I' RACHEL URIST Israeli Dance I nstructress will lead ISRAEL I FOLK DANCING SUNDAY, MARCH 15 at 6:15 following DELI HOUSE at TH E HOUSE 1429 HILL ST. SHOWS AT: 1:00-3:00-5:00 Tt tr 7:00&9:10 P.M NOMI NATED FOR 9 ACADEMY AWARDS "BEST j } PPICTRE OF THE YEAR" -Notionol Boar4 of Revicew "BEST ACTRESS- JANE FONDAJ" ---New York Film Critics * ASUBSIDIARY OF THlE AMERICAN BROADCASTING COMPANIES. INC. DISTRIBUTED BY CINERAMA RELEASING CORPORATION You can't recommend" the best lodging i nAnn Arbor.,. until you've visited the Campus Inn. CRITICIZE IDATA: Faculty hits report on campus disorder ale tC i M1T ai1y page three Sunday, March 1 5, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Continued from Page 1) University campus have indicated this was the case with them. When asked about biased ques- tioning, Thomas Emmet Jr., the president of Higher Education Ex- ecutive Associates, did not deny the charge. "Some days you feel good and the tone of your questioning is good," he explained. "And some- times it's not. We- may give the impression of being biased, but' we try to avoid that." The problem' of assumption about the topic being studied seemed to emerge most in the sec- tion based on, the on-campus in- terviews. The report called on- campus issues the factors which "create a' climate within which a campus eruption becomes either a possibility or a probability." But the report itself did not show any casual relationship in this area. Instead it simply set, out the fact that students are dissatisfied with what the state's colleges and universities offer today. if you need child care facilities or are interested in working to establish them-- COME TO A MASS MEETING- Sunday, March 15 2 00 P.M St. Andrews Church (provisions will be made to care for children of those attending) - , 3020 Washtenow, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor NOW SHOWING Nominated for Seven ACADEMY AWARDS includinq *fBest Picture 0 Best Sonq 7Dm hCENT!"" Pasx BUTCH CASSCE AND THE S UNDANCE K(D This is simply descriptive," said Prof. William Cave of the education school. "In no way does it show causes and effects," "Most studies have found a general malaise about going to school," added Dr. Gamson. "Stu- dents always feel that way, That doesn't say anything about going to student protests." In addition, the experts find the. report deficient on its most basic level-the raw data collected from the questionnaire. All of the professors who read the report found it difficult to discern any meaning from the data because they saw it as ambiguous, The questionnaires used in the study asked people to specify if an item was a protest issue, and if so, then how prolonged the issue was and how much student and faculty involvement there was. "The chart derived from that looks objective," Prof. Cave said, "but who knows what 'protest' is?", "This is a fundamental prob- lem," he added. "People can call a wide range of events the same things. 'Protest' can be anything from simple displeasure to break- ing windows and fighting." Dr. Gamson agreed. "Soiething that would be sneezed at at the University would be hot stuff at Albion College," she said The questionnaire was not sensitive to such distinctions. Brown noted the same problem and added another-the immedi- ate analysis of the data. "These are no more than casual co- ments on what differences in the data mean," he said, 'but that's dangerous because they don't know for sure that those differences mean anything." He was refering specifically to data showing that college presi- dents observed less protest on campuses than faculty or students did. Yet Brown had some lavorable remarks for the study as well. "I won't defend this material on scientific grounds, but the inter- view sults have decent face value," he said. "The quotes do ring true from my experience." But, he added, it is not social science. "It is journalism, pure and simple." The people. who, prepared the report gave two defenses against the charges of deficiency - that the report really is not so bad and that it was meant to be the way it is. Emmet, head of the research firm, denied charges that the dif- ferent parts of the report did not fit together logically. "Every rec- ommendation is cross-woven; they mesh very nicely," he said. Added Dennis Bining, editorial consultant for the study and an editor at McGraw-Hill, "The peo- ple who worked on this report think its the best thing that has even been done in this area and nothing--bar none--nothing can touch it." But it wasn't perfect, he ad- mitted. "As a statistical research- er, I can tell you everything that was wrong with this report. I could write a book on it," he said. "We did not write it' for socio- logists-we did not research it for sociologists," he said. "Let the people decide- not the sociolo- gists." Black movement discussed (Continued from Page 1) "But rather than just an in- terest group problem, the Black Action Movement demands affect the whole nature of higher educa- tion," Singham concluded. Continuing the conference with a history of these black student demands, Walter Lewis '70, said, "The question still remains, 'Does this University take the BAM de- mands seriously?'" BAM leaders have predicted ma- jor student actions if the Regents do not respond favorably to the demands. Harold Cruse, the final speaker, specified the role of culture in the black r'evolution. Cruse is a lecturer in Afro-American studies and is the author of "The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual." Cruse said "Black studies, black revolution 'and black culture are interchangeable terms." He then called upon black students to meet a "creative challenge-the "re- interpretation of an experience which has been interpreted in faulty ways by previous his- torians." This is not a call for a sepa- ration of black and white, accord- ing to Cruse. "The black experi- ence is meaningless if we don't see black history in terms of its im- pact on the broader society around us," he said. Cruse concluded that black stu- dies will have a profound impact as a means of seeing the kinds of historical context from which a black revolution may evolve. "If this is not seen," Cruse said, "the revolution will be a failure, and what that means for blacks in this society I shudder to think or say." the n eWs tday by The Associated Press and College Press Service THE SOVIET UNION warned the U.S. yesterday that the planned deployment of the U.S. MIRC missile system has threat- ened arms limitation talks. A sharply worded commentary in the Soviet Defense Ministry's organ, Red Star, called the decision to put the MIRV into operation a "stick in the spokes" of efforts to curb the arms race. "The Pentagon's decision seriously threatens the Soviet-Amer- ican talks and encourages the arms race," the Red Star commentary said in the first Soviet reaction to the program. U.S. Air Force Secretary Robert C. Seaman told the Senate Armed Services Committee Tuesday the MIRV-multiple independently targeted re-entry vehicle-would be installed in June, well ahead of the original 1970 target date. ** * * SENATE MAJORITY LEADER MIKE MANSFIELD said yes- terday President Nixon does not plan to repeat use of bombers in Laos. The senator said that after the use of B52 bombers in last month's unsuccessful effort to prevent the North Vietnamese recapture of the Plain of Jars he asked that the raids not be repeated. He said, when interviewed, he has received "good enough as- surance to suit me" that the strikes will not be repeated. He did not say who gave him the assurance, though he did say "the President feels the same way" as Senate critics about the need to avoid further involvement in Laos.- A FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION report shows the two friends of H. Rap Brown were killed by an accidental detonation of explosives they had in the car. The report cited evidence involving the position of the passengers, explosives, and car when the blast occurred, which officials say shows the explosives were neither thrown at the car or planted. The explosion, which occurred near Bel Air Monday night, killed William Payne, a civil rights worker from Atlanta, Ga., and. Ralph Featherstone, former program director of the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee. . * * * THE NEW MOBILIZATION COMMITTEE'S call for an anti- draft week March 16-22 has been answered by plans for demon- strations in over'100 cities. ' Those demonstrating plan to focus on "non-violent, orderly civil disobedience." Plans include leafletting, picketing, and sit-ins at draft offices and induction centers, and flooding the offices with phone calls in an effort to impede their work. Panel held onwar and, ecology By HANNAH MORRISON The effects of war upon the environments of Vietnam and the United States were explored at a panel on "War and the Environ- ment" yesterday afternoon. The discussion, cosponsored by ENACT and New Mobe, featured University professors Anatol Ra- poport and Irwin Goldstein, Prof. Kenneth Boulding of the econo- mics department at the University of Colorado, and Douglas Fulton, outdoor editor of the Ann Arbor News. David Gordon, co-chairman of New Mobe, acted as moderator. Stressing the need for govern- mental reform to end the forms of pollution caused by war, Bould- ing said, "There must be a change in the national super-power image. We have this mantle-of-Elijah complex." He suggested a smaller war industry as part of the solu- tion. The economist blamed the inter- national, system of deterrence as the fundamental problem, how- ever. Boulding also suggested two ways to reform the system: mak- ing a better world government structure-a prospect he deemed "highly unlikely"-and reassess- ment of national goals. "We should become the modest society which stays home and minds its own business rather than the 'Great Society'," he said. Goldstein, a biological chemist said, "The U.S. has exported pol- lution by systematically destroy- ing Vietnam. We are converting a once beautiful country into a chemical wasteland. It's immoral." Fulton blamed high costs for. the lack of programs to clean up the environment. "We can no longer afford the luxury of war, for we don't have enough re- sources," he said. "There must be a whole new way of life." Rapoport, a mathematic bio- logist, defined pollution as an "ex- cess of waste spewed out by man's technology." "The reason everyone likes talk- ing about the evils of pollution is because they all agree on it," be said. "It alo keeps people's minds on the government's sins of omis- sion rather than their sins of com- mission - to the government's satisfaction." Rapoport also said the semantic environment needs changing just as much as the biological and physical surroundings. "It is much harder to clean up the semantic environment - the poison secreted in conventional wisdom-than the others. It legit- imizes war as an instrument of foreign policy and convinces that killing and making paupers con- stitutes defense of freedom," he said. C PUS ANN ARBOR'S FINEST MOTOR HOTEL Daily Official Bulletin SUNDAY, MARCH 15 Day Calendar Dance Series: Royal Winnipeg Bal- let: Hill Auditorium, 2:30 p.m. Sigma Alpha Iota American Musicale: School of Music Recital Hall, 2:30 p.m. Degree Recital: Jane Smithson, piano: School of Music Recital Hall, 4:30 p.m. International Center Film Series: The Heritage of Slavery: International Center, 7:30 p.m. Degree )Recital - Ginger Reynolds, piano: School of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. MONDAY, MARCH 16 Senate Assembly Meeting: Report on SACUA, campus planning, Rackham Amphitheater, 3:15 p.m. Department of Engineering Mechan- ics Seminar: Professor M. J. Kaldjian, Departments of Civil Engineering., En- gineering Mechanics, and Naval Archi- tecture and Marine Engineering, "Ofn Finite Elemet Mthod ad Its Applica- tions': 311 West Engineering, 4:00 p.m. Physics Colloq.: B. Maglic, Rutgers, "Recent and Planned Experiments on Resonance Searches" P&A Colloq. Rm., 4:00 p.m. Classical Students & Speech and Professional Theatre Prog.: Takis Mu- zenidis, Dir., Nat'l Theatre of Greece," Problems of Modern Interpretation of Ancient Drama," Rackham Amph., 4:10 p.m'. School of Music Honors Assembly: Wilbur J. Cohen, Dean, School of Edu- cation, "New Directions in American Education": Rackham Lecture Hall, 8:00 p n. Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. The Henry Russel Lecture will be delivered by John Arthos, Professor of English, Wed., Mar. 18, 8:00 p.m., Rack- ham Amph. His lecture topic is "Shake- speare and the Anvient World." The Henry Russel Award will also be made at this time. Late interview announcement, Mar, 18: Mattell, Inc., seeks BA any area for mktg., merchandising & sales; Mat- tell famous as "the toy people" and for aggressive, mktg. programs." Interviews ?t General Div., complete info, published in bulletin, call 763- 1363 for appts. Weeks of March 23 - April 3: Boy Scouts of America Computer Software Systems, Inc. S. S. Kresge Michigan Civil Service Pan American Airways U. S. Marine Corps U. S. Navy e U. S. Air Force Allstate Insurance Fidelity Mutual Life Ins. Peace Corps week, March 30 - Apr. 3 SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE 212 SAB, Lower Level Interviews at Summer Placement Service: MARCH 16: Camp Cavell, YWCA, Det., wtrfrnt dir. (min. 21), asst. dir., geh. couns. & arts & craft. MARCH 17: Camp Tamarack, Fresh Air Soc., Det. couns. spec., wtrfrnt, arts & crafts, na- ture, campcraft, tripping, drama, dance, unit and asst. unit supv, casewkr, truck-bus driver, couns. for emotion- ally disturbed (m), marionette theater, kitchen porter; univ. credit avail, MARCH 1S: Good Humor, Det., men and women, drive ice cream truck, good salary. MARCH 20: Kelly Services, Det., register for sum- mer work in typing, file, bus. machine ,omputer wk., switchboard, gen. of- fice. - (Continued on Page 6) I 615 East Huron Street at State Street - 769-2200 J --ml - m Opp, PANAVISIONS COLOR BY DELUXE I Suogsed' For MATURE Audiences +AI r.;as ''0'."o se P m K LAST 3 DAYS!! ENDS TUESDAY!! a Student Council Election at THE HOUSE 1429 HILL ST. SUNDAY, MARCH 15 4:00 P.M. ALL INVITED TO ATTEND I J - - The brother binds himself to form community For information about these Brothers, write to: Brother Robert Fillmore, C.S.C. Notre Dame, Indiana 46556 I 8th ANN ARBOR FILM FESTIVAL MARCH 10-15 (in cooperation with CINEMA GUILD and DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER) TONIGHT: SUNDAY-WINNERS AND HIGHLIGHTS -i-e-riL r . %,/c.r%/-,.la nn MICHIGRAS does Vaudeville and we need: I specialty acts I singers, dancers, comedians Itrumpets, trombones, pianists, and drums ROBERT REDFORD GELE HACKMANI CAM I LA SPARV / "DOWNHILL RACER I I