Y%, ' ",Z if- YMSEE WNVSAPPENCALL- SWAY Ed. Schoolfuture predicted The University's education dean, Joan Stark, predicted yesrerday that the activities of the faculty of the School of Education will change drastically in the next ten years, primarily because of a decline in enrollment. "As college students become more career oriented, education faculty may be called on to assist other university units in developing their vocational and professional training programs," she explained. She said that the focus of the school will shift from teacher training to work on research projects and assisting personnel in areas such as television, industry, museums, and hospitals. "Obviously, only a portion of our predictions will involve events which are within our control," said Stark. "Now it is our responsibility to investigate how schools of education in particular and society in general meet the challenge of enrollment decline profitably." Everything but the rainbow Dubbed on Monday as the "auction of the decade," Judy Garland's one-time husband Sid Luft sold over $100,000 worth of memorabilia, and clothing which belonged to the late actress. Fans in Beverly Hills paid $25 just to get in the door, and then paid $6,500 for a scrapbook Garland had kept since she was a teenager, $60,000 for her 1953 Mercedes Benz, and $5,750 for a photo which had been given to the star by the late president John F. Kennedy. s Growth Conference opens The University opened its Growth Conference in Kalkaska, Michigan, yesterday focusing on marketing industrial sites and working with industrial prospects to spur development. The conference is funded by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare and is part of a three year program that willmove to other cities throughout the state. "Ecomonic development on a balanced basis for the community happens in the trenches-at the county, township and village board meetings," said Paul Adkins, director of the Industrial Development Corporation in Kalkaska and local coordinator for the University program. He said getting local governments to develop their own "game plan" to determine their economic and cultural destiny is the major goal of the program. Daily information service? When readers call the Daily for information on certain news events, it is usually an isolated call asking for information on political election outcomes or details on some natural disaster. But yesterday, it was a desire to know the outcome of a different sort of election which prompted many University students to call us. Between noon and 1 p.m., the Daily received 27 calls from persons curious about the Heisman Trophy selection for the outstanding college football player of the year. Obviously a big reason for the "flood of calls" was because the University's own Rick Leach was in the running for the award. Although Leachh finished third in the voting, he might be flattered to know he recevied more calls at the Daily from persons interested to know if he won the Heisman Trophy, than Pope John Paul II did when he was selected head of the Catholic Church. Happenings FILMS Ethics, Religion-Roots; Freedom, 4:15, MLB Aud. 3. Ann Arbor Film Co-op-The Cheerleaders, 7, 10:20, Invasion of the Bee Girls, 8:45, Angell Hall Aud. A. Cinema II-Women in the Dunes, 7, 9:30, MLB, Aud 3.. Alternate Action-Orpheus, 7:15,9 Nat. Sci. Aud. Women Studies-Chicago Maternity Center, 7, Angell Hall Aud C. African Atudent Association-South Africa: The White Laager, 8, International Center. PERFORMANCES PTP-Richard II, 8, Power Center. Actor's Ensemble-Macbett, 8, Arena Theatre, Frieze Building. SPEAKERS The Center for AfroAmerican and African Studies-"American Foreign Policy: The Middle East and Southern Africa", Raymond Tanter, 12, 1017 Angell Hall. CEW-"Every Child's Birthright: In Defense of Mothering", Karen Mason, 12, Pendleton rm., Union. Environmental Science-"Stable Isotopes as Indicator of Environmental Change", Philip Meyers, 3:30, 185 Eng IA. Reactor Engineering-"Nuclear Power Program in France" William Kerr, 3:45, 208 Cooley. Palestine Human Rights Committee-"Israeli Violations of Palestinian Rights", Lea Tsemel, 7:30, Pendleton room, Michigan Union. Quarterback Society-"The Design of Naval Hull Forms for the Future", Bob Johnsin, 7:30, Room 229 West Engineering. Spartacus Youth League-'The Great Coal Strike of 1978", 7:30, 122 Residential College, East WQuad. MISCELLANEOUS African Student Association-Panel discussion on African Development, 5, MLB Lecture Room 1. American Society for Information Science-Career Opportunities in Information Science, 7:30, Michigan Union, Conference Room 5. Don't make waves! The government does not have a reputation for being thrifty or careful with its monetary resources, and Senator William Proxmire (D-Wisc.), makes sure that the federal agencies know about it-every month. Proxmires's "Golden Fleece Award" for the' month of November was sent to an Interior Department Agency for spending $145,000 on a wave-making machine for a Salt Lake city swimming pool. The "wasted" 'money was spent by the Bureau for Outdoor Recreation who funded the machine to give inland residents the aquatic experience known only to coastal swimmers. "Based on this rationale, hard-pressed taxpayers will next be asked to fund ski slopes in Florida, mountain scenery in Indiana, igloos in Death Valley or trnnieal rain forests in Wisconnin." Proxmire said. We note that he' The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, November 29,1978-Page 'Inside' vengence plagues city government" ST. LOUIS (AP) - The assassinations in San Francisco are sparking worry among the nation's city officials that violence may be spreading as a means of settling routine political disputes. "We all live with this every day," says one mayor. "I've had meetings with Mafia types, labor hoodlums and Black Panthers. You always figure that in a political meeting, the weapons will be words. "MORE AND more, I'm afraid the weapons will be weapons." The mayor made the remark in an of- fhand conversation to colleagues, many stunned by Monday's murders of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, at San Francisco City Hall. Others among some 3,300 officials here for the annual meeting of the National League of Cities publicly ex- pressed dread at realizing that the murders seemed to stem from a classic political confrontation rather than from some random lunacy. Joel Wachs, a thoughtful city coun- cilman from Los Angeles, reflected the feeling of many officials, saying, "There's just no way to deal with 'in- side' political violence. There's no way to protect yourself from your colleagues. "This goes way beyond any question of security," he said. "We're talking about the basic ways to settle a political dispute." THE MOSCONE and Milk murders were at least the fourth violent attack at a major city hall in three years. The earlier incidents - in 1976 in Newark, Washington, D.C., and Baltimore - all grew out of day-to-day disputes in government and politics. It was noontime in April 1976, when Charles Hopkins entered a temporary city hall in Baltimore with guns blazing. He shot and killed two City Council members. Witnesses told police that- Hopkins said he was really after Mayor William Schaefer. The trigger to Hopkins explosion; he was frustrated with the bureaucratic runaround about his application to open a restaurant. Hopkins went to trial and was found innocent by reason of in- sanity. IN WASHINGTON, Mayor-elect Marion Barry - then a city councilm- man - was wounded as a band of Hanafi Muslim gunmen shot their way into the office of the city council president. The incident was part of a takeover of three buildings stemming from the Hanafis' grievances with the District of Columbia Superior Court over lenient sentences meted out in a murder case and over a demand that American movie owners stop showing a film considered sacrilegious by Hanafi leaders. What concerns city officials meeting here is that all these instances of violence exploded out of nowhere from people involved in established gover- nmental and political processes. William Stafford, aide to former Seattle Mayor Wes Uhlman and now to Mayor Charles Royer, says Uhlman received any number of death threats during his tenure but never actually implemented strict security precautions. Police in Seattle announ- ced Tuesday, however, that theyw ere increasing security around Royer but did not elaborate. STAFFORD expressed a major problem: "You can't frisk every neigh- borhood activist who meets with the mayor, let alone every member of the jjtDal Ofcial Bulletin : WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1978 graduating seniors and students in first or second grad. year. Six month period internship. Detain Daily Calendar: available. Statistics: Fred Bookstein, "Some Principles of -vai-able Analytic Data Display," 451 Mason Hall, 4 p.m. CAREER PLANNING Biological Sciences: Peter J. Davies, Dept. AND PLACEMENT Genetics, Development, & Physiology, Cornell U., 3200 S.A.B. "The Hormonal Control of Whole Plant Senescence," visiting Scholar appointments for 1979-80 are MLB, Lec. Rm. 2, 4 p.m. available at the Center for Study of the American Physics/Astronomy: V. Weisskopf, MIT, "51 Experience, The Annenberg School o Years of Quantum Electrodynamics," 296 Dennison, Communications, U. OF S. California. 4p.m. Pre-Professional Mental Health Counselor' STrainships are offered by the Devereaux Foundation SUMMER PLACEMENT Career House, Devon, Pa. Seniors, new graduates :3200 SAB 763-4117 and graduate students are invited to apply for these Summer Federal Civil Service Announcement 414 "live-in", 12 mo., appointments. has arrived. Required forms available. Deadline for Stipend: $316-409/mo. all apps. is Jan. 12. Dec. 15 deadline for clerical test Fellowship of $3500 will be offered to doctor~l in Jan. candidates in the fields of the Humanities or Social ATTENTION: The Summer Federal Civil Service studies. Announcement 414 has'arrived. Required forms are Grants-in-Aid will be available for students who avalable pps. received before Dec. 15 will be will have completed a min. of 1 yr. grad, work ir scheduled for January test. Good idea to take the classics studies, archaeology, history, art history; first test-clerical. Deadline for all applications Jan. economic history, or related disciplines Grants for 12. Get going-good jobs throughout the country. summer (June 12 through Aug. 11) have a stipend of New Products Corp., Benton Harbor, Mi. Summer $750. The Fellowship and Grant-in-Aid are offered at openings for Soph./Jr. engr. students with The American Numismatic Society, Broadway 41 background in machine design, metallurgy, elec. 155th Street, N.Y., N.Y.10032. engr., drafting. Further details available. Research & Development Projects are offered b INTERVIEW: Bell Laboratories, N.J., Will the East-West Center Institute. Participate in interview here Wed., JNov. 29- from 9 to 5. Fields projects up to 10 hrs. per week while working open-physics, chemistry, math., engr. (many towards Masters or Doctoral degrees at the fields), patent law, econ., psychology. Minority and University of Hawaii. Stipend approx. $9,000/yr. women are encouraged to apply. Register by phone Selection criteria and other information available or in person. at CP&P. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. Cleveland area employers will interview students Internships opening-covers a broad field at the from local Colleges & Universities & Clevelanders gallery - working with paintings, editor's office, home on vacation from out of2town institutions graphic arts, education dept., sculpture, etc. Further during the holidays, Dec. 27-29, 1978. Over 70 details available. Application deadline Mar. '79. employers are scheduled to attend the 1978 Collegy Greenfield Village/Henry Ford Museum. Openings job Interview Center at Cleveland Plaza, East 12th & for guides for historical interpretation. Also, food E'uclid Ave., Downtown Cleveland. service attendants needed. Complete information Graduate Fellowship to encourage graduate study available. Deadline for openings for guides. Jan. 5. of international relations and to further international Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. understanding, the J. W. Dafoe Foundation offers a intern program in foreign policy. Applicants must be fellowship of $5,000.00 at the University of Manitoba.* Help for tax woes By JOYCE FRIEDEN If you have problems figuring out your income tax and struggle to fill out your 1040 Form, relax, VITA (Volun- teer Income Tax Assistants) will be ready to serve you when the nerve- wracking time approaches. VITA works out of Project Com- munity, a program which offers credit for involvement in community organizations. The group consists of co- ordinators Gregg Nathanson, Jon Brand, Steven Michaelson, Gary Blitz, and approximately 100 volunteers. AN AN independent student-operated organization, VITA recruits four IRA oficials from Detroit and one state spokesman to train persons on income tax return filing procedures. VITA's free service is aimed at students, low- income residents, and elderly people. The five year-old program benefits both the customer and the volunteer, according to co-coordinator Nathanson. "People are confused and nervous about tax returns. They don't know what deductions or exclusions they can save money from-we save them money," said Nathanson. Nathanson said students get the ex- perience of working with the com- munity as well as preparationcfor various careers. "Working with VITA is a good addition to the law school ap- plication," Nathanson added. VITA is scheduled to begin its ser- vices on Feb. 1 and will bebopen through mid-April. Stations for income tax filers will be set up around campus. Signs with complete details about the program will be posted and sororities and fraternities will also be distributing information. VITA welcomes additional volunteers and will hold a mass meeting Dec. 6 at 7 p.m. in Auditorium C of Angell Hall. Hiroshi Teshigahara WOMAN IN THE DUNES 1964 A strange erotic fable about an entomologist on a remote beach who is trapped into living with a woman in a deep sandpit. A moving representa- tion of a man's forced search for self and the woman who brings him his final recognition. With EIJI OKADA and KYOKO KISHIDA. Subtitled. FRI.-Fassbinder's EFFIE BRIEST SAT-THE TURNING POINT SUN-Desica's TWO WOMEN CINEMA II TONITE AT 7 & 9:30 MLB 3 $1.50 The Ann Arbor Film Coo erstive presents at Aua. A WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29 THE CHEERLEADERS (Paul Glicker, 1972) 7 & 10:20-AUD. A A gaggle of mindlessly promiscuous Southern California post-pubescents are bent on producing a winning season for their high school team, and damn the sexual expense. What makes the picture a winning exercise is director Glicker's adept visual way of injecting genuine absurdity in what could have been a thoroughly idiotic cinematic outing. At the center of its appeal is a lavish display of nudity by the film's six nubile principals and lots of simulated couplings. "An agreeable surprise: fast-paced, good-humored and titillating." -BRITISH FILM MONTHLY. . INVASION OF THE BEE GIRLS (Dennis Sanders, 1973) 8:45 only-AUD. A There's trouble at the Brandt Research Center: their males keep dying of sexual exhaustion. Solutions abound, but the act is that these killings are being committed by the Bee Girls, a buzzing race of lovelies spawned by radiation. Can their sting be resisted? Come see if these deadly and seductive Bee Women can be stopped before they invade your town! "A great schlock soft-core science fiction movie."-Roger Ebert. tomorrow: SABOTAGE & DEAD OF NIGHT WEDNESDAY MANN THEATRES MATINEES FOX LAGEWIN MAPLE VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER All Seats $1.50 769-1300 until 5:45 pm SHOWTIMES TODAY 1:45 3:45 r y 5:45 7:45 9:45