Page 5x THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 14, 1968 I DAILY OFFICIAL B ":vr.-.:---A:.:tv:- - - -~v^r w." INDEPENDENT, MEETING TONIGHT 8:00 Room 3516 SAB - Everyone Welcome - _ _- . The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be .sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3528 L.S.&A. Bldg. before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publi- cation and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General No- tices may be published a maximum of two times on request; Day Cal- endar items appear onlyonce. Stu- dent organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 764-9270. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14 Day Calendar Conference on the Economic Outlook 1969 - Registration: Lobby, Rackham Building, 8:00 a.m. Flu Shot Clinic: Health Service, the charge is $1.50 for students and spouses and $2.00 for staff and spouses. Persons who have been immunized since 1964 need only one shot this fall. Those who were told they need a booster dose and have not received it should do so at this final clinic.,NOTE: The vaccine to be used at this time does not contain the Hong Hong strain. This strain is not presently available to the public except for experimental purposes. 8:00 - 11:30 a.m. and 1:00-4:30 p.m. IMental Health Research Institute Seminar: Zdenek Lodin, Pasadena Foundation for Medical Research, "Some Aspects of Glial Cell-Neuron Re- lationships," Room 1057 MHRI, 3:45 p.m. Physical Chemistry Seminar: Ken Ru- binson, Dept .of Chemistry, University of Michigan, "Determination of Mag- netic Susceptibility Using NMR", 1200 Chem, 4:00 p.m. T. S. Jerome Lecture Series: Massimo Pallottino, Professor of Etruscology and Italic Antiquity, The University of Rome, ,Sketch of a History of Ancient Italy Before ItsRoman ization-Part VI: "Italy. and Rome on the Way to Uni- fication (IV-I Cents. B.C.)": Auditorium B, Angell Hall, 4:00 p.m. Center for Russian and East Euro- pean Studies - Peter C. Ludz, Professor of Political Science, Free University of Berlin, "Political and Social Change in East Germany": 200 Lane Hall, 4:00 p.m. Student Labdratory Theatre Program (Department of Speech) - Joel Oppen- heimer's The Great American Desert and Laurence Osgood's Pigeons: Arena Theater, Frieze Building, 4:10 p.m. Botany Seminar: Dr. G. Ledyard Steb- bins, University of California, "New Insights into the Relationship Between: Genes and Morphological Characterist- ics in Higher Plants", 4:15 p.m., 1400 Chemistry Bldg. Department of History lecture Series: Aspects of Negro American History: Al- lan Spear, Professor, University of Minnesota, "The Roots of the North- ern Ghetto": Auditorium A, Angell Hall, 4:15 p.m. Cinema Guild: S. Ray's Mahanagar (The Great City): Architecture Audi- torium, 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. Linguistics Club Lecture: Sanford A. Schahe, Professor, University of Cali- fornia at San Diego, "Disjunctive or Conjunctive (?) And. Intrinsic or Ex- trinsic (?) Ordered Rules in Phonol- ogy": Amphitheater, Rackham Build- ing, 7:45 p.m., College of Engineering Guest Appear- ance: Dr. Hannah Arendt, "The Archi- median Point." General remarks follow- ed by a panel discussion with Profes- sors N. E. Nelson and A. P. Mendel (LS&A) and Professors J. A. Clark and L. L. Rauch (Engineering); Professor H. W. Farris, Moderator: Rackhamn Lec- ture Hall, 8:00 p.m. Degree Recital: Gregg Hanson, Trum- pet: School of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. Koppers Company Chemistry Lecture: Dr., J. Stille, University of Iowa, "The Diels-Alder Reaction 'in Polymeriza- tion," 1300 Chem, 8:00 p.m. , Gilbert and Sullivan Society: The Gondoliers (or The King of Barataria): Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, 8:00 p.m. (Sharp). Choral Union Series: Birgit Nilsson, Soprano: Hill Auditorium, 8:30 p.m. General' Notices Broadcasting Service: WUOM Radio (917 Mc.) 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. daily. Thursday 1:00 p.m. U.S. Foreign Pol- icy: The Next Decade: "Projections: Asia", with Prof. Harold Isaacs, MIT. Thursday 4:45 p.m. Conservation Re- port, with Prof. Karl Lagler. 5:15 p.m. U-M Feature Story with Jack Hamil- ton. Friday 11:00 a~m. The Eleventh Hour ULLETIN [San Franc ------3over suspe, 4repeated at 7 p.m.) Ed Burrows hosts an hour of news and conversation about the arts and literature. Guest: SAN FRANCISCO (CPS - Laurel Lee Johnson in a discussion of While the Eldridge Cleaver COnl Work shop Theater. Frilay 1:00 px. Wnhie thed ierCityvof Ca- From The iMdway, U of Chicago. "Walt tioversy at the University of Cal- Whitman: The Man and the Myth", ifornia's Berkeley campus has with Jorge Luis Borges, Argentinian temporarily quieted downS a nI novelist. Friday 5:00 p.m. Focus on Stu- Francisco's State College across dents. produced by students in the speech department. 5:15 p.m. Business the bay is in turmoil - also over Review, with Prof. Ross Wilhelm. Fri- a Black Panther teacher.- day 9:45 p.m. Dimensions of Loneliness tStuet ea tieWd - "The Novelist's Life and the Life tudents began a strike Wed- of Novels", with Herbert Gold, author, nesday (Nov. 6) to protest the recorded in Detroit. suspension of George Murray, Student RelationsNCommittee: Open Black Panther Minister of Educa- meeting Thursday, November 14 3:00I tionwo astchnbsiE- pm. Third floor, SAB building. Agenda: n Who was teaching basic En- 1. Consideration of minutes. 2. Final ------ - - consideration of University-Police Re- lations Report. 3. Advisory Committee on Recreation, Intramurals and Club Sports. 4. Advisory Committees, Office C of Student Affairs. Botany Seminar: Dr. G. Ledyard Stebbins, University of California, "TheM Relationship Between Hybridization and Polyploidy in Plants", Friday Novem- _3j II ber 15, 1968 at 4:00 p.m. Botanical Gar-dens dens. U Center for Russian and East Euro- pean Studies, Brown Bag Luncheon: NEW YORK (CPS) -- The Col- Marian A. Low. Asst. Prof. of History. lege Entrance Examination Board University of Michigan. "Nationalismaperradtocndehtis and Revisionism in Hungary," Monday, appears ready to concede that its Nov. 18, Lane Hall Commons Room, admissions testing program is 12:10 p.m. geared Primarily to serving insti- reported Two 16-man squads San Francisco police came on the campus at 2 p.m. to close the buildings. r Li . 1 f i } >1 Sui be To THE MICHIGAN DAILY isco students strike nded Black Panther glish to disadvantaged students. The college re-opened Thursday, College President Robert Smith and the situation was fairly calm closed the campus Wednesday af- and normal, although some police ter groups of black students, who were on the campus. were going around speaking to The strike is continuing with classes about the strike, threaten- pickets and efforts to get more ed violence if the classes were not student support. Estimates of its dismissed. Small fires, assaults effectiveness varied. One radical and minor property damage were called it "100 per cent successful," SHORTHAND NO MACHINES) kril2Owpmi NO SYMBOLS USES ABC'S &t ylt Mo pa if mn lv, IN 6 WEEKS Ask for free Speedwriting Literature STUDENT GOVERNMENT COUNCIL The approval of the following stu- dent sponsored events becomes effec- tive after the publication of this notice. All publicity for these events must be withheld until the approval has be- come effective. Approval request forms for student sponsored events are avail- able in rooms 1001 and 1546 of the Student Activities Building. Chi Alpha - Book table - Fish Bowl - 11/11; 11/18; 11/25; 12/2; 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.- Doctoral Examinatins John Parker Huber, History, Disserta- tion: "General Josiah Harmar's Com- mand: Military Policy in the Northwest, 1784-1791," on Thursday, November 14 at 2 p.m, in Room 3609 Havel Hall, Chairman: H. H. Peckham. Charles Louis Zahm, Computer, In- formation & Control Engineering, Dis- sertation: "Structure of Sensitivity Re- duction," on Thursday, November 14 at 1 p.m. in Room 3513 East Engineer- ing, Chairman: W. A. Porter. John Krnacik, Jr.:- English Language and Literature, Dissertation: "The Hero of Feeling in William Godwin's Fic- tion," on Thursday, November 14 at 2 p.m. in Room 1613 Haven Hall, Chair- man: S. W. Baker. Andrew Charles Dempster,,Mathe- matics, Dissertation: "Distributive Peano Lattices." on Thursday, Novem- ber 14 at 3 p.m. in Room 2419 Mason Hall, Chairman: A. L. Shields. George Aloysius Kozlowski Jr.: Math- ematics,. Dissertation : "Mapping Theor- ems for Homotopy," on Thursday, No- vember 14 at 3 p.m. in 3227 Angell Hall, Chairman: M. Brown. PlacementI 3200 S.A.B. GENERAL DIVISION Placement Interviews: Tne following organizations will interview at Place- ment Services, the representatives ex- pect to see at least a vita sheet on In- terviewees, therefore, if you are not already registered with the General Division. please stop in and let usepro- vide you with the proper materials. Please call 763-1363 to make appoint- ments by phone, or stop in and make (Continued on Page 7) tutions of higher education and c that, as a result, an imbalance exists between this service and thef individual needs of students who want to continue their educationi beyond high school.t But the board does not seem pre- pared to make any radical depar- tures in its basic program of apti-t tude and achievement tests, with-t out which few students can be ad- mitted to colleges and universities.r Its emphasis more likely will bex on offering additional services to help students make more enlight- ened judgments about themselves and the educational institutions they might attend.x That was the impression left at the board's annual meeting byc its president, Richard Pearson,t and by the chairman of its corn-' mission on tests. The 21-member1 commission was appointed in 1967 to conduct a "broad review" of the theory and practice of the College Board's testing program. It was charged with gathering "evidence of the need for change" and deciding that new examina- tions might be needed in the' fu- ture. So far the commission has been unable to reconcile widely diver- gent views among its members. But Mr. Pearson, in his annual report to the College Board, said his ownt understanding of the commission's intention was that "it looks for new tests and inventories t h a t would give students a better un- derstanding of themselves than1 the Board's traditional tests do, and also for better informational publications and computer-assist-r ed guidance to give students af better basis for choice and decis-f ion" about colleges.I Seeing this as a "long-term ef- fort of program development. .Mr. Pearson went on to voice his .as- sumption at the present time ..'t Civil rights group investigates problems aminBoarld services, that much, though perhapsi all, of this developmental w will go on outside the admissi testing program." But some members of the to commission, at least, have b greatly impressed by demands: fundamental realignments wi in the testing program itself, it is on this point perhaps mi than any other that the comm sion is stalemated. David V. Tiedman, chairman the commission, believes it will. timately call for some "evoluti ary" changes in board activi rather than "revolutionary"s proaches to testing. Neither he nor the commissio vice-chairman, B. Alden Thres were able to say in a "progress: port," however, that the comm sion had resolved its differen over such , basic questions whether the board should con ue the testing program more less as it stands. of while administration spokesmen to claimed only two or three per all cent of the students were honor- 9 ing the strike. The campus news- paper, the Daily Gater, noted that many professors cancelled classes or devoted class time to discus- sion of the strike, and that nor- mally packed student parking lots were only half full. It was Berkeley's Cleaver con- A troversy which precipitated t h e San Francisco State crisis. When it was announced that Cleaver not would serve as a guest lecturer in ork a Berkeley course on racism, the ons Los Angeles Times revealed that another Panther, Murray, was ests serving as a salaried instructor at i een San Francisco State. for Murray is a graduate student at th- the college. He was one of the and black students who beat up the lore editor of the Gater last year. nis- When they found out Murray was teaching, the. trustees of Cal- of ifornia's state college system "re- , ul- quested" President Smith to fire on- him. Smith refused, saying there ties was no legal or professional rea- ap - son to comply with the request. Murray is by all accounts an ex- 's cellent teacher. hers Tehe trustees apparently decid- re- ed to let Smith handle the prob- is- lent his own way, but then Mur- ices ray began making "incendiary" as speeches around the state. He gave tin- one speech in Fresno at the tile or the trustees were meeting there. See PROF., Page 7 What kind of woman reads GENERA TION? THE VOLUPTUOUS GENERATION Campus inter-arts magazine ON SALE THROUGH NOV. 14 Sp eedwriting 120 WORDS PER MINUTE includes I ART' SDRAMA POETRY FICTION ESSA Y PHOTOGRAPHY FREE PLACEMENT SERVICE World's easiest shorthand--no signs, no symbols-- promising a usable knowledge in just a few week. Whether you use Speedwriting for your university studies or to. rapidly prepare yourself for employ- ment, the rewards will be great. Only Hamilton Busi- ness College is prepared to offer Speedwriting or Gregg Shorthand and the nationally-famous' Nancy Taylor Finishing Course Call the Hamilton Business College at 769-4507.' 'Morning, afternoon/ and evening classes. HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE By JOE FRIEDMAN "There is a great lack of in- volvement of law students outside the University" says Steve Eldrick, chairman of the L a w Students Civil Rights Research Council, an organization designed to involve law students in civil rights prob- lems. The local chapter of the research council currently h a s about 55 members who work in teams to further the council's three main functions: research, projects and education. "Our main job" says Eldrick, "is to research various c i v' i rights problems." At present, members of' the group are involved in research on anything from the tax irob- lems of ghetto dwellers in Detroit to the prosecution of students ar- rested at the welfare demonstra- tions in September. Generally, the students" work on cases referred to them by lawyers, although they are willing to work with anyone who comes to them with a problem. Recently, Prof. Robert Harris, the students' faculty advisor, talk- ed briefly with a person who was interested in bringing a suit on behalf of the local sororities against their respective nationals.. The person wanted to prevent the l nationals from taking action over membership rules. Harris said there was a possi bility that. such a suit would be successful even though he admit- ted that it would be "tricly." STATE & WILLIAM' 0 ANN ARBOR ROSE BOWL? UNIVERSITY CHARTER 665-8489 1-5 p.m. i 1 7 i 't !" 1 1 ' If a member of a local sorority wanted to pursue this idea any further, Harris said the students would be willing to do the basic research work. A major project for the coun- William D. Revelli, directot of University bands, has an- nounced that tickets for the "Bandorama" performance Sat- urday, Nov. 16 at 8 p.m. In Hill Auditorium, have been sold out. He said they will Orobably re- peat the performance in Janu- ary. cil already in the planning stage is, an effort. to halve a system. of 'recognizance bail' 'initiated in the Detroit court system. Eldrick hopes to get funds' to finance' this project from the Ford Foundation. According to Eldrick, the pres- ent bail system penalizes the poor, a n d he claims a 'recognizance bail' system would represent a big step in improving this situation. :'1 ... t dad's day a thie tic 4>.' .fatY SS demonstration THE EXAM SECRET h x TECHNIQUES -EXAMS NOW--You can shine in Exami-4 nations and Life! Don't fail exams through ignorance of technique! "The Exam Secret" gives you ex- perience, knowledge needed to make good. It includes: magical lessons; essay is the key; year master-plan, etc. Complete.128 pages. Only $1 ppd. Money-back guarantee. EVERSOLE CO., BOX 10231 Phoenix, Arizona 85016 GO GO. BAHAMAS 8 FABULOUS DAYS 7 GLORIOUS NIGHTS $17900 Dec. 27th-Jan. 3rd INCLUDES: * Round trip jet air fare * 7 Nights accommoda- tions at the famous Freeport Inn 4 !'s p our exclusive import knits brighten the scenery as they buffet chill winds...on the slopes or 'p going class-to-class youll take the cold in stride looking perfectly matched in cozy wool coordinates with pert pom-pom hats. F SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16 after the Wisconsin game EVENTS BUILDING' A. Handknit cap and mitten set in multi-color patterns, 10.00 0 IA^r~kr~nno n AICi hlA/*P tirns- Radial stre tam. 5.00 I I