i Page Seven Wednesday, March 1, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, March 1, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven . I k SPECIAL-During Spring Break REDUCED RATES: Billiards Table' Tennis M Pin Bowling WIN A FREE GAME The Literary Catalyst A student publication with the student in mind. 64 pages of short stories, poems and essays, written by students throughout the United States. SAMPLE ISSUE-50c National Collegiate Publications, Unlimited Box 14 Flourtown, Pa. 19031 And what about looking back into the future? 'U' INCENSED Wave of arson augments campus concern Judge directs UPHA talks MICHIGAN UNION OPEN p.m. Sun.-Thurs. Sp.m.-1 o.an. Fri. & Sat. IN CASE YOU MISSED US IN BERLIN: (Continued from Page 1) destroying over a hundred books and a fire in the Michigan Union which burned several vending machines. A fire set in West Quad was "three minutes away from being a major disaster," according to officials. Early yesterday morning, a fire was discovered in the entrance of Alpha Xi Delta' sorority, which caused $5,000 worth of damages. According to Feldkamp, "only good fire doors prevented a very major fire." Police are currently investigat- ing the blaze, and have thus far declined to comment on possibili- ties of arson. University officials are especially concerned over student responsive- ness to fire alarms. False alarms in the past, especially in dormi- tories, have compounded the prob- lem of raising student awareness of the severity of the arsons. Stu- dents have been reluctant to eva- cuate buildings in real emergen- cies, thinking them to be just another prank. Last year, a series of crank' fire alarms caused, annoyed stu- dents to disconnect fire alarms in several West Quad corridors. One such incident resulted in the mal-I functioning of fire alarms for two entire houses of the residence hall.! Students have also reported fire extinguishers on some dormitory corridors being empty. Several cor- ridors tin West Quad had empty extinguishers all last year, as a, result of student pranks. can be evacuated. Markley Hall has thus far es- caped the fires, but nonetheless has instituted hall patrols to search for possible arsons. In ad- dition, residents ,of the dorm all have special magnetic cards which allow them to enter after the dorm been no special precautions taken by the dorm. Both Betsy Barbour and Helen Newberry Halls have instituted student patrols on duty from 11 pm. to 7 a.m. According to Bar- bour Resident Director Rosalyn Nixon. students are satisfitd with South Quad, the site of several is locked at 11 p.m. the new security precautions arsons, has posted 24-hour guards However, Markley st u d e n t s "The women were quite anxious at all entrances. Only South Quad claim that almost anyone can gain after the fire in Betsy Barbour," residents and their guests are per- admittance simply by knocking on Nixon reports, "but I think every- iitted to enter the building at the door. thing's going to be O.K." mind te trAlice Lloyd Hall has locked the In Stockwell Hall, the doors are any time. dorm's side doors, although the now locked at all times. Each hall However, South Quad is the only main doors remain open. Student resident also has a key to the dormitory on campus with an "in- "Rat Patrols" monitor the halls main doors direct" fire alarm system. In each night from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m Stockwell Building Director Rich other residence halls, and Univer- to watch for any possible fires Thompson explains the move. "I'd sity buildings, fire alarms are The decision to keep the front rather have the doors locked than located on each corridor and when doors unlocked was made, accord- guards," he said. He says he had pulled, sound a general fire alarm ing to one Lloyd resident, because received "generally good" reaction to. evacuate the building. But in "there has to be some trust." on the move. South Quad, any person wishing East Quad, home of the Resi-I Bursley Hall, thus far the site to report a fire must dial a spe- dential College, has not yet been of only a very small blaze; has also cial number, and then the alarm hit by arson attempts. There have instituted student hall patrols. is triggered. The early morning walk-out last Wednesday came in the wake of CPHA management's refusal to negotiate such ques- tions as higher salaries and bet- ter working conditions. CPHA also opposed Local 157's request for a "union shop" designation, which would require all non-pro- fessional CPHA workers to join the local. According to union spokesman Michael Shapiro. "96 per cent of the union's members have shown a preference for a union or closed shop. Last fall, he said, approxi- mately 60 per cent of the CPHA's non-professional keypunch oper- ators, and mailroom and clerical workers had voted in favor of the union. "This would invalidate its (man- agement) claim that the union shop would restrict freedom of (Continued from Page 1) there, and they have been to keep order," he said. able According to South Quad Build- ing Director William Ennen, the switch from a direct to an indi- rect system was made because of repeated acts of vandalism and false alarms. However, some resi- dents are unsatisfied with the sys- tem, claiming it causes dangerous delays between the time a fire is sighted and the time the building '' _ I I .: ,y, :': x.rr DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN choice." he said CPHA Employe Relations offi- :::«,,::::vrir::v::::; Y:" .::. "";:.r ::;"7: .. ..........cial Jane W ilkens said that the _ --_ _- " __ -mana cement's position has .been Y 1 The Prosecutor-Can His Work Be Socially Constructive? A Controversial Discussion with Ward Chapman Chief, Trial lawyer, Genesee County Prosecutor's Office Today-law Club Lounge 4:15 P.M. The Daily Official Bulletin is an darvard Med. Sch., "New Modes of official publication of the Univer- rtelping: Widows-to-Widows, Mothers- sity of "ichigan. Notices should be o-Mothers," 2065 Frieze Bldg., 2 p.m. sent i TYP-WRITTEN FORM to ( Zoology Lecture: H. Padykula, "Cel- 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of Ilular Mechanisms Involved in Uterine the day ptreceding publication and Re-Modeling in Polyestrous Mammals," by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and 1400 Chem. Bldg.. 4 p.m. 'Sunday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are Mathematics: M. Kac. Rockefeller not accepted for publication. For Inst., "Eigenvalues, Pure and jNot So WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1 Pure," Aud. D, Angell Hall, 4 p.m. Botany Seminar: J. Doyle, "Evolution Day Calendar in Early Cretaceous Angiosperm Pollen and Leaves," 1139 Nat. Sci. Bldg., Physics Discussion: I. Herbst, "Dual- p.m. ity and the' Lorentz Group," 2038 Ran- Physics Colloquium: P. Rice, Bell dall, 11 a.m. Labs, "Condensation of High Density; Anatomy Lecture: S. Han, "Effects Excitons in Germanium," P&A Colloq. of Urostaglandin in E2 on Murin Rm., 4 p.m. Ovary." 4804 Med. Sci. II, 1:10 p.m. Hsoyo r:A on.Ui.o Social Work Lecture: P. Silverman, History of Art: A. Young; Univ. of Glasgow, Scotland, "Charlies Rennie that "no one should have to be Dart of the union to work at CPHA." She added that the vote in favor of the union had been approximately 53 per cent. Shapiro charged that CPHA has assigned its approximately 120 professional workers - such as computer programmers -to fill in for the striking union members. "These people are doing our work. More professionals have been hired recently for the same purpose," he said. In response to the charge of "scabbing," Wilkins said only that "we're working to cover all of the jobs." "We're a small non-profit group up against a large union (UAW)," she said. "We feel that our serv- ice to hospitals should not be Im- paireddbecause of the walk-out" she added. YOU CAN STILL HEAR THE WORLD'S FINEST MALE CHORUS* HILL AUDITORIUM-SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 8:30 P.M. THE MICHIGAN MEN'S GLEE CLUB in SPRING CONCERT TICKETS: MAIL ORDERS-March 1-25, 1024 Administration Bldg., Ann Arbor GENERAL SALES--March 18-25-Hill Aud. Box Office PRICES: $2.50 & $3.00 *Winners of the 1971 international Male Choir Competition, Lldngollen, Wales p IlL For the Student Body: SALE " Jeans " Bells " Flares X5.00 reg. to $24.00 CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty. Mackintosh and the Scottish Fin de Siecle," Aud. B. Angell Hall, 4:10 p.m. Speech Dept. Performance: Holberg's "Jeppe of the Hill." and Platus's 'Rope," Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg.,3 4:10 p.m. Computing Ctr: "The MTS Command Language and Running of Timeshared Jobs," Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 p.m. Inst. of Gerontology: J. Leff. Elder Affairs, "State Activist Role in Advo- cacy for the Aging," Lecture Rm. 1, Wilkins said that the dispute Modern Lang. Bldg.. 7:30 p.m. Cont. Educ. of Women and Dance between management and labor Prog.: S. Cohen, founder/editor Dance Perspectives, "Woman as Artistic Inno- arose primarily from differet vator: The Case of the Choreographer," conceptions of CPHA. "We're not Rackham Amph., 8 p.m. Afro-American and African Studies:- a factory, she explained. -B~ t W. A. Rodney, Univ. of Dar-Es-Salaam, they're treating us as if we were'." ranzania, "The Revolution in Tanzan--I la," Lecture Rm. 2. Mod. Lang. Bldg. 8 p.m. to participate. Tickets: Maximum four Grad Coffee Hour: East Conf. Rm., to each prospective graduate, distribut- 4th fl., Rackham, 8 p.m. ed Mon., Apr. 24, to Fri., May 5, at Music School: Univ. Symphony Or- Diploma Office, 1518 LSA Bldg. Remaip- .hestra, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. ing tickets will be distributed from Musical Society: J. Bream, guitar and Crisler Arena ticke toffice after 915 cute. Power Ctr., 8 p.m. a.m., Sat., May 6. Academic costunft: May be rented at Moe Sport Shop, 71 N. University Ave.; orders must be plac- ( re c1 Al' S ed between Mar. 15 and April 15. Grad. v7y II1( 'OI CS uation Announcements, invitations, etc.: Inquire at desk in first flbr Spring Commencement Exercises, May ' lobby of LSA Bldg. Diplomas: 411 d. 1972: graduates assemble at 9:30 diplomas will be mailed about June 45 a.m.; procession enters at 10:00 a.m.; except those being returned to engros- program begins at 10:30 a.m. ser for addition of honors or distinc- Exercises will be held in Crisler tion; these will be mailed about July Arena. Ali grads as of May 1972 eligible 15. 3s is HI-Fl BUYS Mere you one of those people who thought he long-playing record was a passing ancy? )id you laugh at stereo? kre you convinced that cassettes will never ound better than ban AM radio? mportant that you come down to .HI-FI BUYS MONSTRATION on WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1st to hear what the new high-performance "Dolby- in really do. ng disc replaced the old "78" because it was a more con- ounding medium for the enjoyment of recorded music. The issette mn well relanne the Innn-nlnvinn aisc for the some