Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, September 5, 1969 Viet Cong announce cease-fire i o t i n ud frm P a - e 1 r O u e e all movies, shows and sports ev ents will be canceled,," the governmient radio said. "Cadres, workers, government staff members, members of t he Vietnam Laodong Communist par } , < " ty will wear a band of tvo colo f red and black, or a black ribbon e t the left side of the chest." Ft despite the period of mouring, Hanoi called on the neople and. army to "contribute both tiei minds and their force to the greatt task of defeating the J.S. aggcs-t sor' 'and "liberating South Viet- Radio Peking chimed in urging the North Vietnamese to'turn grief into strength and deal still heavier blows to U.S. imperialism." In Saigon, President Nguyen Van Thieu and Premier Tran : Thien Khiem avoided speculation on what member of Hanoi's poulit- ical hierarchy might come to power. In commenting on Ho's death, both emphasized that the only thing of importance to South Viet- nam was whether there would by any change in North Vietnamese efforts to take over the South. As to reports South Vietnam might make an important new} peace move in the aftermath of Ho's death, Thieu said these were "entirely unfounded." Thieu said Ho's death would in- -Associated Press fluence the internal situation and the question was whether "these Leonid Breslinev, Soviet Communist party hiief, signs mourning for Ho. henchmen of Russian and Chinese; Communists" will continue the fight In the South. FIRST TRY'EXPENSIVE.: SGC sets march for Ibookstore Continued from Page 1) gents - as a result of the action on Sept. 19 - might accept this alternative, but he considered it an appeasement. According to Mc- Laughlin it would be extremely difficult for students to raise the necessary funds by themselves. Van Der Hout said that "it is obvious that having been blatant- ly ignored by going through the 'proper channels,' students will not get a bookstore unless they demonstrate their voice through another means." McLaughlin, who relinquished the chair to Darryl Gorman to speak on the issue, said the action "will not alienate any of the Regents who are not already on the wrong side of the fence.' Van Der Hout, McLaughlin, Liv- ingston, Carol Hollenshead and Bob Nelson supported the motion, while Roger Keats and Mike Far- rell voted against it. Farrell argued that the rally and subsequent action would only set the more conservative Regents further against the bookstore. "There are other means of doing things," he said. At one point, however, he advocated postponing the rally until the Regents Oc- tober meeting. Council also agreed to contact other groups for support of the rally. The University is currently the only school in the Big Ten which does not have a university book- store. The Regents opposed the book- store generally because they felt that the $1.75 fee assessment would be considered a tuition in- crease by the state Legislature. The reasoning was that next year's state appropriations would be cut on the assumption the University had raised more money in student fees. Other Regents were dubious of the financial soundness of having student-dominated board of direc- tors running the bookstore, as SGC had earlier suggested. Anthony J. Reilly of the U-M faculty has won a James Mc- Keen Cattell Award for the best research design applying scientific Litter doesn't throwv itself away; litter ,doesn't just happen. I People cause it--and only people can prevent it. "People" means you. Keep America Beautiful. odvertising contributed for the public good U of M Lacrosse MASS MEETING 7:30 MONDAY, SEPT. 8 Business. Administration Building 1 st floor THE PIN ROOM at COLONIAL LANES 1950 S. Industrial IHighwai LIVE ENTERTAINMENT every Friday and Saturday night Cocktails, dining. Music starts at 9 P M. This week featuring. Saturday initeT-i'HE ORMiANDY Supubay ite-TIHIE SUNDAY FUNNIES i - [ j I C, C, i - C I Eo, AW 7.215 liDlith ,StMtP ,St. In Washington, U.S. authorities expected the state funeral services for President Ho would bring a confrontation in Hanoi of the feuding leaders of Communist China and the Soviet Union that could pose deep-seated problems for Ho's successor. Vietnam experts believed it would be less easy for the three top-ranking survivors of Ho's re- gime to walk the tightrope between Moscow and Peking than it was for their departed leader. Peking announced without delay. that Premier Chou En-lai would{ head the Chinese Communist dele- gation to the services for Ho in. Hanoi. Moscow did not say im- mediately who would go, but it was believed that Premier Alexei Kosygin would represent the So-' viet government and party. Mailing system cuts Waiting; registration proceeds smoothily By -MICHAEL THORYN Contributing Editor Aside from the introduction of two new IBM forms, misplacedI pink election cards, and the sun blazing through the Waterman skylight, registration went pretty Swell. The 9508 students who received and returned registration by mail , forms within the allotted time did not need to enter the com- plex ---except to pick up scholar- ships or change a course that, Fleming, MclLaughlin address freshmen Coutnued fromn I e 1) 'Let me make this standing of- dum favoring the store, as an ex- fer to you," he said at the out- ample of the lack of control stu- set." I will personally appea' at dents have over their lives, ? any of your dormitories at which "It's all right for the Regents to' you will gather a gioup. I will levy fees on the student body but debate any subject about the Uni- not okay for students to levy fees versity at your choice. I will an- on the student body," he said, ap- swer any questions about the parently alluding to the $1.75 fee University at your option and I'll ,know the facts." increase students voted to pay fori the bookstore in a referendum last The applause was thunderous spring, although the cry "Murderers "I think they're constitutionally aren't debatable" was heard mo- opposed to us laving any money. ments lat2r. The Regents seem to believe that Fleming indicated the admin- students shoudn't have unfair ad- istration would not tolerate vio- vantage over the bookstore owners. lence or physical destruction and "They are no more responsive added that if for some reason he looked good four months ago, but no longer. Associate registrar Douglas Woolley said 13,300 registration envelopes were mailed. "It was an expensive process." Woolley said. He noted that some packets were sent to out-of-date addresses and some students who traveled dur- ing the summer returned home after the deadline. One woman received her mater- ials but did not return them be- cause she planned to drop and add courses. Not knowing she needed her pink election card to verify her credit hours she stood outside Waterman for an hour before being directed to the nearby Na- tural Resources Bldg. to find the vital paper. An hour later she learned her sociology course was closed. Ernest Zimmerman. assistaiit to the vice president for academic affairs said the two new optical scan forms - a course election change form and an election re- quest form were "run in parallel." Both the new forms and the more familiar ones were filled out at Waterman tables. Zimmerman said, "We re try- ing something new. If it works we will be able to automate more of the registration process." "We did have some design prob- lems with the election request form," he said. The idea, still a few years in the future, is to eliminate Water- man gym from the registration process. The most trouble came with the4 blue course form on which stu- dents were asked to list division number, course number, credit hours, and class numbers. erasing. methods to business and Indus- All the approximately 12.000 trial problems. Reilly's paper persons who did not advance clas- deals with the effects of differ- sify had to fill out the election ent leadership styles on group per- request form. formance. Faculty report cites need for revision of ROTC The instruction sheet had to be' read very carefully to be under- stood and many did not have the patience. A woman who spent three days' checking the form for errors call- ed it "totally absurd." The registration worker ($1.85j an houri was especially critical on the inch long line for the ten digit student identification number. If the penciled number ran into the margin, the entire form would abort. she said. She did a lot of 'olitinued from Page 3 port offered "exactly the kind of choice we think should be consid- "If the committee recommends just, a revision, there's still room for a decision on credit by the lit school," he said. But he declined siderations were not the sole fac- tor motivating the reconsideration of ROTC credit, asked the Senate Assembly to consider the problem from the widest angle - that of t h e entire University's relation- ship to ROTC. The Senate Assembly accepted to the people of the stake of Michigan than President Fleming is to students," he added, It was this kind of comment that Fleming tended to take in stride, saying in his speech that "I came prepared knowing I am deficient in character, that I'm over 30, that I'm evil. I should tell you I beat my wife." bigger than me," he said. left his post, what mattered most was the institution. "The insti- tution is bigger than you and Beginning Sept. 8 the Univer- sity will offer the six courses required for a certificate in real estate. The classes will be at Rackham Memorial in Detroit. to say whether t h e curriculum ! the requt ana reIerreaUit Lu its committee's original recommen- own committee an academic af- dation for abolition of credit fairs, setting the Sept. 1 and Oct. would then be acted upon by the 1 deadlines. college's executive committee. The Senate Assembly's study of ROTC was prompted by Hays fol- lowing several months of work in the literary college on the ques- tin. The college's curriculum coin- mittee recommended that no cred- ti be g i v e n by the college for ROTC. But the executive commit- tee, feeling that academic con- i 2' 'I 1 I,-''V " 1 1 \ ° - - 1 r .: ' - . j 1,1i y . I V3J 51U U 3w -/--.- Ioaaa WELCOME STUDENTS AND FACULTY LET US SUPPLY YOUR HOME ENTERTAINMENT Select From Our: * Comprehensive Stock of L.P. 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