Saturday, July 26, .1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'Pnrta Tkom s . FE -- I p A emu summer theater AThursday on a Friday HOT Saturday rof July 24-26 roof_8:00 p.m. GENERAL ADMISSION: $1.75 FOR RESERVATIONS: 482-3453 Box Office Open: Week days 12:45-4:30 p.m. AIR-CONDITIONED DANIEL L. QUIRK AUDITORIUM -mmmmCOUPON -- a - THOMPSON'S PIZZA UU 161-0001 * I $100OFF' U I 1 I r One a large one item (or more) pizza. One coupon per pizza. I! I Pick Up Only * I 211 E. Ann St.-Next to s the Armory, Expires Aug. 1 - - - - - - BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! WINNER 6 ACADEMY AWARDS! COEAMERA PICTURES p- mi ROMULUS PRODUCION e LIONEL BARTS k JOHN WOOLF CAROL REED , PANAVISZ IECNICO OR' rage i nree I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Official publication of theUniver- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN fo r m to Room 3528 L.S.A. Bldg., before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publi- cation and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices a r e not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. Day Calendar a I I ;I 'E I {$# j} {4 ^, the news tda y Gy I'hrc A','.c a/cc P,( , a I Co ley 1 ss Sc tiu i . July 25, 26-Friday and Saturday Te Golden Aeof Comedy A compilation of Hollywood's finest farce LAUREL AND HARDY HARRY LANGDON BEN TURPIN WILL ROGERS 7;& 9 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75C AUDITORIUM I MICH IGAN DIAL 5-6290 TWO SHOWS DA ILY All Matinees 1:30 Sun. Eve. 7:30-All Others 8 P.M. JUMBOY' Official Harvard Strike Shirt I F M-M-m-m-m, yummie! A giant hamburger of- lb. U.S. Govt. pure beef topped with let- tuce, tomato, mayonnaise, onions, pickles and ketchup .--. ALL THIS FOR ONLY 4c ®MILING PEEDY RVICE West of Arborland As pictured on LIFE cover - 4/25 FIRST TIME OFFERED Giant- RED FIST with BLACK LETTERS WHITE "T" SHIRT $2.50 SWEATSHIRT $3.50 Short Sleeve SIZES: Sm-34/36 Md-38/40 Lg-42/44 XL-46 PREPAID BY MAIL ONLY STRIKE SHIRT Box 6f Glencoe, Ill. 60022 SATURDAY, JULY 26 University Players - Michigan Rep- ertory~ 9-Doctor's Dilemma by George 3Bernard Shaw: Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, 8:00 p.m. Degree Recital - Alex Chrnil. tenor : School of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. SUNDAY, JULY 27 University Players - Michigan Rep- ertory 69 - Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare: Lydia Mendel ssohn Theater, 8:00 p.m. Degree Recital - Richard Anderson, organ: Hill Auditorium Theater, 8:00 p.m. ! I Alfred, Hitchcock's MONDAY, JULY 28 Audio-Visual Education Center Sum- mer Previews - Search and Privacy; Bill of Rights in Action- Freedom of Speech; Revolving Door and The Hand: Multipurpose Room, Undergraduate Li- brary, 3:00 p.m. National Music Camp Symphonic' Band - George C. Wilson, conductor and Col. William F. Santelmann, guest conductor: Hill Auditorium, 8:00 p.m. Summer Concert Series - Gyorgy Sandor, pianist: Rackham Lecture Hall, 8:30 p.m. Doctoral Exams Donald Patrick Draine, Education, Dissertation: "A Study of Institutional Research and a Survey of Its Accep- tance by Administrators in Selected Colleges," on Monday, July 28 at 1:30 p.m. in Center for Study of Higher Ed- ucation, Chairman: J. L. Doi. Placement Service. GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Placement Interview at General Di- vision: Please call 763-1363 for appoint- nents. Literature available on the or- ganization, at 3200 S.A.B. Tuesday, July 29, Morning Only, Will Stay PM If Enough Applicants: Perin- enant and summer positions: Internal Revenue Service, Detroit Dis- trict - Seeking gen.. lib. arts majors for govn't. Income tax positions, Tax Technician, Revenue Officer and Rev- enue Agent. Bckrnds in business and accounting preferred, not required. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. Neyvs phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates : $9 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturda morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. Jloin The .Daily Sports",Staff THE APOLLO 11 ASTRONAUTS cruised toward Hawaii yes- terday as the first lunar rocks were being prepared for testing by scientists in Houston. Astronauts Armstrong, Collins and Aldrin remained in their quarantine van aboard the USS Hornet as the ship sailed for a 2 p.m. EDT arrival in Hawaii. William Carpentier, a doctor sharing the isolation chamber with the space crew, treated an inflammation in one ear of Neil Armstrong, but said the ailment was not serious and was not an indication of contamination from the lunar surface. Carpentier reported the ailment is completely cured and probably resulted from a concentration of fluid in Armstrong's ear due to gravity and pressure changes during the mission. The quarantine van will be lifted onto a truck which will transport the men to Hickam Field. An Air Force C141 transport will complete the journey with a non-stop flight to Houston. The astronauts are scheduled to arrive at the Manned Spacecraft Center at 2:35 a.m. Sunday. Meanwhile, a white sealed box of rocks and core samples from the moon arrived at the Lunar Receiving Laboratory in Houston yesterday. The specimen containers wereweighed, sterilized, and placed in double biological isolation to await opening and extensive testing. The first test to be carried out on the precious specimen will be collection and analysis on the gases surrounding the samples to check for radioactive emissions and identifiable substances, a process which may take an hour tp an hour and a half. OPPONENTS OF THE ABM SAFEGUARD system appealed to the Senate yesterday to delay voting so they can present secret data which would further their case against the missile program. Sens. Albert Gore (D-Tenn) and J. W.'Fulbright (D-Ark) joined in urging no vote until after next week. Fulbright said in a speech to the Senate that he had new information about the effects of radiation on the ABM radar guidance system. Fulbright said reports in his pos- session which he may use as the basis of calling another secret session, indicate a device called a precourser could disable all ABM radar systems and render the network worthless. Gore implied some of the report was compiled by the President's Science Advisory Board and the Institute for Defense Analysis, a Pentagon "think tank." Gore said it was "somewhat remarkable" that no studies supporting the ABM have been received from such groups. SECRETARY OF LABOR GEORGE P. SHULTZ yesterday cautioned that spiraling wages and prices couldput many workers and companies out of business when President Nixon's anti-in- flation policies take hold. Shultz warned that unions and companies negotiating long-term excessive wager increases could be left out on a limb with goods too high priced to sell, resulting in layoffs. The labor secretary em- phasized he was not trying to tell management and labor how to negotiate contracts, but indicated he had reservations about 15 per cent wage increases being written into construction contracts. Shultz's remarks were the strongest warning yet against inflation from the Nixon Administration. THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION accused supermarket chains yesterday of hiking prices for poor city dwellers while funneling prize money to more competitive suburban stores. A report of surveys taken in Washington and San Francisco stated that what amounts to de facto discrimination can add as much as 10 cents on a dollar to poor people's food bills. The FTC investigators also found that seven or eight per cent of the items in urban supermarkets bore different prices-usually higher -than the chain's posted prices for the area. The report cited Safeway Stores, Inc. as a supermarket chain which handed out $1000 eachi to 48 persons in, the Washington area in a promotional contest. Only two prizes were awarded in urban-area stores, the report stated. FTC economist W. F. Mueller said that the findings exceed the probabilities of chance many thousandfold. "LET IT SUFFICE TO SAY THAT -HS A ,,, -IMASTERPIECE."PLAyVBO "SABOTAGE" "B LACKMAI L" 2 vintage thrillers BRITISH AT., JULY 26 8&10 P.M. Aud. A 75c o" ' "'Se W omNovel V'W ill IWVC, manpart d stributed by c:-HIEE IN Color by Movielab SATURDAY-2, 3:30, 5, 6:30, 8, 9:30, 11 SUNDAY-2, 3:30, 5, 6:30, 8, 9:30 MONDAY, TUESDAY-6:30, 8, 9:30 FIFTH AUGUST 1-2-3 Fuller Rd. Flatlanids Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday Eve.-Aug. 1--;30 P.M. Jimmy "Fast Fingers" Dawkins " J.A. Hutto and His Hawks " B.B. King " Fred McDowell " "St. Louis" Jimmy Ggden 0 Junior Wells Saturday Workshop-12:00 Noon Workshops and Lectures Saturday Eve.-Aug. 2--6:00 P.M. Luther Allison " Clifton Chenier " Sleepy John Estes " Otis Rush " Roosevelt Sykes Muddy Wat- ers " Howlin' Wolf Sunday Afternoon-I1:30 A.M. Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup " Big Joe Williams 0 Magic Sam " Freddie King " "St. Louis" Jim- my Oden 0 Roosevelt Sykes " "Big Mama" Mae Thornton Sunday Eve.-Aug. 3-6:00 P.M. James Cotton " Lightnin' Hop- kins " Son House r Sam Lay @ Charley Musselwhite " T-Bone Walker TIMELY THOUGHTS 1. Single Concert .. ..... $5 4 Concerts...........$14 Workshop ...........$2 2. Tickets now on sale at Dis- count Records or Festival HQ (Union 2nd floor) NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION _ FOX EASTEN THeATRESS- FOX VILLBE 375 No.MAPLE PD.-"769-1300 ENDS TUESDAY 1:00-3:15-5:15-7:30-9:30 A RACE FOR GLORY, FOR LOVE AND FOR THE FUN OF IT! P.PRMMUIPIOURESEIS K(EN ANNAKINS ?ROIKxTIo f 4kaui4dhio SUN., JULY 27 8 &1a P.M. Aud.A GEORGE COKOR'S "DINNER AT EIGHT" Jean Harlow! THE film of the 30's and "ADAM'S RIB" DAILY CLASSIFIEDS BIING RESULTS-USE THEM aII T - "THE MOST INTERESTING FILM SO FAR THIS YEAR" -VOGUE ?5c 761 -9700 WINNER "BEST FILM" CANNES "IF YOU'RE YOUNG S: YOU'LL REALLY DIG --OSIPNUTAL Program Information 662-6264 SHOWS AT Sunday-Thursday 1 :15-3:45-6:15-8:50 Friday & Saturday 12:30-1 :35-4:45 6 :55-9 :05 MAIL ORDERS NOW BEING ACCEPTED for the University of Michigan gji1leri and Sulian Societ~ HELD OVER 3RD BIG WEEK! The strangest trio ever to track a killer. flawsJOH WAYNE A tt ACWALLIS' GLENPOUCTON CAMPBELL KIM DARBY Summer Production "PAINT YOUR WAGON" A musical by Lerner and Loewe- the creators of Camelot, My Fair Lady, and Brigadoon. 1111 STARTS WEDNESDAY August 6-9 I TRUEBLOOD AUDITORIUM JOAN E BAEZ with Jeffrey and Fondle Ann Arbor, Michigan mmi mmlmmmmmm m mmmm !mm mmmmmm mm m mmmmmmmm NAME. 0 WED. thru FRI. 8:00 P.M. Aug. 6-8 at $2.50 I . i I Jil I I I IIi ~'fSo ta N o. 7 . . .. . .. . .. . :. rokof ieff ' I I il I