The Michigan Daily-Thursday, October 12, 1978-Page 5 Faculty members lr,.etter supports } Sam'off (Continued from Page 1) "I feel I've bent over backward to make sure it's not an adversary proceeding," he said. In addition to Wald, University faculty and staff members who signed the letter are: Michael Taussig, An- thropology; John Vandermeer, Biology; W.H.. Locke Anderson, Daniel Fusfeld, E.G. Shepherd, Tom ' Weisskopf, Gavin Wright, Economics; "William Cave, Patricia Theiler, Education; William Alexander, Lem (# Johnson, John Wright, English; and ;: .John Broomfield, Michael Geyer, W William Hunt, John King, Norman " '3"wen, Louise Tilly, Ernest Young, History. Also, Terrance Brown, LSA Coun- eling; Art Schwartz, Math; Bunyan ' ryant, James Crowfoot, Natural Re- sources; Schula Reinharz, Psychology; susan Harding, Joyce Kornbluh, Mar- filyn Young, Residential College; and Mark Chesler, Charles Tilly, Sociology. City Council delays session (Continued from Page 1). Belcher said he is not concerned apout obtaining voter approval but he is concerned that delaying the project will increase its cost. Latta previously criticized the mayor for advocating the Headlee amendment and then trying to rush the parking structure project through to escape the constraints Headlee would impose. OPEC demands assistance VIENNA, Austria (AP) - Oil cartel (OPEC) officials wound up a three-day seminar yesterday firm in their demand for help from industrial countries to develop their own petroleum refining industries. But the ex- . s porters set no deadline for carrying out a threat to cut back oil supplies if they don't get Icooperation. The call for a joint approach and a dialogue between crude oil suppliers and consumers was made by Kuwaiti Oil Minister Ali Khalifa al-Sabah at the end of the seminar on "downstream operations," or the manufacture of finished petroleum products. The session was organized by the Organization of Petroleum Ex- porting Countries. Members of OPEC are unhap- py that such operations and marketing are dominated by in- dustrialized nations. OPEC claims that efforts by member rcountries- to diversify into refining and petrochemical in- dustries are being discouraged, 4 :and even obstructed, by the S .; developed nations. IMAGE& I. 4 \ ( I Ann Arbor's Cornerstone of Beauty SPECIALISTS in * PERMS: Curly, Wavy, & - Relaxers " Precision Cuts " COLOR " COLOR CORRECTION lArtml 0 KeIALE Rhodesia integrates, pro and con (Continued from Page 1) race discrimination was out. But mot blacks feel financial, education and language barriers are still in. THOUGH THERE has never been job discrimination by law, these barriers mean few blacks will soon reach the white way of life. Mwanza, a $2,052-a-yar offic messenger is com- paratively well-off, earning more than double the average black wage. Like thousands of working class blacks in cities, he keeps a foot in two camps. He rents a $19.50-a-month room in a tiny house in a black township near the capital. Twice a month he com- mutes to the Goromonzi Tribal Reser- vation, 25 miles east, where his wife and four children live on a lot alloted by the local headman. The nationalist guerrilla war, which has closed the classrooms to some 250,000 children, a fifth of expected enrollment, has not yet reached Goromonzi. SO MWANZA'S OLDER children, ages 12 to 6, attend a school run by a local black state-aided council. Mwan- za, in his mid-30s pays $85.80 a year in school fees. It would cost him $72, plus extras, to get just the eldest daughter, Forgiveness, into one of the current white schools-to be known as "high fee-paying schools" under the new system. And officials say there are plans to make the high fees higher. Blacks, too, have more children to educate. The black population has one of the world's highest growth rates. Ur- ban families average five children, while among the 4 million who live in the crowded tribal trust lands, eight children is normal. THE AVERAGE white couple has fewer than three children, and whites are emigrating at the rate of about 1,000 a month. The government's plan could take several months to become law and and would be irrelevant should the communist-supported guerrillas take over. What is offers Mwanza is a vision, not a reality. For those further down the economic scale, the peasant farmers who scratch a living from the earth, the prospect of sharing a classroom or hospital with whites, or buying the house next door, is as remote as acquiring a penthouse apartment in Manhattan. DOES MWANZA WANT his children in school with whites? Only his oldest, he says, not the others. "They don't speak enough English yet. Also we need some children near home to help on the land." Rhodesian whites reacted with relief that only a "reasonable" number of "reasonable" blacks would be allowed in-and with skepticism that the new law is just a piece of paper that a black government could tear up. "Absolutely super news," said typist Pat Brogan, 36, "so long as everybody respects it and people realize there are still class differences. "The transitional government's decision is a good move," said Stanley Hatendi, 38, a black economist who earns more than the average white salary of $9,240 per year. "Some critics might think there are ulterior motives, but it achieves the desired goal. . . . It doesn't matter how it's done, as long as it's done." THIS APPARENT acceptance of two systems in a single country, two ways of life, one akin to Middle America, another to the poverty of Africa, is not shared by hard-line nationalists. ' Methodist minister Max Chigwida, who recently quit one of the black par- ties in the transition government, said: "Those who look at the change in terms of structures are not very impressed." t # i10 black and white copies or buy 1 color photo'~ t-shirts transfer and get another copy of it free. We can put anything on a t-shirt (from prints, 35mm slides, album covers or your artwork, etc.) DOLLAR BILL COPYING Specialists for dissertations and resumes 611 Church St., next to Sec. of State above Don Cisco's 665-200Expires - .7 m- BOOK COLLECTING - A FASCINATING HOBBY. A WORTHWHILE INVESTMENT DON'T MISS THESE TWO EXCITING DAYS DEVOTED TO THE BOOK COLLECTOR, AT THE DETROIT PUBLIC LIBRARY BENEFIT SPONSORED BY THE FRIENDS OF THE DETROIT PUBLIC LIBRARY 1 RARE BOOK & MANU- foN IrnT 1~ AUCTION You could be the proud owner of an original letter written by Ernest Hemingway-a first edi- tin of the Book of Mormon- autographs of two Presidents- a total of 93 rare and valuable books, manuscripts, & graphics. Materials on display Friday, Oct. 20, 9:30.5:30, at the Main Library; Auction that evening at 8:30 p.m.; adm. by ticket only-for ticket info. phone 8334048 OCT. 20. ANTI- QUARIAN BOOK 20 Medwet book dmalers-opn free to the public all day Oct. 21. Free WORKSHOPS on topics of interest to book loversat 11a.am. and 1:15 p.,. led by authorita- five speakers-Book Iflustratiout, Preservation; Evaluation; Books about Books; Descriptive Biblio. grapfsy. Plus Special Progtran at 12:15 in Friends Auditorium*. SLIDE TOUR OF GREAT LIBRARIES OF THE WORLD For information phone B&I-MM 0CT.21 MAIN LIBRARY DETROIT PUBLIC LIBRARY 5201 WOODWARD AVENUE, btw. Kirby & Putnam FOR INFORMATION PHONE: 833-4048 J,,xI Not because it's not worth reading. You're wasting your time because you could be reading it three to ten times faster than you are right now. . That's right - three to ten times faster. With better concentration, understanding, and recall. The problem is, most of us haven't learned anything new about reading since we were 10 years old. So we're still stumbling along at a fraction of our real capacity. In fact, most people read so slowly that their brain actually gets bored and distracted between words (no wonder you have trouble concentrating when you read!) reading improvement system -designed to be more effective and flexible than ever. With it, you should easily be able to cut your reading and study time by at least two thirds. 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