Wednesday, 'August 13, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednsda, Auust13, 1969HE ICHIAN AIL -a ..hre DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN music Joan, Baez.. Hug, her 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 z p.m. of the day preceding publi- r cation and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mnum' 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. DayCalendar WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13 3 Department of Geography and Asso- ciation of American Geographers An- nual Meeting: Concurrent Sessions, 10:00 a.m. DegreenRecital - J o, h n Littlejohn saxophone: School of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m.j Doctoral Exams James Edward Jonish, Economics, Dissertation: "Collective Wage Deter- mination and International Trade: The U.S. sand Canadian Steel Industries," on Wednesday, August 13 at 8:15 a.m. In 108 Economics Building, Chairman: H. M.. Levinson. Alden Speare, Jr., Sociology, Disser- tation: "The Determinants of Rural to Urban Migration in Taiwan," on Wed-. nesday, August 13 at 10:30 a.m. in the Conference R o o m of the Population Studies Center, Co-Chairmen: Ronald Freedman and David Goldberg. Thomas Harold Ohlgren, English Language and Literature, Dissertation: "The ?21: trations of the Caedmonian Genewn =- a Guide to the Interpreta- tion aothe Text," on Wednesday, Aug- ust 13 at 3:00 p.m. in 7838 haven Hall, Chairman: S. M. Kuhn. Philip Kinsey von Bretzel, Philosophy, Dissertation: "Conventionalism, Con- . -- structivism and Logical Necessity," on Wednesday, August 13 at 3:00 p.m. in 2216 Angell Hall, Chairman: A. W. Burks. Zalman Philip Usiskin, Education.. Dissertation: "The Effects ofTeaching, Euclidean Geometry via Transforma- tions on Student Achievement and At- tidudes in Tenth-Grade Geometry," on Wednesday, August 13 at 7:30 p.m. in 3019 U.H.S., Chairman: A. F. Coxford. Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200. S.A.B. Current Position Openings Received by General Division, please call 764-7460 for further information. Sella Y. Post Montgomery Hosp., Bat- tle Creek, Mich. - Assistant Adminis- trator. World Publishing Company, Cleve- land, Ohio - Librarian for encyclope- dia dept., MALS pref, plus 1 yr. Local Corporation - Associate Re- search Analyst. Maters in science or math, PhD preferred, exper in com- puter syst, programming, and bckrnd in chem,, biol., pharmacol., and stat, abt. 2-3 years. State of Wisconsin - Listing includes positions in areas of admin health, educ. admin., job development, tranls- port engrg. Local Agency, Secretarial Position in- volving much volunteer contact work, supervision of 1 and some typing. Ayerst Laboratories, positions in met- ropolitan Detroit area - Pharmaceuti- cal Sales, pref. degree in sci. area, no exper necess. Management Consultants - Many po- sitions for engineers in pckg, chem and plastics industries. State of Connecticut - Dir. of Rehab. Services, PhD clin Psych plus 4 years. Dir. Mental Health Program Planning, PhD Med or Psych, Soc. Sci. and 2 yrs. Sarkes Tarzian Inc., Bloomington, Id. - Editors, City and Society, Tech- nical Writer, Adv. Sales. Local Publisher - Advertising Sales Manager, pref. man in 30's with bckrnd in boating, and sales experience. State of Arkansas - Admin. Assts, Health Planning Consult, MPH, Radio- logical Health, Phsy, Chem, degrees. Statisticians, math degree. Hosp. and Nursing Home Inspection, Engr. Buckman Laboratories, Inc., Memphis, Tenn., positions in other locations - Bach. in Chem or biol. sci. for indus- trial water use sales. By an Admirer By the time Joan Baez finish- ed singing her first song. last night I wanted to rush past the Events Building's 8200 people and hug her. Joan Baez, a Joan of Arc in smiles and songs in- stead of metal armor, embraces the faces she sings to you and you can not help but want to kiss her back. Don't simply buy her records' and flaten her voice to plastic dies, and don't read just about her and reduce her to two-di- mensional type. Joan Baez is a human being who has kept her humanity through the years of legends and interviews and te- dious television tapes and song- books and money, ,through the myths of stardom which made mannequins out of others who had less to offer-and youhave to embrace her in person. Why did more people come to Joan Baez, jumping to their feet and shouting, more than have ever gathered together in an Ann Arbor summer, more peo- ple than came to hear and see the sex of Janis Joplin? I think it is because Joan Baez is so compelling and compasisonate -she sings a single message, too absolute to change from song to song: killing is wrong and living is right, and that is the end of it. No tirades, no be- littling, no political harangues between songs: just a simple rap which yog must either be- live and live by or flatly reject. The audience doesn't have to agree with Miss Baez's politics, and maybe her revolution of peace and brotherhood will fail pathetically before guns and bullets. But she believes it, and lives it, and that is a human triumph. -Daily-Jay Cassidy When I hear Joan Baez on records, her voice sounds as tedious and flat as the records look. But meet Joan Baez pretty. But meet Joan Baez where you can touch her, where she becomes another human being, and she sings with a power and conviction and pur- ity and unbreakable hope which modulates her voice with more depth and sizzling nuance than any clever dynamics or gyra- tions. When she sings about her husband David, clapped in fed- eral prison because he refused to join an institution which deals in death, she loves him and we feel it. Jeffrey and Fondle, two warm musicians who also struggle in the Resistance, made a remark- able contribution - especially Fondle's soft Nashville guitar, which cushioned Miss Baez's songs, and Jeffrey's quiet har- mony. Collins exam moved (Continued from Page 1) tion that Collins was involved in other murders." Although attempts have b e e n made to link Collins with the oth- er six slayings and with a series of murders in California, Krasny said the police have "no solid con- nections at this point." He added that he also expects to hear from mystic Peter Hu'kos within the week. Hurkos, who claims to have psychic powers and claims he had named Collins be- fore the accused slayer was ap- prehended, was in Ypsilanti last Thursday for Collins' arraign- ment but later returned to Cali- fornia. Krasny explained that a visitor had come to Hurkos on the day Karen Beineman's body was dis- covered and in the presence of detectives assigned to Hurkos told him that Collins frequently took girls for motorcycle rides. Krasny added that Hurkos gave no information that the police had not had previously. He also said earlier evidence will again be reviewed and new leads which are consistently com- ing into the "crime center" are being followed up. One part of the problem at last Thursday's preliminary examina- tion was that' only 10 newsmen were permitted in the small courtroom in Ypsilanti. Michael Devine, chief adminis- trative assistant for state Supreme Court Chief J u s t i c e Thomas Brennan, was sent to Washtenaw County on Monday to help Judge Deake. Devine will handle press arrangements for the examination tomorrow. , Devine said he hopes to make the courtroom available to more members of the press. FBI officers arrested Andrew Manuel, Jr., a former roommate of Collins, on a fugitive warrant. Manuel was charged with inter- state flight to avoid prosecution for larceny. He is presently being held in the County Jail in Ann Arbor. Police have said Manuel travel- ed to Salinas, Calif., with Collins in a rented trailer. The warrant was issued on charges of larceny by conversion for failing to return the trailer. California officials are investi- gating the possibility' that Manuel and Collins might have been in- volved in two murders in the Sa- linas area. Salinas police say they have reason to believe that Collins and possibly Manuel may be connected to the murder of Roxie Phillips, 17, who was vacationing in ,Sa- linas and who disappeared the day after Collins met her friend, Nancy Albrecht. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News 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 University year. Subscription rates: $9 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. the n e ws today by1 The Associate,[ Prces and Collc, Pas cr crc ENEMY FORCES in Vietnam were reported in retreat after breaking a two-month battlefield lull yesterday by shelling 128 cities and towns across South Vietnam and loosing ground attacks on 14 allied bases or positions. The main attacks were centered on two fronts, one north of Saigon and the other in the far north around Da Nang. But U.S. officers expected the enemy to keep up the attacks and this was borne out by a mortar and rocket barrage last night at an U.S. Army camp north of Saigon. THE NIXON ADMINISTRATION yesterday produced a $3.5 billion program to train 1.75 million Americans a year for Jobs, President Nixon said these Jobs would "build a bridge to human dignity." Nixon sent Congress a message dealing with phases of the program that would train one million persons at a cost of $2.3 billion a year- an operation which would eventually be turned over largely to states and major cities to run. This particular phase of the training program falls under the Department of Labor and the balance will involve the Departments of Defense and Health, Education and Welfare. Secretary of Labor George Shultz said Nixon plans to add 150,000 Americans to the roster of Job training operations, mainly from per- sons on welfare rolls, and to upgrade job opportunities for the 75,000 working poor. DEFENSE SECRETARY MELVIN LAIRD was quoted yes- terday as saying he believes specific congressional authorization Would be needed before any U.S. ground troops could be committed in Thailand under a secret U.S.-Thai agreement. Sen. Stuart Symington, (D-M), told the Senate, that a Pentagon witness gave this word to the Foreign Relations Committee, adding the witness said it would be taken up with Congress because Laird wanted to do so.t' Earlier Sen. Frank Church, (D-Idaho), said that a secret con- tingency plan might put U.S. troops under Tha command to defend that country from Communist attack. * * * FIGHTING RAGED throughout last night between Roman Catholics, Protestants, and the police in Londonderry, North Ireland. Scores were reported injured by barrages of rocks and gasoline bombs after 15,000 Protestants-some from Canada and the United States-paraded through the streets of the predominantly Catholic city. The Protestants were observing the anniversary of a 17th century battle over religious differences. Bernadette Devlin, 22-year-old leftist member of the British Parliament, was with the Catholics, urging crowds to "unite and de- fend your homes." The fighting erupted after scattered rock-throwing by Roman Catholics on the fringe of the Protestant festival. Londonderry has been in a state of extreme tension since the weekend. * * * THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION said yesterday it plans to tighten supervision of drug testing on human beings. FDA Commissioner Herbert Ley, Jr. told a Senate anti-monopoly subcommittte the government wants "peer groups" to oversee drug testing at hospitals and medical centers. The groups, comprised of lawyers, clergymen, physician and other professionals, would approve and supervise human drug tests. Ley said a similar system now applies for all federally-funded research. He added the new regulations are aimed at such reported abuses as false reporting of test results and inadequate patient pro- tection. * * * THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION adopted regulations yesterday aimed at ensuring each consumer a fair chance of win- ning in giveaway games at grocery stores and service stations. The action came on a 4-1 vote with the lone dissenter objecting on the grounds that promotional gimmicks are inherently unfair and should be outlawed completely. The new regulations, which take effect in 60 days, followed months of study, six weeks of public hearings, and a three-year in- vestigation by the FTC. The rules will apply only to grocery stores and service stations, but the FTC said in a separate rule is being initiated to govern all promo- tional games in any industry. Basically the regulations prohibit practices which might mislead consumers into thinking their chances of winning a prize are greater than in actuality. FRIDAY and SATURDAY, Aug. 15 and 16 ACHAPLIN FEATURE starring C. CHAPLI N No matter what it is, you get your mo ey's wornh" -Chairman Mao 7 & 9 -J ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75 AUDITORIUM FALL RENTALS 2 bedroom apartment 2-3-4 Man McKinley Associates 663-6448 NATIONAL 6EN~RAL cORPORATION NOW SHOWING FOX EASTERN THEATRES- FOXVILLaGrE 375 No. MAPLE RD. -769.130Q FEATURE TIMES :00-3:00-5:00 7 :00-9 :00 THURS. ONLY 3-5-7-9 I I I Rent your Roommate with a Classified Ad .- I N I I THE SCHOO OF MUSIC and DEPARTMENT OF ART present Nicolai's opera "The Merry Wives of Windsor" (in English) August 15,16,18, 19-8:00 P.M. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Box Office open: 12:30-5:00 P.M. August 11-14 12:30-8:00 P.M. August 15, 16, 18, 19 Good seats still available JOIN THE DAILY SPORTS STAFF 0 BRING US UP TODATE Come In Any Afternoon 420 MAYNARD .: J : ./ . O . r ^ h I LAST TIMES TODAY--"THE APRIL FOOLS" STARTS THURSDAY * * Proqram Information 662-6264 Sa Wellcome to San Francisco, Cathy! "Bizarre and Beautiful! Eerie and Erotic!" -Salmagi, WINS "Clouzot has directed with force, flair, and a sense of style to make the whole experi- ence stand head and shoulders above the current crop of domestic and foreign re- leases!" -GOLDMANWCBS , "Super contemporary!" -.Y.TIMESV -N.Y. T IME S "I literally cannot speak, my throat is. choked, my heart bowled over, an hour after seeing 'La Prisonniere' . . . this had never happened to me, never, I want to be by myself I am so moved!" -Claude Mauriac, Le Figaro, Paris From The . Master Film Maker Henri-Georges Mlumo! I I I I 11 CANTERBURY HOUSE, 330Maynard I . ... I DIAL 5-6290 TODAY at WO:30and8 P.M. R DIAL 8-6416 Endina TONIGHT Joseph E. Levine pesents 66j An Avco Embassy Film Henn-Georges Nuzors BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! I I F... """ I OF THE YEAR!