Tuesday, "July 29, ,1 %9 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pooe Three; usaJuy2,169HIHIA.AL . -y,. T 11e t 1 JOAN BAEZ with Jeffrey and Fondle Tuesday, August 12 8:30 Events Bldg. Arbor . mped envelope FOX EASTERN THEATRES FOX VILL8GE 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769-1300 LAST TIMES TODAY "Those Daring Young Men in Their Jaunty Jalopies" 1:45-4:15-6:45-9:15 STARTS TOMORROW DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o 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 mnaxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar iteiz'appearonce only. Student organization notices a r eI not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. Day Calendar TUESDAY, JULY 29 Audio-Visual Education Center Sum- mer Previews - The Way It Is a n d Lectures Are a Drau MultiminG Get'eral August Teacher's Certificate Candi- dates: All of the requirements for the teacher's certificate must be completed by August 8th. These requirements in- clude the teacher's oath and the Place- ment Office material. The oath should be taken as soon as possible in room 2000 University School. The office is open from 8-12 and 1-5. Monday through Friday Foreign Visitors Week of July 29-August 5 The following individual can be! reached through the Foreign Visitor Di- vision of the Visitor and Guest Rela- tions Office. Rooms 22-24, Michigan Union. Telephone: 764-2148. Dr. Simon Partridge: Industrial En-; gineering. Portsmouth College of Tech- nology. Southend - on - Sea, England. Aug. 5. Notices the news today r f iThe Associated Psr and (Itglle Press Senr ice SCIENTISTS STUDYING MOON ROCKS yesterday turned up a shiny pebble that looks something like a pearl at the Space Center in Houston. Meanwhile, however, rips in gloves used to handle moon rocks inside the special vacuum chamber used for examining the rocks threatened a 21x' day delay in the examination of much of the other lunar material brought back by the Apollo 11 astronauts. While scientists beganWstudying the moon rocks, the astronauts continued their debriefing during their quarantine period which will last until Aug, 11. . * t TICKETS: $2.00 All seats reserved. available at 1532 SAP Doctoral Exans Presented by Ann Tenants Union MAIL ORDER TICKETS: Tenants Union, 1532 SA Enclose self-addressed sta . tiuiupurpose- __ , Room, Undergraduate Library, 3:00 Robert Perry Ryan, Education, Dis- attacks, cancer of the throat, emphysema, non-cancerous mouth p.m. sertaionlaThos CeUo a T th Gde disorders and pregnancy troubles was released yesterday by the School of Public Health - Delta Attitudes," on Tuesday, July 29 at 9:00 Public Health Service. Omega Lecture - Hillel Shuval, Asso- a.m. in 3206 U.H.S., Chairman, S. E.,el- ciate Professor of Environmental Dimond. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Rdbert Finch re- Health, Hebrew University Medical Edward Gustav Dauw, Education, Dis-; leased the 135-page report and at the same time commended the School, Jerusalem, "Transmission of sertatimon: The Effects of a Special tobacco industry for volunteering last week to end all broadcast 'ad- Virus Diseases by Drinking WVa t er":I Curriculum and Separate Physical Fa- School of Public Health Auditorium, cility on a Population of Unsuccessful vertising by next year. 3:30 p.ms yHighSchool Students," on Tuesday, The report is a summary of more than 600 separate studies by University Players - Michigan Rep-? July 29 at 1:00 p.m. in 3206 U.H.S.,.isb ertory 69 - Doctor's Dilemma by Chairman: L. W. Anderson. physicians and scientists all over the world. The Public Health Service George Bernard Shaw: Lydia Mendels- - is required to submit a series of such reports to Congress each year. sohn Theater, 8:00 p.m. Degree Recital - David Bowman, or- gan: Hill Auditorium, 8:00 p.m. GENERAL DIVISION SECRETARY OF DEFENSE Melvin Laird yesterday declared The Woodwind Quintet - N e 1 s o n 3200 S.A.B. that the United States must possess chemical and biological war- Hauenstein, flute; Florian Mueller, Placement Interview at General Di- fare (CBW) to discourage that type of attack by other countries. oboe;. John Mohler, clarinet: H a r r y vision, Please call 763-1 63 for appoint- Betv; French horn and Lewis Cooper. ments. Literature is available at the He said the Soviet Union has a much greater stock of CBW wea- bassoon; Rackham Lecture Hall, 8:00 office. pons than the U.S., but offered no figures. pm. ,Continued on Page 4) _ Laird made his comments before the Na tional Sertt Coutnc lL THIS WEEKEND !!o B.B. KING MUDDY WATERS BIG MAMA THORNTON "LET IT SUFFICE TO SAY THAT if..IS A .d MASTERPIECE."-PLAYBOY JAMES COTTON - and 21 other greats at Fuller Rd. Flatlands (across from N. Campus entrance) rain or shine Tickets on sale at Discount Records, Diag, and the gate $14/ all 4 concerts, $5/ single concert, $2/ Sat. workshop Fri. eve., 6:15 p.m. thru Sunday eve. AUG. 1-2-3 a UAC-Canter-bury House production RBMA "THE MOST INTERESTING FILM SO FAR THIS YEAR::. -VOGUE "IF YOU'RE YOUNG, YOU'LL REALLY DIG ... -CosMOPO TAN WINNER "BEST FILM" CANNES 1 0 SHOWS AT: Sunday-Thursday 1 :1 5-3 :45-6 :1 5-8 :50 d Friday r Saturday , e 12:30-1 :35-4:45 Program Information 662-6264 6:55-9:05 HELD OVER 3RD BIG WEEK! The strangest trio ever to track a killer. ftEi I Atuenia, . WAYNE HAL WALLIS r; >5, PRODUCTION GLEN CAMPBELL KIM GI T DABBY . Technicolor@ A Paramount Picture G "Makes :.r: Killing of Sister G orges' look like. -Salmaggi. N.Y. Daily column 2' ftom thi.SirHoimNowet Ia d Color by Movielab Woman partfl b "X"-persons under 18 not admitted o FIFTH FORUM Today at 6:30, 8:00, 9:30 761-9700 1 . CUIV1 114MUC;111175U C Vi 4110 *1'Ct lV* rtA 0Ct J tS y . U 1 which was conducting at his request a review of the controversial U.S. CBW program. CBW cost about $350 million last year. At the same time, Laird disputed a statement by Sen. Allen J. Ellender (D-La) that the military has kept nerve gas production hid- den from Congress. CBW has become controversial in recent months when the mili- tary was stopped by congressional criticism from shipping 27,000 tons of obsolete chemical munitions by train across the country to be dumped in the Atlantic. In addition, the military has revealed and stopped subsequently some open-air testing of CBW materials in the United States. '1.e Pentagon has also been forced, to admit that nerve gas was being stocked on bases abroad and to remove nerve gas stored on Okinawa when a leak exposed about two dozen men to CB gas. CREATION OF AN UNPRECEDENTED federal-state system to license all the nation's 24 million privately-owned hand guns was urged yesterday by the National Commissiop on the Causes and Prevention of Violence.° "It is the ready availability of the hand gun, so often a weapon of crime and so infrequently a sporting arm, that is the most serious part of the current firearms problem in this country," said Dr. Milton Eisenhower, commission chairman. The commission urged that states be given four years to set up a strict licensing procedure limiting ownership of hand guns to per- sons showing a legitimate need. States which did not comply would come under a federal licensing system. However, the Nixon administration last week cache out against any gun control measures, saying federal regulation was not needed and would infringe upon states rights. * * * THE FEDERAL BUDGET, after eight years of red ink, ended fiscal 1969 with a surplus of more than $3 billion, the Treasury Department and the Bureau of the Budget said yesterday. The surplus was considerably higher than the Nixon administra- tion's forecasts of $900 million to $1.2 billion. The report showed in- come of $187.8 billion and outlays of $184.8 billion for a surplus of $3.1 billion. ""' The fiscal year-ended June 30. PRESIDENT NIXON arrived in Thailand yesterday on his around-the-world tour. Perhaps because of a pouring rain, crowds were smaller than when President Lyndon Johnson visited Thailand in 1966. However, Nixon and his wife were greeted cordially and with a great deal of pomp. t Nixon assured the Thai people that the United States has no intention of ever abandoning them to either internal subversion or threats from abroad. Infiltrators punctuated the President's visit with an attack on a U.S. air base in northeast Thailand, wounding one American. Nixon's three-day visit to Thailand may include a side trip to Vietnam. He will arrive in India on Thursday, and from there he will fly to Pakistan. ------COUPON -n-- I The Michigan Daily, edited and man- I aged by students at the University of U Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second 'I THP 0A4 ] /"sc 1 N ' Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- I igan, 420 Maynard St, Ann Arbor, g I Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- P Aday, through Sunday morning Univer PI *! sity year. Subscription rates: $9 by carrier, $10 by mail. I 761 -0001 « Summer Session published Tuesday I through Saturday morning. Subserip- i tion rates:. $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by $1.00 OFFI i Onea large one item (or, more) pizza. One coupon per pizza.Se Pick Up Only II I3f aa S 211 E. Ann .5t. -Next to t0 I the Armory I Expires Aug. 1 POT LAST TIMES THIS WEEK TO SEE UNIVERSITY PLAYERS MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING-Wed., July 30 & Sat., Aug. 2 "highly entertaining"-MICHIGAN DAILY HOGAN'S GOAT-Thurs., July 31 & Sun., Aug. 3 "powerful and gripping work"-ANN ARBOR NEWS DOCTOR'S DILEMMA-Tues., July 29 & Fri., Aug. 1 "a solid evening of entertainment"--MICHIGAN DAILY *@@@ 0 COMING 0 f" in Daily Classifieds I , I MI&UL eUU DIAL 5-6290 TODAY at 1:30 and 8 P.M. WEST PiIoTIIRF a