The Michigan Daily-Sunday, November 19, 1978-Page 3 'Al IFmtXJffSEEs KVMCAL'DAIlY SOC: By BETSY MANN The name of the newly-formed Student Organizing Committee (SOC), a party pushing its ticket in tomorrow's Literature, Science and the Arts Student Government (LSA-SG) elections sounds familiar to those involved in campus politics since the second-hand name group has borrowed its handle from a party formerly active in the, Michigan Student Assembly (MSA), according to Debra Goodman, a member of the original SOC. Goodman said she objects to the revival of the name, because the students now calling themselves'SOC do not have anything to do with the Nursing Who's Who Twenty-seven students at the University School of Nursing have been selected to appear in the 1978-79 edition of who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges. They join a group of the country's campus leaders selected from more than 1,000 colleges in the United States and several foreign countries. Campus nominating committees and editor of the annual directory, which has been published since 1934, have included the names of these students based on their academic achievements, service to the community, leadership in extra-curricular activities, and future potential. University Nursing students named theis year are: Maryellen Antonelli, Thomas James Bissonnette, Mary Elizabeth Brock, Judith Lynn Burek, Lynn Hoan Darin, Elizabeth Davis, Mary Eva Dent, Barbara Deur, Caroilyn Gaines Eames, Judith Ann Eason, Janeen Gay Ellis, Stephanie Ann Ganton, mary Alexis Gonzalez, Judy Elaine Gorete, June Cross Grimes, Dennis Hohnson Joan Denise Kelsslee, Judith Sebring Mapmel, Joanne Neihardt, Rosa Sumiko Ohno, Mary Lynn Ortquist, Gilb to Moy Rodriqiz, Michael Stuart Seator, Pamela Sheffield, Debra Linn Thelen, Richard Stanley Urbanski, and Eun Ok Yoon. Take Ten On Nov. 19, 1968, the Ann Arbor Human Relations Commission (HRC) agreed to the establishment of a black theater group for the city and planned to ask City Council to release $10,000 from the HRC budget to establish the group for a six month trial period. Also that day, in an attempt to "take pressure off winter term registration," the University set up early registration in the basement of the LSA building. * Happenings SUNDAY FILMS Cinema II, The Harder They Come, 7, 9, Angell Hall. Cinema Guild, Dark Star, 7,.9:05, Old Architecture. PERFORMANCES Brunch on the Terrace, James Dapogny, solo jazz piano, 10 a.m. noon, University Club $6.50. Lynne Lynch, pianist, University School of Music, recital hall, 2 p.m. Chancel Choir, soloists, and the local Chamber Orchestra Society, "The Creation" by Franz Joseph Haydn, 4 p.m. First Presbyterian Church, 1423 Washtenaw. Collegium Musicum, a University School of Music ensemble, "Josquin and his Contemporaries," 5 p.m., Our Savior Lutheran Church in Detroit. MISCELLANEOUS Alumnae Council Scholarship applications for the 1979-80 are now available from the office of the director of student alumni services, Alumni Association, ground floor, Michigan Union. Deadline for applications is December 15 at 5 p.m. Instruction classes at the Metropolitan community Church will e held at 5:30 p.m. A discussion on "Religion in America" will be held at the St. Mary's Student Chapel at 8 p.m. The Wesley Foundation will sponsor a Human Rights Fair beginning with a potluck dinner at 5:30 p.m. at 602 E. Huron. MONDAY FILMS Ann Arbor Film Co-operative, Van Lewton Horror Night, films at 7 and 8:15 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Nuclear Concerns Film Series, More Nuclear Power stations, Kuenzel Room, 7:30 p.m. Women's Studies Free Film Series, O'Keefe's The Originals: Womep in Art, 7 p.m. MLB Aud. 3. PERFORMANCES The Cult Heroes, punk rock, Pendleton Arts Center, second floor of the Union, 10:00 a.m. Scottish Country Dancing, Xanadu Co-op, 7:30, 9:30, 1811 Washtenaw. Composer's Forum, Recital Hall, School of Music, 8 p.m. Julie and Louis Nagel, two-piano recital, 8 p.m., Rackham Auditorium. Eclipse Jazz, jam session, University Club, 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. MISCELLANEOUS Voting for the LSA-SG elections, polls will be open at the following locations and times: Fishbowl, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; the.Michigan Union 1:30 to 7:30; Mosher Jordan, 4:15 to 6:15; Markley, 4:00to 6:30; Alice Lloyd 10:15 a.m. to 6:15 p.m.; East Quad 11 a.m. to 7. In case of good weather the Fishbowl site will be moved to the Diag. If there are not enough campaign workers the Mosher-Jordan site may be eliminated. The Ann Arbor Bridge Club is sponsoring an ACBL Charity game at 7:30 p.m. at the First Unitarian Church at Washtenaw and Berkshire. The Undergraduate Political Science association is sponsoring a student faculty wine and cheese at the sixth floor lounge in Haven Hall from 3 to 5 p.m. Michael Taussig of the Anthropology Department will discuss how Marx relates to his work at 8 p.m. at the Guild House. Jimmy Peanuts Even wonder if there was something evil behind President Carter's smile? According to a 13-page memorandum compiled by the White House Office of Media Liaison, Jimmy stole "a penny from the collection plate at church when he was 5 years old." But-worse than that, he shot his sister Gloria in the rear end with a BB gun - after she threw a wrench at him. Also revealed by the memorandum were the President's allergies: hops, beans, and Swiss cheese. His first car was a brand new 1948 Studebaker. One final tidbit: Carter does not snore. Caught in the act Two Purdue University students will soon become experts on the Old Oaken Bucket, Indiana's answer to Michigan's B'rown Jug. The bucket has been encased in glass in the lobby of the Indiana University Memorial Union for the past two years and will again be awarded to the winner of the Purdue-Indiana game Saturday. However, Paul Nevill and Ed Gedeon decided to grab the bucket a few weeks early. They smashed the glass with a brick but were nabbed by a custodian and security guard before they could escape. A Monroe Superior Court Judge ordered the two to co-author a paper on the bucket's history, spend 30 hours in public service and pay $30. New world records Gary Nuhroke of New York City set a new record for climbing the 1,575 steps of the Empire state Building although he was on a $12,000-a- year disability pension from the New York City Fire Department at the time. Muhroke's record of 12 minutes was recorded in the 1979 nr ,t n rzh nicc ISnRo of World Records. nublished in London Downtown bus riders to get waiting room defunct organization and the ideals it represented. THE FORMER student government representative charged the new group with attempting to ride on her party's hard work and favorable reputation to garner votes. Mike Spirnak, founder of the present SOC, responded he chose that title for his new party because "we tried seeing what would advertise well, and SOC sounded good." Party members figured "the old SOC's popularity was dead," Spirnak said, and therefore saw, no harm in adopting the old name. SOME FEEL the controversy arose from misunderstanding and mismanagement on the part of the new party. "Perhaps we should have checked with the old members to see how they felt," conceded SOC candidate Rick Shahin. "But we didn't think it would be a controversy because the old SOC party is defunct. Goodman questioned why Spirnak, a former Bullshit party member, decided to form a new party at all. "If he's opposed to the Bullshit party, he shouldn't use bullshit tactics to get elected this term," she declared. Spirnak captured a seat on LSA-SG last term after campaigning on the Bullshit ticket, but he said he "doesn't agree with their politics anymore." Doug Steinberg, a current Bullshit candidate, offered his own explanation for Spirnak's action. "Mike's trying to get away from the irresponsibility associated with the Bullshit party," Steinberg stated. "The SOC name better represents his responsible attitude and what he wants to accomplish in student government." By JEFFREY WOLFF Starting with the first of the year, those who ride city buses in the down- town area will finally get a long sought after waiting room as a refugee from the elements. Wednesday night the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority (AATA) board signed a contract for a three-and- a-half year lease starting in January on the main floor of the Benz Building at Fourth and William Streets. AATA PLANNING Coordinator Tom Hackley expects "we'll open the passenger waiting room then (Jan. 1), although construction of toilet facility and other minor alterations may still be going on." Hackley said the hours for the waiting room haven't yet been set,, but he "has a sense" it will be open 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. every day but Sunday. For the approximately $170,000 tax- payers will be paying over the next three years they will receive 500 sq. ft. of space, only 850 of which will go for a passenger waiting room, toilets, a con- cession area, and an information desk. The other 3650 sq. ft. will be converted for AATA offices and storage and there is a possibility AATA will rent out space to new tenants. Willie Horton, a board member who said Wednesday's decision came after a long history of failure due to money problems, said he considered the Benz Building "a little more expensive than hoped. And it's not the ideal site, but at least it's something." Fourth and William has been the main transfer point and according to AATA Director Bob Works, "the hub around which our whole system is structured." Consequently, the Benz Building site will be designed to ac- commodate the 2,500-3,500 people whom AATA estimates board and leave buses there. The transportation group reports the shelter should comfortably handle 85 people with a somewhat higher "crush capacity." Daily Official Bulletin SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 19,678 Daily Calendar: Kelsey Museum: Gallery Talk, Diane Reiersgord, "Guardians of the Nile: Sculpture fromKaramis in the Fayoum," Kelsey, 2 p.m. Music School: Faculty piano recital, SM Recital Hall, 2p.m.; Gamelan, Hill Aud., 4 p.m. General Notices: CEW tGearing Up for GRE-agmat-LSAT Women gearing up to take graduate and professional school admission examinations are invited to two programs planned by CEW. "The Exam-Taking Process," Nov. 27, focuses on application maze and practical tips from women who have successfully survived GRE, GMAT, and LSAT. The meeting will be 7:30-9:30 p.m. W. Conf. rm., Rackham. "Math Review" Nov. 30 and December 4, provides opportunity to brush up on basic skills and practice common exam questions using graphs, story problems, algebra. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., MLB 114, 115, 116. All interested women and men welcome. Series planned especially for women who are not now in school. Advance registration requested. CEW weekdays 8:30 -5:00, 328-330 Thompson St., 763-1353. A Computing Center Open House and tours will be held Sunday, 19 Nov., 1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. Computing Center located 1075 Beal. Purpose of Open House Tours to acquaint students, faculty and staff with services and facilities provided by the Computing Center. Guided tours will be provided through machine rooms and a short termilal demonstration given. Children under fourteen must be accompanied by an adult. Questions call Computing Center,764-9595. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20,1978 Daily Calendar: Psychiatry; George H. Pollock, dir., Chicago Inst. for Psychoanalysis, "psychosomatic Specificity Theory: Still Valid'?", CPH Aud., 9:30 a.m. Near Eastern/N. African Studies: Salma Jayyusi, "Social and Political Protest in Contemporary Arabic Literature," Commons Rm., Lane Hall, noon. Great Lakes/Marine Environment: Ramesh Dayal, "Nuclear Wastes Disposal at Sea," 165 Chrysler Ctr., 3:30 p-in. Statistical/Biostatists: Prof. Herman Wold, U- Uppsala, "From Pattern Recognition to Model Building: On the Evolution of Multivariate Analysis. 451 Mason Hall, 4 p.m. Biological Sciences: Renato Baserga, Dept. Pathology, Temple-U., Phila., Pa. "Genetic Basis of Cell Proliferation in Mammalian Cells, Lecture rm. 2, MLB, 4 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: R. Blandford, Calidornia Institute of Technology, "Radio Jets," 845 Dennison; P. Hansen, "High P. pp Collistions at CERN ISR," 2038 Randall, 4 p.m. Guild House: Michael Taussig, "Marx at Michigan?", 802 Monroe, 8 p.m. Music School: William Garnett, aerial photograper, slide/talk, Art & Arch.,8 p.m. General Notices: Computing Center announces a short course 'THE MIC111GAN D)AILY' Voltume LXXXIX, No. 64 Sunday. November 19. 1978 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April t2 semesters ; $13 by mail, outside Ann Arbor. Sum mer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor: $7,00 by mail outside Ann Arbor. "Introduction to Debugging with SDS." Led by FredHd G. Swartz, Computing Center Staff Member, Mon., Heritage, Century-Grant, Designers Editions, American Artist, Gibson. Nov. 20., 7:30-9:30 p.rh., Computing Center Seminar rm.. first floor. Questions directed to Fred Swartz at Computing Also available, at regular price, are UNICEF and Sunrise cards. Center,764-2121. "Designing Structured Group Experiences," a two-day workshop planned by CEW. Especially for experienced counselors who would like to increase skills in developing structured group programs for their adult populations. Workshop format includes lecturettes, discussion, structured group experiences and skills practice, and individual consultation. Workshop begins Monday, Dec. 4 and continues MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE through the evening and all day Thursday, Dec. 5. Cost is $25, ceu's available. 549 East University at the corner of East U. and South U. 662-3201 Advance registration required, CEW, 328-330 Thompson, 763-1353. 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