Thursday, August 14, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Thursday, August 14, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three I Vi T DIAL 5-6290 TODAY at 1:30 and 8 P.M. .:*:*:*:*x} 4}:"?>t:%{r }.i ::...........l C; "a, ;. :r rr.}{"": :}^,'":.^."y gr,;..;.r: ::.::: i. ..wIY Er'}":v{:i":S::ti..{"1x eeildS, ,rr e "k :{*sosA °V:{:y"44}.:e."{mri"?A :X,"}..i.: DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I 1 JUMBOV I F I ' 0A..PA.S. BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! "To Miss It Is To Throw Awav Ecstasvy!" -Drew Boqema Mich. Daily M-M-m-m-m, yummie! A giant hamburger of 1/4 lb. U.S. Govt. pure beef topped with let- tuce, tomato, mavonnaise, onions, oickles and ketchup . . ®MIPNSEEDY ERV1CE West of Arborland WINNER 6 ACADEMYAWARDS! Today Mat. $1 .75, Eve. $2.00 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 THURSDAY, AUGUST 14 Degree Recital - Patricia Bunce, so- prano: School of Music Recital. Doctoral Exams iWarren Arthur Johnson, Resource 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 Sundaymorning 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. Planning and Conservation, Disserta- tion: "Public Leisure Use of Private Land in England and Wales," on Thurs- day, August 14 at 9:00 a.m. in Room 1503, Natural Resource Building, Chair- man: C. F. Cooper. Eleanor Haven Belswenger, American Culture, Dissertation: "Thomas Chalk- ley Pious Quaker Businessman," on! Thursday, August 14 at 11:00 a.m. in! 7607 Haven Hall, Chairman: J. L. Da-3 vis.! Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Current Position Openings Received by General Division, please call 764-7460 for further information. State of Arkansas - Employment Ser- vice Technician. State of Washington - Educ., Pro-, gram Spec, MA plus 2 years. P a r k s Planner. Food Supv. Inspector. Bennington - Rutland Opportunity Council, Vt. - Executive Director, de- gree and exper working with low-in- come people. Management Consultants - Medical Records Librarian. Chief Medical Tech- noligist. Reg. Phys. Ther. State of Michigan - Labor Executive degree and 3 years admin. exper. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Po s m# m m a music Javanese Gamelan, by the lakeside"i The University's Javanese gam- residents who rehearse two nights elan will present a free outdoor a week in Burton Tower. concert at 7 p.m. today at the lake Three years ago the set of 50 in- Ceam eus.struments was purchased by the Campus.music school and the Center for The gamelan is an ensemble of South and Southeast Asian Stud- gongs, xylophones, drums, and ies Prof. William Malm, an Asian other instruments of bronze and music specialist, directed the first wood from Indonesia. msi sp. Javanese music is traditionally, small group performed at all-night, outdoor Judith Becker h as since then theatrical events, but fouruprey- acted as the gamelan's leader, de- ious Ann Arbor programs h a ve veloping more authentic tech- been in Hill Auditorium. Tonight's niques and a larger repertoire. concert will have a more relaxed, Mrs. Becker ard her husband are informal atmosphere. now in Indonesia on two-year Included in the program are foundation grants for study and pieces with a variety of styles and teaching. techniques, from both the theater In May t h e ensemble toured and dance traditions, several campuses, including Ober- The 18 performers are students, lin College and the University of faculty members, and other intert Chicago, and received warm au- ested Ann Arbor and Detroit-area dience reactions. URGES OPENNESS: Kelley- bars closed 1Regents meetin Is the neWS today by The Associated Prr ad/l Coll me Prres SerIce Read and Use Daily Classifieds Reform or Revolution RADICAL CAUCUS & SGC EDUCATION MEETING 3529 SAB-8 P.M. -Tonight- ALL WELCOME! I NOW SHOWING NATIONAL *ENERAL CORPORAftON FOX EASTERN THEATRES' FOXAVILL3E 375 No. MAPLE RD. "7694300 FEATURE TIMES 1:00-3:00-5:00 7:00-9:00 THURS. ONLY, 3-5-7-9 . I FALL RENTALS 2 bedroom apartment 2-3-4 Man McKinley Associates 663-6448 E Aug. 14, 1969 India Students Associationa the celebration of independc at 8:00 p.m. on August 15, 196 3A of the Michigan Union. We're in d to announces [eneday, 9 in oa (Continued from Page 1) I I. ________ : - 41 T___________________________5_- I a rs, floods, health services life saviu and blood ban us helps The Anewican Red Cn advertising contribu~ted for the pubii construction bids for the Modern bt Languages classroom and office -A request from Pierpont for authorization of funds from un- designated gifts for moving -in costs and equipment for the new Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library. -A request from Pierpont and Acting Vice President for Student Affairs Barbara Newell for re- gental authorization for the Uni- versity to become a lender in the Federal Insured Student Loan 9 1'Program and for the use of cer- gtam funds for these loans. -A request from Pierpont for the approval of the sale of a plot of land on North Campus to the ICS~. Inter-Cooperative Council. -A request from Pierpont for approval of a contract with a private company involving the establishment of a titled profes- sorship in return for grants and scholarship funds. Under the attorneyugeneral's ~3i. ruling, the action requests now handled in closed session will ap- parently have to be considered, or i good at least formally acted upon, dur- ing the open meetings. ,, .... ' - ---. . THE SCHOOL OF MUSIC and DEPARTMENT OF ART present Nicolails opera j6 ~"he Merry Wivies of, Windsor" (in English) August 15, 16,118, 19-8:00 PM. 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 The ruling does not, however, bar informal discussion related, for example, to information re- ports from the executive of ficers. Nor would it preclude the kind of extensive secret discussions held recently by the Regents on such controversial topics as the Stu- dent Government Council book- store proposal, the proposed Uni- versity bylaws and the play "Dionysus in 69." The attorney general's ruling? was prompted by a request by state Rep. Phil Pittenger ER- Lansing) who had specifically cited the problem of closed meet- ings held by the Michigan State University Board of Trustees. Two trustees recently refused to meet with the others during the closed meetings held by the board. Housing head not namned (Continued from Page 1) Mrs. Joseph Mhoon, who resigned July 21 in a dispute with the commission over her role in hir- ing new staff members. The dispute arose in July, when Weeks, reading from the com- mission's bylaws, reaffirmed that "personnel . . . shall b~e selected and appointed by the commis- sion." Mrs. Mhoon objected to the hiring of an assistant for tenant relations, saying 'she would hire whomever she pleased to fill the position. The commission can recommend and approve appoint- ments if it wants to, Mrs. Mhoon, said, but "I will hire my own staff." Mrs. Mhoon will officially leave her position on Monday. Concerning other matters, Weeks made public yesterday a letter addressed to Mrs. Mildred Officer, chairman of a committee recently established by the Human Rela- tions Commission to investigate the Housing Commission's policies. In the letter, Weeks said, "I can understand your concern" about, the Housing Commission's policies, but "I ask you to give us a reasonable opportunity to set our house in order." PRESIDENT NIXON announced yesterday he will nominate an associate justice to the Supreme Court by the end of this week. However, the President did not disclose the nominee's name and the White House press secretary said that it would not be released until the nomination Is made. Earlier Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen said South Caro- lina's federal circuit judge Clement Haynsworth would be nominated today "unless there is a radical change in signals." * * * A U.S. APPEALS COURT RULING overturning the federal civil rights decision to stop aid to a Florida school system may imperil further desegregration efforts, a government source said yesterday. The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that aid could not be cut off to all Taylor County school programs on the basic of segre- gation of students and faculty. The Civil Rights Act prohibition of federal aid to discrimnatory activities is applicable only to individual programs that are found to be segregated, the court maintained. In commenting on the case, a top government civil rights official predicted the ruling would be appealed to the Supreme Court. THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT'S antitrust division chief yes- terday recommended that the government abandon importation quotas on foreign crude oil. Reporting to a Cabinet task force on oil import controls, Asst. Atty. Gen. Richard McLaren said the present system is costly to the economy, unfair to consumers, anti-competitive and unnecessary for national security. He suggested that if import restraints are judged necessary, a low protective tariff would be preferable to aquota system. CZECHOSLOVAKIA'S COMMUNIST PARTY warned yester- day the government would crack down hard on any persons participating in "anti-socialst" demonstrations during the up- coming first anniversary of the Soviet invasion. Party chief Gustav Husak noted an increase in "disruptive activity" including distribution of anti-government leaflets and work slowdowns. * * ' * AIR FORCE ENGINEERS told the Senate yesterday test pilots would not have been allowed to make flight checks of air- plane brakes made by B.F. Goodrich if the company had ac- curately reported defects in the brakes. Officials of the Government Accounting Office said the com- pany's reported data did not correspond to the test results, and that test procedures did not appear to comply with contract specifications. A. Goodrich spokesmen acknowledged the discrepancy in reported data, but denied deliberate falsification. THE PENTAGON'S CONTINGENCY PLAN for U.S. emer- gency military assistance to Thailand "very likely would not be- come operative" in view of President Nixon's Asian policy, said Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Mont) yesterday. Citing Nixon's July 25 statement that U.S. troops would not be used except in case of clear aggression across international boundaries, Mansfield said the secret agreement with Thailand is outdated. Mansfield also joined Senate Foreign Relations Committee chair- man J. W. Fulbright in demanding that texts of the plan be delivered to members of that committee and the Senate Armed Services Com- mittee. The Defense Department has insisted that Senators come to the Pentagon to examine the document. * * . WHITNEY YOUNG yesterday called the Nixon Administra- tion's preventive detention proposals a first step toward oppressive racial containments. The 'administration has proposed imprisonment'for up to sity days without bail for a suspect in whom a judge finds "substantial probability" of guilt. Young, who is executive director of the National Urban League, told the annual American Bar Association meeting the measures, which have raised doubts about the traditional presumption of innocence and the Constitutional proscription of excessive bail, are an extreme reaction to the problems of crime and race. $500 MILLION would be provided to states in 1971 under the administration's federal revenue sharing plan, President Nixon said yesterday. This initial fund would grow to $5 billion by 1975, and much of it would be guaranteed to local governments in this first step toward decentralization of the federal government, Nixon added. Since about two-fifths of local government expenditures are directed toward education, Nixon said he expects most of the federal bonus to be spent for that purpose. * * * A PRISON REFORM PLAN emphasizing rehabilitation and aid to local correction facilities was announced yesterday by the chairman of the House Select Committee on Crime. The chairman, Rep. Claude Pepper (D-Fla), offered his program as a substitute for the Nixon administration's proposals which he said he would repeat the errors of the past. The committee's plan would create a National Institute of Cor- rections to oversee on-the-job training for prison inmates and board- ing of model prisoners, especially youths, in private homes. FRIDAY and SATURDAY, Aug. 15 and 16 A CHAPLIN FEATURE starring C. CHAPLIN "No matter what it is, you get your money's worth" -Chairman Mao 7 & 9 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75C AUDITORIUM '4g ' ,.- TIRED OF GOOD MUSIC? JOIN THE OKEEFENOKEE GLEE AND PERLU UNION BAND AND PLAY * BAD MUSIC * : jiiY."}}: fJAN n r,:i MARCH AROUND (IN GENTLE ANARCHISTIC CONFUSION) NEEDED: CLARINET, DRUM, TRUMPET, TROMBONE, KAZOO, CHIMES, GONG, FIFE, TUBA, AND COMB PLAYERS, COURT JESTERS, GYMNASTS. FALL BY WITH MARK, 665-0606, 330 MAYNARD "Bizarre and Beautiful! Eerie and Erotic!" -Salmami, WINS "Clouzot has directed with force, flair, and a sense of style to make the whole experi- ence stand head and shoulder's above the current crop of domestic and foreign re- leases!" -GOLDMANWCBS DIAL 8-6416 TWIN PROGRAM Odd anu SEPTEMBER 16-28 SAROYAN'S Ih o Another delightful APA revival of an American classi -N.Y. TIMES "Super contemporary!" 'I I " SEPTEMBER 30-OCTOBER 12, Ghelderode's 4 whiff of satanical sulphur" by the author of the APA hit "Pantagleize" I~ I :::f "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 FromTile - ..' Master Film Maker Henri-Georges Clouzot! I I The Mirisch Production Company oc Presents thefrs COLOR by DeLuxe Unifed Artists AND THE MIRSCH CORPORMON presents A JOHN HUSTONWALTER MIRISCH PRODUCTION n, Directed by John Houseman kb"., R i OCTOBER 14-26 Gogol's Joseph E Levine presents An Avco Embassy Film Kenni-Georges Chxsus 1 "La t as _!1 1. l 'hP ~N t EU .~' '~:i.,s. :. * IMKLU' MY El LJI.1V I I SI!1 MEHEIMMENEW 1 0 !, 1 G] N V I,