Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 6, 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 6, 1969 lectures music I The economist (?) looks at blackpower By JUDY SARASOHN "If I were a black, I would not be interested in listening to Arthur Ross talk on black power," said Arthur Ross, vice president for state relations and planning, speaking on black power last night. Several of the blacks who attended the first in a series of social work lectures agreed with him. Basically, Ross said all the proper things. He did not put himself in the position of saying what blacks ought to do-Ross knows that is not the solution, so he only advises. Ros's said that in this "emotional misunderstanding, resenting age," he, "as an economist," can speak unattached. This gives hire more credibility, Ross seemed to believe, because. most people "are apt to lose sight of the realities." Perhaps Ross does have a genius in economics. He is a man who knows how any group of people can gain power through skills and employment. But his complete frame of reference of economics and non-emotionalism kept him from speaking to the whole problem last night. Power through economics-traditional American capitalism- is what Ross knows. He explained, "Powerlessness is at the heart of the black situation in the U.S." Only power through improved jobs angl "equal access" to those jobs would have any significance to black people. "Black power was first associated with rioting," said Ross, "but rioting is only the exploitation of power. Real power is needed to build up black families and communities." Ross said that because middle-class people can afford to be liberal, the real problem concerns the 'low-income whites and competition betweeni them and low-income blacks. It is this group of whites who resent competing with blacks. "National priorities need to be changed," explained Ross. "Otheriwse there will be war between the low-income whites and blacks." And it-is important, Ross said, to remember that economic justice is a right and does not come through welfare. Ross also spoke out against black revolution and separatism, black capitalism, and black studies programs as final solutions. All are related to each other because they would mean separatism from American society or would not work out economically.' Literally, a black revolution would riot amount to anything because of the lack of resources and military power, according to Ross. Blacks must work within society if they are to accomplish anything, he said. Black capitalism also is not significant, Ross said, simply because of the lack of capital for it. Ross said good and important things but he failed to realize/ that people are involved-people who are emotional. His sole usage of economics and his vantage point of detachment some- how-made him sound less than sincere. Patterson takes over Concert artist and voice pro- fessor Willis Patterson will be- come acting director of the Uni- versity Men's Glee Club on July 1. He will succeed Dr. Philip Duey, who came to the Uni- versity as a professor of vocal Imusic in 1947 after a distin- guished career as a professional singer. Duey retires June 30. Patterson, a native of Ann Arbor, graduated from Ann Ar- bor High School in 1949. He earned his bachelor of music degree in 1958 and master's in 1959, both at the University. ice was associate professor of music at Virginia State College in Petersburg from 1962 until coming to 'the University facul- ty last year. Patterson was a fellowship student at the Manhattan School of Music in New York in 1960 and continued postgrad- uate work in voice and opera at the Freiburg School of Music in Germany in 1966-67. From 1959 through 1961 he was an assistant professor of music at Southern University in Baton 'Rouge;, La. While Patterson was a Uni- versity student ,he was active as a bass-baritone jn the School of Music operas and as guest soloist on a number of occa- sions at the National Music Camp and with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Since then, in addition to his teaching responsibilities, lhe has pursued an active concert career, both as soloist and with numer- ous opera companies in Europe. and the United States. He is the bass soloist on the current RCA Victor recording of the opera Amahl and the N i g h t Visitors. Organized in 1859, the Men's Glee Club is the second oldest glee club in America. It is com- posed of both graduate and un- dergraduate men. During the summer of 1955, Service Entrance examinations are available at Placement Services, these are due June 11, test given July 19. al Students Who Took The FSEE Pre- th viously, and have received notification m- of Management Intern Status ontheir >- scores, will be interviewed June 23 and m. 24 at Placement Services.r r- Current Position openings received by General Division by mail and phone, k please call 764-7460 for further in- m- formation: m- St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, in Mich.: Methods and Procedures An- ti- alyst, degree ;in E. or Indust. Mgmt., SR with personnel and/or job evaluation n. exper. n- Avon Products, Inc:, Morton Grove, li- Ill.: Management positions in . Per- sonnel, Packaging, Sales, Acctg., and 29 Engineering, 3-5 yrs. exper. id Presbyterian - St. Luke's Hospital, Chicago, Ill.: Accountant, recent grad. Louis, Mo.: Ralston Purina Company, St. Louis, Conspiracy case prompts noon rally (Continued from Page 1 tention to continue organizing and belong to, including the so-called that we have every right to organ- Tenants Union and any one in- ize," said Katz, a steering com- volved in it and all co-conspirators mittee member. whether named or not." "We want to show our strength The seven plaintiffs are Apart- in order to back our demands that ments Limited, Arbor F o r e s t we have more control over living Apartsrpents, C h a r t e r Realty, conditions," he explained. Brady Anderson. Charlotte Van After the rally, a march to the Curler, William Van Fossen and offices of Charter Realty is plan- Robert J. Shipman. ned. At the Charter office the The rally is being held as a show strikers plan to ask the company of strength of the Tenants Union. to open its financial records for "We hope to demonstrate to the the Tenants Union, withdraw the courts and the landlords our in- conspiracy suit and recognize and - - -- - ~- ~~~~start negotiating with the Tenants iUnion. 'SSpeakers at the rally will in- -eJlude Katz, Berry, Goldstein, and i ve so eDenton, all of whom are members inves t i 811011of the steering committee. Marc Van Der Hout, vice-president of (Continued from Page 1) SGC, is also scheduled to speak at to raise money for the Tenants the rally. I~~~~~~~~ ~. Sell a in Daily C lassif ieds. , rrn i I ,.t Patterson takes the baton from Dr. Duey --- Gq::"...... ' ^^:::::i:. .. .ti" 'Y"" , A": DAILY OFFICIALI BULLETIN, FRIDAY,' JUNE 6 Day CalendarE Department of Architectural Semi-t nar: Computers in Architectural'Edu-E cation, 130 Business Administration,C 9:00 a~m.1 Cinema Guild: Ronald Coleman, EdnaI Mae Oliver and Blanche Yurka in A Tale of Two Cities, directed by Jack Conway: Architecture Auditorium,t 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. Department of Speech: An evening1 of Modern Theater, Act iWthout Words, Dr. Kheal, Portrait and Itch: 'Arena, Theater, Frieze Bldg.; 8:00 p.m1 GENERAL NOTICES Registration Assistants needed. -Ap- ply Room 110 L.S.&A. Building 8-11:30 a.m.. and 1-4:3a p.m. daily Summer Registration June 30, 1-4:30 P.M. July 1, 8-11:30t A.M. and 1-4:30 P.M. Alphabetic Se- quence will be followed. Late Registra- tion Fee of $15.00 becomes applicable at the close of registration. -m ---COUPON ---r-- N NI THOMPSON'S1 1 N~ PIZZA 761-0001 $1.00 OFDF N N i One a large one item (or more) pizza. One coupon per pizza. g N 1I u Pick Up Only I - N 211 E. Ann St.--Next toc the Armory N * Expires Aug. i1 3. . Try Daily Classifiedsl Doctoral Exams' Charles Leonard Eveland, Medic Care Organization, Dissertation: "Th Political Significance of Dentali Heal Orientations in the Fluoridation Co troirersy: A Postreferendum Asses ment," on Friday, June 6, at'9:00 a.r in 3008 School of Public Health, Chai man: C. A. Metzner. Robert Denis Cartpr, Social W o r and Social Psychology, Dissertation "Gazing and Smiling and the Con munication of Interpersonal Affect a Quasi-Ixiterview Situation," on Fr day,, Junte 6 at 3:00 p.m. in 4110 +ISI Building, Chairman: Eugene Burnstei William Allen Ganter, Industrial En gineering, Dissertation: "Control Pol cies for the Geometric Quality Model on Friday, June 6, at 3:00 p.m. in 2 West Engineering, Co-Chairmen: Dav Evans and Daniel Teichroew. Placement GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Application Forms for Next Feder C S c JU ne8 9 am-3 p 201 \Hill Anan Arbor the club made the first of its European tours, appearing in Holland, Germany, Austria, Italy, Switzerland, and France. The tour included a command performance before Queen Juli- ana of the Netherlands and an appearance at the Fourth of July celebration of the Ameri- can Embassy in Rome. In 1959, the club celebrated its 100th birthday with a tour of Great Britain, Belgium, Frances, Holland, Germany,' Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. In 1963 it toured Italy, Greece, Yugoslavia,u Austria, Poland, Germany, France, and G r e a t Britain. Special appearances Mo.: Regional Acctg., Auditors, Pckg. engr., formulation Chemist, Food Tech- nologists, exper. preferred. Michigan welfare League, Lansing, Mich.: Planning - Research Associate, MA in Soc. Wk., Soc.,'Public. Ad. ex- per. in planning and research in com- munity setting. American Cyanamid Company, N.Y.- Sales positions in Arizona, Colorado, De- troit, and N.Y. state, degree and 2-5 yrs. selling exper. for Hospital sales. State of Michigan: Mental Health Community Consultant, degree in psych., soc. wk., nursing, public health, MA pref., and 5 yrs. exper. State of Vermont: Civil Defense Op- erations Officer, BA and 4 yrs. related exper. Rehabilitation Unit Supervisor, BA and 3 yrs., or MA and 1 yr. Director of Clinical Psychology, MA plus 5 or PhD and 2 yrs. Director of Vocational Rehabilitation, Masters and 6 yrs, ex- per. Sanitary Engr., CE or ChE and 2 yrs. were made at the residence of the American ambassador in Athens and the American Em- bassy in London. To celebrate the University's sesquicentennial year in 1967, the club toured the world. The 19-country tour included more than 30 concert appearances and several radio and television performances. The Glee C 1 u b was the third American choral group to appear behind the Iron Curtain, with concerts in Mos- cow and Leningrad. Perhaps the Glee Club's high- est achievements have been the victories at the International Musical Eisteddfod in Llangol- len, Wales. In the summer of 1959 and 1963, the Glee Club returned with the first-place award in the world's leading choral competition. Union. The arrest of Miss Handy, while Mrs. Kozminski was, not arrested, prompted the Tenants Union's statement. Farmer said that the entire law involved in Miss Handy's case is presently ,under "investigation by~ the city attorneys office to see if any revisions are necessary and to see what the law requires. Judge rules out new witness' (Continued from Page 1) witnesses resting its case. The wit- nesses, two of whom were Roman Catholic 'priests, testified that August's reputation for truthful- ness, peacefulness and citizenship is good. The judge will hear legal argu-_I ments today on defensegmotion; for a directed verdict of acquittal or a reduction of the first-degree murder charge against August. If the motion is turned down, the defense will ask for'a reduc- tion from a first-degree murder charge to either second-degree or manslaughter. The case is expected to go to the juryfor deliberationd'on Mon- day or Tuesday, after Lippitt and Weiswasser present their closing arguments. We're in debt vwars, floods, health life saving and blood banki,. he us- hep TheAmerriknRTiedCrss Sdvertisijg cotiue othe public good 1 Order Your Subscription Today' 764-0558 i. FORGOTTEN MASTERPIECES OF 1968 "I sat in a dark screening room last week with a lump in my throat and a general feeling of disbelief, while a pro- jectionist ran one of the best pictures I've ever seen, "Will Penny." Like nearly everybody else who missed "Will Penny" the first (and .last) time around,. I was turned off by'one of the worst 'ad campaigns ever dumped on a movie. What they missed was one of the most luni- nous and penetrating films ever turned out by Hollywood, with a thoughtful and tightly-written script by Tom Gries which shows with subtlety and detail that cowboys are anything but the embodiment of the songs Burl Ives sings. "Will 'Penny" also shocked me with a sensitive, many- faceted performance by Charlton Heston. The best work, in an extremely difficult role, _ I've seen by any actor this year. "Will Penny" makes "Shane" and "Hondo" and all of its other. oaty predec es- sors seem phony by compri- son, and it raises the genre of ~ Hollywood moviemaking sev- eral niches in the direction of_= rt.WIW-I: WI w At 49 ral I C3 0 0 v~l 0 --- --- - ti TONIGHT AND S the incredible of BCI ATURDAY mind 1421 Hill St. 8:30 P.M. F RANK E contemporary and N -Rex Reed, N.Y. Times fI. '"I 71 Pemry" TECHNICOLOR A PARAMOUNT PICTURE guitar and banjo original music SAT. NITE LATE: "AFTER HOURS" ALSO4: BiLitle *oye, prtty poison" is a Special ulYmarvelousfilmndeed truly .' s a level of wit and tersaOn that few n egmented n uoeufilms aspire to, let is tflien nslf alone achieve. And, rwoder Pettio anh ofwonderthe drecto aeetoffn tete thi M entis a 3iyear- thatp d inment entertain m lgack. fnue ene MORGIKrE+ old Amerid' h te ng "TNE NICEV, NASTIEST DIME RW MTO 20TH CN R FOX PREET ARNETRA From the off eflti Iu n r tivy r ...... ... de. the ...,..., Producer GRADUATE" -"...- ia ;1 ,;>1 I! Now Showing FOX EASTERN TEATRES 3&.. FOX VILLaMGm 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769-1300 FEATURE TIMES P-Mon.-Fri. 6:00-9:00 Sat. -Sun. 1:30-4:45-8:00 V I NEVER $OIMINELI 1NEVER $0 GREAT!1 SEE IT I)URING T HE 25TH ANNIVERSARY YEAR OF D-DAY v . DIAL 8-6416 TONIGHT at 7-9 COLORB DLK TViUXE L I SUGTED FRMATURE AUMN.8 ' "Will Penny"-7 :00 only "Pretty Poison"-9 :00 only "From Swingin' Sweden, we have an ultra-mod sex farce of impudent frivolity and.flavor. Do see 'Hugs and Kisses', it's a cheery love-in with laughs-a-plenty."--wtrs Stupendousl There are no more worlds to conquer." -New York Times LWI ~4fi DARRYL F. ZANUCK'S THE CJf i $ dau the Book by CORNEIUS RYAN Rleased by QIt Cery fox WITH 42 INTERNA TIONAL STARSI "BONNIE AND CLYDE" STARTS SUNDAY "UP THE DOWN STAIRCASE" CLASSIC COMEDY FESTIVAL JEAN HAR- ." ":CHARLIE CHASE bROB[RI". EDGAR KENNEDY YGCNGSONJIMMY FINLAYSON v. SNOB POLLARD ' lII IVIIWPT .,' :: >: j ~.w __ I ' Mwmwm . I