THE NIiCHIGAN ,DAILY Thursday, February S, ? 970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, February 5, 1970 )aily Official Bulletin (Continued from Page 6) in (IIIA) and Fall Term (I) be avail. Rm. 2000 University r2. Applicants muat have olastic standing and financial2 happlc. and interview to be ed during Mar. 1970 Sch., high need. com- L.S.&A. JUNIOR-SENIOR COUNSELING OFFICE ADVANCED CLASSIFICATION APPOINTMENTS*: Group I: Anthropology, Astronomy, Eliophysics, Cellular Biology (Srs. in dept.). Chemistry, Classical Archaeol- ogy Classical Studies, Far Eastern Lang R: Lit, Far Eastern Studies, Geography, Geology, History of Art, Linguistics, Microbiology, Near Eastern Lang & Lit, Physics, Psych-Speech-Hearing, Ro- EranceLinguistics,LRussian & E a s t European, Slavic Lang & Lit, Social Anthropology, Studies in Religion, Zool- ogy. Group II: Amnerican Culture, Com- munication Science, English, English T.C., Mathematics, Mathematics T.C., Philosophy, Social Work. Group III:**Biology, Botany, Econom- ics, History,eHistory T.C., Journalism, Political Science. Group IV: Cellular Biology (Jrs. only), French, French T.C., German, Music Lit., Pre-Dent sPre-Legal,yPre-Medical, Pre-Professional Psychology, Sociology, Spanish, *Spanish T.C., Speech, Speech Correction. All Seniors may appear on dates in- dicated below to make appointments: Group I:Feb. 9 -Feb. n1 - appts. madein appropriate dept. office. Group II: Feb. 9 - 10 - appts. made at 1223 A., Group III: Feb. 11 - 12 - appts made at 1223 A.H. Group IV: Feb. 13 & 16 - appts. made at 1223 A.H. Second Semester Sophomores, Juniors appear on the dates ?indicated below to make their appts: Group I; Feb. 7, - 14 - appts. made in appropriate dept. office. Group. II; ;Feb. 17 - 18 - appts. made at 1223 Angell Hall. Group III: Feb. 19 - 20: appts. made at 1223 A.H. Group IV: Feb. 23 - 24: appts. made at 1223 A.H. Students who do not make appt. during scheduled period hav eto wait until Feb. 24. Students on BGS, Liberal Studies, and Individual Concentration may turn in materials Feb. 25, 1223 Angell Hall. *Students with less than 55 hrs. at end of the current term, follow appt. procedure arranged by Freshman-Soph. Counseling Office, 1213 Angell Hall. Honors program students, make advance classific. appts., 1210 Angell Hall be- ginning Feb. 16. **Sophs. in Biology TC. and ,Spanish T.C. won't be able to make appts. un- less they have attended concentration meeting and receive a card, until a 11 other students have made appts. Placement Service +GENERAL DIVISION , 3200 S.A.B. A NNOUNCEMENT: ..Applications for Professional Trainee Program with City of New York ac- cepted until Feb. 20; deadline has been extended. Applc. at Career Planning. Bardach s eaks on dirty ocean. (Continued from Page 1) But Bardach did express the, feeling that the "Big Sink" can" be cleaned up, "provided we, agree that we can't grow very much larger in this country., and as a species." According to Bardach, 28,000 gallons of water are available per person every day in this country. In the preparation of food and other products for each person, however, we now use 15,000 gallons a day. Pop- ulation g r o w t h would thus worsen the situation, he said. Viewing the local situation as an example, Bardach predicted the Huron River Valley will be short of water by the year 2000. "Either we change our way of doing things," Bardach warn- ed, "or we do something about the number of people." Bardach then added that pol- lution further complicates the problem ofi limited water re- sources. "The amount of pollu- tion is absolutely staggering," he said. Bardach cited chlorinated hydrocarbons, -including DDT and PCB's as especially harmful. Among the effects of DDT he listed the reduction of photo- synthesis, and thereby oxygen production, in algae. As a re- sult, Bardach mentioned "a dis- tinct possibility in the very long run of a decrease in the atmos- phere's oxygen content." In conclusion, Bardach said that action on the problem must begin now if the problem is to be solved. "The world won't end everywhere, but it may end in many places, including - very disagreeably -our own." SACIA blasts SDS actions (Continued from Page 1) ed about seeing whether the exist- ing institutions can hold up," he OBSCENITY R ULING: * Judge revokes bail after cour (Continued from Page 1) the front row, tried to pull them away from him. She was forced back into her seat by three marshals. Another marshal approached Abbie Hoff- man while he was struggling with two others and threw him to the floor. Lamb was arrested when he ap- proached the marshals scuffling with Hoffman. Other members of the defense staff, as well as de- fendants Rennie Davis and Tom Hayden also joined in the melee. As the uproar died down briefly, Davis yelled at the judge: "This court is bullshit! I say it too. Re- voke my ball too. This court is the most obscene thing I have ever seen." Jerry Rubin, standing near Del- linger, shouted, "You're not going to separate us! We're partners. Take us all!" The other defen- dants also took up the cry. t outburst Rubin's wife, Nancy Kurshan, yelled "Right on!" and was drag- ged from the room by the mar- shals. Fighting broke out again as Rubin attempted to get to her, screaming "Take your hands of my wife!" She was expelled from the courtroom but not arrested. Kunstler, pleading, with the judge to call off the marshals and reconsidering his decision on Del- linger shouted, "Your honor, is their no decency left here?" He received no verbal answer. Through the uproar, Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard Schultz could be heard making sure the court recorder got the names of the defendants as they yelled con- demnations at the judge. \bbie Hoffman was livid as he screamed to his namesake on the bench, "You're a disgrace to the Jews, you runt! You're a fascist! Why don't you work for theI Nazis?" E: College 4 .... is a waste of time... 4 SPECIAL SALE 1969 Fiat 124 Spiders . . . unless you find a job that turns you on and makes good use of your education. Inland Steel wants only people who want to use everything they've learned in college-and strongly desire to grow personally and professionally. Inland's future depends on the creativity arnd productivity of its people. If you want a really challenging opportunity to contribute-with the rewards and responsibilities that go with it -- Inland wants to talk to you. We need action-seeking graduates with degrees in most fields for management opportunities in sales . . . production . .. research ... engineering ...finance . .. administration . . . or you name it. Think it over. If you have high aspirations and a good record, take time to find out about a career with us. For information, see us on campus. THURS., FEB. 5, 1970 * t I, , ... They envy this newest new car of any year . . . the Fiat 124 Spider. No other sports car at near the price has dual over- head cams . . . plus 5-forward- speed synchromeshed stick shift... radial tires... plus Gran Turismo styling by Pininfarina. SUMMER PLACEME SERVICE 212 SAB, Lower Levi Interviews at Summer Pia Camp Scotmar,'Coed, Cal 3-5 p.mu.LGen. couns., ttm-it' spec. in arts and crafta, spc and sci, riding instr. Camp Ma-Hi-Ya, Jew hC Center of Toedo, soci'a w Feb. 6, 10 a.m.-S p.m.; Ac*'mla. gram director, waterfronat dir in arts and crafts, music, maint. man. added. NT The last section of the SACUA statement condemned the vandal- elism because of the expense it cement - cauSes the University. if eb. 5: The statement charged that rts, nature vandalism takes funds urgently needed "for the support of larger Community numbers of students from disad- w grkcamp, vantaged sectors of the popula- ector, spec. tion." The statement concludes by campcraft, suggesting a "reordering of priori- ties right here and now." $3,495° 00 How does Fiat do it for the price? OVERSEAS IMPORTED CARS INLAND STEEL COMPANY MON. & THURS.E OTHER DAYS TILL 6 P.M. 936 N. MAIN *DELIVERED EVE'S TILL 9 P.M. SAT. 9 A.M.-2 P.M. 662-2542 Joseph T. Ryerson & Son, Inc. Inland Steel Products Company Inland Steel Container Company An equal opportunity employer 1 ___ __ ._. 49 The is Westinghouse Broadcasting Co. (Group W) interested in filming a documentary q on environmental problems IF YOU: -are from the Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia, or Pittsburgh areas -are the son or daughter of a business executive -have a younger brother or sister in high school -are an articulate person willing to seriously discuss environmental problems with media representatives THEN WE WANT YOU. You may be a critical part of a nation-wide 3-hour broadcast. A Westinghouse representative i ,, I