Tuesday, October 8, 1 968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Tuesday, Qctpber 8, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Faculty-student group urges changes for campus police 'DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN y.'I (Continued from page H) "This man," states the report, University police functions under "should have control of all polic- a chief of campus prptection and ing, fire, and security forces. He security asked that this officer be should understand police and se- "controlled or advised" by Univer- curity work, but he should also sity Council or the Police Advisory understand his role in relation to Committee. students and faculty. Draft resisters trgal dras emontstrators (Continued from page 1) The trial was .more than two hours late getting under way be- cause of legal maneuvers. The courtroom was closed after spec- tator seats were filled, mostly with supporters of the Catholic pacif- ists, two of them priests. Police halted a scuffle when Joseph Carroll, a local official of the National States "Rights Party, grabbed a red flag from the pro- testors. He tried tq burn it on the Battle Monument, which stands in a small plaza in front of the post office. Several Negro youths tried to rush Carroll, but were restrained by officers, who immediately herded the five States Righters out of the area. There were no arrests. The demotiotrators were heckled along their march, and speakers at a planned rally at War Memo- rial Plaza were drowned out. A scuffle took place when spectators carrying signs saying "Peace Creeps Go Home" moved near the speaker's stand. American citizen," jumped to the platform, but was pushed back by police. "These people are not Amer- icans," he shouted. "They're a dis- grace to America. We should all bind together and kick these Com- munists out." The trial was recessed after se- lection of a jury of five menu and seven women. This process was speeded when the defense re- frained from participation in the selection. The defendants are Rev. Philip F. Berrigan, 45, of Baltimore; his brother, Rev. Daniel Berrigan, 47, formerly an instructor at Cornell University; Thomas P. Lewis, 27, a Baltimdre artist; James Darst, 26, a Christian Brother teacher in St. Louis, Mo. Also, John Hogan, 33, a former Maryknoll brother; Thomas Mel- ville, 38, a former Maryknoll priest, his wife, Marjorie, 38, a former Maryknoll nun; George Mische, 31, a peace organizer from Washington, and Mary Moylan, 32, a local nurse. "The committee cannot over- emphasize the importance of plac- ing the right person in this position." The report also recommends that the University: -Have an evaluation made of the service provided by the San- ford Security, Service, preferably by an outside agency such as the International Association of Chiefs of Police; -Provide more street lights on campus; ' -Reevaluate and renegotiate its contract with the -city on pay- ments now m51ade for police serv- ices. Specifically, costs for traffic control services, which the report says "appear extcessively high," should be studied; -Study the, feasibility of con- trolling building access through electronic a n d./ o r mechanical means. Members of the University-Po- lice Relations Subcommittee are Prof. George West of the engineer- ing school (chairman), Associate Director of Student Organizations Will Smith, Prof. Albert Reiss of the sociology department, Prof. PatriciA Rabinovitz of the School of Social Work, Prof. Samuel Estep of the Law School and Student Government Council member E. C. Knowles, '70. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sitiy of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 35281 L. S. & A. Bldg., before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sun- day. General Notices may be pub- lished a maximum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear only once. Student organization notices are not accepted for publica- tion. For more information call 764- 9270. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar: "Management of Managers, Pro- gram No. 70": North Campus Commons, 8:15 a.m. Electrical Engineering Research Re- view: Lecture Hall, Chrysler Center, 8:30 a.m. School of Music Recital: Students of the String Department: School of Music Recital Hall, 12:30 p.m.. Computer and Communication Sci- ences Lecture Series: Dr. Arnold Rosen- berg,, I.B.M., "Automata Theory, and Computational Complexity," L. S. & A. Bldg., Room 4016, 3:30 Coffee,' 4:00 Lec- ture. Professional Theatre Program: APA Repertory Company in Shakespeare's Hamlet: Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, 8:00 p.m. General Notires FLU SHOTS There will be a "Flue Shot" Clinic at the Health Service, Wednesday, Octob- er 9, from 8:00 -11:30 a.m. and 1:00 - 4:30 p.m. The charge is $1.50 for stu- dents and spouses and $2.00 for faculty, staff and spouses. Persons who have had a "Flu Shot" since 1964 need only one this year. Persons who require a second~ injection this year may obtain it at this time. Broadcasting Service: WUOM Radio (91.7 Mc.) 11, a.m. to 11 p.m. daily. Tuesday 1:00 p.m. The Next Fifty Years - "Creating a New Standard of Life", with Charles Abrams and George Can-- dilis. Tuesday 5:15 p.m. U-M Featury Story, with Jack Hamilton. Tuesday 8:05 p.m. Music of the Masters -- fea- turing candidates for the Doctor of Musical Arts in Piano from the School of Music: a program devoted to the keyboard music of Bela Bartok. Tues- day 10:00 p.m. Background - three ex- perts discuss the Community College System. Wednesday 11:00 a.m. The Eleventh Hour (repeated at 7 p.m.) Ed Burrows hosts an hour of news and conservation about the arts and literature. Guest: Benjamin Khoo, supervisor of music in the Singapore schools. Wednesday 1:00 p.m. The Aging Conference - Mar- garet Clark of the Langley Porter Neuropsychiatric Institute, San Fran- cisco, on "The Aged in American Cul- ture". Wednesday 4:45 p.m. Campus News, produced by students in the de- partment of speech. Wednesday 8:00 p.m. Stanley Quartet Concert, broad- cast live from Rackham Lecture Hall. Attention: Students planning on do- ing their directed teaching durng the Winter Term, 1969. If you have ot re- ceived a note in the mail to report to the Directed Teaching office please stop as soon as possible in 2292 U.H.S. If we do not hear from you we will as- sume you do not plan on doing your directed teaching. Zoology Seminar: Dr. Lucille Shapiro, Dept. of Molecular Biology, Albert Ein- stein College of Medicine, "Host Factors for the In Vitro Synthesis of Bacterio- phage QBRNA, 4 p.m., Wednesday, Oc- tober 9, 1400 Chemistry Bldg. Ermine Cowles Case Memorial Lec- ture: Sponsored by Museum of Paleon- tology, Geology and Mineralogy De- partment, and Sigma Xi. Dr. Elwyn L. Simons, Peabody Museum, Yale Uni- (Continued on Page 6) A muse yourself? Contribute prose, poetry, drama, artwork, photographs, non-fiction, literary criticism -almost anything, in fact, of in fiction, to generation[ the Inter-artsmagaine Fi - - "" STUD. PUB. BLDG. 420 MAYNARD ST. Center For Chinese Studies presents PROF. JAMES CAHILL Speaking on CHINESE PAINTING in the YUAN DYNASTY An illustrated lecture THURSDAY, OCT. 10-4:10 P.M. And. B, Angell Hall Mr. Cahill is Professor of Oriental Art at U of California "Berkeley deadline, first issue: October 12 r The SPANISH SOCIETY a lecture by presents YOUR MOTHER Paul Brinkman, 52, who ,le- Among those seated at the de- scribed himself \as a self-employed fense table as the trial began was Baltimore contractor anp "an Episcopal Bishop James A. Pike. PROF. JOSE DURAND on the 1967 Winner of the Nobel Prize of Literature: -'Miguel Angel Asturias Entre El Mundo De Los Mayar y el Arte De Vanguardia OCTOBER 9, 8:00 P.M. 3050 FRIEZE BUILDING 3I I. I WO 'T WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY 1 DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH STUDENT LABORATORY THEATRE presents CALM DOWN MOTHER 4:10 P.M. 11 I .... r .. 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" Election of officers " Program discussion 4 Progress reports if you dor't go over to the Student Publications Building this week, Oct. 7 to Oct. 10, 10:00 to 5:00 and 7:00 to;9:00 P.M. and make a last ditch attempt to get your SENIOR PICTURE in the 1969 Michiganensian, so she can show Uncle Irving you finally graduated. EXCELLENT FOR " THESIS WORK " BOOK COPIES " TERM PAPERS R NOTE BOOKS " TAX FORMS " CLUB NOTICES * CLASS NOTICES * PHOTOGRAPHS Discount Photocopy 211 5. 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