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January 11, 1969 - Image 8

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The Michigan Daily, 1969-01-11

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Eght

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Saturday, January 11, 1969

Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, January 1 1~ 1969

Dity housing director DAILY OFFICIAL
WIUTW W ~rU W " T

i

offers resignation

ISLbJL ~~II11

,Continued from Page I
Although none of the parties in-
terviewed last night would dis-
close details, Mrs. Mhoon was ac-
cused of evicting giests who had
been living with tenants in a
single family dwelling.;
"I've heard all sorts of w i l d
stories," said Wheeler. "One of
the tenants claimed that the
guests were relatives, one story
Council ma
Ce .qai

said the 'guest' was a sop home
from Vietnam"
Tenants leveled abuse and curs-
es at Mrs. Mhoon at the Dec. 12
meeting.
"I refuse to be called all sorts
of names." Mrs. Mhoon said. "I
have been accused of all sorts of
motives when I was only perform-
ing an administrative function,"
she added. ,
The other major incident pro-
voking dissension between t h e
community and the Housing Com-
mission was the organization of an
assQciation of public housing ten-
ants.

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan for which The
Michigan Daily assumes no edi-
torial responsibility. Notices should
be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to
Room 3528 LSA Bldg. before 2 p.m.
Friday for Saturday and Sunday.
General Notices may be published a
maximum.of two times on request;
Day Calendar items appear once
only, Student organization notices
are not accepted for publication.
For more information call 764-9270.
SATURDAY, JANUARY 11
Day Calendar
Midwestern Conference on School]
Vocal and Instrumental Music - Re-
gistration: Rackham Building, 8:00 a.m.
Michigan Conference on Applied
Linguistics: Aspects of Language _- re-
gistration: Auditorium B, Angell Hall,
8:30 a.m.
Basketball: U-M vs. Ohio State: At
Events Building, 2:00 p.m.
Cinema Guild: Antonioni's Eclipse:
Architecture Auditorium, 7:00 and 9:05
.p.m.
Ge ufl Notires
Health Service: A flu clinic offering
"Hong Kong" flu vaccine will be held
at Health Service Tuesday, Jan. 14,
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""0 '- "AAccording to Wheeler, the
(Continued from Page 2) NAACP talked about the need for
in-ga tenants' association at t h e i r
The "dial-a-bus" system in- meeting early in December, and
volves the use of a computer to was making plans to initiate such
answer phone( calls made by peo-a .
ple in need of transportation. The a\goup:
computer will determine which . Wheeler claims a tenants meet-
bus is nearest the caller, the num- ing called later in December by
ber of passengers on board, and Mrs. Mhoon was designed to un-
where the bus is heading. dercut the announced NAACP
The reorts will also mention plans.

i

"The Housing commission has from r:00 - 11:30 a.m. an 1:00 4
the technical skills available atno business organizing tenants," p.m. The charge will be $2 per per-
the University and the availabil- Whoeusresidganighn . "That's son. Students, faculty, staff and their
ity of a large computer which' Wheeler said last night. Ta spouses are eligible.
could be redesigned for use in th like Henry Ford trying to organ-
could ize workers on an assembly line" Broadcastiaig Service: WUOM Radio
"dial-a-bus" system, (91.7 Me.) 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. daily.
Finally the reports willindicate However, commissionschairman Saturday 12 Noon to 11"p.m., Sunday
iniaeWelch claims that Mrs. Mhoon 12 Noon to 6 p.m.-
the need for route changes so the had no such intention. Although Saturday 1:00 p.m. The Economic Out-
oste cit poplation Ueco-k the commission did not have ad- Conference on the Economic outlook
om cit routes which servicnecfe vance knowledge of Mrs. Mhoon's held at the U-M, Lawrence H. Selzer of
nolmeetingouWelchhsayssersicehoon Wayne State University summarizes
people in more remote areas will meeting,:WelchsaysMrs.Moon and evaluates the views presented at
be elinminated. The report will also wa9ipy arigou a r the conference.:~udy5:5pmJz
attempt ntged some estimate of dinary administrative function. Revisited, Helen Schumacher presents
future operating costs and rev- He explains the action by saying 7:30pdr. T eR r Clleag. Sita
7:0p.m. The Record Collector, w it h
enue. that initiative for the tenants' as- Prof. Warren Good. Saturday 9:00 p.m.t
Saginaw has already received sociation could only come from Basketball - the U-M vs. Minnesota,
a few buses from the federal gov-the commission. "It was the logi- with Tom Hemingway reporting the
af0 fewtothertgovaysgame from Minneapolis.
ernment under' the program. The cal spot for it to start," says Sunday 2:00 p.m. Cleveland Orebes-'
cost of these- buses was $209,000, Welch. He said only the director tra, Martin Turnovsky, conductor. Hay-
of which the government supplied and commission members have a dn, Janacek. Ovorak. Sunday 4:00 p.m.
$133,000. Saginaw's application list of all public housing tenants. Ernest Block: The Man and His Music.
's submitted in February, 1965, "She didn't anticipate trouble,"
ad devilery of the buses was says Welch.Plcement
completed by September. Beyond the basic issues of hous- GENERAL DIvISION1
Application was made under the ing regulations and the tenants. 3200 S.A.B.
Urban Mass Transportation Act association, both Welch and Mrs. April, June and August Graduates
of 1964. Mhoon feel that the basis of the Placeent Service offers assistance in
'The government could make a conflict is personal. career planlningcareer planning and
grant commitment as early as 30 - "I don't mind constructive crit -_ _ ___ _
days after the forwarding of the icism," said Mrs. Mhoon. "How-
report. Once the grant is officially ever personal abuse directed at COME TO
made, the city could handle the me has not been constructive at
bidding process, in which the ma- all. These people aren't trying ! Sudent Book Service
jor automobile firms might vie for to criticize the workings of the
the Ann Arbor bus contract, commission but are attacking me and visit
After the bidding process has as director." RENEE
been completed 90-120 days would Welch said that accusations,
elapse before the buses could be such as one made at the Dec. 12 BARB
delivered. Robbins hopes for de- meeting that Mrs. Mhoon was K U ND US
livery by late May. "leading the tenants back i n t o
If council decides to buy ten slavery," result from personal an-
buses at their Monday meeting, tipathy toward her.
each with a capacity for 45 pas- In response to griticism of Mrs. FUN W O R KIN
sengers, the total cost would Mhoon, Welch says, "I've nevejr
amount to $300,000. The federal known anyone more dedicated
government will either commit it- than Mrs. Mhoon."
self to pay one-half or two-thirds E "If she makes this stick I feel
of the total cost. If HUD feels it sorry for the Housing Commission.
has sufficient information, It will They'll have trouble keeping this
defray two-thirds of the cost. program going," he maintains.

job hunting' to anyone with 12 hours
at U of M. 3200 S.A.B., hours - 9:30 -
12 & 1:30-4:30 P.M. Registration is urg-
ed early for use in interviewing com-
panies visiting, and job hunting else-
where, by mail and visit. If going to
grad school, collect professors' recom-
mxendations now. Watch this column
for information on all post college op-
portunities.
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Seminar and Film on Careers in Sales
Management presented by Proctor and
Gamble and Friden, Inc. Open to a 11
students, of special interest to LS&A
and Bus. School students. Tuesday,
January 14, 4 P.M. in Multipurpose
Room of Undergraduate Library. Con-
tact Placement Services, General Divi-
sion for further information.
Grad meeting for Summer Intern Pro-
gram in Washington is being held on
Jan. 15, 4 p.m., Multipurpose Room of
the UGLI. Underclassmen, seniors and
graduate students may attend to get
information on the programs sponsored
under this plan.
Current Openings received by Gen-
eral pivision by- mail and phone, not
interviews on campus. Please call 764-
7460 for further information:
Memorial Hospital, Long Beach, Calif.:
Coordinator of Children's Activities,
direct, and dev. full program, direct
volunteers, min. BA, MA pref. in child
dev. area such as elem. ed., exper in
hospital or' elem. teaching.
Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Mich.:
Lab Technician for tissue research, BS
in Biol, or microbiol., fam. with micro-
tone for dermatology research.
Office Communication Equipment
Group of Litton Industries: Hartford,
Conn.: Director of IndustrialrRelations
in Hartford. Pref. MBA, or MA in
psych. v ith 10 years muntiplant or-
ganization exper with unions, sales and
service personnel exper and production
planning exper.
Ayerst Laboratories, Southfield, Mich.:
Sales Represetative, young person with
some exper., not necess sales, for con-
tacting physicians, hospitals, a n d
pharmacies. Pref. degree and course-
work in nat'l. or physical sci.
W-TWO Television Center, Terre
Haute, Indiana: Commercial Director,
producing and directing. and some work
with continuity, beginning position,
good oppor. to learn programming
phases of broadcasting.
CDetroit Area Hospital: Administra-
tive. position for recent grad of School
for Hosp. Admin. or MBA, good poten-
tial for young person.
City of Bay City, Mich.: Probation
Officer for pre-sentencelinvestigations
with young men, corrective casework
orientation. liaison with govn't. agen-
cies and civic organizations, degree in
police admin., psych., sociol., counsel-
ing and guid.
Local Organization: Executive Direc-
tor for a United Fund Agency working
with retarded children, coord commun-
ity agencies, degree and exper in educ.,
psych., soc. wk, or related areas.
The most complete
supply of
NEW and USED TEXTS
and PAPERBACKS
is at the
Student Book Service
G INEURPE

96Arrade,s6 M,O, of
SUMMER PLACEMENT
SERVICE
212 S.A.B., Lower Level:
INTERVIEWS:
January 14: Fresh Air Fund Camps,
Social Work, New York, interviewing
from 10-5. Openings for general coun-
selors, village leaders, waterfront direc-
tors, nature and arts and crafts coun-
selors.
January 15: Camp Indiana Council
for Camp Fire Girls, Central Indiana,
interviewing from 10-5. General Coun-
selors, Waterfront director and assist-
ants, specialists in arts, nature, music,
campcraft, unit and program director.
January 16 & 17: Camp Tamarack,
Mich. coed, soc. wk., 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. gne,
couns., waterfront, arts & crafts, na-
ture - campcraft, tripping, music, dra-
matics, unit supv. & asst., caseworker,
truck-bus driver, nurse and camp phy-
sician.
State of New Jersey, Dept. of Com-
munity Affairs Intern Prog., June 23 -
Aug. 29, info & applic. at SPS.
State of Indiana, Dept. of Nat'l. Res.,

Engineering Placement Meeting: No.
1. "Engineering Market and Placement

biologist aides in fisheries and wildlife
projects. applic. due March 1.
ENGINEERING PLACEMENT
SERVICE
128-H, West Engrg. Bldg.
Make interview appointment at Room
128 H, West Engrg. Bldg. unless other-
wise specified.
JANUARY 20, 1969:
The Boeing Co,
Commonwealth Associates Inc.
Deere & Co.
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.
; Firestone International Co.
General Motors Corp. - All Divs.
General Radio Co.
City of Milwaukee.
PPG Industries, Inc. - Chemical Div.
PPG Industries, Inc. - Corporate
Raytheon Co.
Steelcase, Inc.
Surface Combustion Div. - Midland-
Ross Corp.
U.S. Gov't.
Navy - Surface Wave & Aviation -
Reserve Officer Candidate

and how to use the Engineering Place-
Services." Salary and demand trends
ment Service. First of four meetings.
Primarily for seniors and graduate stu-
dents, but open to all interested. Pro-
fessor J. G. Young. January 13, 4:00
p.m rind 7:30 p.m. in Room 325. West
EngineerigEii ilding. Afternoon and
exeninL_ meetings will b)e the same.)
ORGAN I ZATI ON
NOTICES
U Fellowship of Huron Hill Baptist
Church, Jan. 12th, 7:00 p.m., 2nd floor,
Ann Arbor, "Y", faculty and adminis-
trative personnel: "What Jesus Christ
Means in My Life." 8:30 p.m. campus
and careers fellowship and refresh?
ments.
Libertarian League Meeting, Sunday,
Jan. 12th, 2:00 p.m., 2X(MIMES) Un-
ion. Upcoming lecture and activities to
be discussed.

rf-_

MARCH ON
WASlI NGTON
Jon. \18, 19, 20
1. Ann Arbor Movement Center
2. Liberation Classes
3. Counter-Inauguration March
4 Counter-Inouguration Ball
BUS TICKETS NOW
2527 SAB 1-6 P.M.
Phone 761 -3252
or 769-1400
Sponsored by
Mobilization Committee to
End the Vietnam War

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and supplies. Our LAW section
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OVERBECK BOOKSTOIRE

THE LAW BOOK STORE

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1216 South University

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SUNDAYS ARE NOW
BONUS DAYS
from 12 Noon-5 P.M. at
discount.Urecords,
1235 S. University only
CHECK US FOR
IN-STORE SPECIALS

PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL

GUARANTEED JOBS ABROAD! Get paid, travel, meet people,
SUMMER and YEAR ROUND. 20 countries, 9 paying job cate-
gories offered. For FREE cultural program literature including
details and applications, write: "ISTC admissions, 866 United
Nations Plaza, New York, N.Y. A Non-Profit Student Mem-
bership Organization.

Southern Baptist Convention
1131 Church St.
761-0441
Rev. Tom Bloxam
9.45 a.m.-Sunday School
11:00 a.m.-Morning Worship
6:30 p.m.-Training Union
7:30 p.m.-Evening Worship
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL
On the Campus-

1 511 Washtenaw Ave.
(The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod)
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
Sunday at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-The Rev.
Alfred Scheips, "The Days of Your Youth."
(Communion at 9:30 a.m.)
Sunday at 11:00 a.m.-Bible ClaSs.
Sunday at 6:00 p.m.-Gamma Delta Supper
and Program.

-..

MEARI IN AFRIO
+ HUNT RIDE IN IRELAND
j4+ CANOE THE DANUBE
+ ROAM THE ORIENT
+ EXPLORE EUROPE
o p Summer expeditions for sophisticated
r't and energetic students who prefer an
adventurous, unstructured; self-directed
program. For information write to:
R O Mr. Robert M.' Hill, Director
ROBINSON CRUSOE ABROAI
338 West 84th St., New York City 10024

--.

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CHURCH

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Corner State and William Sts.
Terry N. Smith, Minister
Ronald C. Phillips, Assistant
Services of 9:15 and 11:00 a.m.-"Make
Room for Forgiveness."~
CAMPUS CHAPEL
1236 Washtenaw
Donald Postema, Minister
10:00 a.m.-Morning Worship: "Ready and
Waiting."
11:00 a.m.-Coffee.
5:00 p.m.-Vesper Service: "On the Bound-
ary.
6:00 p.m.-Mixer, includinq light supper.
BETHLEHEM UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST
423 S. Fourth Ave.
Telephone 665-6149
Pastors: H. G. Kroehler, A. C. Bizer,
W. C. Wright
9:30 and 10:45 a.m.-Worship Service
9:30 and 10:45 a.m.-Chrch School

FOLLETT'S FOIBLES

By E. Winslow

A coed customer of ours who reads,
Plays chess, and dresses in tweeds

Was one night caressed,
And gladly confessed,

"Folletts supplies
almost all my needs".

Wednesday at 8:30 p.m;-Chapel Assembly.,
Wednesday at 10:00 p.m.-Mid-week Service.
ST. AIDEN'S EPISCOPAL CHAPEL
(North Campus)
1679 Broadway
10:00 a.m.-Discassion Group.
11:00 a.m.--Service.
LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER
AND CHAPEL
A.L.C.-L.C.A.
Hill St. at S. Forest Ave.
Donald G. Zill, Pastor
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m.--Matins.
11:00 a.m.-Daniel Moe Contemporary Lit-
urgy (Holy Communion). Sermon: "That
j Complex Business of Growing Up."
6:00 p.m.-Supper.
7:00 p.m.-Illustrated Program: "Escape."
FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH
1917 Washtenaw Ave.
Dr. Erwin A. Goede, Minister
Sunday at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Sermon:
"Religion: Underground and A b o v e
Ground."
Church School and Services ai 9:20 and 1-1 :00
a. m.
Student Religious Liberals at 7:00 p.m.
HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH
Presently meeting at the YM-YWCA
Affiliated with the Baptist General Conf.
761-6749
Rev. Charles Johnson
9:45 a.m.-U Fellewoship Bible Discussion.
11:00 a.m.-"Prayer-Supernatural and Self
Helo."

FIRST UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH and WESLEY
FOUNDATION
At State and Huron Streets
Church-662-4536
Wesley-668-6881
Hoover Rupert, Minister
Bartlett Beavin, Campus Minister
SUNDAY
9:00 and 11:15 a.m.-Worship.
6:00 p.m.-i--Fellowship Supper.
7:00 p.m.-Contemporary Christian Worship
with Craig Hammond.
ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
306 N. Division
8-00 a.m.-Holy Communion
9:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon
11 :00 a.m...Morning Prayer and Sermon
7.00 p.m.-Evening Prayer
THE CHURCH OF CHRIST
W. Stadium at Edgewood
Across from Ann Arbor High
John M. Hamilton, Minister
SUNDAY
10:00 a.m.-Bible School
1 1 '00 a m.-Regular Worship
6:00 p.m.-Evening Worship
WEDNESDAY

7:30 p.m.-Bible Study
Transportation furnished for all
NO 2-2756

services-Call

Thrill to one-stop shopping for all your

UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH
1001 East Huron
Phone 662-3153
Minister: Calvin S. Malefyt
10:30 a.m.-"The Manipulator" by Dr. Calvin
Malefyt.
7:00 p.m.-"The Word for Our World" by
Dr. Calyin Malefyt.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw Ave.
Phone 662-4466
SUNDAY

CANTERBURY HOUSE
330 Maynard
11:00 a.m.-Communion, Film-"it's About
This Carpenter;" also Franke's Music.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST;
SCIENTIST
1833 Washtenaw Ave.
SUNDAY
10.30 a.m.-Worship Services, Sunday School
(2-20 years)
WEDNESDAY
8.00 p.m.-Testimony Meeting
Infants room available Sunday and Wednesday
Public Reading Room, 306 E. Liberty St. -

school supplies

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in a variety of prices to fit your budget. We also

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