FtYU SEE N HAPPEN CAL WDAJIY Take ten In his first State of the University message on Sept. 30, 1968, newly- arrived University President Robben Fleming 'called for greater student participation but condemned "violence, coercion, and threats" on the part of students. Speaking before 800 faculty members, their wives and nearly 150 uninvited students in Rackham Lecture Hall, Fleming warned of the difficulty the University faced in growth and the financing of that growth. He noted that 1968 was the first year the University was forced to turnaway qualified applicants., All night action If, like My Fair Lady's Eliza Doolittle, you've got a hankering to dance all night, head over to the Michigan Union. From 8 p.m. tonight until 8 tomorrow morning, you can disco there to your heart's content, or play pinball or billiards or participate in a host of other activities as the Union Programming Committee sponsors its firtst "all Nighter". The Union will be alive until the wee hours with dancing, beer, a student organizations activities fair and a prize raffle, to name a few of the happenings. Ken Feit, self-proclaimed Fool, will be on hand to provide entertainment. Admission is $1.00with student I.D. Happenings... ...this last day of September begin at 10 with the Artists and Craf- tsmen Guild Fall Art Fair at the Michigan Union. The fair, which runs until 6, includes displays in the Pendleton Room on the second floor of the Union. Art-st-in-residence Ken the Fool conducts one-hour workshops in the first floor Union Gallery. At 11, he'll feature sign language; puppetry at 1; movement at 3, and story-telling at 4:30. The fair also features demonstration in the Collaborative studios, lower level of the Union. Carol Furdato displays her weaving skills at noon, Barb Tannenbaum demonstrated calligraphy at 1, more weaving with Ruth Brownley-Green at 2, followed by batik with Carol Shostak at 3 ... the Michigan Cannabis Caucus holds an organizational meeting at noon in the Tower Room of Eastern Michigan University's McKen- ny Union in Ypsilanti . . MSA will sponsor an All Night Information Fair on Student Organizations as part of the Union Programming Committee's all-night slate of activities at the Michigan Union from 8 p.m. til 8a.m It Oh, brother! While Jimmy Carter reflects on the achievements of the Camp David summit, another member of the Carter clan is doing his bit to promote international harmony. Billy Carter, the presdent's beer- guzzling sibling, is in Tripoli promoting warmer relations between the United States and Libya-a puritanical Moslem land where all alcoholic beverages are verboten. "That will make a nice big dent on his beer belly,'' remarked on less-than-kind observer, noting that brash billy is better known for promoting beer in television than for his expertise. Word that the president's kid brother had arrived in Tripoli Wednesday on a four-day visit was greeted with other cries of disbelief from observers of Arab affairs on the Lebanese capital. "Absolutely impossible," said one Westerner. "This must be the Libyan equivalent of April Fool's Day." There heis .. . Skimpier bathing suits than usual adorned the contestants of a beauty pageant held at the St, Cloud State University in Minnesota - all the participants were male. And many did not enjoy being on display in the role-reversal contest nearly as much as they'd expected. and affirmed they would not choose to repeat the experience. "I've never been so embarassed in my life," said one contestant as he paraded before the crowd amidst catcalls and clapping. "Yeah, I felt just like a cow; just like at the state fair," another agreed. But moderator Warren Farrellm a men's liberator advocate, knows which way the wind blows. "Freedom of choice is quite meaningless in the face of social pressure," he declared. "In a sense, every woman is in a beauty contest every day of her ife, whether she's attractive or ugly." S. On the outside.. .. Trade in your stadium blanket for an umbrella, because there's a 40 per cent chance the clouds may open upon us before the end of the fourth quarter. Expect partly cloudy skies today with a high around 70. Daily Official Bulletin r ........... ...........................,:::,: ..r............,... r....::.. LOOKING FOR A SUMMER JOB: If you' Liberal A work ex might ha CapitolI series fo research services. The O Placeme to under from th Students d some h to Cher program INTER service a vice inte 10 years minister and Pla nships be Public placeme executiv and m, Washing Placem program advertise relation; Chicago, Boston. This p students positions and 40 s received program Internships give By CAROL AZIZIAN Ti D LIU, a senior majoring in Wa re an undergraduate student in Economics, interned with the tm Arts looking for an educational American Civil Liberties Union We :perience next summer, you. (ACLU) in Washington D.C. this past Dev ave an opportunity to lobby on summer. During his public service in- wor Hill, produce a documentary ternship, he accompanied the director r a radio station, or conduct of ACLU to lobby on Capitol Hill con- wou. ifor a corporation's marketing cerning the office's position on privacy L legislation. does .fice of Career Planning and "I was interning under the director mu nt offers summer internships and this was part of my responsibility,", on nt offte sudetsrmrilshe said. "ACLU took us seriously. Th rgraduate students primarily watdt ssr efh ey pha e Literary College (LS&A). wanted to give us a general idea of how con in other areas may apply, an- the office worked, and lobbying was inte have been selected, according part of this."tni yl Liang, supervisor of the Liu's other responsibilities included tun y. ,attending congressional hearings and ter RNSHIPS are offered in public mark-up sessions (concerning K and business areas. Public ser- language or the way a bill is written), in ernships were initiated nearly andg arching b ils h wer radi "s ago by students and ad- relevant t ACLU. Mas 'ed throughsCareer Planning "AS INTERNS we worked on po cement, while business inter- Criminal Code revisions, ERA exten- pro egan about five years ago. sion, privacy legislation, housing acts, 29 ti service internships, including and Grand Jury reform. Along with wi.K nt in congressional offices, other staff members, I would research wit e agencies, interest groups, bills and help formulate the ACLU's arei iedia, are conducted in' position," said Liu. two gton D.C. and London. "When I represented the ACLU at sup ent in the business intern congressional hearings and mark-up 6 z, including fields of finance, sessions, a lot of people didn't realize I mu incg,led/mg eing, pbic was an intern, and I went along with Kn s, and broadcasting, is in that, because I thought it would help th Detroit, New York City, and make ACLU's position more effective," he said. Liu added that he also did some ast summer, approximately 70 clerical work. among 425 applicants receives Liu, who is interested in urban or in- in the public service program. ner city problems, said the experience tudents among 475 applicants helped him question the effectiveness of I jobs in the Business Intern a career in Washington. "Before I went, a, according to Liang. working through the forum of The Michigan Daily-Saturday, September 30, 1978-Page 3 education, pay shington, D.C., either for the Depar- ent of Health, Education, and lfare, or Housing and Urban velopment, seemed possible. After king there, I see my effectiveness uld be limited." IU, HOWEVER, said the program s have some problems. One is too ch emphasis on getting placed with gressional offices. "There's an em- sis on the glamour of working for a gressman, but it seems that other rnships offer better work oppor- ities. I think the program should phasize interning with public in- est groups," he said. aren King, a junior who's majoring Radio and Television, interned in io news at station WBZ in Boston, Ss. A documentary series she duced aired September 25 through hroughout the New england area. ing is also a student coordinator h the intern program. Coordinators former interns who make a one or -year commitment to work with ervisors in running the program. IT WAS UNBELIEVABLE how ch the program did for me," said g. "I wanted to help people the way y (persons running the program) helped me." Deborah Miller, a junior who plans to major in Political Science and Psychology, said she was disappointed with the job she received. "It was not so much a problem with the program, as a matter of personal taste," she said. SHE WORKED for the Consumer Protection Center at the Georgetown University Law Center in Washington D.C. As a case worker in Contact 4 (which receives consumer complaints from across the country by mail), she negotiated problems by phone between consumers and merchants. "It was tedious talking to these people every day for eight hours, and it was frustrating talking to businessmen because often we had no legal clout," sh she said. "I didn't like being in one office all day. Some of the other interns in Washington had more flexibility. Some former interns said that the program should be open to more students. Mark Freer, a junior majoring in Business Management of Natural Resources, said "there are so many students who want to get in the program, it seems unfair that so few can get in. MARC:e, A slice of Old World spirit Looking for a part time job while you're in school? or a way to supplement your family income during the day High school students and housewives, McDonald's has part time or full time positions available. Experience not neces- sary. We will train you to become a member of the Mc- Donald's family. We offer very competitive pay, flexible hours, paid vacation after 1 year even for our part timers. Free food for breaks, uniforms provided. Excellent training and break facilities. Stop in today at one of the following McDonald's: By STEPHEN CONN Most of you would probably opt for cheering at a football game over rooting as a medieval joust, but a growing number of students prefer those activities normally associated with knight in shining armor and dam- sels in distress. These people are members of MARC, the Medieval and Renaissance Collegium. And MARC is more than just sentimentalism for an age long past. According to Christine Bor- nstein, acting director of the program while Shakespeare scholar Russell Fraser is on research leave, MARC is a highly intensified interdisciplinary humanities program focusing on various intellectual, cultural and social aspects of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. THE COLLEGIUM was founded in 1973 by a federal grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Even though the grant has since been exhausted, the Univesity has continued its support of the program. MARC offers courses ranging from the history of English criminal law to paleography. The program draws students and professors from such disciplines as law, art history, music, religion, medicine and philosophy. "More and more, professors from around the University are showing an interest in teaching a course here," says Bornstein. "In all, the University has been very receptive." This receptiveness has helped with room space, too. Once cloistered away in the Law Quad, MARC has since taken up residence in East Quad and has established the MARC House there. The variety of students living in the house attests to the multidisciplinary spirit of the program. "Even graduate students from such completely' dissimilar fields as geography, library science and business have taken housing here," ex- plains Bornstein. "You don't have to be taking courses with us to live in MARC house and share the environment." Contrary to what some people might first assume, MARC students believe their study to be relevant to today's world. "The Middle Ages and Renaissance form a great deal od our culture's background," says one student. "We are, in fact, still very much affected by the fusion of thought between these two ages," adds another. 337 Maynard (Downtown Ann Arbor) 4775 Washtenaw 3811 Carpenter Rd. 2000 W. Stadium Blvd. 373 N. Zeeb Road 7847 E. Michigan Ave., Saline We Are An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F I ORIENTAL RUGS We buy, sell, trade, appraise, and clean. 769-8555 995-7597 1 WERNER HERZOG 1968 EVEN DWARFS STARTED SMALL Twenty-seven dwarfs, inmates in a reformatory for deviant dwarfs, stage a wild uprising when the director takes a day off. These anarchistic dwarfs really go berserk, bombarding the deputy with stones and live hens, smash- ing furniture, dressing dead insects with miniature clothing, marching in procession through smoking flower pots, holding aloft a pet monkey tied to a cross. "Wildly funny and obscenely terrifying."-London International Film Festival. All dwarf cost. German with subtitles. SUN: D. H. Lawrence's VIRGIN & THE GYPSY Schedule change,-MEMORIES OF UNDERDEVELOPMENT on TUES. OCT. 3 (not Wed. Oct. 4) SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30,1978 CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3200 S.A.B. MBA Admissions Forums for Fall 1978 are scheduled on the dates and at locations listed below: NEW YORK CITY: Oct. 19, noon-7 p.m., Oct. 21, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Roosevelt Hotel-45th and Madison Ave. BOSTON: Nov. 17, noon-7 p.m., Nov. 18, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., 57 Park Plaza (Howard Johnson's), 200 Stuart St. LOS ANGELES: Dec. 1, noon-7 p.m., Dec. 2, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Los Angeles Hilton, 930 Wilshire Blvd. You can drop by anytime. Admission fee is $2.00. Ad- ditional information available at CP&P. NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION announces NATO Postdoctoral Fellowships in Science for 1978- 79. Fellowships in Science will be offered in mid- February 1979 for further study in the sciences at in- stitutions outside the U.S. These fellowships normally awarded for tenures of either 9 or 12 mos. are intended for persons planning to enter upon on continue postdoctoral study in the sciences. Fields covered are the mathematical, hysical, medical, biological, engineering, and ocial sciences, and the history and/or philosophy of cience. Also included are interdisciplinary fields comprised of overlapping areas between two or more sciences (such as oceanography, operations resear- ch, meteorology, and biophysics). A list of the specific fields supported in this program is included in the application materials. Apply to: National Science Foundation, NATO Postdoctoral Fellowship Program, Div. of Scientific Personnel Improvement, Washington, D.C. 20550. INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS: Oct. 2 & 3, Monsanto Co. Oct. 5, Harris Corp. & George Washington U. Law Center. Oct. 10, Control Data Corporation, Montgomery Ward, Earlham Sch. of Religion, HUD, and Univ. of Penn/Law. Oct. 11, Detroit News, Northwest Orient Airlines, Burroughs Corp. Oct. 12, General Telephone & Electronics, North- west Orient Airlines, Manufacturers National Bank, & Burroughs Corp. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB 763-4117 Experiment in International Living, vermont. Of- fers over 100 group leadership positions in thirty-one countries. Language skills necessary in most cases. Further details available. Appl. deadline Nov. 15. 1979 Newspaper Fund, New Jersay. Editing Inter- nship' Program and Minority Internship Program. Complete details available. Deadline for applying Dec. 1., Newsday, New Yotk. Summer Journalism Program for '79. Open to students completing their sophomore and junior years in journalism, Further details available. CINEMA II TONITE .a 7 9 ANGELL-AUD. A $1.50 CAREER OPPORTUNITI.ES MEETI NGI Career Development Opportunities at a Unique Electronics Company We are seeking innovative and talented BS, MS, and Ph.S. graduates and undergraduate co-op stu- dents. Join our professional staff. We are doing state-of-the-art research and development in the following areas: " ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING AND COMPUTER SCIENCE Solid State Deviced, Change Coupled Devices, MOS and Bipolar Integrated Circuits and LSI, Analog Hybrid Circuits, Logic Circuits, Comput- er Architecture, Software, Systems Analysis, Signal Processing Communications, Radar and IR Systems, Microwave Antennas, receivers and Transmitters, Displays. * MECHANICAL, ENGINEERING & MATERIAL SCIENCE Servo Mechanisms, Heat Transfer, Optics, Structures, Mellurgy, Stability, Analysis, Aero- dynamics and Process Control. Meet with Hughes Technical Managers and recent Graduate Engineers on Tuesday, October 3, 1978 at 8:30 AM to 12:30 PM in Room 128F, West En- gineering Building. NOW SHOWING Mon-Tue-Thur-Fri 7:30-9:30 Sat-Sun-Wed 13 -3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 1u'r gonna laugh your )of! in Manchester, MI presents