Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October $; 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 8, 1969 Forum set RACISM CHARGED: Hearing DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ............ .....- ... '%-A' -NL- %, FL. - - on street disorders (Continued from Page 1) "We feel it completely inap- propriate to give aid or comfort in any way to the self-proclaimed revolutionary groups whose sole aim as publicly stated has been to breed revolution within the schools of the community," the report states. The area would include several indoor and outdoor coffee and coke houses, book and magazine shops, and a speakers' stand "available to anyone who felt he had something to say." In addition, a mini-park would be included in the arrangement. which would have the advantage, of being close to the other activi- ties. "Presently, these places (parks) are generally removed from loca- tions which would give such a choice of activities," the majority report states. The Community Interaction Pro- ject-as the youth area is called - could also sponsor casual and informal seminars on topics which are of concern to youth. As a whole, the project appears to be an attempt to provide young people with a satisfactory facil- ity in which 'to channel needs which, the report says, are par- tially provided for on S. Univer- sity Ave. "The project is intended to sat- isfy the needs of a particular and important segment of the young community." Faber explains, "that segment which was intimately in- volved in the confrontations which took place on S. Univer- sity. And here is where the b a s i c disparity between the two reports lies. The majority report consid- ers the segment to be junior and senior high school students, while the minority reports points to "revolutionary elements" as the major segment. And these groups, the minority report says, would not be deterred from another takeover of S. Uni- versity Ave. by the majority re- port's recommendations. Black student group held on to \try' Law School ROTC 7 Continued from Page 1) University of Michigan Law School: --"Of the 1,150 students at the University of Michigan Law School, 38 are Black. -"The University of Michigan Law School reneged on its agree- nent to increase the Black student population by 50 this year. -"Of the 70 administrators and; faculty members at the University of Michigan Law School, none are Black. -"The University of Michigan Law School reneged on its promise to hire Black faculty members for this school year. -"After only one semester, the University of Michigan Law School dropped the two most relevant courses to the needs of Black; people (Race Relations Law and Poverty Law>. -"The University of Michigan Law School has added no new courses with particular relevance to the legal needs of Black people." Prof. Robert Harris, a member of the Law School's six-man spe- cial admissions policy committee, yesterday differed with the blacks' recollection of the decisions on admitting blacks. Oct. 15 strl widespread Cont inued from Page 1) day in the Law School in favor of the strike," Cohen adds. Added support from the Uni- versity has been coming in daily. So far Student Government Coun- cil, Young Democrats and student groups in at least 10 colleges and departments have declared their support for the action. Faculty members in these same colleges and departments also have: indicated support for the strike. And Monday Senate Assembly, the representative faculty body, en- dorsed the moratorium. "Our committee agree would admit as many qua black students possible unde formula," he said. "We agre no quota." d we alified er our eed on The Daily Official Bulletin is an Official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3528 L.S.A. Bldg., before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publi- cation 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 organizations notices a r e By SHARON WEINER The "Moral' Significance" of ROTC in relation to the Univer-' sity was one of the primary prob- Harris said the committee of lems discussed during last night's not accepted for publication. For four faculty members and two stu- open hearing on the ROTC report I ore information, phone 764-9270. dents admitted 50 students, but released by the Academic Affairs WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8 only 17 accepted. The committee Committee of Senate Assembly handled approximately 125 appli- last week. .e cations. The criteria was "hard data" meeting which was sponsored by , Anatomy Seminar: Dr. Theodore V. including LSAT scores and ad- the committee at the request of Fischer, Dept. of Anatomy, "Local justed 'grade points, and "soft Assembly, the faculty representa- Uterine Regulation of the Corpus data" including high school per- tive body. Luteum"; 4804 Medical Science IL formance, improvement in college, 1:00 p.m. outside jobs, interviews sometimes The report includes a majority Computer, Information and con- done by black law students, and report which calls for eliminating trol Engineering Seminar: Donald P. interest in civil rightsactivity. financial support for ROTC and Gaer, Professor of Statistics, Care eie abolshig acdemc crditandI Mellon University, "Queens and Corn- Assistant Dean for Admissionsabolishing academic credit and puters": 275 West Engineering. 4:00 atthew McDaey, a advissos tdepartmental status for ROTC in p.m. the special admissions committee the University. A minority report Botany Seminar: Dr. George M. Van tihe ejeedass o iommattey' recommends complete severance Dyne, Colorado State Univ., "The Chal- said he r'ejected approximately of the program from the Univer- lenge of Systems Ecology"; Botanical half the applications before they Sity.Gardens, 4:10 p.m. reached committee because he Russian and East European Studies felt the applicants did not have The report will be presented to Lecture: Miklos Molnar, Specialist on sufficient potential. Senate Assembly on Oct. 20. Final East European Affairs and History of action on the recommendations is the socialist Movement, "Budapest and McCauley said he sent letters up to the Regents. Prague--A Comparison": Auditorium C.r to pre-law advisors across the "The r . r Angell Hall, 4:10 p.m. The Utvesity canst operate ioComputer Lecture: Rice Carnahan, state and to the presidents of a vacuum," Marcy Denmark, '71, Professor of Chemical Engineering and many big city universities. The said last night. "As a committee, Biostatistics, "The FORTRAN IV Pro- members of BLSA were also free,'you're obligated to relate this gramming Language-III": Natural to recruit. , Science Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. question to society as a whole.d Museum of Paleontology, Department "The committee has by-passed of Geology and Mineralogy and Sigma the issue," agreed Donald Sulli- Xi Lecture: Ermine Cowles Case Me- van, Grad. "The committee has morial Lecture: Porter M. Kier. U. S. equivocted on its position. It iNational Museum, "Living Habits of should define the University's role I Fossil and Recent Echinoids": Rack- before decing this Unise.s r ham Amphitheater, 8:00 p.m. before deciding this issue." University Player] (Department of "When you let ROTC go, you Speech): The Balcony by Jean Genet: also lose what control you have Trueblood Theater, 8:00 p.m. over the training of the military," '1'The Stanley Quartet: Gilbert Ross, ansere c-chirmnviolin; Gustave Rosseels. violin; Rn- "At least one-third to one-halfaswered committee h aert Courte, viola; Jerome Jelnek, of the faculty will commit them- Prof. Theodore Buttrey. He added cello; Rackham Lecture Hall, 8:00 p.m. one side of the paper on regular manu- script sized paper. Submit two copies at 1220 Angell Hall by December 1, 1969 Placemtent Service 3200 S.A.B. GENERAL DIVISION National Security Admin applicd ue tyday. Oct. 8 for Oct. 18 test. Current Position openings received by Gen. Div., by mail and phone, not interviews on campus, call 764-7460 for further iformation: Owens Corning Fiberglas Corp, Tol- edo, Ohio: Patent attyn, graduate w/ tech under grad degrees and 2-5 years exper in patent applic. Also EE or physics degree with desire to get law degree, to complete law educ. dur- ing, employment. Abbott Laboratories, Chicago, Ill.: In- dustrial and project engrs. BS ME, IE, exper up to 2 yrs mgr, cost acctg. BS plus 3-5 yrs. Software spec, BS plus 2 yrs cyst engr. Programmer, BS pius 1 year. Syst Analyst, BS. Site Construc- tion Engr, ME plus 3 yrs pref, foreign lang pref. Mc Rel, (Mid-Continent Regional Educational Laboratory), Kansas City, Mo. - Research and Evaluation spec- ialist. PhD soc sci plus computer prog courses. Dickinson County Hospitals, Iron Mt, Mich.: Med Technol, and Lab tech. Robertson and Associates, Inc., Ne- wark, N.J.: Management Consultants in areas of engrg, mktg, and invest- ment. VP level jobs, part commissions , education in tech areas with bus trng. and exper in consulting, or butsiness exper. - - --. - - - -- ALtCE'S RESTAUR~ANT" Our Classifieds Bring Results. *in- ....COUPON - -- --. I* * T OPSON'S i PIZZA I ! c ! B 71T-0001 off Q 50c[] offf !I SLorae one item (or more) Ia * nzzo. One coupon per oizzo I ! Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs. Only OCT. 6-9 S---- --- at THE HOUSE tisEEeek 1429 HILL STREET "PORTNOY'S COMPLAINT- EROS, ETHOS OR Voss IS DOSS."/ HRC submits report Continued from Page l dresses denoting a certain level of job. Not only am I concerned about discrimination, but also about upgrading." Mildred Officer remarked "We (HRC) are trying to get better re- lations with the poor community, but we can't do anything with the University where so many of them are employed." The Commission decided to try and seek closer cooperation with the University and to ask William Cash, University director of hu- man relations, to discuss the Uni- versity's employment and promo- tion policies. selves in advance to not holding classes," maintains English Prof. Nick Mills, faculty coordinator for Mobe. "And I think this is con- servative estimate." Some staff members are report- edly also interested in participa- ting in the Oct. 15 strike. Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith is expected to issue a statement today explaining wheth- er the University will permit non- academic employees to participate in the moratorium. Steering committee member Marty Halpern, Grad, who is in charge of labor contacts, says members of locals 600. 251 and 51 of the United Auto Workers, and Teamsters Local 654 have in- dicated support for the Oct. 15 strikt. These groups may send dele--ations to tihe ally, Halpern says. Prof. John M. Armstrong, of the environmental and water re- sources engineering program in the civil engineering department, has been appointed by the U.S. Corps of Engineers to serve on the technical advisory board for the Great Lakes systems analysis pr'oTra m. The board will work closely with the Great Lakes Basin Commis- sion in establishing a comprehen- sive program in mathematical mo- deling of the Great Lakes. The advisory board is nade up of members selected from universi- ties and other institutions though- out the country. that the question of morality was mraised in committee meetings, but said it is not the task of the com- nittee to answer the question at this time. "Our function is to make rec- ommendations to Senate Assembly on ROTC's position in the Uni- versity," e x p 1 a in e d committee! mnember Prof. Donald Brown. "We're saying if the Defense De- partment can't accept these con- ditions. ROTC should become ex- tracurricular." In response to a question asking why the University had not pre- pared such a report earlier, Prof. James O'Neil, replied, "Inertia. These ROTC programs were con- ceived in crisis and no one both- ered with them afterwards." Several people also asked if the committee knew how the depart- ment of defense would react to the report. "A year ago they would have cut ROTC from the campus in- stead of complying with our rec- ommendations," said B u t t r e y. "Now, we believe they will accept modification." General Notices Graduate Assemblyleeting tonight: 7:30 p.m.; Rackham. 1968 University of Michigan Biblio- graphy: Forms for bibliographic in- formation forsthe 1968 University of Michigan Bibliography were mailed in April, 1969, to faculty and staff mem- bers at their home addresses. Any University employee who has publica- tions to report for the calendar year 1968 and who did not receive the form should call the ORA Editorial Office, 764-4277. Elizabeth Sargent Lee Medical History' Prize: Established in 1939 by Prof. Al- fred O. Lee, a member of the faculty from 1908 to 1938. The income from the bequest is to be awarded to junior or senior premedical students in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts for writing the best essay on some topic concerning the history of medi- cine. Freshmen in Medical School who are on the Joint Program in Liberal Arts and Medicine or who were ad-" mitted after their junior year in LSA are also eligible. Judges: Professors Frank Whitehouse, Jr., Chairman, Carl- ton F. Wells and Frederick H. Test. Consultation with committee members by appointment. Prizes of $150 and $100. Manuscripts, 3.000 to 5,000 words should be typed, double spaced on Collegiate Ca-Ed WINTER VACATIONS Israel & Europe from $425 Including Airfare, Hotels, Most Meals, Sightseeing, Transfers and Special Features DEPARTURE DATES 10 Days Israel Only-Dec. 23 & 25 10 Days Israel Rome-Dec. 25 15 Di's Israel Only-Dec. 24&25 12 Days Spain-Dec. 24 & Mar, 25i 22 Days Spain-Dec. 23 22 Days Israel, Greece, Spain-Dec. 28 8-DAY CARIBBEAN AIR CRUISES Departures Dec. 20, 26; Jan. 2, 3.. Mar. 27, 28. Fly to Caribbean, then cruise the islands! $294 from NY Get all the facts about these great special collegiate vacations. Mail coupon for free booklet. ------------------- -n - j EASTOURS INC./ i Attn. Mrs. Engel 1 24250 Gardner 1 Oak Park, Michigan 48237 / Tel. UN 4-7096 I Please rush Free booklet on 1 *Collegiate Vacations to: SName . . * - - - -*-- -- - - I :Address.. I City, State, Zip ........... . I========== W EDNESDAY, OCT. 8 8:00 P.M. PROF. MARVI N FELHEIM, English Dept. PROF. ALEXANDER Z. GUIORA, Chief Psychologist at the Neuropsychiatric Institute, University Hospital MODERATOR-ROBERT ROCKAWAY F-- --- - - I a Rom Read (d Use D~ailyClass ifieds Join the diversified world of Martin Marietta Subscribe To THE MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 764-0558 FREAKS, [RATS.TC. Let the 1970 Michiganensian represent the whole University Choose a look. Norelco w help you keep it. Choose any look. Make it yours. Tnen Nore co will help you keep it. Because no matter which ook you choose, your beard still grows. It still needs to be trimmed and snaved. Norelco handles that. 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Each location offers opportunities for continuing education with financial support. Representative on campus Wed. &Thr. C. 15. 16 SENIOR LAST WEEK TO SIGN UP F ,