Friday, February 21, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Friday, February 21, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY L. r m i ars U 0 1 II II LI I I I I I I P I I I Ili%' STUDENTS GO TO WORK Radicalizing the professionals 1 the news today /) TheC AbsschI(/ed 1Press anzd C.ulle'~ e1Prss Sern we L I I I mF I February 21, 22 MAGNIFICENT SEVEN Yul Brynner Steve McQueen James Coburn Eli Wallach "MAGNIFICENT"-Rhone ** m 0. Ol 00 o THE O o ENTERTAINER 0 o by John Osborne 0] 0 o Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre o o February 19-22 o o presented by o Department of Speech0 0 University Players 0 0 BOX OFFICE O Feb. 17, 18, 12:30-5 P.M. 0 Feb. 19, 22, 12:30-8 P.M. 0 TICKETS 0 Feb. 19, 20, $1.25, $1.75 0 Feb. 21, 22, $1.75, $2.25 0 ALL PERFORMANCES 8:00 P.M. 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 By TOM MILLER WASHINGTON (CPS) - It is inevitable that as radicals and other socially concerned stu- dents leave their undergraduate roles and enter grad schools or professions, they will attempt to re-orient the goals of that profession. Professional meetings this year have borne this out. Radi- cal caucuses have sprung up at the American Historical Asso- ciation, American Political Sci- ence Association and National Education Association, to name just a few. Medical and law stu- dents have their own organiza- tions to makertheir respective professions more socially con- scintious. And now finally, this pattern has comee out of the libraries and into the labs. A re You Interested In Psychology Existentialism SEE Dr. Rollo May Noted existential psycho- logist and Best Selling Author at TRUEBLOOD AUD. Sat., Feb. 22, 8:30 P.M. ADMISSION FREE' SYMPOSIUM '69 At a national convention of physicists in New York last week, two organizations from major campuses urged both na- tural and physical scientists to re-examine their profession re- garding its social usefulness. In addition, they called for a general work stoppage of all scientific research on Tuesday, March 4. In its initial policy statement, a group known as Scientists for Social and Political Action (SSPA) said, "As scientists have become more and more depend- ent on the government for re- search funds and for their very livelihood, speaking out on is- sues has been more and more cautious. We must strive to re- gain our full intellectual and political freedom." An SSPA founder, Dr. Char- les Schwartz of University of California at Berkley, admitted that his group "is very much anti-establishment. Our purpose is to improve the intellectual conditions in the profession." "The profession" encompass- es nearly 26,000 members of the American Physical S o c i e t y (APS), now in its 70th year. "We will continue to work with- in the Society," Schwartz says, "but right now APS is in nar- row confines, and it has been this way too long." APS executive secretary Dr. W. W. Havens, of Columbia Un- iversity, maintains, "The Society should stick to physics and not involve itself with politics. We have to discuss technical de- velopments," Havens says. "Once technical problems are solved, then social and economic ques- tions arise, and it is not our place to speak out on these." However, Schwartz says APS Is ignoring its young and more activist members. "The average age on the governing council is well in the fifties, but the mem- bership's average age is under ORGAN IZATION NOT ICES HillFoundation, 1429 Hill St., Fri., Feb. 21st, 5:45 p.m. - Traditional Serv- ices, 7:15 p.m. - Hillel Student Services, 8:30 p.m. - "Does Judaism Discourage Materialism?" a discussion led by Mr. Lawrence Halpern. Harvard. 35," he says. "One of our de- mands is for a graduate student on the council." The anti-ballistic missile pro- gram is a prime example of what the two sides of the "young turks" revolt is all about. Schwartz and his group contend that contributing to the development of ABM is ac- quiescent in the political a n d social implications of that sys- tem. Havens says that the role of the physicist should stop when the system is technically func- tional. Arab guerrillas split over airplane attacks, To dramatize the new aware- ness in the sciences, a Science Action Coordinating Committee is planning research stoppages at schools around the country for March 4. The work strike is called, not against the schools where research Is carried out, but instead to "encourage sci- entists and engineers to scrut_- inize political and moral con- siderations before working on research financed by the mili- tary," and to point out the shortage of non-military re- search opportunities. BEIRUT, Lebanon (P) - The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the guerrilla group which claimed credit for the attack on an Israeli planeat Zurich's airport, is rapidly be- coming an outcast among Arab guerrilla organizations. General Arab reaction to the Popular Front and its specialty -attacks on Israel's El Al air- line-has been mixed. The Popular Front is divided into two factions whose rivalry has become increasingly bitter over the last few months. Reports from Amman, Jor- dan, said the two factions in- dulged in a shoot out there Mon- day night when members of ine wing tried to arrest the leaders of the other. The Popular Front is a Marx- ist-leaning group whose leaders believe guerrilla activity against Israel should also include polit- icgl indoctrination of the Pales- tinian people. This view is not shared by the other commando groups, includ- 1ng the powerful Al Fatah. The guerrilla groups formed a Joint military command Tuesday to coordinate operations against Israel, but the Popular Front was left out. Front delegates also boycot- ted a meeting of the Palestine National Council in Cairo early this month, when Al Fatah's leader, Yasser Arafat, was elect- ed head of the Palestine Libera- tion Organization (PLO). The two wings of the front classify themselves as "progres- sive" and "right wing," but both are considerably left of center. The "right-wing" group is led by Dr. George Habash, a 42- year-old politician with under- ground activities in several Arab countries. Habash spent a long period in Syrian jails last year for al- legedly being involved in a plot to overthrow the government. He was subsequently rescued by his men at the time when the split inside the front became ap- parent. Little is known about NaIf Hawatma, head of the "progres- sive" faction. It was not immediately clear which faction of the Popular Front was responsible for the Zurich attack. Unconfirmed re- ports in Amman said it may have been Habash's group. With the PLO and Al Fatah underhArafat's command, there have been indications that the front will be left to fight its own battles by itself. The front claims to carry out activities within Israel itself and the occupied territories, chiefly Gaza, However, its most spec- tacular blows have been against Israel's national airline. In July it hijacked an El Al Boeing out of Rome and forced it to fly to Algiers. The aircraft and its passengers were even- tually returned to Israel. PRESIDENT NIXON told Congress yesterday that the electoral system should be reformed prior to the 1972 presidential race. Nixon said the Constitution should be amended to pro- vide for a runoff election, with the popular vote winner be- coming president, if the electoral college should deadlock in a future race for the White House. These two changes would avert the possibility that a-fu- ture presidential decision might be made by the House of Representatives, a prospect which arose during the three- way race in 1968. * * SECRETARY OF DEFENSE Melvin R. Laird told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee yesterday "I lean toward going forward" with an antimissile system. He added that he rejects Senate plans to delay deploy- ment of the system pending arms control talks with Russia. Laird made clear his overriding concern w I t h Russia pushing a strategic weapons buildup and with the possibility of a Communist Chinese missile threat in the mid-1970's. In repeated exchanges with Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D- Ark.), chairman of the committee, the defense secretary in- dicated he did not want to hold up on any antimissile system until the effective date of the nuclear nonproliferation trea- ty. He said it might take one or two years to win ratification from the necessary 40 countries. " ,! . THE SOVIET UNION has launched a major peace of- fensive in Laos, some Western diplomats reported yester- day. The offensive is'part of a broader attempt by Moscow to close out the war in Vietnam. One diplomat asserted, "The Russiansmay be playing the role of intermediary in an attempt to re-establish con- tact between the Pathet Lao and the government. This would represent a big change." In the Vietnam peace talks yesterday, the U.S. search for common ground for negotiation ran into a wall of opposi- tion from North Vietnam and the National Liberation Front. Ambassador Lodge, U.S. representative to the peace talks, commented that it is "highly unlikely that any negotiated settlement will be' reached without the elements of the Ge- neva accords of 1954." ARAB NATIONS, braced for an expected retaliatory strike from Israel, have been warned by Defense Minister Moshe Dayan that they will be hit "in the place that will hurt them most" in reprisal for guerilla attacks, A spokesman for Dayan insisted that the minister was not referring directly to the latest Arab attack on an Israeli airliner, but yesterday's warning came the day after an El Al plane was hit by guerillas in Zurich. Israeli foreign minister Abba Eban asked UN Secretary- General U Thant yesterday to call for "constructive inter- national action" to prevent repetition of the Zurich attack. AFL-CIO PRESIDENT George Meany said yesterday "policemen are workers like everybody else" in taking the first step toward the creation of a national labor union. He added that police officers behind the move for a national union do not want the right to strike. "I would say there would be a constitutional provision that they would not have the right to strike," Meany said at a news conference. "The police are having problems," he said. "If we are going to have a modern society, we have to have police." * . . DIST. ATT. JIM GARRISON abruptly rested his case yesterday in the Clay Shaw trial. Garrison dropped the month-old conspiracy trial after losing a final plea to put up testimony that Shaw once gave an alias. The defense attorney, F. Irvin Dymond, immediately call- ed for a court-directed verdict of innocent to the charge that Shaw conspired to assassinate President John F. Kennedy. lb. -------------------------~- - .. .. presents!! TOM RUSH FRI. SAT. 8:00 P.M. free eats, too! admission $2.00 ($1.50after 2nd set) SUN. Sets at 9:00; 10:30; 11 :30 I r1 TONIGHT and Saturday TAKE A TRIP WITH THE INCOMPARIBLE 1421 Hill St. 8:30 P.M. G psy Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning University year. Sub- scription rates: $9.00 by carrier, $10.00 by mail. STONED!! "stereopticon" STONED!! "Marx Brothers" MAD MARVIN at the Vth FORUM ORIGINAL MUSIC Plus INCREDIBLE HUMOR Equals ENTERTAINMENT PAR EXCELLENCE! ;) r Friday, February 21 7:30 P.M. CINEMA GUILD Welcomes its new members t ' ONIVERSI IT i MUSICAL AP An SOCIETY presents THE COLOGNE CHAMBER ORCHESTRA 111 HELMUT MULLER-BRUHL, Conductor "THE BLACK GHETTO AND BLACK POWER" Third program in a series on "Negro Life and Culture" led by Mr. Eugene McCoy, school principal from Battle Creek. at Curtis Room, FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Co-Sponsored by the Ecumenical Campus Centerand the Ann Arbor-Washtenaw Council of Churches LE METRO Directed by LOU IS MALL E, 1960 French, color CATHERINE DEMONGOT "There's something not quite innocent or healthy about this f'm." -Bosley Crowther 7:00& 9.00 7cARC'HITECTURE 662-8871 -5 AUDITORIUM Sue Norton Nick Chrisos Martin Sanders Dan Berman Sara Krulwich Bruce Mocking MALE 20-30 years old to assist in psychology experiment. Some acting experience ferred. 15-40 hours per week for weeks. Call 764-9494. I Program Information 6 8-6416 TODAY-2 Big Specials pre- 2-4 11 IN RACKHAM AUDITORIUM SAT., FEB. 22, 8:30 Concerto Grosso in D, Op. 6, No. 5 .........Mandel Concerto for Trumpet in D major ...........Torelli Concerto for Two Violins in D minor ........,.Bach Rondo in A major ... ................. Schubert "Eline kleine Nachtmusik"............. . . Mozart TICKETS: $5.00-$4.00-$2.00 ll i WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! 1Y. COLUMBIA PICTURES psents FRED ZINNEMANN'S FILMO F A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS From the playbyr R0131Il 13011 WN Shown Today at 9 P.M. ONLY! Sat. & Sun. at 1-5-9 P.M. A RlSTRICTED-peneeu unMrtO rrottCmllt Q,[ unfits escarnpsntM by pima w.Nit yiprdhn. I t I BALLET FOLKLORICO OF MEXICO Company of 7S Dancers and Musicians I RUSS GIBB presents in Detroit PAUL BUTTERFIELD BLUES BAND and Veu i kAADicnkI I I lIII I I r"!: I-