Sunday, February 23, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Sunday, February 23, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three ..... ... . 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor NOW SHOWING Feature Wed., Sat., Sun. 1:30-3:45-6:15-8:30 Man., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 7:00-9:00 JOIN-IN THE DISNEY FUN-IN! > COMMUNICATION LINES: Math staff split on openness' (Continued from Page 1) be rescinded as easily Thursday as it was passed at the last meeting. However, some say they will seek a compromise to maintain the spirit of the original amend- ment. The clash over Halpern's amend- ment was somewhat unexpected, but it was not totally surprising. Faculty members say theyrknew the chairman, Prof. LeVeque, was unhappy with the motion, but they didn't know how he would react. Most faculty members seem to agree that the intent of the amendment was merely to foster the spirit of openness. "Coming out against openness is like com- STONED!! "stereopticon" STONED!! "Marx Brothers" MAD MARVIN at the Vth FORUM W LTDISNEY .WinnietheIobY and the bustry dr Technicolor, W ing out against motherhood," says The question of openness and Prof. Joel Smoller, a member of communication wasn't raised five the executive committee. or ten years ago, even though However, he notes, "Openness the communication situation was can't be legislated, because there worse than it is now, says Prof. is no legal structure in which to Frank Raymond. a member of work."! the executive committee. But backers of the Halpern There was enough money then amendment, including Profs. Mor- so that even younger members ton Brown and 'Arthur Schwartz,w who were "out" of the departmen. rsay, it is more than a matter of didn't mind because their salaries personalities.m ss were always going up fast enough. The problem has its root~s inanteprfsosy. the financial difficulties of the another professor says. department. Math is one field that Now, however, the younger mem- is slowly losing the high esteem bers, especially the untenured as- it acquired in the post-Sputnik sistant professors, feel .a great deal days. Money is becoming tighter'of pressure because they fear few and the competition necessarily'will be granted tenure even though more intense. they may be qualified. Rent strikers claim11 jlandlord, harass men11t Continued from Page 1) ters actions and her own legal "it's too bad" if they are lost. "I responsibilities as a co-signer. will turn over my copy of the lease Another case of alleged harass- when I bring them to court." he ment is reported by Mary Crowly. says. a rent strike organizer, who lives The girls also say Kloian has in an apartment managed by extended his harassment to their Duane Renken, also of Arbor Man- parents" agement. Mrs. Elsie Gernaat, mother of Miss Crowly said that late last Miss Liska says, Kloian called her Wednesday a man who identified collect inKalamaotwarnherhimself to one of her roommates that if the rent was not paid sheasnFBagtsevdwo"- would be sued for $2000. Mrs. Ger- eas an FBI agent served two "no- naat says that Kloian threatened tices to quit." The notice demands to have her car possessed or her ithatthhetenants pay their rent salary attached if she could not within seven days or be evicted. pay. Yesterday, she says, the same Kloian denied calling Mrs. Ger- man returned and identified him- naat collect and says he called self as Duane Trolz. He denied only to advice her of her daugh- having claimed to be an FBI ___________________________agent. He then served a third no- Second Class postage paid at Ann tice to quit. Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Renken said he had no knowl- Arbor, Michigan 48104. edge of the incident and that his Published daily Tuesday through attorney, Kent Talcott, is han- Sunday morning University year. Sub- dling notices to quit. Talcott was I s8 the news today 1? The ,A.so'urlalcd Prc,, aund C ol(',c Press Scr itee AN ISRAELI RETALIATORY BLOW against an Arab target is expected by both Arab and Jews following the bombing Friday of Jerusalem's largest supermarket. The likeliest targets for retaliation are the airports, bridges, dams or oil installations of the four Arab nations which ring Israel-Egypt, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon. The supermarket blast, which killed two university stu- dents, came only 72 hours after an Arab machine-gun at- tack on an Israeli airliner in Zurich, Switzerland. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a guerilla organization based in Jordan, has claimed respon- sibility for the supermarket bombing and the Zurich raid. SAIGON WAS ATTACKED early today for the first time since the United States ended the bombing of North Vietnam last Nov. 1. Damage from small rockets appeared to be light and there was no immediate accounting of casulaties. Military authorities said the assaults on Saigon and about 30 other South Vietnamese towns and bases were confined to bombardment, with no significant ground action. THE LONGSHOREMEN'S STRIKE, which shut down Atlantic and Gulf coast ports for 64 days, appeared near- ly over yesterday. The dockers returned to work in the Port of New York, despite a wildcat strike by waterfront mechanics. Work also resumed in Baltimore, Miami and New Orleans. However, in the West Gulf district longshoremen and management were still far from agreement. No new negotia- tion sessions have been scheduled. 'PAKISTANI LEFTIST LEADER Zulfikar Ali Bhutto said yesterday he plans to run for his nation's presidency in January 1970. If he wins, he would succeed his chief rival, President Mohammed Ayub Khan, who announced Friday he would not seek re-election. In recent months, Ayub has been the tar- get of violent demonstrations staged by discontented students and workers. Bhutto, head of the People's party, announced he will fly to East Pakistan soon to try to form a union with political leaders there. BACKERS OF GEORGE WALLACE'S presidential bid met yesterday in Louisville, Ky. to f o r m a permanent third party. The new party will try "to preserve America within the limits of the Constitution," a spokesman said. The 176 delegates from 26 states plan to form a party structure "which can survive the loss of a strong leader," one delegate explained. Most of the delegates are relying on Wal- lace to run again in 1972, but if he decides not to, "we've had it," said William K. Shearer, a convention leader. EAT LUNCH AT A PRESS CONFERENCE WITH RADIO AND T.V. COVERAGE SANDWICHES & COFFEE OR MILK FOR $.50 NO COVER CHARGE They will be served at 12:15 P.M. Wednesday, Feb. 26, in the Union Ballroom. Following Senator Packwood's appearance on the Diag from 11:50-12:15. HE IS A REPUBLICAN FROM OREGON WHO DEFEATED WAYNE MORSE_ scription rates: $9.00 by carrier. $10.00 by mail. not available for comment yester- day. THE YOUNG REPUBLICANS CONTEh MPORARY DISCUSSIONS - m. A SOUND THAT'S REAL PRESENTING GLEN YARBROUG.H WITH THE FRED RAMIREX TRIO AND IFC SING BLOCK TICKET ORDERS DUE TODAY- Chili S ILD Saturday and Sunday. YOJIMBO Directed by AKIRA KUROSAWA, 1961 (JAPANESE, ENGLISH SUBTITLES) TOSHIRO MIFUNE From the great Japanese director of IKIRU, THE SEVEN SAMU- RAI, and RASHOMON comes another masterpiece, an Eastern in the style of an American Western, except, "Kurasawa slashes the screen with action, and liberates us from the pretentions of our serious' westerns.", Mifune, "a Galahad with lice," won the Venice Film Festival award for his performance in YOJIMBO. "YOJIMBO is not a film that needs much critical analysis: its boisterous power and good spirits are right there on the surface. Lechery, avarice, cowardice,coarseness, animality, are rendered by fire; they become joy in life. The whimpering, maimed, and cring- ing are so vivid they seem joyful; what in life might be pathetic, loathsome, offensive is comic and beautiful. Kurosawa makes us accept even the most brutish of his creatures as more alive than the man who doesn't yield to temptation." ---Pauline Kael 662-8871 ARCHITECTURE 7:00 & 9:05 75C AUDITORIUMW HEAR THE AWARD WINNING generation poets JIM PETERS RON BRASCH IIark,' -CPffee /eue I 9:30 P.M. FREE MONDAY, FEB. 24 Y.:'v'.?v:^:v:^ i ;i:;'r:-:+Y":"