Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, November 19, 1968 Pag Si T H MI HIG N D ILTu sdr. N vem er 9, 9I EUROPE FOR THE SUMMER? Fly Boeing 707 Jets Save $21-$82 on University Charter Flights GO DETROIT - LONDON - DETROIT' College contributors Senate Assembly suggests 0 wo get tax creaus i Daily name own editors " $100 deposit till March * Cancellation Privileges Phone: 665-8489 1-5 p.m. 1207 Packard May 7-Jmne 24 May 15-Aug. 20 June 27-Aug. 25 July 8-Aug. 17 7 wks $199 14 wks $204 '8/2 wks $229 6 wks $214 35 seats remaining 35 seats remaining 15 seats remaining 50 seats remai n ing By BARBARA WEISS A law recently passed by the S t a t eaLegislature is expected to add additional monies to tle cof- fers of t h e University's general fund. Public Act 315, which became effective last week, provides state income tax credit for both indi- viduals and corporations who con- tributed to the general fund of any state junior college, college or university, "This law provides an oppor- tunity for University alumni as we 11 as corporations to support higher education and get a sub- stantial tax credit against t h e Michigan state income tax," said Wendell Lyons, of the University's Development Council. Lyons noted that the tax bene- fit, coupled with already existing federal income tax deductions for contributions to higher education, could result in significant savings for the contributor. For individuals, the a c t pro- vides for a tax credit of one-half of their contribution, 20 per cent of their state tax liability,'or $100, whichever is less. Corporations can claim one-half of their contribu- tion, 10 per cent of their state tax liability, or $5,000. Letters explaining the n e w law will be sent to the 65,000, alumni who have not as yet con- tributed to the University this year. The University's general fund pays for teaching, administration and the basic operation of the University plant. Some of the funds are also earmarked for scholarships. Sponsored by THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GRADUATE ASSEMBLY it - ----w. - - _____ (Continued from page 1) ident of the University from assembly had not considered each slate selected by Daily senior edi provision of the report separately tors. and should not convey such an - Publication of a regular in impression to the Regents. sert to The Daily which woul The remainder of the report in- present the views of the facult cludes provisions recommending: and administrators. - A restructured Board f o r - University-paid home sub Publications consisting of three scriptions for all members of t student members elected by the scuptyonsfollambero student body, three faculty mem- facupossibly leadrsadminiostrato bers chosen by the Senate As- andtossaizadernso om t sembly and three professionaldetognzins journalists appointed by the Pres- A resolution introduced by Pro recommending the deletion of this Albert Conard of the Law Scho S. Coud resident ST. CLOUD, M i n n. ( IP) - A Acourses in black history and elim group of about 15 black students ination of "racist" textbooks. entered the office of the president Monday the black student of St. Cloud State College here headay haes adox yesterday afternoon and refused Minneapolis, hela late-mornir to let anyone enter or leave. : onered a te-mool There are only 24 blacks among press conference at the school the approximately 9000 students on the campus. Then some members of tt T h e blacks were . reportedly group picketed a school admini pressing several demands on pres- tration building and about 3 p.n ident Robert Wick and a spokes- they went 'to Whitney Hous man for the group said they would which holds the president's offic hold him in his office until he_-- - agrees to the demands. But Beth Rochford of the col- lege's news information service e 1 n said Wick had indicated he did ing peacefully with about 10 of the group in his office. There were no ra reports of violence. The other students aref in the hallway outside the office or at Ann Arbor detectives have di the entrance to the building to covered "definite evidence" poin prevent persons from entering or ing to several suspects in the leaving, search for the assailant of grad Friday members of the group ate student Joel Cordish. had passed out leaflets presenting Cordish was shot on the Diag their demands. , 4 a.m. Oct. 5. A small caliber bu These include a cultural center let penetrated his back and bor for black students, m o r e black its way to a final lodging pla students and faculty members, near his face. a proposal.was defeated by the As- i- sembly yesterday. In other action the assmbly - tabled the recommendations f the d report of the assembly's Commit- ty tee on Student Evaluation of Courses. b- The committee's report which e was released yesterday recoin- mends that: - The faculty give twenty min- -utes of class time to the student (course evaluation) committee'for of. collection of evaluation data this ol term. The faculty appoint a com- mittee to maintain liason with the student committee and provide technical consultation to them. - The material be made direct- ly available to the faculty mem- ber for his use and by mutual agreement of the faculty member and his (department) chairman - and/or his departmental commit- tee to his college executive com- mittee ts, The student course evaluation of committee plans to prepare an ng evaluation of more than 570 Oee- to tions of literary college courses this fall. The data will be gather- he ed between Nov. 25 and Dec. 5 s- and will be made available to stu- n. dents in time for the pre-regis- e, tration period during the winter ce. 'term. cover clues ishooting 4.A 300 S. State St. 1232 S. University ANN ARBOR'S MOST COMPLETE RECORD STORES 10 DAY$ ONLY... Nov.18 to Nov. 27 OUR ENTIRE STOCK' ALL SPECIALLY PRICED is- it- eir lu- at ul- ed ce $1.79 per, disc by'Black Label. UTTLE ViCTORIES Below are just a few of the great and varied selections you can choose from. MY GRANDMOTHEW'S COMING TO SEE THE CAMPUS THIS WEEKEAV - fN BUT 'M OIN 7-774 L N(14ANYHOW Ii / //i Cordish, who still remains in University Hospital, in what a spokesman termed 1 a s t night "good" condition, was in critical condition immediately after the shooting. Doctors had feared he would be paralyzed as a result of the shooting. County Prosecuting Attorney William Delhey and Ann Arbor Chief of Police W a 1 t e r Krasny said yesterday morning the Inves- tigation of the shooting is not yet complete, and pointed out that a {lot of"groundwork" remains to be done before any apprehensions. are made. However, arrests could come within a week, they said. T h e Regents have authorized the offering of a reward of $5,000 to be paid to the person or persons furnishing to police evidence lead- ing to the arrest and conviction of the person who wounded Cordish.. The reward will be paid from the University's unrestricted gift fund after police have identified the person providing the informa- tion. kU Gremlins were at work on the in- nards of an ad that ran here re- cently for the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. The CPA people, after telling us a bit about the profession, and why it offers a rosy future for a college man, offered to send interested students a booklet with the whole CPA story. That part got left out of the ad. There was lust white space, star- ing up blankly at the reader. Dis- concerting. Phantasmal. Sp . The booklet, with the whole PA story, will be sent to you if you write: Dept. A-11, AICPA, 666 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. p0O19. A I ii 5-60079 (stereo only) 69063 (mono only) A gift of the highest rank-the ,Indispensable 1930 recordings by first stereo "Choral" Symphony to now legendary giant. "Boasts a be fitted to a single L.P. by a more spontaneous expression, an budget-priced label. A superb and impulsiveness that is perhaps even higily recommended performance. more thrilling than the work of tIe,order artist." An historical do- -. cumentation of the Horowitz gen- iusr to be treasured. IS-6032 (mono only) By popular demand-the magni- ficent Callas Lucia! Brilliantly re- mastered, 'this wondrous perform- anec now sounds even more so ... still the sandard by which all oth- ers are judged. (2 discs/libretto) IE-6030 (mono only) The historic "live" 1951 perform- ance-complete-from the first post-war rBayreuth Festival. An historic and indispensible all-star recording . . at a cost you'can not ignore (5 discs/libretto) S-60043 (stereo only A monumental assemblage of all- nowned German tenor: from Bo- time lyrical favorites by the re- heme, Madame Butterfly, Mattha, Rigoletto, more. Warm and won- derful Wunderlich. F ff 1 & * WHEN YOU IAVE A VICTORY TO CELEBRATE, DRINK A KEG OF BEER. ,B S-60069 (stereo only) . we are fortunate to have this well-remembered concept in excel- lent modern sound - first irate Beethoven," High Fidelity. Attrac- tively packaged and priced for eveyone to enjoy. 41 60076 (mono only) Q lB 6024 (mono only!) Two esteemed ochestras inimitably batoned by the legendary German maestro. A two-record collection reaffirming the magnificent itra- dition of Furtwangler's, Wagnerian interpretations. Superb recording. (2 records) SIC-6031 (stereo only) The supercharged Callas/Lo Scala stereo production . . . remastered and repackaged for the auspicious debut' of Mario Callas on Sera- phim. The performance which de- fies competition! (3 discs/libretto) S-60074 (stereo only!) One of Rodzinski's brightest re- cordings, a performance which dramatically displays his propul- sive energy and the unique Vien- nese-style finesse. Standard reper- toire finely recorded and very at- tractively priced. Q 1960 CARLIN~G IIWING COMPANY, CLVELNO. 0. S-60067 (stereo only) 60040/60073 (mono only) Two vdlumes by history's most fa- mous horn virtuoso. These are rare recordings and are a vivid docu- mentation of Brain's peerless mu- sical genius. SIC-6028 (stereo only!) S-60075 (stereo- only!) The most fiery (and most popu- lar) of all the romantic violin con- certos performed by the young ar- tist America has taken to heart ever since his 1958 Boston debut. Here is Kogan technique at its most revealing. 1C-6004 (mono only) 5-60083 (stereo only) IB-6027 (mono only) 60060 (mono only!) Hungarian Quartet-Beethoven: ..iI:. 6b), Early Quartets ='< > Hungarian Quartet-Beethoven: ,...f r :f :4