Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 15, 1969 ,:, . THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 15, 1969 U U INTERN ATIONAL CONVENTION: Parliamentary move 'U' hosts remote sensing meeting blocks House debate By PAT MAHONEY Is man as a species doomed to extinction or will he improvethe; conditions under which he lives? Dr. Thomas Malone, senior vice president of The Travelers Insur- ance Company, told the Sixth In- ternational Symposium on Re- mote Sensing of Environment last night he is optimistic ecological problems will be solved although there are "symptoms that all is not well." Nation sets ititwratontur .. Continued from Page 1) United Nations to St. Patrick's Cathedral. Names of war dead will be read at Trinity Church at the head of Wall Street, where brokers, traders and financiers are expected to take part in a noon memorial service. In Washington, the widow of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., is expected to lead thousands of marchers on a candlelight parade around the White House. The moratorium, meanwhile, has reached the point where headquarters in Washington has little to do with what h a p p e n s today. Peggy Shaker. director of the volunteers who continue to pour into th2 headquarters, now has them readying mailing lists for Nov. 13-14, the two-day November sequel to this month's single day observance in the committee's plan of escalating dissent. Moratorium leaders have de- clared that if November's demon- strations fail to pressure the ad- ministration to call an end to the war, a three-day moratorium will be held in December. If that fails to produce results, say leaders, longer moratoriums will be held every month. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 'The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 358 8L.S.A. Bldg. before z p.m. of the preceding publi- cation and by 2 p.m. Friday for Sat urday and Sunday items appear~ once, stuldent orgaizationi notics5 are Rot accepted for publication. For more information, phone 76- WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15 Day (calendar International symposium of Remote sensing of Environment: First Session: Rackham Lecture Hall, 8:00 a m. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Black Graduates and Pofeasional students Mass Meeting Oct. 15, 1969 at 700 p.m.. Union Assembly Hall. Leadership Conference, Oct. 24, 5:00 p.m, Oct. 26, High Scope Lodge in Clinton, Michigan. $16.00. Call 764-7416 or sign tip soon at 1001 Stud. Act. Bldg, Office of Student Affairs. University Lutheran Chapel, Oct. 15. 10:00 p.. 1511 Washtenaw, Student- Led Service. 7:00 - 10:00 p.m. Peace V~igil. The Symposium is meeting inI the Rackham Bldg. this week. Sponsored by the Institute of Sci- ence and Technology and t h ej Willow Run Laboratories, a n d Agricultural Research Service of the Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Geological Survey. During the past three million years, Dr. Malone said, the human race's capacity to improve 1if e conditions have been constrain- ed. Now man is in a unique period in his history because a combina- tion of this "mastery of matter and energy and of information and the ability to couple these" have removed old limits, Malone said. Earlier generations were held back by a lack of knowledge, Ma- lone said, and he urged the aud- ience to use the new capabilities to eliminate shortages of food, clothing, housing and other things1 the human race needs. However this new ability may be eliminated by current prob- lems, Malone declared. Among these are the threat of a nuclear disaster, the population explosion, the gap between developed and underdeveloped countries and the quality of the human environ- mnent. To deal with these problems, Malone recommended a new re- newal that would be entirely dif- ferent institutional arrangement that has developed, and a new commitment to bring actions into congruence with stated beliefs. After the speech, a panel discus- sion on effective use of environ- mental data was held. Panelists i n c l u d e d Harvey Banks, chairman of the board of organization of consulting engin- eers in San Francisco, Bruce Cook, a mnember of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization in Australia. Dr. David Jenkins of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources, and Dr. Roger Tomlinson, vice president of the General Computer Corporation in Ottawa. Dr. Stanley Cain of the Natural Resources School was moderator. The discussion considered ex- panding the use of available data. Department of Speech (Student Lab Theater): Birthday Present and Pur- gatory: Arena Theater, Frieze Building, 4:10 pm. String Department student Recital: Scool of Music Recital Hall. 5:00 p.m. Computer Lecture: B'rice Carnahan, Professor of hCemical Engineering and Biostatistics, "The IBM 360 67 Comput- in,. System and MTS": Natural Set- ence Auditorium. 7:30 p.m. G' eneal Notices "F111 Shot" Clinic, Health Service, Wednesdaiy, October 15 from 8:00-11:30 ram and 1 :00-4:30 p c $200 for stu- dents and student spouses and $3.00 for faculty, staff and their spouses. Per- sons who have had a flu shot since 1967 need only one shot at this time Others should receive two flu shots at an interval of two weeks or more. Representatives from the Law School of Harvard University will be in 1223 Aiigell Hall on Thursday evening, Oc- tober 29 at 7:30 to meet with students interested in the study of law. A representative from Case Western Reserve Law School will be in the For years scientists have collect- ed data, but this is often not avail- able to users in a form that helps them, Banks said. More users must be made aware of the data and its potentials. Applications outside the federal government, Banks said, should be considered. Jenkins said the University's Department of Natural Resources has wanted to use environmental sensing to determine environment-l al abnormalities, map the physical environment and count animals and fish. He asked why some in- formation had been classified. None of the basic techniques of environmental sensing, Holter' claimed, are classified. He added By WALTER SHAPIRO the classified materials "in them- Daily Washington Correspondent selves have no immediate appli- After more than four hours of cation to the civilian sector." fte ye th hous of One barrier to this Banks said debate yesterday the House of is that the agencies that collect Representatives voted 112-110 to data often do not communicate adjourn, thus blocking an attempt with those that use it. This hap- to stage an all-night teach-in on pens on projects funded by state the Vietnam War. and federal agencies and among The marathon session, planned units of the federal government' by about two dozen opponents of During its three-day session, the the war, was officially set to be- symposium is considering uses gin at the close of regular busi- and applications of electronic in- ness yesterday and continue until fra-red remote sensing. Papers I today's session at noon. are being presented by scientists fromn universities, the federal gov-. However, a series of supporters erment and industry, of the Nixon administration an- ! nounced plans to push for ad-: journment and continually ask for quorum call. At the close of House business Rep. W. S. Stuckey iD-Ga) moved for adjournment. This mo- tion which would have blocked the special session completely was defeated by a 210-99 vote. Rep. Marvin Esch (R-Mich) voted against adjournment. Although opponents of the Viet- nam war held the floor for most of the four hour session there was a good deal of debate between them and supporters of the Nixon administration. Rep. Henry Jac- obs D-Ind) said if this country ever goes to wear it should be "be- cause we have to, not because we are able to." John B. Anderson (R-Ill.) asked Jacobs, "Do those that endorse the objectives of the moratorium (support) absolute unconditional withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam?" Jacobs replied, "obviously there has to be some kind of negotia- tion." and he added, "to my mora- torium friends, don't blow it, you've done pretty well already." Rep. Benjamin Rosenthal (D- N.Y., was the next speaker. And he gave a speech outlining the history of our involvement in Vietnam. Rep. G. V. Montgomery (D- Miss. requested a quorum call at the conclusion of Rosenthal's hour. After the role was called, speaker John McCormick an- nounced the absence of a quorum. In response to several queries to clarify house rules, McCormick ruled that the house faced two choices -either a motion to ad- journ "Or a motion to instruct th Sgt. at Arms to produce the issing members." After somemfurther parliamen- tary wrantling, Majority Leader Carl Albert said, "I would prefer not to make this motion but in view of the parliementary situ- ation I move the house adjourn." On a roll call vote the adjourn- inent motion carried by a vote of 112 to 110. At that the session adjourned for four hours after'it had begun. IF YOU DO FEEL THAT THE WAR SHOULD STOP NOW* THEN DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT CONTACT: New Mobilization Committee 2522 SAB 769-2570 NEED ED,~ ELECTIONS DIRECTOR FOR SGC Apply before Oct. 17 See ADMIN. V.P. or MRS. SAMUELSON S.A.B. U-M TUTORIAL PROJECT presents "High School " --Associated Press UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO students read names of U.S. Vietnam war dead at the university. counseling office on Monday, October 27. Information. 764-0312. Plac emenit Serv'ice (;ENERII, 1DIVISION 3200 SAlB Peace Corps Test at downtown branch of Post Office, Main at Catherine sts.. this Sat., 1 p.m. Peace Corps visiting campus in November. Late Announcement of Interview: October 21, Johns Hopkins University MAT Program. As a g raduiiat ion daite approaches 011l. at few )psi t ion will be listed in this column, some current openings for new graduates and jobs in S.E. Mich. Come in to browse through books of all openings: Edsel it. Ford lnst for Med Res, Detroit -Electron Microscopist. Ford Motor Co, Dearborn-Engineer- ing, general mgmt, and acctg. person- ne I Mayor Matthew Kihlewald, city of Richmond, Mich.: City Manager, exper in legis procedures, fund acquisition etc, degree in pubs ad, bus ad, or comp exper Student Book Service SCREDIT UNION 4; will be closed Oct. 15 To Support the National Mora- torium Against the Viet Nam War If the public schools of the United States are as bad as "High School" suggests they are, this nation is chopping up its own youth in a gigantic garbage-disposal unit and going down its own drain. -Newsweek Tuesday, October 21st ED. SCHOOL AUDITORIUM 10:00 A.M. and 2:00 P.M. ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 7":00 p.m and 9:00 p.m. ASSETS: $130,000 MEMBERS: 975 STUDENT LOANS MAXIMUM: $1,000 WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FORI FIRST FLOOR, MICHIGAN UNION CLOSED OCTOBER 15 GET YOUR MAN WITHA Want Ad ADMISSION 75c Petitions available now in 1538 SAB until Oct. 17' For committee positions on the Student Organizations Committee, or else contact Rich Perlman, 769-7137. I L Subscribe To THE MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 764-0558 -y _ __ NfGUe HO ECO I G '69 PRESENTS Blood, Sweat and Te THURSDAY, OCT. 30, 8:30 P. ALL EVENTS BUILDING TICKET PRICES $4.00, $3.00 BLOCK TICKET DRAWING Sunday, Oct. 19 Laura Nyro RIchie Havens Sweetwate r Today Is the LAST Day for MICHIGANENSIAN Senior Pictures STOP IN AT THE 'ENSIAN OFFICE, 420 MAYNARD Hours-10-12, 1-5, 7-8 sl ITURDAY, NOV. 1, 8:30 P.M. ALL EVENTS BUILDING TICKET PRICES $5.00, $4.00, $3.00 BLOCK TICKET i I i