Friday, August 15, 1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Friday, August 15, 1 9 6 9 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three FRIDAY and SATURDAY, Aug. 15 and 16 ANHPLIN FEATUR ECAA starring C. CHAPLIN N "No matter what it is, you get your money's worth" -Chairman Mao 7 & 9 ARCH ITECTUR E 662-8871 7AUDITORIUM' "Bizarre and Beautiful! Eerie and Erotic!" -Salmamqi, 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!"-GOLDMAN WCBS m retaon a Yf/dern Goodi g. DIAL 5-6290 TODAY at 1 :30iand 8 P.M. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ° :. I I BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! "To Miss It Is To Throw Away Ecstasy!" -Drew Boqema Mich. Daily WINNER 6 'CADEMYAWARDS! Today Mat. $1.75, Eve. $2.00 I I 4 h874.r47 .. DIAL 8-6416 TWIN PROGRAM Official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f or 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 FRIDAY, AUGUST 15 Degree Recital - Sharon Holmes, violin: School of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. Opera - The Merry Wifes of Wind- sor by Otto Nicolai, Josef Blatt, con- ductor; Ralph Herbert, stage director: Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, 8:00 p.m. General Notices Recommendation for Departmental Honors: Teaching Departments wishing to recommend tentative August grad- uates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, for Honors or High Honors should recommend such students by forwarding a letter to the Director, Honors Council, 1210 Angell, Hall, by noon, Friday, August 22, 1969. Teaching departments in the School of Education should forward letters di- rectly to the Office of the Registrar, Room 1513 LS&A Building, by 11:00 a.m., Friday, August 22, 1969. AttentionAugust Graduates: College of Literature, Science; and t h e Arts, School of Education, School of Music, School of Public H e a 1 t h, School of Business, Administration: Students are advised not to request grades of I or X in August. When such grades are absolutely imperative,the 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. SummeraSession published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. I - - ~ - work must be made up in time to al- low your instructor to report the make- up grades no later than 11:00 a.m., Au- gust 27, 1969. Grades received after that time may defer the student's gradua- tion until a later date. Seniors: C a11e g e of L.S.&A., and Schools of Education and Music Ten- tative lists of seniors for August grad- uation have been posted on the bulle- tin board in the first f lo or lobby, L.S.&A. Building. Any changes there- from should be requested of the Re- corder at the Registrar's Office, Win- dow A, 1513 L.S.&A. Building. Doctoral RobertiAnthony Schaefer, Nuclear Engineering, Dissertation: ""On the Scattering of Laser Light by High Den- sity Plasmas," on Friday, August 15 at 9:00 a.m. in 315 Auto Lab., North Cam- pus, Chairman: R. K. Osborn. William Guy Nash, Zoology, Disser- tation: "Epigenetic Clustering of the Genes at the Tip of the X Chromosome in Drosophila melanogaster," on Fri- day, August 15 at 10:00 a.m. in 2111 Natural Science Building, Chairman: T. M. Rizki. Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION } 3200 S.A.B. Current Position Openings Received by General Division by Mail and Phone, please contact P.S., 764-7460, for com- plete application details: Family Service Agency, Gallion, Ohio, (abt. 2 hr. drive from A. A.) - Director, Counseler position, new grad with MSW or Guid-Couns degree. Photo Marketing Magazine, Jackson, Mich. - Managing Editor, Journ, Adv., Mktg. degree, 1-2 years with newspa- per or other layout and photog. knowl. Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Stanford, Calif. - Budget Analyst, BStMS Bus, Econ. plus exper.Engin- eer/Physicist, BS, some knowl. of me- chanics. Research Assistant, BS Applied Pkys, or EE. Scientific Programmers, BS/MS, programming, mgmt., or elec- tronics bckrnd. Other Scientific Pro- gramming positions. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Phoenix Anarchist Coalition: Friday, August 16, 6 p.m., 2534 Student Ac- tivities Bldg. * * * India Students Association announc- es the celebration of Independence Day at 8 p.m. Aug. 15 in room 3A of the I Union. Exams "Super contemporarv!" the news today by 7 let' Aw ia/C1(d Press and (oW Pres efc -N.Y. TIMES "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, l want to be by myself I am so moved!" -Claude Mauriac, Le Figaro, Paris BLU E 34 ANTI-WAR PROTESTERS were arrested at the Pentagon yesterday while they tried to hold a requiem mass for the Viet- nam war dead. Pentagon police warned the group, the second in recent weeks to attempt celebration of a mass inside the building, that they were violating regulations concerning unlawful assembly. A priest speaking for the group which included Quakers and members of the War Resister's League, responded "We'd like to pray," and refused to leave, leading to the arrests. THE APOLLO 11 CREW returned to their homes in Houston yesterday after a cross-country tour during which they were hailed by millions and hosted at a state dinner by President Nixon. The three space explorers face another jubilant ceremony in the Astrodome Saturday night. More extensive travel was hinted at by the President, who predicted a warm welcome abroad for the moonmen at an unspecified date. * * * U.S. PEACE NEGOTIATORS and South Vietnamese dele- ( gates to the Paris peace talks yesterday denounced a recent upsurge in the war and expressed concern that Hanoi may be seeking a military victory rather than a negotiated peace. U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge charged that while the U.S. is proceeding with troop pullouts in South Vietnam, the North Vietnamese are preparing a new offensive. The North Vietnamese delegation returned the U.S. charge of obstructing the peace talks and declared the troop withdrawals a "sham." TWELVE ENLISTED MEN who left military service have been granted sanctuary in a church near the University of Hawaii campus inHonolulu. The soldiers, who abandoned their military duties to protest "the injustice tinherent in the American military system," were welcomed by the congregation's governing board. The Resistance anti-draft group has pledged non-violent ob- struction of any attempt to arrest the 12. But arrests have been de- layed because military police, the FBI and local officials have all declined to acknowledge jurisdiction in the matter. * * * 300 TONS OF LETHAL GAS is being shipped by train from Denver, Colo, to Lockport, N. Y. and Hessmer, La., the Depart- ment of Transportation disclosed yesterday. The phosgene gas was purchased from the Army by a private chemical firm and is being carried under a special permit issued by the department which does not require gas-tight valve covers and other safety precautions. A similar permit was withdrawn last May when Army plans to transport 21,000 tons of deadly gas to the Atlantic for dumping caus- ed a public uproar. * * * MASSACHUSETTS DISTRICT ATTORNEY Edmund Dinis said he or a deputy of his would go to Wilkes-Barre, Pa. today to seek an order for performance of an autopsy on the body of Mary Jo Kopechne. Kopechne died accidentally last month in a car driven by Sen. Edward Kennedy. Dinis' initial request for the autopsy was delayed by a Wilkes- Barre court whitch cited statutes requiring a personal appearance by Dinis or an agent acting for him in making the request. Kopechne's parents have announced that they will oppose ex- humation of their daughter's body. 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