, contemporary and traditional 1421 Hill St. folk music-playing guitar, banjo, 8:30 P.M. and autoharp. $1.00 Cover includes entertainment and refreshments! U- '-1: S " r . '* WASHINGTON (/P) - Troubles are mounting for science-minded students who want to enter grad- uate schools next September. Piling atop worries about the draft are cuts in government fel- lowships, which could keep the needy out of school, and a drop in federally sponsored research, which could cut the quality of education for students who aren't drafted and who conquer money problems. All three developments are fur- rowing brows at universities. At many schools there is also con- cern that government research * uts will reduce heavily operating Five More' ~Serve Jail Sentences Five more of the 29 persons convicted of trespassing at the Ann Arbor draft board during a 1965 anti-war protest have sur- rendered themselves to begin serving jail sentences. The five-Sam Friedman, David Bernstein, Edward Geffner, Tom- mie Suber, and Joseph Gaughn- surrendered themselves to Wash- tenaw County authorities yester- day ten days after the Supreme Court denied their appeal on the trespassing charge. Thirteen others who withdrew from the final appeal to the Su- preme Court served their sen- tences over winter vacation. Of these, Prof. Tom Mayer of the . sociology department received the longer sentence, 20-days, while the others, all students and for- mer students, received 15- or 18- day sentences. Of the 29 who staged the pro- test, 28 were sentenced and one forfeited bond. Defense attorney r Ernest Goodman informed Assist- ant Prosecuting Attorney Thomas Shea the remaining nine people could not appear for jailing be- cause they are in other states now, some as far away as California. The protest took place at the draft board on Oct. 7, 1965. All 29 were convicted in early 1966 and have been appealing the decision since then. budgets already strained by ris- ing costs. The Defense Department and space agency combined are lopp- ing 20 per cent this year from the $400 million they sent to univer- sities in 1967. Through the early and mid- 1960s, annual government re- search spending spiraled to $1.6 billion at universities. 33 Schools A private Defense Department memo, compiled after checks with 33 schools on the cuts, reported general agreement that new post doctoral fellowships and graduate student admissions would be cut in September. Schools facing research money cuts, the memo said, are holding up on spending for new equip- ment and are preparing to lay off some technicians. Some summer faculty salaries may also not be covered by research money as in the past. The memo states, "The impact on the small private non-endowed! university will be much more se- vere than on state universities or on the bigger endowed private universities." It said the impact will probab- ly peak in the spring, when marny contract and grant decisions will be made and schools will learn exactly howrmuch they're losing. Drastic Cuts Cuts in new fellowships are drastic: the National Aeronautics and Space Administration went from about 750 new fellowships in 1967 to 75 for next September. The National Science Foundation dropped from 1,200 to 700 and National Defense Education Act fellowships were halved to 3,000. Raymond Woodrow, director of the office of research and project administration at Princeton Uni- versity, told a reporter the "ex- tent to which we could increase university money to pick up grad students who would otherwise be supported by, say, a NASA fellow- ship, is very small." Others Hold While defense and space cut- backs have been the most severe, other government research arms such as the National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health and Atomic Energy Commission, have been forced to hold even with last year's expen- ditures or expand only a bit. PETER ARNOT Classical Puppeteer I fl MONDAY, JAN.29 8:00-Aud. A Tickets: $1.00 at Union desk UAC presents, in co-operation with the Creative Arts Festival Na than Milstein WORLD-RENOWNED VIOLINIST-IN RECITAL MONDAY, JAN. 29, 8:30 in Hill Auditorium PROGRAM: Devil's Trill Sonata (Tartini); Chaconne for Solo Violin (J. S. Bach) ; Sonata in F major ("Spring") ; Three Caprices for Solo Violin (Paganini) ; Nigur. (improvisation by Ernest Bloch); and Intro- duction and Tarantella. (Sarasate) . TICKETS: $6.00-$5.50--$5.00-$4.00-$3.00--$2.00 at University Musical Society, Burton Tower Hours: Mon. through Fri., 9 to 4:30; Sat., 9 to 12 (Telephone 665-3717) (Also at Hill Auditorium Box Office 1 / hours preceding performance) - - - - - - - -_ Aud. A Angell Hall a 1 fir CHARGE IT! ® PRESCRIPTIONS * COSMETICS e MEN'S TOILETRIES 1112 South University Phone 663.5533 Highest Quality Always ADULTS ONLY YOU MUST BE OVER 18 FOR OUR AFTER HOURS Every Friday and Saturday Nite 1 :30to 4:00a.m. featuring THE PRIME MOVERS AND OTHER GROUPS Cover only $1.00 the FIFTH DIMENSION 216 W. Huron Phone 761-7866 THURSDAY and FRIDAY MEIN KAMPF (1960) A documentary made up of films taken from the Nazi files, films which originally shot by Nazi pho- tographers. Edited in Sweden, narration in English. t i