THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'UDENTS UNCONCERNED: UGLI calm after a SDS reaffirms militant tactics (Continued from Page 1) confused about the tactics as she leafed through a book near the first floor catalogue. "I guess if it's the only way to get people to listen to demands, it's okay. As long as they just took the books off the shelves and didn't destroy them," she said, "at least I'm aware of what they're asking for." "They've alienated a lot of peo- Edgroup to convene (Continued from Page 1) the committee might be asked to leave when specific promotions were discussed. In response to SEI's charge tha' their criteria for promotions were ignored, Dimond said the executive committee's action was "the fair- est appointment of faculty I have ever experienced in 42 years of teaching." Meanwhile the promotions com- mittee of the behavorial sciences department of the education school decided to "appeal to the executive committee to reevaluate the decision and, unless they change it to urge them to join us in going to an outside review com-, mittee such as the SACUA griev- ance committee" said dept. chair- man Loren Barritt. Of four _faculty members the deparmental committee recom- mended for promotion, none were promoted. "The people we recommended met the criteria for promotion. We don't understand how these people were not accepted for promotion," Barritt explained. He plans to sub- mit a memo to Cohen stating his opinion. The annual University of Mich- igan Community College Counsel- or-Student Conference will be held here today and tomorrow. Through this program the University and community colleges attempt to maintain and improve their close working relationship. Counselors and faculty mem- bers from the 29 community col- leges in Michigan will interview students who have transferred from the community colleges to The University. Such interviews with students provide the "feed back" which is, the community col- leges and the University need in evaluating programs and services, ple," said Jim Anderson, an econ- omics student. I don't khow what better tactic there is but there must be. I think they could find some way for constructive partici- pation, but not this." He added, however, that he is now more aware of the effort. Another girl, in the second floor record room, was generally annoy- ed but not completely certain. "I don't see what they expect people to do. It's perfectly reasonable to step up minority admissions, but wow, throwing books around. doesn't help. "You get into this 'books are my friend, I Will not mistreat them' thing; it doesn't seem too groovy to throw them around. But there's a real bind-what kind of Find 'bomb' in 'library A stink bomb was discovered late last night inthe stacks room at the UGLI. At about 10:30, a li- brary worker found the bomb, re- ported it to his supervisor, and the bomb was then turned in to the police. "The bomb was probably put in about dinner time," he said, but added that he had no indication of who deposited it. Another bomb had been discov- ered Saturday at the UGLI, as well as in the Michigan Union and South Quad. The bombs contained butyric acid, an organic solution which produces an unpleasant odor which spreads rapidly over large areas. Moratorium' supported (Continued from Page 1) fellows are supposed to teach and they defeat their purpose when they are not teaching." Professors of courses with can- celled recitations were reluctant to discuss their personal view of the moratorium in the hope that no misunderstandings develop. Professor Alfred Meyer, director, of the Center for Russian and East European Studies and lec- turer in -polic sci 101, declined comment on the dispute in inter- est of settling the disagreement as soon as possible. lisorders, protest would have an effect?" Another boy said, "I think it was, a good idea that black students weren't going to give into the Re- gents. I don't remember what the Regents said but this showed them they would put their foot down." One girl on the third f lo or paused when asked her response. She had one but "I don't feel like going into it," she sighed as she continued to walk. "Very mixed feelings, very mixed feelings," she echoed as she approached the elevator. Bus ad gAup award given The 1970 Business Leadership Award was presented last week by the business administration school to Joseph Wilson, chairman of the Xerox Corporation. Wilson, a trustee of the Com- miteee for Economic Development, the Carnegie Endowment for In- ternational Peace, and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and director of the Council for Financial Aid to Education, introduced the copy- ing process known as xerography to the Haloid Corporation in 1948. The business has since become a billion-dollar enterprise. The 21st Annual Advocacy In- stitute, the largest teaching opera- tion of its kind in the nation, ex- pects some- 3,000 attorneys from the U.S. and. Canada to meet here on March 6 and 7. They also will see trial demon- strations with comparative cross- bxaminations, a teaching technique originated at the institute. The meeting is sponsored by the Institute of Continuing L e g a 1 Education of the University of Michigan Law School, Wayne State University Law School, and the State Bar of Michigan. (Continued from Page 1) SDS members said they under- stood that a blow-by-blow account of an all-collective meeting last Thursday was being transmitted over police ban radio. And they said several people had been eject- ed from a mass meeting last week after they were seen talking with police. Some members questioned whe- ther a security committee could really be effective in keeping po- lice out of meetings, but there was general agreement that something had to be done about the feeling, as several members expressed it, that they were continually look- ing over their shoulders to see who was listening. During discussion of the GE in- cident, members commented that the group had acted pointlessly in attempting to block the arrest of SDS member Susan Eisenberg after she had been secured in a police van outside W. Engineer- ing Bldg. Miss Eisenberg was the first person taken into custody during Wednesday's demonstra- tion. They agreed, however,. that they should keep in close touch with people in their groups and attempt to free them should they be grabbed by a policeman. In planning for the demonstra- tion against the Dow Chemical re- cruiter next week, SDS members outlined a broad plan for action, but agreed to leave specific plan- ning up to a five-man committee. Members were urged to get friends with apparently legitimate reasons ORGANIZATION NOTICES U of M Teaching Fellows Union music school teaching fellows meeting, Feb. 24. 12:30. 2044 Music Bldg. for meeting with the recruiter to sign up for appointments. SDS members said they hoped to see faculty members from the Radical College in the "front lines" because this would show that the issues involved do not relate only to students.. Underlying much of the discus- sion throughout the evening was the concept that SDS must win a defensive "military victory" over the police by acting collectively to prevent the isolation and arrest of demonstrators by the police. And with the experience they say they gained in the GE con- frontation last week, SDS mem- bers apparently believe they will now be prepared to deal with the police effectively if they are called in on the next action. Tuesday,;February 24, 1970 ail O ficalRuassociated Newspapers, 'Wayne, ?Mich., Daily- Official Bu letIn ,re ^2rta d e p annn, liti rprtr prefer bckgrndls. in journ. or related seas, will consider new grac] ai:d exper. persons. Day Calendar Economic Opportunity Committee, of TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24 Wayne County. Executive Director, ex- tensive and recent exper. in admin. Council for Exceptional Children: capacity in fiells rel. to public or pri- Dr. Frank Hewett, U. of Calif.. will " vate soc. wel., health, educ. or bus.. speak and show film. "The S a n t a degree, pref. MA in above areas. Monica Project" Sch, of Educ., RIm. Research Group Inc.. Ann Arbor. le- 1405, 3:00 - 5:00 p.m. gat secretary. typ. - 60-65 wpm, short- Dept. of Computer & Communica- hand 100-120 wpm, 1-2 yrs. legal sec. wkl% tion Science: H. Wm. Buttelmann, U. pref. of N.C., "Generalized Automata and Phrase Structure Sets" Rm. 4051 LSA, SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE 4:00 p.m. 22SB oe ee Physics Seminar: Joel Feigenbaum. 212SAB, Lower Level Cornell, "Correction to the Goldberger FESB.24-25: Treiman Relation" P & A Colloq. Rm., Camp Chi, Wisc.. Soc. Wk. coed camp. 4.15 p.m. Gen. Cuns. (n). Spec. in skiing, water- 445 PIXEfront, & sailing. (m&f I. FEB. 25: General Notices Camp Sea Gull, Mich., coed, P.M* only. Couns. (mainf waterfront dir. (mn Regent's Meeting: Wed., and Thurs., or f), & nurse. Mar. 18 and 19. Communications for Irish Hills Girl Scout Council, Jack- consideration at this weeting must be son. Mi, 10 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. asst. dir., in the President's hands no later than bus. mgr., nurse, wrtfrnt staff, unit March 5. idrs,, couns., cook, handyman and May Teacher's eCrtificate Candidates: kitchen asst. All requirements for teacher's certifi- include material for Placement Office ' and the teacher's oath; oath should be " taei 00Ui.Sho we and 12, Mon. - Fri. All fees must be JA P A takenin 200Univ School between 8 paid before degree and certificate can sUMMER -4 COLLEGE CREDITS be granted. DSTE COLLE Radical college plans to join bus ad meeting (Continued from Page 1) action came from faculty mem- bers, many of the faculty later said they felt pressured towards more militant actions by the stu- dents. History Prof. Arthur Mendel said at yesterday's meeting that the goal of the college "is simply enlightenment" and warned that too militant actions would turn faculty members away until the college consisted only of students. Mendel said the college was or- iginated to be a new faculty voice and not "just to lend faculty sup- port to student actions." Sunday the college agreed on a proposal by Mendel to circulate a petition cansuring President Rob- ben Fleming for., turning in the names of the students arrested in the LSA sit-in to Lansing. As a measure towards educat- ing and radicalizing the Univer- sity community philosophy Prof. Frithjof Bergmann proposed set- ting up a "radical information theater." This would involve put- ting a large movie screen on the, diag and loud speakers around the campus and downtown areas to broadcast information on radical issues. Bergmann suggested that the idea of a radical information the- ater might spread to other cam- puses, just as did the concept of the teach-in. Several faculty members sug- gested requesting a campus-wide referendum on recruiting as a follow-up to the college's demand that Fleming immediately end all recruiting on campus. Many others, however, said there was no real purpose to a referen- dum because it bound no one to abide by the majoity opinion, and that they themselves would not agree to abide by the results of a referendum. Jim Forrester, a member of Rad- ical Caucus, said that although "deciding by referendum would be a step towards democraticizing the University, the interests of the majority of this school may be counter to the interests of the society as a whole." Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Late Announcement of interview at General Division : MARCH 11: Barton-Aschman Assoc., Inc., open- ings in Chicago and 'Wash. D.C., MA ano PhD in areas of transportation and Urban planning from any adv. degree prog. in these areas at U of M. Call 763- 1363 for appts. Current Position Openings, come in and browse through others: U of M Personnel: Staff Assistants in Financial and Business. Operations, ac- count., financial anal., personnel, gen. bus, areas; degrees in acctg., gen. bus., finan. or mktg. In depth vacation enjoyment and study of Japan's history, politics, economics," education, religion and arts. SFSC pro- fessor administers classes, but lectures are by leading Japanese educators. Enroll for credit or as auditor and re- quest pass/fail or alphabetical grades. Price includes Oakland/Tokyo round- trip via jet charter flight (based on 100% ocrupancy), first-class hotels, train and motor coach Japan travel, transportation and admission to Expe 170, extensive sightseeing, guides, baggage handling, tips, transfers, etc. Hong Kong optional. Land arrange- ments operated by: HOWARD TOURS ! OF OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA APPLY- Institute of international Studies; 522 Grand Avenue, Oakland, CA 94610 A, U MS-PhD GRADUATES FRESHMEN and S interest SOPHOMORES ed in lucation I, Special Ei E NACT "Alter the Environmental Crisis" DR. GLENN GOFF University of Missouri Today 12 Noon 1040 School of Natural Resources FAMILIAR EQUATION? It describes the dynamics of a linear system. We use such equations in solving problems in inertial guidance for ships, aircraft, and, submarines. The work involves analytical research relating to gimballed and strapdown inertial systems and sensors including: mathematical modeling of physical processes, inertial system error analysis, system snythesis, optimization and evaluation in the area of Navigation, Guidance and Control. We'll be on campus MONDAY, MARCH 2nd talking to MS and Doctoral graduates in EE, Aero/Astro or Systems who are familiar with automatic control systems and random process theory. The positions are located 8 miles from Boston and Cambridge and offer excellent salaries, benefits and paid re-location. If you're interested in joining a small fast-moving research firm and enjoy professional recognition of your work, plan to see us on Monday, March 2nd. THE ANALYTIC SCIENCES CORP. w Come to Room 2009 (Ed. Students Advising Office) in the Ed. School to find out about the Special Ed. Curriculum--Wed. 2/26-Thurs. 2/27, 9:30-11:30, 11:30-3:30 P.M. This counseling is a service of the U of M Stu- dent Council for Exceptional Children I ' (i i Is 6 JACOB WAY READING, MASSACHUSETTS 01867 '1 'I This album is dedicated to those people who make sleeping around a pleasure. t For Lisa, Jay, Joe, Bob, Danny, Nancy, Rick, Ron, Joanne, Victoria, Terry and the Rest... The Fifth Dimension- who sent four of my songs on ; Stoned Soul Picnic B-Side Trip... A Midnight Cowboy who took two, A Famous Myth, and Tears and Joys to ease the torment of Ratso. Sure Hope You Like It, By Jef frey Comanor (Who Sure Hopes You Will)