Friday,. April 18, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine 7 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN -:s::......ry.,,...-.- - - - - ..:J ..,. {:.^n^::v.1:.."s. " 4v.. .. ,...,.. .rr Administrators hit campus disruption also starrng story and screenplay by doected by produced by Patrick Wymark - Michael Hordern * Aistair MacLean. Brian G. Hutton. Ellott Kastner SuggestedforMAtEaude Panavision6 and MetrocolorMGM (parental doscre on ad sed 300 S. STATE and 1235 S. UNIVERSITY (Continued from Page 8) Local Organization: syst. analy., and comptuer personnel, BA and some bus. 2r exp. or no. Local Organization: syst. anal., and computer personnel, BA and some bus. or exper. Roranoff Electric Motor Service, Mich.: Sales Correspondent, electrical bckrnd., degree not necess, good bus. inclination. Management Consultants, Chicago: Controller for food distributor in Mich. degree in bus. area with heavy exper. in area of cost and budgetary controls. Systems Research Labs, Inc., Dayton, Ohio: Phys., Chem., Biol., and Engrg. research positions. State of Washington, Research Anal., MA psych., stat, math plus 3 years Chemist. Community Affairs Consult- ant. Parks Planner. City of Milwaukee: Public Health Nurse, Public Health Educator Bacter- iologist, Planner, Asst. Manag. Dir., Safety Commission, Project Coord. S. S. Kresge Co., Detroit, Mich.: Audit staff, acctg., majors, 1 plus yrs. exper. Wood Veterans Administration Center, Milwaukee, Wis.: Counseling Psycholo- gist. Several trainees, pre & post doc- toral. State of Utah: Transportation Anal. engrg. bckrnd. State of Wisconsin: careers in finance and acctg., trainee and exper. positions. Smith, Kline & French Laboratories, Phila., Ps.: Lib. arts new grads for ad- mnistraton and mktg. program. Ex- per personnel for mgmt syst., OR, pharm sales, med.chem. ,biochem. County of Wayne: Personnel A ss t. Committee clerk. Hoover Ball and Bearing Corp., Chem. Products Div., Whitmore Lake, Mich.: Indust.Engineering trainee, math bck- rnd., degree not necess, no exper. typ.. ing, time studies, all phases. SUMMER PLACEMENT INTERVIEW 212 S.A.B. Lower Level April .18: Southwestern Company, Nashville, Tenn~ 1-5 p.m. Be outdoors all summer and make good money, de- tails at S.P.S. Opportunities will continue to come to the attention of S.P.S., please stop in any time at, 212 and check up on these. Some Ann Arbor jobs are avail- able, and some camps and other em- ployers have not yet contacted us yet, thinking students will be here till June like at other schools. SUMMARY OF ACTION TAKEN BY STUDENT GOVERNMENT COUNCIL AT ITS MEETING APRIL 10, 1969 Transportation Seminar: James O'- Day, Highway Safety Research In- The Original Sound Track of SWEET C RITE Starring SHIRL EY MACLAINE NOW IN STOCK on DECCA Records stitute, "Motor Vehicle Inspection and Highway Safety": 338 West Engineering, 3:00 p.m. Department of Zoology Seminar: Dr. John Emlen, Department of Biological Sciences, State University of New York at Stony Brook: "Age Specificity and Ecological Theory": 1400 Chemistry, 4:00 p.m. Botany Seminar: Co-sponsored with the School of Natural Resources, Dr. Hans Heybroek, Forest Experiment Sta- tion, Wageningen, Netherlands will speak on "Breeding Elms for Resist- ance to Dutch Elm Disease", Wednes- day, April 16, 1969 at 4:15 p.m., Botani- cal Gardens. String Department Student Recital: School of Music Recital Hall, 5:00 p.m. Cinema Guild: Gene Kelly and Leslie" Caron in "An American in Paris": Ar- chitectural Auditorium, 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. Graduate School of Business Admin- istration: The 1969 Business Leadership Award: Mr. Ernest Arbuckle, Chairman of the Board, Wells Fargo Bank, Rack- ham Amphitheater, 8:00 p.m. School of Music Recital, Francis Bun- dra, viola; Jill Bailiff, harp; K e i t h Bityan, flute, Angel Reyes, violin: Rack- ham Lecture Hall, 8:00 p.m. Degree Recital: John Timothy Cald- well, tenor: School of Music Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. Approved: WHEREAS: The voters for the of- fice of the LSA Senior Class President have chosen to have the office abol- ished (chosen an abolitionist candi- date). 8Sb8a ,foz-ofccue fisbe-s WHEREAS: It is the obligation of an officer to serve his constituency. WHEREAS: Without the LS&A Pre- sident, the Senior Board only repre- sents a minority of the University's "nseniors. WHEREAS: The new (to be) Senior Board has only two members (only En- gineering and Education elected mem- bers this year), not even -enough to fill the positions of president, vice presi- dent, secretary, and treasurer, tradi- tiouially elected by the senior board. WHEREAS: The Pesident of the En- gineering Senior Class (to be) ran un- opposed. WHEREAS: The Senior Board does not even:have a constitution. WHEREAS: The existence of the Sen- ior Board is not acknowledged (writ- ten) in any University of SGC codes or operating procedures. WHEREAS: The Senior Board has no delegated University power and at- tempts to gain power have been futile. WHEREAS: The Senior Board is. pre- sently anachronistic and extraneous. WHEREAS: In view of the above, the present Senior Board (class of 1969) has refused to recognize any future Senior Class Officers of the colleges. WHEREAS: The present Senior Board atfer which decided to abolish its existence. THEREFORE: Be it resolved that SGC will no longer recognize the Sen- ior Bard. THEREFORE: Obviously will not hold, sponsor, support, or condone any elections in the future for any such offices. Approved: That SGC rescind its mo- tion of March 27 to allocate $100 to the Harris for Mayor campaign. Approved : That SGC express disap- proval with action by faculty on the language and distribution requirement by writing a letter to the Daily. Said letter to be written by Michael Farrell, Mary Livingston and Marc Van Der Hout. SGC will continue to work for abolition through acquainting Fresh- men with theissue during orientation, ponting to possible action in the fall. Approved: That Bob Nelson and Al- bert Warrngton be seated to fill the two vacant Council seats. * * * Approved: Completion of Judiciary Structure (attached) (Passed without opposition): TO: SGC * * * SGC will debate and vote on the following motions on April 17 in the council room, 1540 SAB at 7:30 p.m. Interested persons are invited to par- ticipate in the debate personally, by pe- tition, or by some other means. 1. Be it resolved that: SOC's ex-of- ficio seats shall be filled in the fol- lowing manner: (a) That there will be five such seats. (b) Four of these. seats shall be filled by the four largest major governing bodies under SGC and the fifth by UAC. Major governing bodies shall include the legislative bod- les of (1) schools, (2) colleges (3) liv- ing units of federations of groups with- in 1, 2, or 3. (An example of such a federation would be IHA or two groups who have similar 'interests such as, say Panhel - IFC. Largest shall refer to the number of constituents repre- sented by these groups. This size shall be determined by membership lists submitted to SGC the last week in September each year. Governing bodies holding such seats shall be only those who are in accordance with SGC's re- quirements for democratic student or- ganizations. SGC shall grant an ex- officio seat to an organization on the condition that the organization grant SGC an ex-officio seat on its gov- erning body. Ex-officio seats. shall be non-voting but be regarded as having the other parlimentary privileges of the Council members. If any organization shouldreject its seat it shall be filled by the largest uninvited governing body. The official representative of that organization should, if possible, be the president or a vice-president of that governing body. We also recommend that the Central Participant Assembly be reconsidered and that when estab- lished, ex-officio seats - be reevaluated. 2. Central Student Judiciary Opera- tion Procedures. 3. Summer authority of Council members who remain in Ann Arbor for the summer. 4. Suspend regulation on registration of student organizations for .Spring and Summer terms. 5. Consideration of proposed Intra- mural Building. 6. Participants' Assembly. Lemuel Adolphus Johnson, Compara- tive Literature, Dissertation: "Negro and White Syncretism: Literary Mani- festations of a Pathogenesis," on Thursday, April 17 at 10:30 a.m. in 2031 Angell Hall, Chairman : F. W. Weber. Joseph Paul Yaney, Business Admin- istration, Dissertation: "Organizational Support and Employee Performance," on Thursday, April 17 at 7:00 p.m. in Room 316 Business Administration, Co- Chairman: L. E. Danielson and G. S. Odiorne. UM Judo Club will have its last meet- ing of the semester this Thurs., all members are encouraged to attend. * * > * The Dept. of Ron'ance Language is presenting a free showing of the Cannes award winning production of Gide's La Symphonie Pastorale in the UGLI multi-purpose room - Thurs., April 17th, 1969 at 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. * * * * Phi Sigma Honor Society: Speaker will be Dr. Henry Van der Schalie - Museum of Zoology who will speak on "Man Meddles with Nature, Hawaiian Style" at 8:00 p.m. - Rackham Amphi- theatre - public cordially invited. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Student Religious Liberals: a loose- ly disorganized dinner and discussion group, informal pre-exam get together, Sunday, April 20th, 7:00 p.m. First Uni- tarian Church - 1917 Washtenaw. Jelly donuts. People! Fun! Everyone wel- come, for further info call 769-1605, S* * * * Hillel Foundation: 1429 Hill St., Fri.,' April 18th, 6:00 p.m., Traditional serv- tce, 7:30 p.m., Hillel Student Services, Sat., April 19th, 9:15 a.m., Traditional service. (Continued from Page 1) among some of the young a cult of irrationality and incivility which severely strains attempts to maintain sensible and decent hu- man communication," the state- ment continues. SGC Administrative Vice Presi- dent Bob Hirshon responded last night by blasting Fleming for "at- tending a secret, closed meeting to sign a statement calling for a greater amount of open and ra- tional discussion." "This is the pinnacle of hypo- crisy," he said. McLaughlin charged Fleming and the other administrators with "reacting in a hysterical way to any attempt to arouse students." The administrator's statement will be distributed to the ACE's 1,538 member colleges. It concludes that, "There is a minute group of destroyers who have abandoned hope in today's society, in today's university, and in the processes of orderly discus- sion and negotiation to secure sig- nificant change." Responsible students and faculty are "moving to deal with the Professors support i NAME YOUR DISCOUNT ON LP's' THIS SUNDAY-April 20t--12 Noon-5 P.M. 'U' School BUY 1-5 LP's you pay only BUY 6-10 LP's you pay only BUY ii or more you pay only 4.98 LIST per LP 3 oer LP 09 per LP 5498 LIST per LP, 399 per LP 3 69 per LP 6.98 LIST 5per LP per LP 429 per LP IC OUR ENTIRE STOCK (Budget Labels excluded ) 3S.count an co S int 300 S. State and 1235 S. University Read BOOKS' Every Sunday, (Continued from Page 1) and space difficulties as the pri- mary reason for closing the school. He said the school is "shabbily housed, ill equipped and paying substandard salaries to staff." Lehmann noted that if Univer- sity School is closed it would pro- vide the education school with an additional 20,000 square feet of space. Representatives of the Univer- sity School aPrent-Teacher Or-' ganization attacked the admin- istration for the speed with which the question of closing the school was brought to the Regents, and asked for a postponement of the final decision. Until yesterday's open hearing, the Regents were considered vir- tually certain to ratify the phas- ing out of University School. It is unclear whether the hearing had any affecthon their decision, especially in the face of strong administration support for closing the school. The initial recommendation to close the school came in the re- port of a special blue ribbon com- mission on the education school is- sued last month. The report noted contributions made by the Univer- sity School, but said the expendi- tures and space allocations r e - quired "do not justify its contin- uing existence." The proposal before the Regents at today's meeting calls for the elemination of g r a d e s seven through nine this year and clos- ing, of the entire school in June 1970. In other action, the Regents are expected to ratify the literary col- lege faculty proposal for the crea- tion of a Bachelor of General Studies, and to abolish the physi- cal education requirement for all University students. , cults' destructive activities." the administrators say. But, "if uni- versities will not govern them- selves they will be governed by others," the statement warns, Although it says violations of the law must be dealt with by police, the report emphasizes the need for administrators to deal with demonstrations before they reach the stage of requiring police intervention. Minor clash at Columbia (Continued from Page 1) meeting of the university's board" of trustees. One speaker urged high school students in the city to attend Monday's rally. He concluded, "Come Monday, either the trus- tees open the university or we'll close it down." SDS's eight demands include the two issued during the black . sit-in: that an "experienced and capable admission board, nomi- nated and, authorized by the black students be established to evalu- ate and determine the admissions and funding of black students to enter in September, 1969" and that "an admissions staff nomi- nated:and authorized by black students" be established to "de-; termine and enact recruitments, admissions policies and programs for funding." Dean Carl F. Hovde flatly re- jected both demands Tuesday. SDS is also demanding the abo- lition of Reserve Office Training Corps (ROTC), a halt in all mill- tary recruitment and research, the re-opening of 197 apartments owned by Columbia and scheduled to be replaced by middle-income housing units, and the university's influence in freeing the 21 Black Panthers arrested recently in the city. Dean Arnold.,. to leave'U for U.S. postl. Dr. R. Keith 'Arnold, dean of' the University's School of Na. tural Resources, has been named deputy chief of the U.S. Forest Service in charge of research. Arnold has been dean ,of the Natuiral Resources school since. May, 1965, when he succeeded Dr. Stephen H. Spurr. Edward L. Cliff, chief of the U.S. Department of Agriculture'I division, said in announcing the appointment that Arnold ,'will' head all. Forest Service Re- ; search. On assuming his new duties r at the end of the present aca- demic year, Arnold will be in charge of eight regional forest stations, the U.S. Forest Pro- ducts Laboratory< in Madison, Wis., and the Institute of Tropi- c a e e r h i " u r o R e.Ar n o ld 's s u c c e s s o r a s d e a n o f ' the School of Natural. Resources has not yet been named. . I a- ti Why Tenant? . mmmmmlm Many of you tenants, both strikers and non-strikers, have come to the office of the Tenants Union to ask what you can do if you have a 12-month lease and plan to be out of town during the summer. Some of you are only now realizing the full injustice of the 12-month lease you signed more than a year ago and are beginning to see how landlord monopoly power in Ann Arbor affects you. The Rent Strike Steering Committee has studied the alternatives and lists them here for your information. (1) You CAN PAY ALL of the Summer's rent even though you're not living there. That is, you can pay for nothing.just because your landlord had more bargaining power than you did when you signed your lease. The advantage of this choice is that your landlord will love you even though he may cackle to his business partners about what a sucker you are. (2) You can still try to SUBLET. If you haven't succeeded by now you'll have to offer a sublet rent that is only a fraction of your own rent for the same apartment. Suppose you do sublet: your landlord will tell you to make up the difference between your rent and the sublet rent. a) You can pay that difference; That places you in category (1) above., b) You can refuse to pay that difference. See category (2) below. In either case the landlord has you doing his job for him. (3) You can SIMPLY ABANDON YOUR APARTMENT and LET YOUR LANDLORD SUBLET IT. Close any bank accounts your landlord knows about and if you are returning in the fall be sure you have a lease for next year before you leave. Many students do this every year. It is no new alternative, but it is going to be used this summer on an unprecedented scale. It involves no red tape and is simply executed. This method is popular with tenants who have been unable to sublet because the worst that can happen to them is that the landlord will get the money he's telling them to pay anyway. The Tenants Union has been successful in establishing the failures of landlords in carrying out their end of the lease. In almost every instance, the landlord has in some way breached the terms of the lease. When the lease has been so breached, the tenant has the legal option of vacating and Raying no further rent. It is then the obligation of the landlord to prove there has been no such breach. Whether the landlord pursues this course reduces to a very pragmatic question: Is it worthwhile for your landlord to chase you around the country (world?) to get some money that he may not be able to get anyway,, particularly when he has hundreds of people doina this and a lot of strikers as well. The strike has Watch for Grand Opening of THE ALTERNATIVE Student-Faculty Co-op Coffee House 1st WEEK-SPRING TERM Michigan Union -- - - . - -n+i f 'q 4:Li:4+r8!'_ :?rr:. }}:.:r±,..t".\. ~f:":~'r }.............. .:. '...'...........':....i! ".:.+sAS:%;':::x';%.'t:F:;;'iv?:s:.: . . ..-..aX:: ir:: av a7tc'.t.f2:::. i:o:i"..caa.r~ti . c^. got >:}1 S:}Ss ilgiiiii z 1 t " " Y !s him p i E - f: Mit >.'v cI So Happy, 1 Could Do Hand Stands 4, .pi i_ STUDENT SABBATH SERVICES Last of the Semester Tonight-7:30 P.M. (P.S. Good Luck on Finals!) HILLEL FOUNDATION-1429 Hill St. LI I-- BEFORE YOU SIGN THAT LEASE, CHECK THIS: 0 recognizes student tenant groups " offers 8-month leases " no pre-payment of last month's rent * damage deposit ($45) responsibly administered I I free parking * immediate handling of each complaint * reasonable rental rates * resident manager or representative always on duty .- I II I I [ 1 I frm inrl the nnnrtmpnt I wnntprl Ii