---I PAGE EIGHI DAILY OFFICIAL, BULLETIN rx ;..Se?{?'S;"TY rr$i ;;"Sfr rr;;?:;f{}"::9E$.M r°SSr"{ %$%&%$Sa:T:::{S;::::^:;:::"tr{::;;;..iti rnS:;}"?r>::}:}#.@v:7M"":S"%"iie S;.v rv+ r.:r ." :"."vr"IF r.SSS#in>. :sii ",":." ###Frdr:: r.".."":"":.# .v."".""S.::"...::Si%:r:.-i:^:{:"i"..""":}: S:::"": ?:9 % r."iN ii | THE MICHIGAN DAILY 0 A ''T'D WIAv i7 vlrT& Y A?) sy t* e, The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only, Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. FRIDAY, JANUARY 26 Day Calendar SATURDAY, JANUARY 27 Swimming-U.M. vs. Purdue U.: Matt Mann Pool, 1:00 p.m. Basketball-U-M vs. Ohio State Uni- versity: Events Building, 2:15 p.m. Wrestling-U-M vs. Purdue University: Events Building, 4:00 p.m. Cinama Guild-Mark Donskoy's Gorky Trilogy, Part 1: The Childhood of Maxim Gorky: Architecture Audito- torium, 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital-Joseph Feinberg, Double Bass: School of Music Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. General Notices TV Center Programs: On Sun., Jan. 28 the following programs produced by the TV Center will have their initial telecast in:Detroit: 11:00 a.m., WJBK-TV, Channel 2- "Green Power and Black Power." A look at the government's role in the advancement of civil rights through economic channels. 12:00 Noon, WWJ-TV, Channel 4- Education: Today and Tomorrow. "The Counselor." Four educators review the role' of the counselor in the elementary and secondary schools. Center for Russian and East Euro- pean Studies Lecture - Dr. Nikolai To- dorov, Professor of History and Direc- tor, Institute of Balkan Studies, Uni- versity of Sofia, "The Genesis of Capi- talism, in the Balkan Provinces of the Ottoman Empire in the 19th Century," Monday, Jan. 29. Room 2445 Mason Hall, 3:10 p.m. Engineering Mechanics Seminar - Dr. Walter R. Debler. Associate Profes- sor of Engineering Mechanics. The University of Michigan, will present "Laminar Convection in Fluids with Parabolic Density Distribution" on Monday, Jan. 29 at 4:00 p.m. in Room 311 West Engineering Building. Medical School Glee Club - Musical variety program, "On Call '68" Mon., Jan. 29, Mendelssohn Theatre, 8:00 p.m. Make-up final examinations for Ger- man 101,102, 111, 231, 232, and 236 will be given Tuesday, Jan. 30, 7-9 p.m.. in 2512 FB. Students must get written permission from their former teacher, and register in the German Depart- ment office before 12 noon, Tuesday, Jan. 30. The approval of the following stu- dent sponsored events became effective after the publication of this notice. All publicity for these events must be withheld until the approval has be- come effective. UAC - World's Fair Ticket Sales - Jan. 29-Feb. 1, 1968-10 a.m.-4 p.m. Fishbowl. Bowditch Review - Magazine Sale - Jan. 29-Feb. 2, 1968 - all day -- cam- pus. La Sociedad Hispania - Movie film - March 13, 1968 - 7-10 p.m. - Angell Hall Aud. A. Summary of action taken by student government council at its meeting Jan. 25, 1968. APPROVED: That SGC expresses its initial approval to commit itself as a co-sponsor of the Ann Arbor Draft Counseling Center. APPROVED: That SGC will co-spon- sor a Draft Teach-In in cooperation with Guild House, the Wesleyan Foun- dation and Inter-Faith Council on Feb. 18-25, 1968. APPROVED: SINCE Ann Arbor apart- ment managers and owners havercon- stantly reaped above normal profits through exhorbitant rents and twelve- month leases, and (Unanimously) SINCE several major and smaller Ann Arbor managers and owners have already accepted the Uni- versity eight-month lease, and SINCE Apartments Unlimited has re- fused to accept the University's eight- month lease and has accumulated the largest number of complaints relating to return of damage deposits, main- tenance, repair, cleaning bills, etc. with the Student Rental Union complaint service. MOVE: That SGC endorse the efforts of the Student Housing Association and the Student Rental Union in securing general adoption of the University eight-month lease. That SGC support SHA and SRU in their, use of consumer pressure to achieve acceptance of the eight-month lease and urge students, faulty and staff to lend their support. APPROVED: That Mike Davis, Paul Milgrom, Dennis W. Marks, Eugene De- Foe and Christopher Block be appoint- ed to a committtee on the eight-month lease to assist SHA in organizational tactics, APPROVED: That SGC contribute $100 from its Sponsorship Fund to the Challenge Lecture Series, coordinated by the Honors Steering Committee. APPROVED: That SGC place the fol- lowing referendum on the ballot: Shall the University cease all classified re- search. APPROVED: That SGC place the fol- lowing referendum on the ballot: Shall the University cease being a member institution of the Institute of Defense Analyses, APPROVED: That SGC adopt the fol- lowing policy with regard to its own facilities and urge the University of Michigan to adopt it for all other Uni- versity facilities: "Any person(s), organization or cor- poration using the facilities and/or services of the University of Michigan for purposes of recruitment and/or public relations shall be able and will- ing to disucss, in a prearranged and orderly open forum, the policies and activities of the cause or organization which he represents. Refusal to comply with this requirement shall be grounds for denial of the use of such services and/or facilities." APPROVED: That SGC endorse the proposal sent to President Fleming by an ad hoc group working with Profes- sor Richard Mann and including Gayle Rubin, Danny Sobel and Carol Shalita. APPROVED: That the SGC Consti- tutional Convention shall be elected as follows: 1. Delegates to the Convention shall be elected on a separate ballot in con- junction with a regular SGC election.. 2. Each voter shall, as he presents his student ID card to vote, state in which constituency he belongs. The Election worker shall then check his constituency by referring to the Stu- dent Directory, (i) Students not in the Student Di- rectory shall present a University, local, state,. or federal piece of identification which will establish their constituency. (ii) Each polling place shall be pro- vided with a list of graduate students. 3. The Election worker shall mark the number of the voter's constituency on the top of his ballot for convention delegates, and only votes cast on the appropriate part of the ballot shall then be valid. 4. The Constituencies shall be as fol- lows : (1) LS. & A. (2) Engineering (3) Education (4) Medical (5) Business Ad. (6) Law (7) Music (8) Nursing (9) Architecture and Design (10) Social Work (11) Dentistry .(12) Natural Resources (13) Public Health 5. Delegates shall be apportioned to the Constituencies by population as follows: (a) The total student population shall be divided by the total number of delegates,to obtainan ideal num- ber of students per delegate. (b) the population of each Consti- tuency shall be divided by this ideal number and the remainder noted. Step 1: Each Constituency shall re- ceive as many delegates as its popula- tion is evenly divided by the ideal number. Step 2: Each of the delegates not assigned to a Constituency in Step 1 shall be given to the Constituencies in order of size of the remainders, largest first. E (c) Computation of Measure of Er- ror: Step A: If a Constituency has a non- zero remainder in Step land did not gain an additional seat in Sept. 2, its remainder shall be noted. Step B: If a Constituency has a non- zero remainder in Step 1 and it did gain an additional seat in Step 2, the difference between the ideal number of the remainder shall be noted. The sum of the number noted in Step§ A and B shall be taken, and shall constitute the measure of im- perfection for this apportionment of delegates to Constituencies. 6. The actual size of the Convention shall be between 45 and 55, and shall be chosen by the Chairman of the Se- lect Committee on the Constitutional Convention to be the size which pro- duces the smallest measure of error as computed above. 7. Delegates for the Convention shall be elected at-large from that consti- tuency, with each voter having as many votes as there be delegates to be elected. Nomination shall be by letter of candidacy, stating platform and experience, and filed as for SGC candidates. Candidates may affiliate themselves into slates of any size by applying in writing to the SGC elec- tions Director within one week after the deadline for filing letters of can- didacy. 8. If from a given Constituency less than or equal to the full number of delegates file, those who file are auto- matically elected, the remaining seats shall remain vacant, and there shall be no ballot. 9. If at all practicable, IBM cards shall be used for balloting with one card for LSA and one card for all other Constituencies. 10. Slates may be formed and titled and may be grouped accordingly on the ballot with a method for voting col- lectively by slate as well as individual- ly; but in the case of Engineering, LS&A, and Education School, no slate shall be greater in number than two- thirds of the number of seats open. 11. Mayor Hulcher shall be approach- ed for use of voting booths. 12. All petitions shall be kept by the Executive Vice President of SGC until after the closing date and hour for filing, at which time the list shall be made public. 13. Permision shall be obtained from the Deans of Schools to the end that candidates be permitted to campaign in the classroom in the 10 minutes be- tween class hours. 14. All issues of election procedure shall be decided by the usual SGC procedure. PlacemnentGera Current 'Positions received by General Division by mail and phone, call 764- 7460 for further information: Local Organization, Ann Arbor, Mich. -Secretary - Receptionist, typing, fil- ing, bkkping, no exper. req. Dalmo Victor Co., Belmont, Calif.- Electronic Design Engineer, BSEE, 2 years exper. req., for mfg. of electronic equip. Wisconsin Civil Service, Dept. of In- SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE,. dustry, Labor and Human Relations, 212 S.A.B.; Lower Level Director, Youth Opportunity Center- Milwaukee. Devel. progs. to meet the INTERVIEWS: needs and probs. of new entrants in January 29, 1968 the labor mkt. MA in voc. guid., educ., Camp Al-gon-quip, Mich. Coed, psych., soc. wk. plus four yrs. exper.; Camp Takena, Mich. Girls, and Camp State of Utah, Dlv of Welfare-Con- Birkett, Day Camp YW-YMCA of Ann sultant, Work Experience and Train- Arbor. Interviews from 10-5. Couns. for ing, devel. occup. skills of the needy, all fields. MSW plus 3 yrs. exper. or an equiva- February 1 and 2, 1968 lent combin,. 6 University of Rochester, School of Camp Tamarack, Fresh Air Society1 Medicine and Dentistry, Vocational interviewing from 10 to 5. Couns, with Counselor-provide counseling. to in- specialties in waterfront, arts and dividuals recently handicapped, MA in crafts, nature, dramatics, music, trip- rehab. Couns., guid. and Couns., or soc- ping and unit supv. and asst., truck/ ck.up., gri. In nous, or soc.bus driver and nurse. wk., exper. pref. If interested, make COME TO SPS, 212 S.A.B., Lower appt. at Bureau for Fri., Feb. 2. Level for details and applications. SUNDAY, JANUARY 28 the film "Southeast Asia: The Other War" (National Educational Television documentary) of the Noon Dinner-Forum PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER 1432 Washtenaw Dinner-75c Reservations-662-3580 or 665-6575 « " " 23A 1 UnVAX, JANUARY 27, 1968 1 f 4 Monday, January 29 Using the unique potentials f* to reproduce ancient Dr. Aomi reent arlowe's Doctor Faustus. TICKETS: $1.00 at Union desk Arts Fes tival Art Buchwald Sunday, January 28 8 P.M. Hill Humorist, columnist, performer, and author of Son of the Great Society, Buchwald will speak on the great society and what it means to all of us. TICKETS: $1.00-students $1.50 non-students at Union desk MfC UNION-LEAGUEPETITIONING for LABOR DAY WEEKEND CO-CHAIRMEN Has been EXTENDED to January 30th PETITIONS Available in UAC offices I 11 i 1 -- WORSHIP, I 1 2nd floor UNION 3rd floor LEAGUE I STUCK WITH AN APARTMENT TO SUBLET FOR THIS SUMMER? Here's How Tc Rent It Quick Through The Michigan Daily's "Student Housing Guide" EXAMPLE DEADLINE- - FRIDAY, FEB. 2 The quickest and easiest way to sublet your pad is through The Daily's special apartment supplement to be published Sunday, February 11th For only you can place a I Col. x 4" advertisement with a guaranteed circulation of THE FINEST .IN APARTMENT LIVING MODERN 4-MAN APT. with central air-con-, ditioning and heating, garbage disposal, parking lot facilities, large front view picture window, completely furnished, live-in manager. 2 large Bedrooms AL792 r / r / NAME __ I 1 i. ADDRESS t # * PHONE _______ Print or Type Copy Legibly in Space Provided as You Would; rI Like it to Appear. / r /II * / I 1 I I I / r r r t I t I Ir / I I r I t I / # r / t / t r / r t / I # t R / r / I I # I I I r / " r FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Phone 662-4466 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Ministers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcolm G. Brown, John W. Waser, Harold S. Horan SUNDAY Worship at 9:00, 10:30 a.m., and 12:00 noon. Presbyterian Campus Center located at the Church. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw Ave. Dr. Erwin A. Goede, Minister Phyllis St. Louis, Minister of Education 9:20 and 11:00 a.m.-Service and Church School Service. Sermon Topic: "Religion, The Opiate of the (Poor) People." BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Telephone 665-6149 Pastors: E. R. Klaudt, Armin C. Bizar, W. C. Wright 9:30 and10:45 a.m.--Worship Services. 9:30 and 10:45 a.m.-Church School. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) A'f red T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 9:45 and 11:15 a.m. - Services, Sermon by the Rev. Alfred Scheips, "Heart In, Head Out." Sunday at 11:15 a.m.-Class in Epistle to the Romans. Sunday at 6:00 p.m.-Gamma Delta, Supper- Program. Wednesday at 10:00 p.m.-Midweek Service, with Holy Communion. LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER AND CHAPEL National Lutheran Council Hill St. at S. Forest Ave. Dr. H. O. Yoder, Pastor SUNDAY 9:30 and 11:00a.m.--Worship Service. 6:00 p.m.-Supper. 7:00 p.m. - Speaker: Dr. William Stapp, Assoc. Prof. in Conservation-"How the Individual Can Aid in Conservation." HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH Presently meeting at the YM-YWCA Affiliated with the Baptist General Conf. Rev. Charles Johnson 761-6749 9:30 a.m.-Coffee. 9:45 a.m.-U. Fellowship Bible Study. 11:00 a.m. - "A Needed Church Edifice through an Edified Church." 7:00 p.m.-Special presentation: "Christian Reactions to Contemporary Music." 8:30 p.m.-College and Careers Fellowship. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH Corner State and Huron Streets 663-0589 Dr. Raymond H. Saxe, Pastor Morning Services-8:30 and 1 1:00 a.m. 9:45 a.m.-Sunday School and Alpha Omega Fellowship. 6:00 p.m.-Training Hour-Classes for all ages. 7:00 p.m.-Gospel Services. Wednesday Prayer Meeting at 7:30 p.m. If it's Bible, you want, come to Grace Bible- Fundamental, Pre-Millenial, Biblical. THE CHURCH OF CHRIST W. Stadium at Edgewood Across from Ann Arbor High Roy V. Palmer, Minister SUNDAY 10:00 a.m.-Bible School. 11:00 a.m.-Regular Worship. 6:00 p.m.-Evening Worship. WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.-Bible Study. Transportation furnished for all services-Call NO 2-2756. PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH Southern Baptist Convention 1131 Church St. 761 -0441 Rev. Tom Bloxam 9:45 a.m.-Sunday School. S11:00 a.m.-Morning Worship. 6:30 p.m.-Training Union. 7:30 p.m.-Evening Worship. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH AND WESLEY FOUNDATION At State and Huron Streets Phone 662-4536 Hoover Rupert, Minister! Eugene Ransom, Campus Minister Bartlett Beavin, Associate Campus Minister SUNDAY 9:00 and 11:15 a.m.-Worship Services. Dr. George A. Fallon, guest 'minister. 7:30 p.m.-Church Unity Week Service, St. Mary's Student Chapel. TUESDAY 12:00 noon-Luncheon Discussion Class, Pine Room. "A Christian Perspective of Black Power." Out in time for 1 :00 p.m. classes. WEDNESDAY 7:00 a.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel, fol- lowed by breakfast in Pine Room. Out in time for 8:00 a.m. classes. 12:10 p.m.-Holy Communion-Common Meal, Pine Room. Out in time for classes. THURSDAY 7:30 p.m.-Discussion Class, Pine Room. "A Christian Views the Problems of the Mid- dle East," Bart Beavin. FRIDAY 12:00 noon-Luncheon Discussion Class, Pine Room. "A Look at the Gospels," Bart Beavin. Out in time for 1:00 p.m. classes. 6:00 p.m. - Young Marrieds, Pine Room. Dinner and program. CANTERBURY HOUSE 330 Maynard 11:00 a.m. - Folk Mass. Sermon by Burke. Dan Thursday at 7:30 p.m.-"Biblical Class," Prof. Hassold. Theology FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenow Ave. SUNDAY 10:30 a.m.-Worship Services. Sunday School (2-20 years). WEDNESDAY 8:00 p m.-Testimony Meeting. Infants room available Sunday and Wednes- day. Public Reading Room, 306 E. Liberty St.- CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Rev. Terry N. Smith 9:15 and 11:00 a.m.-Sermon Topic:: Secret Weeping." 6:30 p.m.-Pilgrim Fellowship. A UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 East Huron Phone 662-3153 Ministers: Calvin S. Malefyt ,Paul Swets CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 Washtenaw Donald Postema. Minister 10:00 a.m.-Morning Worship Service. Ser- mon: "See How They Love One Another." Guest minister, Rev. Harold S. Horan, Asst. Minister, First Presbyterian Church. 7"n n m __,.s ,..., WrsrhknService. Ser- 1 I i I El 1 .I I