qmwpRdrmqrmvwqrwwmr ,, NOW IA' DIAL 8-6416 second front page Ammlmm - 4T4r S6wir4 40 Dattil NEWS PHONE: 764.0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 A Fim by NORMAN MAILER presented by Grove Press1 "It has guts, humor, and tagent"-CUE PLUS 2nd FEATURE GROVE PRESS PRESENTS JEAN-LUC GODARD'S STARRING MIREILLE DARC AND JEAN YANNE. Wednesday, August 6, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Scientists leave 'engineer-oriented' space agency STARTS TODAY NATIONAL aENERAL CORPORATION FOX EASTERN-ThEAT - FOR VILLAGE 375 No. MAPLE RD.+.769.1300 RASCAL: 1:30 4:00-6:50-9:15 HAT: 3:10-545 8:30-10:50 SPACE CENTER, Houston (P)-Sci- entist-astronaut Dr. F. Curtis Michel announced yesterday he's quitting the space agency, thus joining a growing number of scientists fleeing a program they believe too "engineer-oriented." Michel resigned by letter to astro- naut chief Donald K. Slayton. He said he did so with reluctance, but ex- plained he was eager to devote more time to science and the opportunities to fly into space are rare. Three other scientists-astronauts out of the 17 selected by the National Aeronautics 'and Space Administration resigned earlier, Sources said some of those remain- ing also are unhappy about the long wait for aE flight and the lack of em- phasis on science in the programa None yet has been assigned to a mis- sion. Two scientists in the earth and lunar resources branch at the Manned Spacecraft Center announced their resignations just as examination started of the first rocks brought back from the moon. Dr. Wilmot Hess, the chief scien- tist at MSC, resigned to take a job with the U.S. Environmental Science Services Administration. Dr. Elbert King, curator of the Lu- nar Receiving Laboratory, is resign- ing in September to take a post at the University of Houston. King said NASA has "given science a back seat in the last few years. He maintained that must change if the space program is to succeed now that the first astronauts have landed on the moon. "Now that we've accomplished our national goal," he said, "there has to be a good scientific reason for us to keep going back to the moon. NASA has made no real effort to develop this. "The NASA space program would lose some of the support it has from the science community without a sound scientific development" of its future flights to the moon, King said. Emphasis in the program, so far, he said, has been practically all on the engineering of getting men to the moon and bringing them back. One source said the continuing con- flict with the engineers is the main reason Hess is leaving the program. NASA always has had difficulties in attracting scientists, the source said, and it probably will be even harder now that the highly-regarded Hess is leaving. The conflict between, science and engineering thinking surfaced earlier this year when a petition from 60 scientists asked the space agency to hold the number of flights to the moon to two or less a year. NASA officials, however, have advo- cated three or more of the lunar landing flights a year until the exist- ing launch vehicles and spacecraft are exhausted. Scientists feel that more time 'be- tween flights would increase the sci- entific return of the moon landings. There would be more time to study data from previous flights and decide where next to land. There also would be more time to develop additional scientific experiments. Engineers, however, feel that the engineering teams needed to make the flights can't be held together unless the flights are at least every four months. They point out that the long delays between flights would cause engineers to drift to more active programs. King said that scientists would ac- tually prefer about nine months be- tween the flights. There are a number of restless sci- entists in the space program who are hanging on, hoping NASA will devote more of the immense engineering cap- ability it has developed toward science, King added. Some, like himself, he said, feel they can accomplish more in science while working with NASA as an outsider THURSDAY TIMES: Rascal :00-6:50-9:15; Hat-3:10-5:45-8:30-10:50 Dr. F. Curtis Michel Caucus proposes Collins identified as driver of car Schell last seen alive in the newsitoday by The Assucia fed Press and College Press Service LWAIT ~un DISNEYUJ 1 pT E G ® ~ WI 1CIINIOLOR8 RADICAL FILM SERIES presents The official British entry at the Venice Film Festival 1965m good limes, wonderful limes Produced and Directed by LIONEL ROGOSIN C CINE FORUM at Venice e FIRST PRIZE at Leipzig Film Festival new union (Continued from Page 1) filiated with any of the groups on campus. However, Gary Rothberger main- tained that forming a mass based organization like the RSU could create a split similar to the one whiche caused the formation of Radical Caucus after a dispute over tactics with SDS last fall. The letter, going out nationally, to other radical groups and in- dividuals, explains why caucus split with SDS last fall. An "opposing faction called the Jesse James Gang, which placed great emphasis on vanguard ac- tion to 'spark' the struggle, ulti- mately made it- impossible for Radical Caucus to continue to operate in the SDS framework," the letter says. The letter explains that Cau- cus emphasizes "a democratically- based movement which seeks to organize, educate, and limit itself to useful disruptive tactics with large support rather than "cre- ative destruction by a politically advanced elite." (Continued from Page 1) V street by a man who described himself as an EMU student. After talking for awhile he said he would visit her the next day. Albrecht reported. Smith reported that Albrecht said she had told her friend of Collins, the car he was driving, and the fact that Collins would visit Albrecht again. Phillips "was well aware of the existence of John Collins," said Smith. "Collins failed to return and on the following day, a Monday, Roxey Ann Phillips disappeared from Salinas and her body was found two weeks later in the Car- mel area," Smith said. Meanwhile, police and officials from the Federal Bureau of In- vestigation are conducting a na- tion-wide search for Andrew Man- uel, who police say traveled to' Salinas with Collins in a rented camping trailer. A warrant for Manuel's arrest has been issued because he failed to return the trailer to an Ypsi- lanti firm. The FBI has a warrant out for his arrest as a fugitive from the law. Paul Stoddard, spe- cial agent in charge of the Detroit FBI office said the FBI is only concerned with finding Manuel and does not at this time have any thing to do with Collins' case. Police have reason to believe that Manuel is on his way to Flor- ida and they are especially check- ing out leads in states with routes between Michigan and Florida and Michigan and California. Police picked up a man suspect- ed -to be Manuel, but he was clear- ed "within a matter of minutes," according to Stadtfeld. Manuel had rented the trailer using a check and identification stolen from an EMU student. Det. Sgt. Ken Christensen and De.t Tom Nasser of the State Po- lice Crime Laboratory in Plymouth have been examining the trailer, but have reported little evidence linking it with any of the local murders. According to Stadtfeld, there is no information concerning a finger print of Phillips on the trailer. Collins faces a preliminary ex- amination tomorrow in District Judge Edward Deake's court. His attorneys will probably ask for a change in venue for both the ex- amination and trial charging that adverse publicity to Collins war- rants a change in location. However, the preliminary ex- amination may be postponed any- way if Collins replaces his at- torneys and retains two from Marine City, Mich. who reportedly conferred with him Monday. At the examination, the prose- cuting attorney presents evidence to show that a crime has been' committed and that there are rea- sonable grounds for believing the! defendant committed the crime. County Prosecuting . Attorney William Delhey is expected to op- pose both motions for change. Although Delhey rarely appears for a lower court examination, he is expected to present the case against Collins tomorrow. Delhey is expected to present only the "barest" evidence against Collins at the pre-trial examina- tion, holding back his main evi- dence for the Circuit Court trial. The Supreme Court has given explicit decisions about publicity proven detrimental to the defend- and before the trial, and the seven unsolved slayings in the Ann Ar- bor-Ypsilanti area and the arrest' of Collins have received worldwide attention. Good Times, Wonderful Times "SATIRIC THRUST at the smugness complacency and stupidity of people who do not grdsp the anguish, horror and desolation that may be caused by war and warmongers." Crowther, N.Y. Times Good Times, Wonderful Times "IRONIC AND SHATTERING it is difficult to ignore Rogo- sins abrasive thought-provoking report of contemporary society * the'fim is shattering." Carroll, Daily News Good Times, Wonderful Times "A PROVOCATIVE, IMPORTANT MOVIE to stir the conscience. You owe it to yourself to experience this sardonic powerfully - conceived film." Wolfe, Cue Good Times, Wonderful Times "A CALL to action, a warning and a punch In the soft underbelly of society. Rogosin has managed brilliantly to set the present world teetering on the stem of a Martini. It should be seen." Newsweek .4r :r., . ..t%..4' .. "". .k. . .. .. . . .... . . .} ,.5v4S .s .. ...' **...".'. %VttW''. 1. . . WED., AUG. 6th-7:00, 8:30, 10:00, 11:30 P.M. Admission 75c CANTERBURY HOUSE-330 Maynard Order Your Daily Now- P7" 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 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 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6 Audio-Visual Education Center Sum- mer Previews - Lonely Dorymenand World of Yukar: Multipurpose Room, Undergraduate Library, 3:00 p.m. University Players - Michigan Rep- ertory 69 - The Duchess of Malfi by John Webster: Lydia Mendelssohn The- ater, 8:00 p.m. Gilbert and Sullivan Society - Paint Y o u r Wagon by Lerner and Loewe: Trueblood Auditorium, 8:00 p.m. Degree Recital - Franklin Dybdahl. bass: School of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. The Stanley Quartet - Gilbert Ross, violin; Robert Courte, viola; Gustave Rosseels, violin; Jerome Jelinek, cello assisted by Clyn Barrus, viola: Rack- ham Lecture Hall, 8:00 p.m. General Notices Summer Commencement Exercises August 10, 1969 To be held at 2:00 p.m. in Hill Au- ditorium. All graduates of t h e 1969 spring-summer term may attend. Reception for graduates, their rela- tives and friends in Michigan League Ballroom immediately following t h e ceremony. Please enter League at west entrance. Tickets: Four to each prospective grad- uate, to be distributed from Monday, July 28, to Friday, August 9, at Diploma Department, 1518 LS. & A. Building, except on Saturday, August 2, when of- fice will be closed. Academic Costume: May be rented at Moe Sport Shop, 711 North University Avenue. Orders should be placed imme- diately, and MUST be placed before July 19. Assembly for Graduates: At 1:00 'p.m. in Natural Science Auditorium. Mar- shalsnwill direct graduates to proper stations. Programs: To be distributed at Hill Auditorium. Announcements: There will be a lim- ited number of graduation announce- ments for sale at the Information Desk, First Floor Lobby, L.S. & A. Building. Candidates who qualify for a doctor- al degree from the Graduate School and Who Attend The Commencement Ex- ercises will be presented a hood by the University as part of the ceremony. PLANS FOR SUMMER COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES Sunday, August 10, 1969 - 2:00 p.m. Time of Assembly -- 1:15 p.m. Places of Assembly The President's Group: Regents and Ex-Regents, President, Executive Offi- cers, Faculty with active duty in the Exercises, Minister, Speaker, Honorary Degree Recipients, Master of Ceremon- Kalamazoo Room of the Michigan Lea- gue where they will robe. The Dean's Group: Deans (or their representatives) and Directors. This group will assemble in the Michigan Room of the Michigan League where they will robe. The Faculty: Other members of the faculty in academic costume. This group will assemble in Room 1053 Nat- ural Science Building where they will robe. Students of the Various Schools and Colleges: In Natural Science Building as, follows: SECTION A - Literature, Science and the Arts - Front part of Auditor- ium (West Section) -Library Science - Front part of Auditorium (East Section) -Dearborn Campus - Front part of Auditorium (East Section, behind Li- brary Science) SECTION B - Graduate School -Ph.D.'s, Room 3082 -Inter-College Degrees, Rear part of Auditorium (West Section) - Candidates in Philosophy. Rear part of Auditorium (West Section) -Educational - Rear part of Audi- torium (Center Section) - Social Work - Rear part of Audi- torium (East Section) -Flint College - Rear part of Audi- torium (East Section, behind Social Work) SECTION C - Public Health, Room 2071 - Engineering - Room 2042 - Business Administration - Room 2042 (behind Engineering) - Music - Room 2033 (North End) -Nursing - Room 2033 (behind mu- sic), - Dentistry - Room 2033 (behind Nursing) - Medicine - R o o m 2033 (behind Dentistry) - Pharmacy - Room 2023 (W e st End) -- Natural Resources - Room 2023 (Center, behind Pharmacy) - Law - Room 2023 (East End, be- hind Natural Resources) MARCH INTO HILL AUDITORIUM 1:45 p.m. - Academic Dress John E. Milholland, Chief Marshal Robert B. Harris, Asst. Chief Marshal W. Earl Britton, Asst. Chief Marshal ing Ability in Fourth Grade Children," on Wednesday, August 6 at 1:00 p.m. in 3019 U.H.S., Chairman: J. N. Payne. Raymond Paul Tamppari, Education, Dissertation: "A Model for Determining Biological Concept Attainment," on Wednesday, August 6 at 2:00 p.m. in, 1431 U.H.S., Chairman: B. E. Voss. Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Current Position Openings Received by General Division, please call 764-7460 for further information. U.S. Information Agency, Wash. D.C. - Seeks Polish speaking guides f o r architectural exhibit shown in three Polish cities between Jan. and May 70. Inquiries from students, faculty or practitioners in arch, c i t y planning, fine arts are encouraged to contact the agency, wives may accompany husbands on own expense unless both are se- lected as guides. S t a t e of Washington - Attendent Training Instructor, BA soc. sci. Educ. Professions Dev. Coord, MA in ed plus 2 years teaching, educ. consult or ad- min. exper. Teacher of the Blind. Dept. of Highways Engineers. City of Minneapolis-Park Construc- tion Supv., degree in CE or ME and 5 years exper in consulting with arch- itects and construction in dev. of parks, recreation ctrs. etc. State of Wisconsin - Mediator, Em- ployee relations commission, MArin la- bor rel., personnel mgmt., indust, rel., or law degree and 1 year exper. Health Planning research analyst, degree in math, stat, biol. sci., or soc sci, with mi. 15 hours in stat, masters and 5 years exper or BA and 7. ORGANIZATION NOTICES University Lutheran Chapel, August 6, 1969, 10:00 p.m.: 1511 Washtenaw Avenue - Midweek Devotion, the Rev. Afraifran n~~ THREE AMERICAN SERVICEMEN arrived in Vientiane, Laos, yesterday after being released from a North Vietnamese prisoner camp. Navy pilot Lt. Robert Franchot Frishman acting as spokesman for the freed men said their treatment in the camps had been adequate. Frishman, Capt. Wesley Lewis Rumbel, an Air Force pilot, and Douglas Hegdahl, a seaman apprentice, were accompanied by a fur4 man pacifist mission. The pacifists took over custody of thethree n Hanoi Monday. Frishman had been a prisoner for nearly 22 months after his plane was shot down Oct. 24, 1967, near Hanoi. Rumbel was in cap- tivity for 16 months following his capture in April, 1968, and Hegdahl, who fell into the sea from a U.S. cruiser April 5, 1967, was a prisoner for 28 months. Although it has not been confirmed, the three servicemen are expected to arrive at JFK International Airport in New York to-' morrow. * * * ITALIAN LEADER MARIANO RUMOR formed his second government in eight months yesterday ending a 31-day crisis but leaving Italy's deep political troubles largely unsolved. The all-Christian Democrat minority government, to -be sworn in today, is a stopgap body to govern with the support in Parliament of two Socialists parties. The government is committed tacitly to resign as early as fall or by spring at the latest. The new solution in effect puts off a decision on the issues that created the crisis-cooperation with the Communists and the relative weight to be given to forces within the "center left." The crisis occurred when Rumor failed to form a coalition govern- ment with his own Christian Democrats and the split halves of the Socialists-one moderate, the other leftist. The Socialists fell apart July 4 when the moderates accused the leftists of cooperating with the Communists. * * * SEN. EDWARD M. KENNEDY'S recent automobile accident has forced him to cancel a long-scheduled mid-August European tour. A spokesman for the Massachusetts Democrat yesterday said Kennedy had cabled the World Conference on Youth to cancel his Aug. 19 address in Brussels. Kennedy had cited legal matters surrounding the death of Mary Jo Kopechne that might require his presence as the reason for can- celing his trip, the spokesman said. Legal proceedings stemming from the July 18 accident would presumably include, an inquest, requested by Dist. Atty. Edmund Dinis, to determine the legal cause of Miss Kopechne's death. The inquest would be held in Edgartown, Mass, Although the Brussels address was his only scheduled public appearance Kennedy had planned to tour several European cities with his wife. DISTRICT COURT JUDGE James A. Boyle has made a deci- sion on the request for an inquest into Sen. Edward Kennedy's auto accident, but it won't be made public for another day or two, authori- ties said yesterday. The sources said Boyle was mailing his response to Dist. Atty. Edmund Dinis who began seeking the inquest last week. Dinis has not yet said why he wants the case reopened. ARMY DOCTOR HOWARD B. LEVY ivho was sentenced to { three years in prison for refusing to train medics bound for Viet- nam, was ordered freed on $1,000 bail Monday by Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas. Levy would have completed serving his sentence at the Federal Penitentiary at Lewisburg, Pa. Aug. 14. Douglas acted to make sure the case remains alive for consideration by the Court when it re- turns in October from a summer recess. Levy had been denied bail by Federal courts in Pennsylvania and then by Justice William J. Brennan Jr. who has jurisdiction over the courts in the state. Douglas subsequently overrode his colleague. * * * MULTIPLE NUCLEAR WARHEADS are carried on subma- rine-borne Polaris missiles, a defense department spokesman dis- closed yesterday. The disclosure was made in closed-door testimony by the depart- ment's director of research and engineering to a House subcommittee which has been considering a mutual moratorium with the Soviet Union on testing of multiple warhead missiles. The testimony was made public following the House session. * * * ' GEN. LEWIS B. HERSHEY, director 'of the Selective Service System, has been criticized by two former members of the Sele- tive Service Appeals Board. One of the recently resigned officials declared that Hershey is "unable to distinguish between himself and the Selective Servie Sys- tem" and that he "feels an increasing ownership of the system." Hershey, who has offered no comment on this latest criticism, re- sponded to calls for his resignation last May by saying "you hear a lot of talk" about his retirement, "but you don't hear it from me." :U F] FO Th 76 R-Restr --GOODBYECOLUMBUS'IS THE WARMEST, FRIENDLIEST, FUNNIEST, MOST HUGGABLE IFTH FILM I'VE SEEN IN A VERY )RUM LONG TIME. I PLAN TO SEE teatre IT AGAIN AND AGAIN UNTIL IT BECOMES AN OLD FRIEND" 1-9700 R.x.Reed, Women's Wear Daily ta l m ,,, ,, ,, icted --- -- I I r acto itMn o . DIAL 5-6290 TODAY at 1:30 and 8 P.M. Airea Scheips, 6peaker. Doctoral Exams William Lee Swart, Education, Dis- The Michigan Daily, edited and man- sertation: "A Comparative Study of the aged by students at the University of Effects of High-and Low-Structure Ap- Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second proaches to Developing Problem-Solv- Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- _i--- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, t)Qt t) Co tGrtg Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- V v day through Sunday morning Univer- Ssity year. Subscription rates: $9 by KASHM IR carrier, $10 by mail. _ Summer Session published Tuesday RESTAURAN T through Saturday morning. Subscrip- iR 1tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by 4 mail. 4 BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! I i U ~?" '~'~ U I II I I _ _ __ __ _ _ _ ' .. - - - - - 4