Tuesday, August 1, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Tuesday, August 19, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three ,,. SThursday, August 21 I is the last issue of THE DAILY for the summer term. The ad deadlines for this Woodstock: Pot, music mud WHITE LAKE, N.Y. (R)-With a final strum from the last guitar, a huge crowd quietly de- parted yesterday from the mu- sic, mud and marijuana of a unique rock festival, weekend mecca for an estimated 400,000 people. "This generation was brought together and showed it was beautiful," said Michael Lang, a promoter of the festival, who along with three associates in the venture estimated a finan- cial loss that might approach $2 million. "The kids were wonderful, honest, sincere, good kids-. and they forced me to open my eyes," decla red their host, Max Yasgur, a dairy tarmer I think America has to take no- tice." It was across his 600-acre farm that the multitude slogged and grooved through three days of intermittent rain to the music of such favorites as Joan Baez, Janis Joplin, the Jefferson Air- plane, Sly and the Family Stone and the Credence Clearwater Revival. Lou Yank, head of the consta- bularly in nearby Monticello, U OWN., paper are as follows. said: "Nothwithstanding their personality, their dress and their ideas, they were and are the most courteous, considerate and well-behaved group of kids I have ever been in contact with during my 24 years of police work. Two deaths were reported. One apparently was from an overdose of heroin, and one teenage boy was run over by a tractor. Two babies were born. Close to 5,000 people, most of them in the mid and late teens, were treated for injuries, illness and dope reaction. There were about 80 arrests on the more serious drugs charges. But for the most part marijuana smok- ers were left alone to do their thing. "There was so much grass being smoked last night that you could get stoned just sitting there breathing," said the col- lege student. Sgt. John Krom, at State Po- lice headquarters in Middletown, said: "We're just happy they're leaving. They can take their narcotics with them. We've had it." More than 100,000 bought tick- ets in advance to what was billed as the Woodstock Music and Art Fair, an Aquarian Ex- position. When four times that number showed up, shortages of food, water and sanitary facili- ties quickly develop amid im- provised camp sites set up in seas of mud. Lang, 24, said it cost $50,000 to rent the Yasgur farm. There were payments to the musicians, plus an estimated $600,000 in emergency expenses. Creditors were demanding cash or certi- fied checks from Woodstock Ventures, Inc., with which Long and the other organizers are associated. Lang said it was impossible to collect admissions from more than half the audienece because of the crowd's size. He said receipts totaled about $1.3 million, with expenses of at least $2.4 million, possibly much more. He offered no word on how they hoped to make up the deficit. Despite the impact of the youth invasion on this Catskill mountain community of 3,000, farmer Yasgur was enthusiastic. A graying, 6-footer of 50 who describes himself as a conserva- tive Republican, he declared:, DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Official publication of the Univer- sity o Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN o r n to Room 3528 L.S.A. Bldg., before a pm. of the day preceding publi- ction and by 2 p.m., Friday for DISPLAY-3 P.M. Tuesday, Aug. 19 (LASSIIED-3 P.M. Tuesday, Aug. 19 11 : = 1 W I JUMBO' I~ Fp RADICAL FILM SERIES M-M-m-m-m, yummie! A giant hamburger of 14 lb. U.S. Govt. pure beef topped with let- tuce, tomato, mayonnaise, onions, pickles and ketchup. M u S TIR I O LING ®PEEDY @ERVICE West of Arborland I RADICAL FILM SERIES presents AGI F-PROP 105 A film by Norman Fruchter and John Douglas Distributed by NEWSREEL -Draft Resistance organizing in Boston -A Boston organizer's trip to North Vietnam -A G.1. coffee house in Texas -Newsreel's appearance on Channel 13 in N.Y. -Production of THE RAT'S special issue in Chicago -Chicago during the Democratic Convention-the planning and carrying out of five days of protest Each section focuses on on organizer central to each project- the attempt is to define the nature of commitment to "the Move- ment" against a backdrop of last summer's activity. "In the beginning, when I re- ceived threats from some neigh- bors, that they'd burn my place down, or boycott my milk; I stopped and thought, 'If they're right and I'm wrong, let them stop me legally. "The kids were wonderful, honest, sincere, good kids who said, 'Here we are. This is what we are. This is the way we dress. These are our morals.' "There wasn't one incident the whole time. The kids were polite, shared everything with everyone, and they forced me to open my eyes. I think America has to take notice. These are the future voters. This is the future population. "If they're using drugs, it's because they have emotioal problems, and that's our fault, the fault of me and my genera- tion. We made them this way and we've got to try and help them now and prevent younger ones from taking drugs." Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Studen~t organization notices a r e not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270 Day Calendar TUESDAY, AUGUST 19 Degree Recital - Linda Jaffarian, pi- ano: School of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m.t 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. Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Current Positions Received by Gen- eral Division please call 764-7460 for further information: U of Wisconsin Medical Center - Biol., Chem., Biochem., Med tech, de- grees for work In Preventative med., onocology, path, Obs., Med. Genetics, Anatory, Plant Path, Food S, Pharm- acol. Management Consultants - Chief Engineer, BSME, new product design and exper in directing engrs, s h e e t metal fabrication exper. Mobil Oil Corp, Ninle, nl. - Process Engr,.ChE, 'bper pref. Mechan engr. Marketing Rep, CE pref. Ford Motor Company, Utica, Mich. - Engineers, any area, Indust. Relations Personnel, Bus. Ad., Psych, Indust Rel. degree. Finance, Bus. Ad. City of Chicago - Air Pollution Con- trol personnel, research in meteorology, bl., math, or systems exper, MS or PhD pref. and several years exper. Local Office - Placement Assistant, some office exper. helpful, no degree needed. Arranges visits to campus of recruiters, and other duties. The Michigan Daiy, 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 dailyTues- 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, $300 by mail. 1 I -. 1'.ecttont Lne )loe'prn GaOlrrtg DIAL 5-6290 TODAY at 1:30 and 8 P.M. the n e ws oday by, Tblx Assochirfd Pressand C oW t Prcs & ri c THE U.S. OFFICE OF EDUCATION has ordered Mississippi to delay spending federal funds for the schooling of disadvantaged children, charging racial discrimination in the state program. Federal officials say that Mississippi's per-pupil expenditures are higher for white children than for black students. The funding delay is the government's first attempt to enforce regulations re- quiring equal educational opportunity for whites and blacks. Previous federal efforts have concentrated on racial desegregation. The order to halt aid funds exempts "essential" health, welfare and teaching programs, which claim more than half of the state's $32.1 million in federal aid for disadvantaged children. * * * A FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION spokesman has suggested that air traffic control systems be automated to increase the safety of the nation's jammed airways and overcrowded air- ports. The plan was announced before yesterday's release of a report by Republican congressmen which predicted an increase in air cata- strophes due to the heavy volume of air traffic. The FAA official said that if Congress is not willing to appropriate funds for automation, the FAA, which has felt increasing pressure from air traffic controllers protesting stressful work loads, will have to impose further restrictions on landings and takeoffs at major air- ports. * * * U.S. ARMY OFFICIALS in South Vietnam ended the close confinement of eight Special Forces soldiers accused of mur- dering a suspected Vietnamese double-agent. The Army said their confinement was "no longer ne'cessary," while a lawyer for three of the men said charges against all the ac- cused, including the former commander of all Special Forces in Viet- nam, may be dropped by tomorrow. Military spokesmen have released no word of the results of a pre-court martial investigation of the case. * * * THE U.N. COMMAND has asked North Korea for a meeting of the Korean Armistice Commission in Panmunjom, apparently to discuss the downing of a U.S. helicopter over the North on Sun- day. North Korea acknowledged shooting down the aircraft, but gave no information on the survival of the three-man crew. The Remember the Pueblo Committee has announced that it learned from North Ko- rean contacts that all three are alive. The U.N. command said that continuiig investigations show that the helicopter entered North Korean air-space accidentally. HUMAN RELATIONS COUNCILS should be established at military bases to promote racial harmony among servicemen, the Pentagon's civil rights head recommended yesterday. The acting deputy assistant secretary of defense for civil rights has drawn up a detailed report of racial conflicts at U.S. bases at home and in South Vietnam, including Camp Lejeune, N.C., *here one man was recently killed in a racial clash. The report, which notes the absence of racial conflict among soldiers in combat, suggests that 285 local councils be established to deal with on-base racial problems. FUNERAL SERVICES were held yesterday in Cape Town, South Africa for Dr. Philip Blaiberg, who died Sunday after sur- viving 19% months with a transplante# heart. Dr. Christian Barnard, who performed the world's second heart transplant on Blaiberg, indicated that autopsy results which have not yet been released would show Biaiberg died of an unstoppable immu- nological rejection of the alien heart tissue. PENTAGON BUDGET OPPONENTS in the Senate are lire- paring amendments to the $20 billion current military procure- ment authorization bill which would block $50 billion in long- range expenditures on four items. Current development funds for the C5-A transport plane, the Advanced Manned Strategic .Aircraft, the F14-A replacement for the Navy's TFX-F111B fighter, and a nuclear attack carrier would be eliminated or withheld by measures presented to Congress after its summer recess by military critics. Additionally, another pending amendment would reduce U.S. troop strength by the number of servicemen withdrawn from Vietnam. Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss) .has indicated that reducing U.S. forces from a total of 3.5 million to 2.5 million could save $10 billion yearly. A PEACE COMMITTEE set u by North Ireland Prime, Min- ister James Chichester-Clark last night called- for the use of more British troops to cool fighting between Roman Catholics and Protestants. The British commander said his troop strength would rise to 6,000 by Thursday, but added that he was uncertain the good rela- tions between his men and the populace would continue. Quiet prevailed in Befast as six victims of the religious strife were buried and 22 men received jail sentences for participating in earlier fighting. But in Dublin, the outlawed Irish Republican Army began recruitment of volunteers to aid the Catholic minority in the North. Chichester-Clark is scheduled to meet today with British Prime Minister Harold Wilson to discuss additional peace-keeping meas- ures. Britain, which has a veto in the UN Security Council, has op- posed the Irish Republic's call for a UN peace force in Ulster. Program Information 662-6264 Shows at 1,13,5, 7, 9 P.M. Feature 10 Min. Later What made you leave him, Cathy... was it the way he made love, or why? Wednesday, Aug. 20 7-8-9-10-1 1 p.m. Admission 50c CANTERBURY HOUSE 330-Maynard - . ..dM'"'" """ /010 *UNIVERSITY * MUSICAL SOCIEY "SIT DOWN AND ENJOY YOURSELF! Tom Courtenay turns up as Otley himself, who exists on the fringes of London's younger, swinging set!" -Archer Winsten. New York Post "OTLEY IS FULL OF LAUGHTER! A rollicking adventure for Tom Courtenay and fun for the entire audience!" -Frances Taylor. Long Island Press CARL FOREMAN P uw AE TOM COURTENAY ROMYSQHNEIDER ~i D CECWICURTISi'RDDUCTIOlI .ALAN BADEI-wVwER 4tEONMDROSmTERsAMSfA Eaewhi t wCARLt FOREMAN- ft baBRUCE COIN CURTIS- Wwuj, CLEME~NT tU1At, A aIS c ecsw-o "OTLEY starts tomorrow SFIFTH FORUM 761-9700 ®A.M.P.A,.S. BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! "To Miss It Is To Throw Away Ecstasy!" -Drew Bogema Mich. Dail NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES A MARK ROBSON PRODUCTION ' 0;%VYiS6dNi gmt ~ Technicolor" a WINNER 6 ACADEMYAWARDS! Today Mat. $1.75, Eve. $2.00 I I ends today "La Prisonnaire" 7:00 9:00 Try Daily Classifieds I I DIAL 8-6416 TWIN PROGRAM Odd an Sfirst. NOW 0OF REGULAR TAG PRICE OF ALL USED PHOTO AND SOUND EQUIPMENT The Mirisch Production Company Presents thefirst -time" COLOR by Deluxe United Artists AND TH UlRlSCti CORPORAIONpresents A JOHN HUSTON- WAITER MIRISCH 11lt11Vmus1icZ'.morn1 mannoro ...,. we~U., tJ4U. xO 1111 , I