Page Eight THE M1CH[GAN DAILY Friday, October 11, 1968 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fr iclay, October 11, 1968 I ENGINEERS & SCIENTISTS DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .,,,...":'.i; a ...... ............n.. n ....,:" .:s .:.r"{:'"l:...........: :1rrrr'.V:}.i}:}rV:: ....." Mexico City braces for Olympic ganes ---.., Wth ur~Inter/ Vted ouae OUdare vi tooanni/t tinritew with or repesentt an jin je to at frview with our reprsensti FI OCrtOieR2 . re e . FR D , tR Z The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility, 14otlces 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. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar: "Management of Managers, Pro- gram No. 70": North Campus Commons, 8:15 a.m. Computers Fundamentals Workshop: Chrysler Center, 8:30 a.m. Department of Philosophy Lecture: Thomas Nagal of Princeton University. "Sxual' Perversion,"AFriay, October I1. 1968, 4:00 p.m. Auditorium( A, An- gell _ all. Cinema Guild: Abram Room's Bed' and Sofa: Architecture Auditorium, 7:00 and, 9:05 p.m. Department of Astronomy Lecture & Visitors' Night: Richard G. Teske, As- sociate Professor of Astronomy, Univ. of Michigan, "Observing the Sun From Space," To Observe: a Star Cluster and a Double Star: 8:00 p.m. Aud. B, Angell Hall. Children welcomed, but must be accompanied by adults. Professional Theatre Program: APA Repertory Company in Shakespeare's Hamlet: Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, 8:00 p.m. Dance Series: National Ballet (From1 Washington, D.C.) in Swan Lake, Act. II (Tchaikovsky); Concerto Barocco (Bach) = Balanchine; A Pas de Deux; and Raymonda (Glazounoff) #- Frederic Franklin, Director: Hill Auditorium,1 s:30P.M. ' General Notices Recreational Hours, Women Students: Barbour Gymnasium will be open for women students from 3:00 to , 5:00 p.m. regularly on Fridays starting Oc-1 tober 11., Center for Russian and East Euro- pean Studies and the Department of History Lecture: Thomas J. Hegarty, Associate Prof esor of History, Boston University, "Student Activism in Rus- sian Universities, 1855-1917," 4:10 p.m., Monday, October 14, Auditorium A, MEXICO CITY (A) - The po- litical strife that has soiled the image of a progressive, stable Mexico' is unusual in that it did not happen sooner. The students-inspired violence that has claimed some 50 lives since July has been throttled at least temporarily by official mus- cle. The world's foremost sports pageant, the 19th Olympiad, seems certain to go on, starting Satur- day, without a hitch. But when the last Olympic cheer dies down at the close, Oct. 27, the curtain may be going up on a sequel to the worst political storm to r o c k this prosperous nation since the abortive revolt led by Gen. Gonzalo Escobar in 1929. The political illness has not scarred the capital's impressively modern facade or slowed its vi- brant pulse. Nor does the city wear that bruised, sullen look so fa- miliar among Latin - American cities in turmoil. Because of its size, 6.3 million Soviets plan Czech pullout UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (iP) - people in a 300-square mile met- ropolitan area, Mexico City looks big enough to stage a revolution and an Olympiad at the same time without one bothering the other. This is why the games are not expected to suffer. The evening of the bloodiest clash between stu- dents and troops, Oct. 2, Avery Brundage, president of the Inter- national 01 y m p i c Committee (IOC). attended a jazz festival at the Palace of Fine Arts, 11/2 miles from the scene of the 'fight. Other members of t h e IOC executive committee dined at a luxury hotel downtown. Commenting on the violence, Wayne Le Bombard, U-S. cyclist from Milwaukee, Wis., said "It's so far removed from us it might as well be going on in Vietnam." "The Olympic Village is a sort of Shangri-La," said Barry Weiz- enberg, water poloist from Los Al- tos, Calif., "it hasn't touched us and we feel it won't." Ironically, the source of Mexi- co's political stability, the Insti- tutional Revolutionary party, PRI, that has ruled Mexico for three decades with partriachal firmness, is the font of the current stor'm. There has been growing disen- chantnient at nearly all levels, but! particularly among ,middleclass youth and students, with the one-t Angell Hall. Broadcasting Service: WUOM (91.7 Mc.) I a.m,to 11 p.m. Friday 11:00 a.m. The Eleyenth Friday 11:00 a.m. The Eleventh (Continued on Page 12) -Associated Press Russian girls shaping up Radio daily. 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TIME: Monday evenings at 1:30 P.M., beginning October 14,196*8 PLACE: Guild House, 802 Monroe St. October 14-Beyond A Split-Level Universe: The Philosophy of'Organism October 21-Charles Hartshorne-A.New Advocate October 28-The Divine Dipolarity November 4-A Framework for Christian Thought Sponsored by: The Office of Religious Affairs RC PROPOSAL: Debate faculty review (Continued from page 1). T teraforsuch - students to submit their criticisms to him. The Soviet Union was reported party system and its long-estab- yesterday night to have promised lished ills; cronyism, nepotism and that 90 per cent of the Warsaw corruption. pact troops in Czechoslovakia Evidence of, growing sentiment would be withdrawn by Oct. 28, the against the party has emerged at !50th anniversary of Czechoslovak state. and municipal elections and; independence. in bloody clashes. These were Diplomatic sources said Soivet mostly in the interior. It was not there to negotiate a treaty for until the student conflict brokeI officials made the promise in Ithat the storm brewing on he, Moscow to Czechoslovak officials fringes was brought home to Mex- there to negotiate a treaty for icans in the capital. temporary stationing of, some of - The student explosion was not the troops in their country. set off by PRI-spawned discon-I By some current estimates, that tent but that was the main propel- would mean that about 50,000 or lant, serving to prolong and in- fewer troops would remain. tensify its effects. Political rivals The informants said all the and opportunists, Communists, troops remaining would be Soviet foreign adventurers and thrill- except for command detachments seekers turned a strictly student' from Poland, East Germany, Hun- dispute into a conflagration ofI gary and Bulgaria. still undetermined dimensions. . Those five countries sent forces The tumult has now died down into Czechoslovakia Aug. 20 for and post-mortems are proliferat- the avowed purpose of preventing ing in t h e colorfully festooned anti-Communist counterrevolu- capital that chose the word tion. ep~ace" as its Olympiad motif. 11 2282 SAB 764-7442 gubscribe To THE MICHIGAN DAILY Phone, 764-05,58 ROCHESTER, NEW YOR*\ MOM I5 SEIA#STEAEO TRADEMARK Or XEltY5CORPORATION, I,- AMANDA tC FENWICK From Israel LEATHER COATS MONGOLIAN LAMB LINING 522 E. WILLIAM' isc011t records, 300 S. State-1235 S. University ADVANCE RELEASE SPECIAL Rbrtson also objected to a tion would be unclear and possibly'Rbrsn.loojetdt divisive. 'formal review committee o'n the Prosf.JaeCONgrounds that criteria for evalua- Prof. James C. O'Neill. chair- tion would be unclear, man of the romance languages, de- "What would you judge faculty partment in the literary college. on?" he asked, "Personality? In- said student opinion as to; a fac- terest? Relevance? The definition ulty member's ability would be of what is good. teaching varies in "extraordinarily limited." the relation~siip of each student "Because of the short time stu- to his instructor."' dents are here at the University Guskin objected to the criticism it is structurally impossible for that a review commitee would them to gain any useful amount upset the unity of the college. of expertise" in judging faculty. .de"Te relationship between stu- desand faculty could break * Prof. Carl Cohen of the philo- 'down if a review committee be- ophy department, an Assembly came solely involved in accepting representative, said a formal re- or rejecting faculty. The commit- view committee would be "un- tee should be involved in several realistic," and added it would intermediate steps, most impor- "use up any reserve of goodwill" tantly, positive feedback to the the Residential College.-has with professors themselves." individual departments. Guskin added however that "You are not dealing with many objections to implementing hired hands but prima donnas. a review committee at the present Review of faculty is a very deli- time are legitimate. cate issue, q hot potato even in "It is true that many faculty the hands of administrators. You members now would not put up are not evaluating journeymen with such a review committee. electricians." , However, I do not feel this means Residential Co11e g e Director it is an impossible thing. I think JamesdRobertson said he. felt a faculty attitudes must be changed. formal board for complaints would It is a toucl iy issue, and it may upset the unity of the college.- not be possible to resolve in six month or a year, but it is impor- Robertson and Cohen agreed tant to start now." that students had a useful view Dean William Hays of the lit- in evahliating faculty but that it erary college said there is "noth- would be better left unstructured. ing in the structural relationship "I believe the answer lies not in\ between LSA and the Residential a committee structure but in open College to prevent RC review of channel~s of communication be- ftaculty." tween students, and my office," He said he was not prepared to Robertson said. Ie ehcouraged comment further: COMPUTER SCIENCE ELECTRONIC ENGINEtR4 M.S. 9nd Ph.D. Schlumberger, the nation's undisputed leader in all oil well service techniques, is seeking advanced degrees. 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