Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, October 2, 1969 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, October 2, 1969 REQUEST CLOTHING FUNDS: Welfare mothers protest today i Untinued fron Page 1) funds for pre-school children going to nursery schools or day-care centers, and mothers who worked in schools or other places where they work with the public. In response to the WRC pro- posal, the board requested the committee to supply the figures on the total cost of the proposal to the county. WRC then surveyect each of the families it represented and came ROTC report feleaed Continued from Page 1) University and the ROTC pro- grams. The University has been contributing free classroom space in North Hall, and pays for secre- taral services, and some supplies for the programs. The total worth of the Univer- sity financial assistance to the programs is valued near $350,000 ner year. Under the terms of the commit- te report, no departmental status would be accorded to the ROTC programs. Currently, they are list- ed in the LSA catalog as the De- partments of Military Science, t ArmyF, Naval Science, and Air Science. In addtion. the reports asks that ROTC instructors not be given an academic title unless they actuaily have degrees. up with an average clothing cost of $120 per person. In August, WRC submitted this figure to the Social Services Board and demanded an addition- al allowance of $109 per person -$120 minus the $11 from the state. The Board said they would con- sider it. Meanwhile, the County Board of Supervisors recommiended a plan which would indirectly provide the money requested by the WRC, without requiring a specific ap- propriation for school clothing. The board recommended that the Social Services Board give $50 to each family joining the fed- erally-funded food stamp pro- gram. The families would use $36 of the $50 to buy food stamps, which could buy $96 worth of food. The families would thus save a total of $110 - $96 plus the $14 left from the $50. f Although the Supervisors never; stated so publicly, it was widely believed that the $110 was in-E tended to be used for purchasing school clothing. Informed sources say the sup- ervisors did not want to appear' to be interfering with the school clothing dispute - which t h e y have repeatedly said is the prob- lem of the Social Services Board, WRC reaction to the supervis- ors proposal was unfavorable, ac- cording to attorney Stewart. WRC responded to the board's proposal in a letter dated Aug, 27, which denounced the food stamp' program as "unworkable and un- plopular." time. Others should receive two flu shots at an interval of two weeks orC more. On Aug. 29, the Social Services Board passed a resolution direct- ing the County Social Services Department to distribute $16.50 to each elegible ADC recipient. This figure, combined with the $11 from the state, brought the total' school clothing allowance toa $27.50. WRC found this sum to be in-: sufficient but temporarily aban- doned their attempts for a addi- tional funds. During September, the Citizens Committee for School Clothing-' a group of middle class mothers-{ took up the cause of the ADC mothers. The committee demanded that the Supervisors allocate funds to pay for school clothing. However, the Supervisors re- fused saying they had no money, available for such an appropri- ation.; Last week, WRC drew up a corn- promise proposal and submitted it to the Social Services Board at their meeting Monday. The new proposal reduced the imme- diate request from $120 to $73 50.! Taking into account the $27.50: already appropriated, the county was required to allocate only $46 immediately. The proposal further requested that the Board recommend to the Board of Supervisors that they allocate sufficient funds in their 1970 budget to pay an additional $46.50 per child - the difference between the $120.00 and $73.50. The Social Services Board said Monday they would consider the proposal and sent it to the Board of Supervisors. Thl Supervisors accepted. Committee plans re form (Continued from Page 1) According to Van Der Hout and committee chairman Daniel Hol- loran, student control is non- negotiable. They said the other parts of the proposals are open to discussion. The moderate Coalition for Ra- tional Student Power has proposed several alternatives. One plan calls for the policy board to be composed of one stu- dent, one faculty member and one administrator, while another asks the policies be made by five stu- dents, three faculty members and one administrator. Other proposals are being drawn up by various faculty members. Meanwhile, attorneys for the defense plan a 9 p.m. meeting for all students arrested during the LSA Bldg. sit-in on the second floor of the Student Activities Bldg. tonight. Attorneys ask ar'- rested persons should -bring their trial date and time to the meeting. Demonstrators attend 'mill-in' (Continued from Page 1) favorite service tunes. Mill-in participants started about 35 strong from the DiagI at 1:30 p.m., and marched straight through the lobby of the LSA Bldg. to the recruiters' offices. A ragged "HoHoHo Chi Minh, NLF is going to win" chant sounded occasionally as the protesters marched along. F s over pkis to keep fighting crim1e WASHINGTON )-- White House sources say FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, dinner party host to President Nixon last night, has given no indication he will retire on his 75th birthday Jan. 1. They say they know nothing to support renewed widespread spec- ulation Hoover was contemplating stepping down in the near future. The possibility of Hoover's re- tirement has cropped up from time to time ever since 1965 when former President Lyndon B. John- son waived the mandatory federal retirement age of 70 for the FBI director. President Nixon continued the waiver. During the recent controversy over who authorized an FBI wire- tap of the late Dr. Martin Luther King's telephone in the early 1960's former Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark suggested Hoover's useful- ness had come to an end. "I think, perhaps, the time has come when he should retire, both in the interests of his own career, which has been distinguished and in the interests of the FBI. which has been a great investigative agency," Clark said. In an interview with the Asso- ciated press last May, however, Hoover said he has no intntion of retiring. "As long as God grants me the health and the stamina to con- tinue I have no ambition other, than to remain in my post as di- rector of the FBI," Hoover said. The short, bulldog-faced Hoover has headed the FBI since Presi- dent Calvin Coolidge named him to the post in 1924. Longa symbol of law and order, Hoover enjoys the respect of Nixon and Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell. Neither Nixon nor Mitchell have given any sign that age 75 repre- sents a magic number to be trans- lated into automatic retirement for Hoover. On the contrary, perhaps because of concern about fulfilling a 1968 Nixon campaign pledge to counter crime, they seemed pleased that Hoover con- tinues to direct the FBI. Hoover was the frist holdover federal official that Nixon, as President-elect said he would re- tain. The FBI chief was one of the first government officeholders-in- vited to join the President for an overnight stay last spring, at the chief executive's Camp Dav'id ie- treat in Maryland's Catoctin Mountains. Wednesday night, Hoover be- came the first government official of any rank to be visited in Ps home by the chief executive. Joining Nixon and Hoover for the occasion were Mitchell and John D. Ehrlichman, ,counsel to the President. NEW FASHION EXCITEMENT! 1121 S. University P.S. Panty Hose by Hanes SDS LOCK-IN TRIAL: PART III CONFRONTATION ON WAR REEARCH Featuring: A. GEOFFREY NORMAN U of M Research Veep TODAY, Aud. C, Angell Hall :3 0 P M y WARNING: U of MMayBe Fatal! DAILY OFFI( The Daily Official liulletin Official publication of the sity of Michigan. Notices shl sent in TNPwiWRITTEN Itoom :;5?8 L. SA. Bldg., ? p.m. of the day preceding cation and by ' p.m. Fri Saturday and Sunday. Notices may be publisheda mum of two tihes on reqte Calendar items appear on Student organizations notic not accepted for publicati more information, phone 76-1 TlHttRSDAY, OCTOBEI IDay Cal en, l)epartmcnt of Speech (Stu Theater) 'The Sandbox by Fm bee: Arena Theater, Frieze 1:10 p.1m. Stearns Collection of Music mnents Lecture: Robert A. Wa -essor of Music, assisted by D 'ecortlor, "T'reaeimre Redwi i.ckham Amapi8t0heater, :1 General Net C JAL NT tt oodrow Wilson Fellowships: Nom- inations for Woodrow Wilson Fellow- ships and Designates for first year grad- -uatework leading to a career in college n is an teaching are due October 20. Only Univer- faculty members may nominate candi- ould be dates. Eligible for nomination are men o r in to and wonen of outstanding ability who before are seniors, or gratuates not now en- g publi- roled in a graduate school, or grad- day for now in the armed forces who will General b,' free to enter a graduate school In a maxi- 197M-71. Seniors who next semester est; Day be double enroled in the Literary ce only. l and in the Graduate School are es a r e e be To give nominees sufficient on. For t ite to prepare and submit the re- -9270. o - -dentials, faculty members it ireued to send in their nominations ryas possible, although letters omakedl Octocber 20 will be ac- t rters of nom ination shmouldt in- ideit Lab ctu1e'the student's field of concen- tward Al-ti-ation, his local address and tele- Building. phoe and should be sent to pro- ttor Ott G : Department of at Instru- (rmn. 1073 Friczc Building, Univer- rner, Pro- st of Mihigan ale Bonge. .mir , Interested indvanced study coVered": atI a taching career whose academic p.m. perfo>mmae merits nomination f o r %''- ;rowWilson fellowships may con- mt tne campus representative, Pro- esr orri sGreenhut, 1616 Haven. Placement Service: 3?00 S.A.B. GENERtAL DIVISION Current Position openings received by General Division by mail and phone, not inteviews on campus. call 764- 7460 for application detail. State of Washington: Program Analv- st. BA in bus or public admin and I year in butget wk. Research Assistant, work in state anal. ELA in soc econ. xv courses in statma(-ug. Research Sj,-ialist, n all orM, with:grad train- ing or experin m ae - vet tor, medic.l related work, PhD 'i h work in sac, bol, ph, sei and Sisome exper, or MA and 2 hears exper. Education Professions Development Co- ord. MA in ed plus 2 years teaching consult, c. Oradineer Maagement Consultant: Manage- ment T1'rainoe for finance company. de-' gree, no exper. Corporate Attoney, ex- per mnot necess, preferred some exper. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Bach Club meeting: Thuis., Oct. 2 8.00; 1236 Washtenaw tat S. Forest near S. Univ.) Speaker: Randolph Smith, "How Beautiful, Interesting and Ex- citing the 1st Movemenit of Bach's Can- tata 35 Is". Refreshments and fun afterwards. Everyone welcome! No muscal knowledge necessary. For info. call 663-2827, 665-6806, or 761-7356. South and Southeast Asia Club Brown Bag, Oct. 3. 12 noon, Commons Room, Lane Hall, Speaker: Prof. George Sim- inons, Popular Planning Center, "Pop- ulation Planning in South Asia." Theta Sigma Phi, national profes- sional organization for women in jour- ralism and communications, is hold- ing a open rush meeting on Sunday, Oct. 5 at 7:30 p.m. in room 3-D of time Mieimin Union to give interested women the opportunity to meet the active members and to learn more about Theta Sigma Phi. Also planned is a panel of Theta Sigs who held media jobs the past summer. U of M1 Folk Dance Club: Avi will teach Israeli dances this Friday, 8-9 p m., Barbour Gym. Requests after- ward. BUFFY SAINTE MARIE October 4! Flu Shots:C l"luc Shot" Cimi', -ath Service, Thursday. October 2 and Wed- nesday, October 15 from 8:00 - 11:30 amm. and 1:00 - 4:30 jmn. $2.00 for atudents and student spouses and s300 for faculty, staff and their spouses. Persons who have had a flu shot sincee 1967 need only one shot at this A New Bold Publication- (M) 60-60 60-60 Christmas 1969 Acapolco $399 London $319 Rome $399 Trip includes: Transportation Accommodations Meals plus all possible x-tras! Contact: EMU: EILEEN ELLIS 483-6100 RM. 817 Hill For A New Bold GenerationI THE 1970 e .... ws...w s s . s ww " w . s w s~ s . s w s s~ NOW is the time to buy your MICHIGANENSIAN The University of Michigan Yearbook just return this card with 57.00 (check or money order payable to the " MICI-IGANENSIAN) to the Student Publications Building, 420 May- * nard. A receipt will be sent within 3 weeks after your order is received. r r r NAME_-- I r ! ANN ARBOR ADDRESS ! r MAILING INSTRUCTIONS: a S l additional charge if you wish the I r! book mailed anywhere in the world. I ( . I ! £ Schol(e.g. LSA, etc.) ----- ----' I * - - - aaa -- -a ma a a a - - - - a - a- -- -- -- -- -- -- r ain eve for c. ,' . - DL 75137 NOTHING ESCAPES THE ATTACK OF TERENCE, CCAI/f1dn'