Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 21, 1969 Page Eight [HE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 21, 1969 NOV. 15: . i . . Department of English Poetry Read- ...... .. .......AL Y. ing: Anne Stevenson: M ulti-Purpose B e '' . DAILY OFFICIAL Room, Undergraduate Library, 4:10 -ML w N_/.JL -IL JML.JL -AL N-,IL WJL AL lk-/ I - - - - - - - - - - : Mo be rift threatens Washington march bookstore decision BULLETIN ' 1TUSDAY, OCTOBER 21 .Day 'Calendar p.m. Comparative Studies in History Lec- tuare: Prof. William L. Langer, Harvard University, "Medical Aspects of Eur- ope's Population Problem" Aud B, An- gell, 4:00 p.m. William W. Cook Lecture On Amer- ican Institutions: Politics Of Change- WV. Willard Wirtz, Former U.S. Sec. of Labor, "Inventing the Future": 100 Hutchins, 4:15 p,m. University Arts Chorale: M a y n a r d Klein, conductor: Hill Aud., 8:00 p.m. General Notices auditing, tax and mgmt. consulting services staffs, min. 12 hours acctg. with any major. Local Office, Typist, office work, some exper pref, could be part time. Bichigan Dept. of Educ. Div. of Vo- cational Rehabilitation, Ypsilanti Counselor-Coordinator, MA in Gi&C, Voc. Rehab., Psych, MSW etc. and some exper. pref., not necess.{ City of Madison Heights, Mich, - Administrative Asst, to City Manager in matters of personnel, labor rela- tions and admin. duties. 'Continued from Page 1) With a focus on mass demon- strations, rather than on local organizing, the Mobilization in- tends generally to operate outside the confines of the electoral sys-j tem. Nonetheless, Mobilization or- ganizers are hopeful of attracting some Congressional support for the Nov. 15 march on Washington.i Although no public announcement has been made, Sen. Charles D~elay vote on ROTC (Continued from Page 1 -The Regents take steps to re- negotiate the ROTC contracts so that the military departments beE replaced by "programs," the staff members be recognized by their;+ military titles unless they hold regular academic titles, and the Department of Defense maintain its own services or reimburse the University for services at full cost; -A student-faculty-administra- tion committee be set up to evaluate ROTC personnel, super-4 vise ROTC curricula, and medi- ate between ROTC and students who have disputes with the pro- gram; -Credit be allowed only forI courses taught by instructorsI holding regular academic appoint-! ments.l Any action the Assembly takes will be sent to the Regents who will have to make the final deci- sion on whether to alter the cur- rent status of ROTC programs. ItI is unclear exactly when the Re- Goodell (R-NY) has reportedly promised to participate in t h e march and perhaps speak to the' gathering. Organizers of the Mobilization have continually stressed its peaceful intent. Asked yesterday whether the Mobilization planned to ask the Weatherman-the ul- tra-militant SDS faction involved in the recent violent demonstra- tions in Chicago-not to partici- pate, Miss Lipman said, "We have told our constituents that this will by a peaceful demonstration." Although the Moratorium r e - ceived generally favorable p r e s s coverage, the same may not be true for the Mobilization w h o s e more radical spokesmen are gen- erally less photogenic and arti- culate than the organizers of the moratorium. Typical of the problems the Mobilization may face from the press was the question at yester- day's press conference which cited! allegations that the S t u d e n t Mobilization Committee was dom- inated by the Young Socialist Al- liance, described as a "Trotskyite group." Although not denying YSA in- volvement, Miss Lipman said the Student Mobilization Committee was a "broad-based student or- ganization, controlled by no one organization." The student mobilization com- mittee unveiled plans for a Nov. 14 "student strike" in preparation for the march on Washington the following day. I The National Moratorium Com- mittee had earlier rejected the use of the word "strike" to describe their activities last week. Describing the strike, Miss Lip- College of Pharmacy Annual Pharm- (Continued from Page 1) acy Lectures: Clinical Pharmacy and Its Contribution to Health C a r e gestion, this was not stated in the ITowsley Center for Continuing Medical earlier proposals and may have Education, 9:00 a.m. assured the Regents the store ----.-~ would be economically sound. This . ..raduate Record aminatio Appl ORA N, Ir7AEAON~ cation blanks available in 3014, Rack- factor was particularly important ORGA NZAT IN ham for Graduate Record Exam. given since the store would not, as the on Sat., Dec. 13. Applications are due September plan stipulated, be con- INOTICES in Princeton, N.J. before Nov. 18. trolled by Vice President and Chief... .. representative from the University Finncil ffierWilur iepon....................::..:of Toledo College of Law will talk with interested students this afternoon Another important influence on the Inera ioncheon sonso in the Jr-Sr. Counseling Office, 1223 the Regents' decision lay in the Every week,at 12:00 Noon at the M. Angell. Appointments may be made in solid support the faculty gave the Pound House (corner E. Univ. & Hill,4t3e2counseling office or by calling proposal. SACUA, the faculty ex- across from East Quad). Directed Teaching in Elementary Ed- ecutive committee, unanimously Concert Dance Organization: T us s., ucation and Special Education (Educ endorsed the plan and several Oct. 21, 7:00 p.m., Men's Modern Dance D305), Winter Term. 1970. Students who members spoke strongly in its be- Technique, 8:00 p.m. Coed Beginning have not verified Winter Term, 1970, half. The faculty had not support- Intermediate Modern Technique. Wed., directedvteachingmapplications on file Oct.21,7:1 pi "Echigs n Dnceor received a time permit for direct- ed any previous proposal. No. 1" followed by a showing of a ed teaching must do so by Oct. 31, at In addition, high administration dance film of historic merit. Barbour the Dircted Teaching Office, 2292 U.S. officials supported the plan. Pres- Dance Studio. No charge. or the Special Education Office, 734 offiial suportd th pln. Pes-University. Winter term teaching as- ident Robben Fleming - who is Black Graduates and Professional signm~ents wvill be made only from ap- said to have lent his support to Students Mass Meeting, Oct. 22, 1969 plications verified by Oct. 31 and will the proposal - is highly respected at 7:30 p.m., Union Assembly Hall, be available from November 17 to by most of the Regents. * December 1. yBach Club mneeting', Thursday, Oct. The LSA Bldg. takeover is not 23, 8:00 p.m., 1236 Washtenaw (at S . Service thought to have pressured many Forest) Speaker: Wayne Linder, "Prob- GC-"""N ln lems in ePrformance in Bach's Can- f N'LR'!L' T m mfmi'( WOW! A three-piece Treasure Chest chicken direr, plusfrench tries, for only 79! larger take-home orders also. Try a box soon!! (S MILING(S)PEEOY ®ERVICE West of Arborland -I U-M TUTORIAL PROJECT presents The Documentary " High School" Produced and Directed by FREDERICK WISEMAN famed for "Titicut Follies" Tuesday, October 21st ED. SCHOOL AUDITORIUM 10:00 A.M. and 2:00 P.M. ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM 7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. ADMISSION 75c Regents. Its importance, says SGC e in um 5w dtate 152". No musical knowledge need- President Marty McLaughlin, was !ed. oFr further information: 761-7356; that it allowed the issue to stay 663-2827; 665-6806. alive another month. UM oceanological Society: Regular And it was dullrig this 121th meeting Tuesday, Oct. 21, 7:00 p.m., room 1028 Nat. Res. Bldg. John Gissberg that the most widely-accepted will return to continue his discussion bookstore plan was drafted. on Sea Law and present his film on Japanese fishing trawlers off the Alas- kan coast. Coffee and refreshments af- Dr. Daniel Botkin of Yale Uni- terwards. All welcome!! veritywil coduc a otay ** * * versity will conduct a botany U.M oceanological Society: Regular seminar at 4:10 p.m. Wednesday,, meeting Tuesday, Oct. 21, 7:00 p.m., Oct. 22, at the Botanical Gardens room 1028 Nat. Res. John Gissberg on Dixboro Road. The subject will return to continue his discussiog will be computer simulation of on Sea Law and present his film on growth in theHubbardBrookJapanese fishing trawlers off t h e Alaskan coast. Coffee and refreshments Forest of New Hampshire. afterwards. ,.,..,L.StAL D IS AONW 3200 SAB As a graduation date approaches only a few positions will be listed in this column, some current openings f or new graduates and jobs in S.E. Mich. Come in to browse through books of all openings. Ernst and Ernst Consultants, Detroit, Mich. - beginning level personnel for Kawasa ki E Sidewinder 250 cc SCRAMBLER NICHOLSON Motorcycle Sales 224 South First 662-3221 HOW'S. YOUR GROWTH?. If you're PROUD of your BEARD and MUSTACHE.. ENTER HOMECOMING PARADE 1969's BEARD and MOUSTACHE CONTEST For information call: 663-8334, 662-3115, 769-0763 or 763-1256. Or stop in at the Homecoming Office, Rm. 3A, Michigan Union gents will consider ROTC, but it man stressed that "we're not ask- appears unlikely the question will ing schools to shut down if they come to them before their Decem- can't shut down, We're not asking ber meeting. for disruption." VIET NAM FILM SERIES at the ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER, 921 Church Wednesday, October 22-7:30 P.M. "MEKONG-WATER FOR THE LANDI Discussion follows with Mrs. Le Thi Anh l1 You won't have to go as far as You thought for your new SAAB because 936 N. Main St. will feature SAAB start- ing October 15, 1969. Drop in and ask for a test f light 936 North Main St. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 WHY WASTE TIME CLEANING 1 We Can Do It Quicker and Better QUALITY CLEANING AMPLE PARKING *OPEN 7 A.M. to 6 P.M. EUREKA CLEANERS 308 N. Main St. ANN ARBOR FESTIVAL OF MOVEMENT FILMS From October 21st thru 23rd, Ann Arbor Resistance is sponsoring the Ann Arbor Festival of Movement Films ... the largest collection of revolutionary films ever shown in Michigan. Nearly all of the more than 35 films produced by NEWSREEL in the .last two years, and more than a score of foreign films im- ported from fraternal organizations are being shown. These films are being screened in thematic groups and each group is being accompanied by a workshop. TONIGHT ANGELL--AUDITORIUM A-B 8-12 ADMISSION $1.50 213 S. STATE ST. U. of M. Payroll Checks cashed here OPEN 10-6 NO GAMES " NO GIMMICK S COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON Expires 10-27-69 Expires 10-27-69 Expires 10-27-69 Expires 10-27-69 200 COUNT 2 PLY 12.5 OZ.-$1.79 SIZE 65c SIZE--3.5 OZ. 49c SIZE JOHNSONS FACIAL BABY V05 FLAIR TISSUE SHAMPOO 'EM"E RE sEW PEN C $19_C 33c LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 LIMIT i LIMIT 2 COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON Expires 10-27-69 Expires 10-27-69 Expires 10-27-69 Expires 10-27-69 $1.39 PACKAGE $1.00 SIZE 16 OZ.-$3 50 SIZE BOTTLE OF 100 Packages of 6-8-12 or 14 GLAD HANDS GAYLA LTXLIFE BAYERMO GLOVES LOTION ASPIRIN Hair Rollers $ 59 53c ~ 78 16 LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 LIMIT 3 COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON Expires 10-27-69 Expires 10-27-69 Expires 10-27-69 Expires 10-27-69 $1.00 SIZE $1.55 SIZE-200 COUNT 69c SIZE $1.00 TUBE Johnson & Johnson TRYLON Maybelline Dr. West SHAMPOO OR hTWIN TRAY PACK Tbrush CREME RINSE COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON Expires 10-27-69 Expires 10-27-69 Expires 10-27-69 Expires 10-27-69 DURABLE KEY WOUND R I' $1.15 SIZE--12 OZ. U * A * ^ 1 1INGRAHAM-NEW PACER AUDITORIUM A DOMESTIC COLONIES--Black, American Indian, Puerto Rican, Mexican-American and other peoples live in a different America from white working people, students and vouth. Culturally, po- litically and economically, they are oppressed and exploited as colonies within imperial America. This group of films traces the failure of the civil rights movement to achieve meaningful pro- gress "within the system," the cooptative and suppressive efforts of the state, parallels with U.S. imperialism abroad, and the emer- gence of revolutionary nationalism among Third World peoples here in the United States. FILM NOW-Cuban film by Santiago Alvarez, winner of 2nd prize, Leipzig. TROUBLEMAKERS-Film of Newark Community Union Project, year before riots. 6th STRET MEAT CLUB--Domestic pacification program fails to meet co-op. WILMINGTON-Analysis of a company town-Dupont Cor- porate control. VENEZUELAN FALN-Outbreak of guerrilla struggle in Vene- zuela. COMMUNITY CONTROL-Struggle in Black and Puerto Rican communities in N.Y. PANTHER-Basic first film about the Black Panther Party. MAYDAY-2nd film-The Black Panthers as they have de- veloped-United Front. RIOT CONTROL WEAPONS-Explanation of government weap- ons for the cities. SIMULTANEOUSLY AUDITORIUM B THIRD WORLD LIBERATION--The U.S. government undertook the role of world cop at the end of the Second World War, usina the rationalization of anti-Communism and the domestic prod of McCarthvite repression. Control of Latin America was consoli- dated, pieces of collapsing European empires in Asia and Africa were acguired. But the Chinese revolution, the stalemate in Korea, and the Cuban revolution shattered the myth of American omnipotence, and the heroic struaale of the Vietnamese people demonstrated that U.S. imperialism can be fought to a stand- still, no matter to what vicious lengths it is willing to go. This group of films covers a broad range of Third World Liberation struagles and America's reactionary role around the world in HOURS: Open 8- Mon. & I