PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY
'WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1967
$169,853,000:
Riot Victims Across the Nation
AddUp Their Economic Losses
NEW YORK (') - With no end in Cairo, Ill. The Department of The General Adjustment Bureau,
in sight to the nation's summer Housing and Urban Development a national organization that sends'
of racial violence, weary victims said in Washington that no fed- adjusters into disaster areas, set
of rioting in cities across the eral funds are available to help up a 15-man temporary office in
country are adding up their eco- repair or rebuild. East Orange, N.J., to help in set-
nomic losses and planning for the But no monetary value could be tling Newark claims.
future. placed on the human tragedies, "We're just beginning to get re-'
With preliminary damage esti- the loss of the family home, the ports on Detroit," a spokesman
mates in Detroit already over $200 work of a lifetime, perhaps, lost said "I understand the fires are'
million, official estimates of mon- in one riotous night. still going on. But as soon as we
etary losses around the nation "We have been getting telephone can, we'll establish a temporary
Peace Controversial on Berkely Campus
BERKELEY, Calif. (A') - Even;Navy recruiter. Former student
peace can be controversial in I Mario Savio led a sit-in tha n same
Berkeley. day and anti-Vietnam war ele-
Six months ago, Clark Kerr was ments tried an abortive class boy-
fired as president of the nine- cott Dec. 4 because the Navy was
campus, 87,000-student University allowed, to set up a table inside
of California. It climaxed more
than two years of sporadic tur-
moil over student rights on thej
Berkeley campus where 27,500 are
enrolled. Berkeley has been quiet,
ever since.
But don't jump to quick con-
clusions.
There is disagreement over
what it means.
the Student Union Building.
Striking Contrist
Heyns' procedure was in sti-k-
ing contrast with the handling of
prior disorders.
In 1964, Savio, then a hushy-
haired junior studying philosophy.
sparked disorders which led to his
arrest along with nearly 800
nhar fna mciu cit-i at
totaied over $169,853,u00 in an
Associated Press survey.
Some victims, in despair, plan
to get out of trouble spots as soon
as possible; others are starting
work on new plans to minimize
the chance of future outbreaks;
still others, stunned, just don't
know what to do.
'Can't Take Any More'
Cincinnati jeweler Rudolph
Youmans said, "I just can't take
any more," and planned to leave.
Mike Levy, operator of a food
market in the Ohio city, said,
"I'm going to stay."
Tampa, Fla., merchants joined
a biracial commission in a train-
ing program to open employment
to Negroes as a peace move..
A Buffalo, N.Y., banker sum-
med up:
"Many of the merchants would
love to leave the area, but they
have no place to go."
Of the $169 million, $15 million
was in Newark, N.J., ;$3 million in
Cincinnati, Ohio, $1 million in
Tampa, Fla., $350,000 in Dayton,
Ohio, $250,000 in Buffalo, N.Y.,
$150,000 in Erie, Pa., and $100,000
cans, some 01 them±rom5smal office there." There is disagreement over how UiOms a ive sit-inN a
homeowners, actually . crying on P. B d Nort hief of it can be continued. - Sproul Hall, across the plaza from
the phoe," said Morrisernar man,cAnd there is considerable dis- the Student Union Building. Savio
an organizer of the Newark Busi- Newarks Office of Economic De- i and his supporters opposed a rule
nessmen's Emergency Committee. velopment, said 783 stores in that agreement over what was left un-anninguporterappd a yule
'What will we do? Where will e city were damaged or looted or settled by the coming of the quiet. banning political advocacy on
Whatwil wedoWhee wll e ;oth Ofthes, 1 wee dstryed' Wen t Bgancampus.
get the money to start again? they both. Of these, 16 were destroyed, When It Began President Kerr conferred with
ask.', and 86 suffered heavy damage. There is one point of complete Savio, then under suspension, and
No Insurance About 100 inspectors from Nort- agreement - precisely when it later the rule was changed by the
He said many of the businesses man's office have toured the riot began. university regents. The then
hit were family concerns, some of area and he estimated their com- Spokesman of the administra- chancellor Edward Strong, ac-
which had no insurance or were pleted survey will show about 1,- " tion, the faculty and the students cused Kerr of interference.'
dropped by insurance companies 000 damaged stores and 400 dam- all pinpoint the first week of last Kerr kept hands off the Navy
in recent years. Dagedr.Thhomes.re'
"We put a $15 million insured Some cities reported only neg- December. That was more than recruiter fuss, leaving Heyns a
damage estimate on the Newark ligible damage - mostly broken a month before Gov. Ronald Rea- free hand. Heyns balked at talk-
rioting last Friday (July 21)," windows - in relatively minor dis- gan and 13 other university re- ing with Savio, then a nonstudent
turbances. These included Atlan- gents summarily ousted Kerr, one living in Berkeley. Instead, Heyns
said a spokesman for the Insur- ta, Ga., Birmingham Ala Hart- of the most widely known educa- conferred with student and fac-
ance InfWmation Instued inNe ford, Conn., and New Britain, tors in the nation. ulty representatives, then ruled
be paid." Conn. Little Waterloo, Iowa, esti- The "Berkeley cool" began af- that the Navy recruiter must move
He said some of the claims will mated about $3000 worth of dam- ter Chancellor Roger Heyns set- his table out on the plaza whee
come under a homeowner's policy age was done during rioting July tied an uproar over the appear- student tables of cause and pro-
of fire and extended coverage p01- 8-9. ance Nov. 30 on campus of a U S. test are permitted.
icies that. include such risks as
riots, explosions, fires and civil
cotsm e ot ionsir s an c vl ; 1
";sansidi wud orld Newspapers Concerned
The spokesman said it would o l sCc r e
take years to determine whetherp
the riots would lead to an increase 1 T 1
n rates. Ove1 i..e I J C ivi w1r
Except for some picketing of with them-more disagree-but the formulation of educational
the Navy table. the Berkeley because the students are pooped policies, including measures for
campus has been on its best be- and tired of the issue," observed the improvement of teachings.
havior. Dan McIntosh as he completed "One reason it is quiet in Ber-
"The university is not the ad- his presidency of Berkeley's As- keley is because this commission
versary any more," Heyns said sociated Students of the Univer- exists," said bearded Henry May-
when interviewed about the cur- sty of California. er, a graduate student and co-
rent quiet. "We have hardly begun to fiid chairman of the commission with
solutions to these problems," said Caleb Foote. a law professor.
The problem itself is the ad- his successor, Dick Beahrs, a sen-
versary." ior history major from Palo Alto. "Many of the students on the
But, despite rule changes al- "I'm discouraged when the ad- commission were active in vary-
lowing students freedom to advo- ministration .makes statements ing degrees in protest. The report
cate and protest on campus, stu- implying that many of our prob- will be very controversial."
dent leaders are far less optimis- lems are solved. Often times. I After that, still to be deter-
tic. And critical government offi- think they have'to see 8,000 stu- mined is what the university and
cials hint openly at a crackdown dents protesting in the plaza to the regents will do about the
when the long hunt for a succes- recognize that this campus is still recommendations.
sor to Kerr has ended, troubled."
Two key figures in the earlier
Reagan, asked about his view Study Commission Berkeley disorders-Savio of the
of the quiet at Berkeley, said he Right now a little-publicized Free Speech Movemenit -FSM -
felt. like one shoe has been drop- investigation is under way that and nonstudent Jerry Rubin,
ped and the other is about to be. could explode like a bombshell founder of the Vietnam Day
That apparently referred to the next October. A 12-member study Committee - are removed from
firing of Kerr and the choice of a commission on university griev- the scene.
new president.-t ances is looking into the broad Savio recently entered prison to
Reagan's Investigation spectrum of student rights. serve a 120-day sentence for his
Reagan, who has pressed for a Six students - including some Municipal Court conviction for
full-scale investigation of the most active in expressing griev- the Sproul Hall sit-in of Decem-
Berkeley disorders,'said he was ances about current conditions ber, 1964. Savio, turning over his
holding that in abeyance since it and six faculty members will re- 18-month-old son to his wife,
now "depends on what the presi- port their findings next fall. Suzanne Goldberg Savio, another
dent does who comes in." Among these will be steps to in- FSM activist, said in court the
Max Rafferty, state superinten- crease and improve the appro- FSM was "one of the most impor-
dent of public instruction and, priate participation of students in tant events in higher education."
like Reagan, an ex-officio member
of the university regents, put it
even more bluntly: The next pres-
ident's "first job is to define the
proper function of the university,
factory or an ornothological sane-: IJ I
no gaito rea bie lckil's Assets: Sensitivity,
tuary for odd birds. The purpose
is to pursue truth in a scholarly
manner. He's got his work cut Sustained Pianissimo,suites
4i
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Baseless Rui
1943 DetrToit
DETROIT (P) - Detroit's first
major riot 24 years ago in war-
torn 1943 was sparked by a minor
incident and fueled by a rumor
that a Negro woman and her baby
had ,been thrown by whites off
the Belle Isle bridge into the De-
troit River.
-In two days of rioting, June 20-1
21, 1953, 35 persons were killed
and 530 injured. More than 1,300
persons were arrested before Pres-
ident Franklin D. Roosevelt order-
ed 4,000 federal troops into the
city, quelling the violence.
Stayed Three Weeks
The troops, cheered by residents
as they entered the city, stayed
three weeks.
The rioting began on Sunday,
June 20 at the Belle Isle bridge,
leading to an island park in the
Detroit River. Two Negro youths
set off fighting because they want-
ed to "even the score". for being
tossed out of an East Side amuse-
ment park five days before by a
group of whites.
The youngest of the two Ne-
groes, a 17-year-old, was charged
by police with starting, the rumor,
which ,although unfounded, in-
t
F
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I,
I'
ior Started LONDON UP)-The Detroit race
SoTi riots were prominently played by
newspapers around the world yes-
terday and editorials ranged from
R ace Riot sympathetic to declarations that
the United States faces civil war.
flamed a large Negro crowd. Noting the rioting in Newark,:
Police used tear gas to break N.J., and Detroit, the independent
up a free-for-all . between 200 Sueddeutsche Zeitung of Munich!
whites and Negroes on the bridge said "one gets a foretaste of com-
and the violence spilled along ing disputes which smack more of
East Jefferson on the near East civil war than civil rights."
Side. "The hell of modern war is com-
ghettos of the big cities of the
United States."
Said the pro-socialist Frankfur-
ter Rundschau of Frankfurt, Ger-
many: "The majority of whites
must have the will to recognize
their colored fellow citizens as
truly equal in ranks and rights."j
The comment in the British!
press took these views:
The Times of London, indepen-
dent: "City wrecking articulatesj
no tangible set of demands, sets
out no discussable grievances. The:
nonviolent southern civil rightsE
campaign was by contrast really
productive. Violence thrills the
new Negro leadership, whose aims,
however, are as cloudy as the slo-
gan black power."
The London Daily Telegraph,
conservativeT: "Each successive
outbreak surpasses its predeces-
other cities have reacted against
the reaction."
The Soviet press buried brief
accounts of the racial violence on
inside pages and radio and tele-
vision gave only short accounts.
The Communist Party newspaper
Pravda reported the disorders on
page five over a headline: "Bloody
Sunday in Detroit.".
In the Far East, newspapers in
Japan and on Nationalist Chinese
Formosa gave prominence to the
Detroit story but there was no
editorial comment.
In making clear he feels the
rules have been swung too much
the students' way, Rafferty said:
"There's no reason for anyone to
demonstrate any more than there
is reason for a burglar to murder
his victim if he gives him every-
thing he wanted."
Student Leaders
On the other hand, student
leaders voice dissatisfaction under
the rules as they are, not to men-
tion a crackdown.
"The administration h a s n ' t
'won' because the students agree
,
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E
By CHARLES TIMBRELL Suite is a colorful and brilliant
Michael Block presented the virtuosos version of three scenes
third recital of the University's from the ballet, arranged for the
Summer Concert Series in Rack- piano by the composer. Block's
ham Auditorium Monday night, playing was exemplary in every
and the program was of particu- respect. The repeated octaves and
lar interest inasmuch as it fea- chords in the "Dance Russe" were
tured two large and seldom-heard remarkably precise, and the
suites of the early twentieth-cen- movement had a controlled sense
tury. of direction and was thrilling in
tury.,., n..,.. n.. s..
By midnight, police reported
the riot under control but the
same rumor was repeated early onI
June 21 when a checkroom oper-
ator at a Negro recreation center
seized a microphone and repeated
it to a group of dancers. The Ne-
groes surged out of' the hall into
the streets, setting off a rash of
stabbings and widespread looting.
WhITfP Rn+ Nporn
ing to major U.S. towns," wrote
the Dagens Nyheter, a liberal
I newspaper in Stockholm. Draw-
ing a parallel to "what daily hap-
pens in Vietnam," the newspaperC
added: "One wonders what les-
sons authorities have drawn."
Italians
Rome's leftist newspaper Paese
Sera said the Detroit events "are
tha vhlo h aa hnr
M
I
I
Ike Hits 'Lawlessness,'
Calls Rioting 'Shameful'
DA ILY -C
The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan for which The
Michigan Daily assumes no editor-
ial responsibility. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to
Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be-
fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding
publication and by 2 p.m. Friday
for Saturday and Sunday. General
Notices may be published a maxi-
mum 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.
WEDNESDAY, JUJLY 26
Day Calendar
Dept. of Gerontology Conference -
"Twentieth Annual Conference on Ag-I
ng": Conference Breakfast, Michigan
Union, 8 a.m.
Audio-Visual Education Center Film
Preview-"Custer: The American Surge
Westward" and "Booming World of
Boats": Multipurpose Room, Undergrad-
uate Library, 1:30 p.m.
Dept. of English Lecture: Prof. R. M
Ohmann, Wesleyan University, will lec-
ture on "Syntax and Style," Aud. C,
Angell Hall, on Wed., July 26, at 4:10
p.m.
Dept. of Political Science/Center for
Russian and East European Studies:
Are co-sponsoring a lecture by Dr. Jerzy
Wlatr, of the Institute of Philosophy
and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sci-
ences, entitled "Local Politics as an In-
strument of Socio-Economic Develop-
ment" in the Sixth Floor Conference
Room, Institute of Social Research
Bldg., 4:10 p.m.
Dept. of' Romance Languages Lecture
-Monsieur Maurice Zermatten, Swiss
novelist, poet and dramatist . (lecture
will be given in French), "Le Baroque
dans la Litterature Europeene": East
I mes reat iegroes the symbol of the racial enange in
By a1m.Monay, J51une , u21 theamindsUofVa.groing uberof ' sors in some aspect of mad vio- WASHINGTON (R) - Former advance of a Republican Policy
Byit jm . bgndakin at , Ne in Aia ow n these lence, as if fumbling, elemental President Dwight D. Eisenhower Coordinating Committee state-
Iwhite mobs began making attacks Negroes in America . .. in these forces, are finding the weak joints says a "shameful outcropping of ment, to which he subscribed Mon-j
on Negroes along Woodward days President Johnson has been behind the magnificient facade lawlessness" in city rioting must day, accusing President Johnson
Avenue, a main artery. Cars were firmly warned that his next war of the American social structure." be dealt with sternly lest it lead of failing to recognize and dealI
burned and overturned along! could be a civil war." . The Financial Times, indepen- to anarchy and destroy the na- with the problem of Facial viol-
Woodward and streetcars were "Tanks, helicopters, p o 1 i c e . A ' tioni" ence in the cities.
stopped by whites who beat up charges will not resolve the Negro would A nongtoadeal wt the The people must be taught, Ei-
Negro occupants. problem in the United States," underlying causes of Negro dis- senhower said, that "personal or
At the height of the violence, wrote the Paris communist news- cnteng Theses ca berod- social problems cannot be solved Johnson, who dispatched feder-
police concentrated 2,500 officers paper L'humanite. by violence and defiance of au-l troop to Detroit, subsequently
in the lower East Side area. "The deep causes of the revolts only by vast social expenditure, bhority." Many have blamed the a
goodwillon ll sdes andpa-and television broadcast to law-
Mounted police charged white breaking out today are the intol- tine In anie though, rioting on poverty conditions in ang tzeso helpdpt own
mobs to keep them from invading erable conditions of life in which Bence. In the meantime though, the slums. abiding citizens to help put down
Negro areas. the blacks live- packed in the ievery further outbreak of violence Utmost Sympathy the rioting.
is bound to strengthen the ex- "I have the utmost sympathy for Eisenhower said the short-range
r."'G'i:^ . ..v:::.".. ".a... .........::'%}i{ ' ::r':":v:" .... ' : .. .......... ......::iv:::t{rmist forc s in bot:camps.
tremist forces in both camps."T any person who has never had a answer to street violence is to use
United States, by a terribly irony decent chance in life," Eisenhow- the National Guard quickly. He
iUnowe suffering back rrbalah r er said. "But the fact that so- said in the long haul there must
B U L L T INis now suffering a black backlash' ciety has treated him badly does be more and better paid police,
)CBLast year, white America reacted not give him the right to smash with a restoration of pride in
to a summer of Negro violence by and take what he their work
..... teiprtn nega-astore window an aewa eterwr.
.":..4.. ....: ....}::..... i::"": ... .... .4............... .""".rV {::^ defeating+: " : : : r :"t :""::'% ": .
efes :ti: ed housing swantsngtheoimportantintegor to attack our police I "In the fight against crime, one
Conference Room, Rackham Bldg., 4:15 telle Gallatin, Psychology; thesis: "The ed housing provisions of the Civil with animal ferocity." of the things we must do is to
p.m. Development of the Concept of Rights Rights Bill, by swinging to the This, he said, is heading to- pay our policemen adequately, and
iDept. of Speech University Players East Huron. at 3 pan Chairman J. B, right in the mid-term elections, ward "an era of lawlessness, which bring our forces up to necessary
Production-William Wycherly's "The Adelson. and by adding a national hostility in the end can only lead to an- strength, even if this means the
Country Wife": Lydia Mendelssohn The- - toward the poverty program to the archy. And anarchy is a destroy- postponement of other worthy
atre, s5pm. rch. nd narhyiobstacles potpneraisedthe woth
CnefraaeStdsInopobstacles already raised for it by er of nations." projects," he said
Center for Japanese Studies: In coop- thecompeting demands of* a war Eisenhower expressed these -
eration with the CIC Summer Asian POSITlON OPENINGS: economy. This year Negroes in views in an article written for
Languages Institute present Prof. Wil Raleigh County Community Action Detroit, Newark, and a dozen Reader's Digest and released yes- AS ;
liam P. Malim, professor of music at the Association, Beckley, W. va. - Grant terday. It was prepared long in
University of Michigan, giving a public from OEO serves low-income rural peo-dd
lecture entitled "Left-Wing Music of ple in 25 small communities. Need:
East Asia," Aud. A, Angell Hall, 8:30 Community Health Project Admin., NI Z_7AT I CJ N
p.m- 5 yrs. min., supv. comm. action work. ,RGA N Z T ION
Administrative Asst., some exper, in ES WACST I
Nineteenth, Annual National Band this typ ok ed"p. R ls3
Cnutr'Cneec-hUnerititype work-. Field Supv., RN plus 3 (.,,~
Conductors' Conference--The Universi- yrs. public health exper. Health Educa- i.
ty of Michigan Woodwind Quintet: tion and Trng. Spec., MS plus experD A
School of Music Recital Hal: 8:30 p.m. rg. progdms. Environmental EnIAL-6416
A-.pt gin eer, BS, spec. in env. health. Home USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- ENDS TONIGHT
sNS.ONG HT Ecnomit.NOUNCEfENTS is availabletoofficially
Block's most impressive. assets
fthroughout the evening were his
ability to sustain beautiful pianis-
simos and to shape phrases mu-
sically and sensitively. This was
immediately apparent in his play-
ing of the opening Schubert A,
Major Sonata (Op. 120), parti-
cularly in its first two move-
ments. The finale suffered some-
what from a stop-and-go tendency!
which detracted from its rippling
charm, but it remained convinc-
ing in its musicality.
The Grandados "Goyescas" is
an ambitious suite of six color-
ful and lengthy pieces inspired by
paintings by Goya and depicting
various episodes in the lives of
the "Majos" and "Majas" of Ma-I
drid-serenades, dances, love and
death. Block played each piece
with abundant variety, color and
flexibility and made much of the
diffuse and improvisatory writing
continually interesting. His ob-
vious empathy with the Spanish
idiom, combined with a convinc-
ing personal approach, prevented
the music from becoming a series
of "moments." His balance and
control of the wealth of decora-
tive figuration was impressive,
and "Coloquio," "Majay el rui-
senor" and the "Epilogo" were
particularly satisfying in this re-j
spect. His placing of the supple-
mentary "El Pelele' before the
"Ballade" provided welcome con-
trast.
The Stravinsky "Petrouchka"
its imp ulsiveness. The various
tonal effects in "Chez Petrouch-
ka" were imaginatively and subtly
varied. The finale, "La Semaine
Grasse" is the longest movement
and the hardest to hold together
musically. Block's clear contrasts
between the many episodes'made
it enormously exciting in its cu-
mulative effect.
It was an evening of thoroughly
superior pianism, the highlight,
thus far, of the present series.
Phone 434-0130
Ectna n.CRPENTER ROAD
FIRST OPEN 8:00 P.M. FIRST
RUN NOW SHOWING RUN
when you. ye
got it made... '
Tony Curtis
Shown at
9:35 Only
inpanavision
and metrocolor
ALSO. ..
M-G-M PRESENTsAN ALVIN GANZER PRODUCTION
Dvd
IVIr-allum'"
Shown at
11:20 Only
I' PANAIDN"
and METR1OCOLOR
PLUS..
GRANDAD O RACING"
COLOR CARTOON
4i
I1
VALTER MATTHAU
INGER STEVENS
ROBERT MORSE
V t
,fir:
'
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tGenerat iNotices
Botany Seminar: Dr. Alfred Sussman
will speak on "Control of Germina-
tion in Neurospora Ascospores," Wed.,
July 26, 4:15 p.m., 1139 Natural Science
Bldg.
Doctoral Examination for Allen Ed-
ward Blaurock, Physics; thesis: "X-Ray
!Diffraction Studies of the Myelin
Sheath of Nerve," Wed. July26, Room
629 Physics-Astronomy Bldg,, at 3
p.m. Chairman, C. R. Worthington.
Doctoral Examination for Agnar In-
golfsson. Zoology; thesis: "The Feed-
ing Ecology of Five Species of Large
Gulls (Larus) in Iceland," Thurs.,
July 27, Room 2009 Museums Bldg., at
10 a.m. Chairman, R. W. Storer.
Doctoral Examination for Joan Alice
Philipp, Education; thesis: "The Com-
parison of Motor Creativity with Fig-
ural and Verbal Creativity, and Select-
ed Motor Skills," Thurs., July 27, West
School, at 1 p.m. Chairman, E. L.
Council Room, Rackham Graduate
Schurr.
Doctoral Examination for Judith Es-
r vavurau a 11 eiu z rs. eer NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially
District Nurse, RN, some community recognized and registered student or-
action exper. or LPN, or Med. Corps- ganizations only. Forms are available
Behavioral Research Laboratory, Mur- , *m*1*Ai
ray Hill, N.J.-Research Asst. in Ex-
perimental Psychology. Some trng. past University of Michigan Rifle Club
BA, familiar with electrical or elec- will hold open shooting with .22 caliberI
tronic equip., lab exper. in perception, and pistols on Wed., July 26,
cognition, or learning computer skills. and P. t.es wTC Rfleandil-s
Management Consultants, N.Y.C. and pistols will be furnished and amn-
Corporate Controller, MBA and CPA, munition is available at reduced prices.
10-15 yrs. with organization with pro- Christian Science Organization spon-
gressive acctg. dept. Knows. interna- sors a weekly testimony meeting on
tional banking and business. Jl 7 :083 ~.a 55SB
Compton Advertising, Inc., N.Y.C. -_ July 27, 7:30-8:30 p.m. at 3545 SAB.
Asst. Account Manager, MA in ad. Deutscher Verein will sponsor kaffee-
{mktg., or BA with exper. Asst. Media Destunde aVeeinucilnsponvrskatfen-
Buyer, degree and interest in adv., stunde: kaffee. kuchen, konversation,
1ability to deal with figures. Junior Wed., July 26 3-5 p.m 3050 Friee
Copywriter, degree, writer-idea creator,, Bldg.
foreign language asset, oppor. for some Far Eastern Language Institute pre-
foreign assignments. sents Prof. Richard T. Thompson, of'
** * Georgetown University, who will speak
For further information please call on "Chinese Lexotactics: From Clause
764-7460, General Division, Bureau of to Sentence" at 7:30 p.m., July 26 in
Appointments, 3200 SAB. Room 25 of the Michigan Union.
P~ramAfl ~Ct-
in Color
1:00-3:00-5:00
7:10-9:20
The fine
suspense classic-
"DIABOLIQU E"
and
"Counterfeit Constable"
---THURSDAY--
ROMAN POLANSKI S
"An Absolute Kockout
Of A Movie!"
-Bnsfey Crowther, New York'Times,
A ROYAL FILMS INTERNATIONAL PRESENTATION
HELD OVER
3rd WEEK
"in the tradition
of 'Dear John'
makes 'Dear John'
look likeafairy
tale. Would you
believe 'Virginia
Woolf' looking
like a. Sunday
go-to-meetin?
-World Journol Tribune
"I, a man... enjoyed!"
I
MICHIGAN
DIAL 5-62901
ENDING THURSDAY
pe.entsarnod PA w
WALLIS "Wake up!
PRODUnON* M ake love!
" t ' Fall over yt
laughing~ll. :
anid
I, AWoman
Show Times:
Mon. thru Thurs. 7-9
q'-7
f
I
. :_
26IdWAAiritVWA
U Ll~ ~~A~D~ui Eu HUED U'>U > :t:i: i! !" <fl 31
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