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May 19, 1967 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1967-05-19

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MAY 19

1ame Tots, niper
ttaek on Student Unrest

'Cold, Hard Facts'

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN,

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dominantly white University of
Houston.
A professor at TSU said, "Those
demonstrations in March were like
an axe blow in the skull" to the
students and classroom concentra-
tion had been low since.
Tuesday had been a busy day for
TSU protesters.
Students joined protests at the
garbage dump and at a junior
high school where 16 white and
Negro students had been suspend-
ed for fighting.

By JILL CRABTREE
"God grant me the serenity to
accept the things I cannot change,
courage to change the things I can,
and wisdom always to tell the dif-
ference."
A man and a woman, both
middle-aged, sit in the cluttered
kitchen of an old house. The man
is repeating his daily prayer for
the benefit of his wife, who sits
by his side like a trusting child,
quietly admiring him.
The time, the 1940's, perhaps. The
place-America, probably the mid-
west. The man-is an alcoholic.
That fact is both a cause and a
result of the life he leads from day
to day, for these people have lived
together many years, and few
things have happened to them in
that time.
They once loved each other pas-
sionately. But the woman is no
longer pretty and the man no
longer virile. The man gave up
medical school and became a
chiropractor to marry and sup-
port the. woman. Their first baby,
the reason for their early mar-
riage, died. They could have no
more children. These are the cold,
hard facts of their existence.
The way each of them lives with
these facts is a contrast and a
complement to the other. Their
prayer for serenity, courage, and
wisdom is not answered daily.
Rather, they live in a cycle.
The man is courageous-he triest
to reform himself. The woman ac-
cepts her lot and tries to find
litle things to make her life
brighter - the conversation of
milkman and mailman. Then, the
man begins to wish, silently but
always more insistently, that his
life had been different. The
woman, too, lives in the past, but
she remembers only the good
things. In her reverie, she forgets
to try and make her husband's life
as livable as she can. They become

increasingly dissatisfied. An in-
cident brings the facts of their
life home to them, the man gets
drunk, and the cycle begins again.
Alfred R. Reilly as Doc is too
resigned for his role as a man
with a fragment of drive. He does
not bring out the cyclical nature
of his role to the fullest. It is only,
in the words he says, rather than
in the manner he says them, that
one can see his increasing de-
spair.
Veitch Reinhart, playing the
wife, shows in contrast an ex-
cellent development of character.
The high point of her portrayal
comes when her husband gets
drunk once again: The audience
is let in on her private world of
hopelessness. Then, she "gets
busy" and makes the house beau-
tiful for her husband's return from
the City Hospital where he has
been taken for the "cure."
Marie, a boarder in the house-
hold, provides a picture for Doe of
his wife as she once was. Played
by Rosalyn Berlinger, she is more
superficial than she needs to be,
as if she had merely read the
role and let it go at that.
The supporting actors are com-
petent in their portrayals, with the
exception of the milkman, played
by Roger Trim, who is too ill-at-
ease for his virile role.

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Micnigan 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 Satarday 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 mbore
information call 7$4-9*270.
FRIDAY, MAY 19
Day Calendar
Institute of Science and Technology
Workshop-" The Computer and Today's
Manager": Engineering Society of De-
troit Aud., Rackham Memorial, Detroit,
Registration, 8 a.m.
Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem-
inar-"Management by Objectives":
Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. to 3:15 p.m.
General Notices
Computing Center. Course: The Com-
puting Center announces a short course
"The Use of the IBM 360/67 MTS Sys-
tem, including Fortran IV." Fri., May
26, 1-5 p.m., Room 1400 Chemistry Bldg.
Registration not necessary. Inquiries
may be addressed to Prof. Bernard A.
Qaller,
Astronomical Colloquium: Room 807
Physics-.Astronomy Bldg. Prof. William
P. Bidelman, Department of Astronomy,
University of Michigan, will speak on
"The Northwestern Space-Spectroscopy
Symposium and the Paris Abundances
Conference," Fri., May 19, 4 p.m.
Doctoral Examination for Douglas
Holcombe Armstrong, Romance Lan-
guages and Literatures: Spanish; thes-
is: "The Novel of the Spanish Civil
war-a Thematic Appraisal-1936-1960,"
Fri., May 19, Room 2072 Frieze Bldg.,
at 10 a.m. Chairman, M. Z. Hafter.
Placement

ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Regular Peace Corps. Test-Given this
Sat., May 20. at 1:30 p.m. at Down-
town Branch of Post Office, Main at
Catherine Sts. Bring ,completed applica-
tion to test.
Reminder to FSEE Applicants-Those
holding accepted applications for the
May 20 test, test is 8:30 a.m., 220 N.
Main St., Downtown Branch of Post
Office Next test open for application
is August 12, applications due July 12.
Forms available at Bureau of Appoint-
ments.
POSITION OPENINGS:
-Armstrong Cork Co., Lancaster, Pa.
-Staff Economist, PhD in Econ., abil-
ities and interests in forecasting and
analysis. Bkgd. in mgmt. ol., emphasis
on decision theory. Will be in a. position
where have direct personal contact with
senior members of company, good ad-
vancement possibilities.
United Planning Organization, Wash.,
ORGAN IZATION
NOTICES
Ai

D.C.-Staff Attorney to work in general
counsel's office, advise mgmt., nego-
tiate contracts, litigation emphasis. Law
school graduate. Immediate need.
Burroughs Wellcone & Co., Tuckahoe,
N.Y.-Pharmaceutical sales, desire BA
level degrees in pharmacy, biological
or chemical sciences, no previous exper.
necessary. Recently increasd salary
scal. Booklet available at Bureau.
* * *
For further information please call
764-7460, General Division, Bureau of
Appointments, 3200 SAB.
SVNIMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE:
212 SAB--
Summer Placement Service Hours -
1:30-5 p.m., Monday-Friday, 212 SAB,
Lower Level.
Phone 434-0190
E&A"" 0+tCARPENTER ROAD
OPEN 7:00
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NOUNCEMENTS is available to }officially
recognized and registered student or-
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Folk Dance Club (WAA), Folk dance
with instruction open to everyone, Fri.,
May 19, 8-11 p.m., Barbour Qym.
B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, Sab-
bath service, theme: "Israel Independ-
ence Day," Fri., May 19, 7:15 p.m.,
Zwerdllng-Cohn Chapel at the Hillel
Foundation.
B'nai B'ritr Hillel Foundation, Picnic
celebrating Israel's Independence Day,
Sun., May 21, 1-5 p.m, Dexter-Huron-
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-Associated Press
POISONOUS PAPER
DR. PHILIP W. WEST, Boyd Professor of chemistry at Louisiana
State University, adjusts equipment he used in isolating the toxic
element selenium in cigarette papers. West cited "circumstantial
evidence" suggesting relationship between selenium and cancer.

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