Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fridoy, November , 1968 Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY _.r.rdry . .Novembe.,r r8..1968 PLEASE CHECK YOUR AD The Michigan Daily makes every effort to avoid errors in advertisements Each ad is carefully checked and proofread But when you handle hundreds of ads each day. mistakes do slip through We ask, therefore. that you check your adand if you find an error. report it to The Michigan l)ailv Classified Dept .764-0557 be- tween 12:',"0 p m and 2:30 p m We regret that we can- not be responsible for more than one day's incorrect it- sertion it you do not call the error to our attention Thank you ALL CAMPUS MIXER FREE GIRLS GUYS $.50 EAST QUAD Anderson, the "Action House" FRIDAY, NOV. 8 8:30-11:30 P.M. I Featuring UGLY ROOMERS What kind of man Reads Generation? The new House The inquirer GEUNERATION, campus inter-arts magazine ON SALEbeginning NOV. 7 President-elect Richard Nixon will face a strong Democratic majority in the House of Representatives when he takes office Jan. 20. The map shows the breakdown of congressmen by party in each state. NIXON, NEW CONGRESS: Dirksen predicts cooperation 4' includes ART DRAMA POETRY FICTION ESSA Y PHOTOGRAPHY WASHINGTON (A') - Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois said yesterdayI he expects President-elect NixonI to get along all right with a Con- gress controlled by the Democrats. "President Eisenhower had the same problem, and it worked out, all right," Dirksen remarked in an interview. The GOP leader, re-elected for a fourth term in Tuesday's elec- tion, said Nixon has an advant- age that Eisenhower didn't have -broad experience in government a - - --, as a former member of the House and the Senate as well as vice president. Members of Congress with whom Nixon served are still here, Dirksen observed, adding this will give him an advantage of per- sonal contacts just as President Johnson has had from his long service in Congress. Dirksen said he thinks the Sen- ate will be more conservative in the new Congress and called this in line with a national trend. "I expect senators on both sides of the aisle will respond to this trend," he said. III it1 TEMPLE BETH EMETH (reform) Bruce Warshal, Rabbi ' INDIA STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION, ANN ARBOR INVITES YOU TO ITS ANNUAL FUNCTION Deepaw Celebration THE FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS Enjoy Indian Music, Dances, and Sweets Everybody Welcome. Bring Your Friends, Too. Admission: 50c per head 7:00 P.M. SUNDAY, NOV. 10 at FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH of Ann Arbor, 1432 Washtenaw Ave. welcomes faculty and student =Jewish families to worship with the congregation. Sabbath Service (Shabbat-Ha Moreh) Friday, Nov. 8, 8:30 P.M. 1917 Washtenaw, Ann Arbor Teachers of the religious and Hebrew school will be honored at this service. Religious school Sat. morning 9-11:30 in kinder- garten-lO (confirmation). For membership infor- mation please call 668-7974. Sabbath services, religious school & Hebrew classes are held at 1917 Washtenaw, Ann Arbor. Friday evening services 8:30 P.M. semi-monthly. guests? Do them a favor. Put them up at Bell Tower Hotel, then join them on the town after the game. Bell Tower Hotel- bigger than before, elegant new rooms and suites-the only great hotel in campustown. Near where all the action is! Reservations? 769-3010 BELL TOWER HOTEL 300 S. Thayer Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 - Enjoy Yourself - Join the Daily Staff Today! w The Center for Chinese Studies presents LYMAN VAN SLYKE speaking on the Sian Incident TO DIE IN MADRID SHOWN NOV. 17-18 (Sun and Mon nights) 7 and 9:05 AUDITORIUM "A" made by Frederic Rossif in '65 from films of the Spanish Civil War. Docu- mentary and "work of art." Sponsor, SDS. i 000000 f i NOV. 8th at 4:00 P.M. Room 200, LANE HALL Mr. Van Slyke is an associate professor of history at Stanford University and is the author of "Friends and Enemies: The United Front in Chi- nese Cominunist History," among other works. i 0 """"""""" Subscribe To Los Carabiniers J. L. Godard ('63) Nov. 24-25-Sun. 7 and. 9:05, Mon. 9 only Michel Ange, the draftee. Godard's film meant as 'a child's primer on war." THE MICHIGAN DAILY IV Phone 764-0558 m I FOCUS ON LATIN AMERICA Monsignor IVAN ILLICH Speaking On Violence: A Mirror for Americans TUESDAY, NOV. 12 noon-International Center Luncheon "Social Change in Latin America Today" 8:00 p.m. Rackham Auditorium "The School System as a Belief System: The Need to Demythologize Educa- tion." Introduction by Prof. Mathew Trippe, Special Ed., School of Educa- tion WEDNESDAY, NOV. 13 noon-Canterbury House, 331 May- nard St "Peasants in Latin American Church & Society." Discussion with Prof. Eric Wolf, Anthropology. 8:00 p.m. - St. Andrew's Episc. Church, 306 N. Division. "Christian- ity & Communism: Coexistence or Conflict." Discussion with Prof. Al- bert Meyer, Polit. Sci. Ivan clhe --- foundier nf the Centro At this stage of the war in Vietnam the violent symptoms are too horrible to permit a lucid analysis of the causes that produce them. It is therefore more important to focus U.S. attention on the other two programs, the war on poverty and the Alliance for Progress: one, a war conducted by social workers: the other, an alliance that has maintained or swept into power military regimes in two-thirds of Latin American countries. Both originated in the best of good will both are now seen as pacification programs; both are pregnant with violence. In the mirror of Latin America, violence in American ghettos and on the borders of China can be seen in its new meaning, as a rejection of American values. From experience of years in Cuernavaca, dealing with U.S. "idea salesmen," I know this in- sight is costly to come by. There is no exit from a way of life built on $5,000-plus per year; and there is no possible road leading into this way of life for nine out of ten men in our generation. And for these nine others it is revolting to hear a message of eco- nomic and social salvation presented by the affluent that, however sincerely expressed, leads the "poor" to believe that it is their fault that they do not fit into God's world as it should be, and as it has been decreed that it should be around the North Atlantic. The study of violence in Latin America deeply touches the life of the U.S. . h m u..-__r.. m.men.st.. ill-alluws him tn tn disenaaed. In the capital- i 0,0, l? o ' P 11 .I I in