' r YIOU SEE N 5ME AL 6'AL k Big brother's watching Last week an editorial appeared in the Daily calling for the CIA to stop covert activities on American college campuses, particularly this one. We're flattered it didn't go unnoticed. When one of our reporters called the CIA this week, Coordinator for Academpic Relations Jim King charged the editorial was "a really nasty one" written by an "allegedly responsible journalist airing "his own vitrolic prejudices." Keep up the good work Jim; we wouldn't want you to miss anything. Satisfaction for chocolate junkies Students with an uncontrollable sweet tooth can now breath a sigh of relief. ARA Food Services, which controls all candy machines on campus, settled its five-week long employee strike last Friday, and machines are once again bearing chocolate-covered goodies. Hugh Erickson, a spokesman for ARA, said the company is working hard to fill the machines quickly. "We're still playing catch-up, but by Friday evening all machines will be filled." Xmas spirit? The Christmas rush in now officially underway, for it seenis that a certain periodical has "laid bare" its annual yuletide campaign. The Community Newscenter on S. University received yesterday a shipment of 500 issues of the Christmas edition of Playboy magazine - twice' the normal monthly order of the publication. The December issue features TV's plastic sex symbol Farrah Fawcett-Majors on the cover, and it appears that sexism will be a popular seasons greeting again. "We are anticipating selling every copy," Newscenter manager Sandra Guinness confided. Take Ten Despite President Johnson's decision to end the bombing of North Vietnam, graduate students on Nov. 3, 1968 still faced the imminent possibility of being drafted. Rackham Graduate School's assistant dean commented, "'Things look bleak for the graduate school for the winter term." n Happenings FILMS Cinema Guild - Adam's Rib, 7,9:05 p.m., Old A&D. Mediatrics - Alice in the Cities, 7, 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Cinema II - Joe Hill, 7 p.m., Sacco and Vanzetti, 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Gargoyle Films - The 39 Steps, 7, 9 p.m., 100 Hutchins Hall. Lloyd Minority Council - Sparkle, 7, 9:30, 11:30 p.m., Blue Carpet Lounge, zlloyd Hall. Alternative Action - Clockwork Orange, 7, 9:30 p.m., MLB Aud. 4. Ann Arbor Film Co-op - Morocco, 7, 10:20 p.m., The Devil is a Woman, 8:30, MLB Aud. 3. Couzins Film Co-op-Silent Movie, 8, 10 p.m., Couzens Cafeteria. PERFORMANCES PTP. "'California Suite," 8 p.m., Power Center. 'K University Philharmonia - Haydn's "London" Symphony, No. 104 and the Saint-Saens "Organ" Symphony, 8 p.m., Hill Aud., free admission. Anthroposophical Student Association - Eurythmeum Stuttgart featuring Else Klink, artistic director, with the Romanian State Orchestra conducted by Ion Baciu, and a speech by Sarah Burton, November 8, Power Center. R.C'. Players - "Endgame" along with three short works by Beckett, 8 p.m., R.C. Auditorium, East Quad. Celebrabts - "Godspell", 8 p.m., Holy Trinity Chapel, 511 W. Forest, Ypsilanti. SPEAKERS International Trade Symposium - "Anti-Dumping Law Policy and * Implementation,"' 10 a.m., and 2:30 p.m.,. Hutchins Hall. Nuclear Seminar - "The Application of Digital Computers to Reactor Protection and Operation", Dr. Charles Kling, 3:45 p.m., - White Auditorium, Cooley Building. Law School.- Chicano activist Ricardo Romero who was jailed for refusal to testify before a grand jury speaks on abuses of grand jury, 7 p.m., Lawyers Club Lounge. Wholistic Health Council - Dorothy Maclean on contact with devil - kingdoms, 7:30 p.m., Wesleyan Lounge, State & Huron. A workshop follows this weekend at the League. Trotter House and association of Black Social Work Students - Minister Abdul Farrakhan on philosophical truths confronting Black .Americans, 8 p.m., Rackham Auditorium. Guild House - "Tapestry - A Feminist Counseling Collective," panel discussion, noon, Guild House, 802 Monroe. Washtenaw County Extension Service and League of Women Voters - Public Forum on Ballot Proposals, 6 p.m., Channel 9, cable t.v. MEETINGS Hillel -' Orthodox minyan, 6:15 p.m., reform minyan, 8 p.m., Hillel, 1429 Hill St. MISCELLANEOUS Folk Art Fair - 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., International Institute, 515 Stevens Street in Flint. Student Blood Bank - Union Assembly Hall, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Undergrad Political Science Association and the Undergrad Economics Association - football challenge game, 3 p.m., Hoover and Division,"all members and interested participants welcome. International Center - Trip to Renaissance *.Center and International Institute Old World Market, 3:30 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., sign up for transportation at 8:00 a.m., room-18, International Center. International Students - Recreation night, 7 - 10 p.m.., sports Coliseum. Ann Arbor Art %association - Fall Membership Show, 7-9 p.m., 117 W. Liberty: UAC/Union Programming Committee - Mini-course on *Ballroom Dancing, beginning November 8, 79:30 p.m., sign up at Ticket Central in the Union before Nov. 8. Ethic- Humanism and Medicine - Last chanee to register for the 'U' opens plastic research laboratory By CAROL KOLETSKY The University Plastic Research Laboratory, formally dedicated Oct. 28, aims at improving methods of treatment and' reconstruction of various parts of the body. Under the direction of Dr. George Cherry, two full-time and six part-time faculty plastic surgeons and six. residents will work to perfect techniques of microsurgery and stretching flaps of skin. "THE USE OF skin flaps is essential in repairing injured parts of the body," said Dr. William Grabb, head of plastic surgery at University Hospital: One of the laboratory's new techniques involves the stretching of skin through osmosis. Grabb explains the process as similar to the way in which a pregnant abdomen stretches. A silicone bag containing salt tablets can be implanted in the hollow of a leg injured from a car accident, for example. Osmosis draws fluideinto the bag, causing the bag to expand. As the bag expands, the skin stretches. -The loose skin which has just been created is then pulled over the wound. ANOTHER TECHNIQUE the lab is perfecting is called "delaying the flap." Skin needs a certain amount of blood in order to survive. Cutting off the blood supply from several angles in the skin allows blood to enter more ,profusely into the'flap of skin that needs repair. The laboratory will also study various drugs that increase blood supply. F. Roland Sargent, a University alumnus and major financial contributor to the new laboratory, was on hand for the dedication. The lab is located in Kresge II Research Laboratory. The 100th anniversary of teaching of i architecture at the University was celebrated in 1976. By ELEONORA DI LISCIA The Ann Arbor Committee for Human Rights in Latin America (AACHR) will sponsor a three day teach-in beginning November 7 to publicize political repression and U.S. involvement in Mexico. The teach-in, entitled "Mexico: Contours of Crisis," will feature several prominent scholars and activists from the Uniter States and Mexico who will lecture on the nature of the Mexican state, history of the Revolution, and activities of U.S. intelligence agencies in Mexico. ACCORDING TO committee member Howard Brick, the purpose of the, three-day event is to "reveal the extent of political repression in Mexico and to show the historical and continuing involvement of the United States in Mexican affairs." Speakers at the teach-in, which will begin at 7:30 p.m. in Schorling Auditorium in the School of Education, will include Hector The Michigan Daily-Friday, November 3, 1978-Page 3' Mexican teach-in in As Marroquin, a radcal student leader who was accused of taking part in terrorist activity in Mexico; Jacques Medina, an attorney and labor organizer; and Juan Jose- Pena, founder of La Raza Unida Party in New Mexico. Marroquin visited Ann Arbor last Spril when he was appealing for political asylum. This was the catalyst for the Committee's decision to organize the teach-in on economic, political, and social conditions within Mexico. The AACHR was formed in August 1976, and according to Brick, its intention is to aid Latin America political prisoners and to oppose U.S. support of oppressive Latin regimes. 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