Sunday, March 26, 197: THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven isa Great Paper! 1972 GREML St 0 10O0% Gur a eed Under Am Motors Buyer Protection Pia ' 3 CAMP'S AMER-M o- I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN, Pioneer II offers new high school experience IN till nly erican n. I J I SUNDAY, MARCH 26 TV Center Film: "The Worlds of Ab- raham Kaplan: Loneliness," WWJ-TV, Channel 4, noon. Family Recreation Program : for fac- ulty, staff and married students, all sports bldg., facilities, 1:30-5:30 p.m. Creative Arts Festival-Spring Fest Weekend: Art Fair, Union Ballroom, noon-6 p.m.; Square Dancing and In- ternat'l Folk Dancing. Union Ballroom, 8-l1 p.m.. MONDAY, MARCH 27 Ma thematicsLecture: J. Cowan. Univ. of rhicago. 2225 Angell Hal. 2 p.m. SACUA Meeting: 4079 Admin. Bldg.. 3 p.m. Physics Seminar: F. Mills, Brookha- ven Nat'l Lab., "Isabelle - The Pro-, posedIntersecting Storage Rings for BNL," P & A Colloquium Rm., 4 p m. History Dept.-Comparative Studies Prog. in History: M. Finley, Cambridge Univ., England, "Aspects of Ancient and Modern Slavery Compared," Rack- ham, Amph., 8 p.m. Music School:AUniversity Symphony Orchestra, Hill Aud., 8 p. SUMMER PLACEMENT 212 S.A.B. For further info, about the follow- ing, please stop in or call 763-4117. INTERVIEW, Camp Sequois, Adrian. Mich. Coed. Will interview Thurs.. Mar. 30, 9:30-: 6:30; openings include waterfront, rid-' ing instructor (western) and cooks; register by phone or in person. ANNOUNCEMENTS : Kensington Metro Park. Opening for Day Camp Director. Must have WSI. chauffeur license, camping skills, etc., further details andlapplications avail- able. City of Oak Park, Mi., Parks & Rec- reation. Wide field of openings - life guards, concession operators. play- leaders, tennis instrs., baseball. soft- ball instructors, sports instrs., Mar. 29' deadline for applications. (Continued from Page 1) er's ed. and science. to Chinese cooking, human ecology, yoga, the Bible, genetics and evolution, and ESP. Students learn from "resource people" - teachers, parents, Uni- versity students, even Board of Education members-anyone who op, who prepare, serve, and clean up after lunch, pay less than those not involved with the co-op. Kit- chen facilities are provided at the school. Signs on bulletin boards, which seem to be everywhere, advertise the free people's clinic, request help in money-raising for Clon- 001, knows anything. lara, the city's -only free elemen- A student committee helps tary school. and solicit interest in- choose their own teachers and new course ideas. makes recommendations to the No one knows whether colleges Pioneer High School principal. will accet students who receive Each student has an advisor, a a diploma from a "free" high teacher who determines whether school. Pionrer Two sends out a or not a student should receive letter with stud'nts' transcriptA credit for his participation in a explaining how the school oper-- Par'ticularcourse. All classes are ates. run on a pass-fail basis, but, so far, only two students have "fail-R ed" K pn i CAMPUS _. __ ___ For a subscription call 764-0558. Enjoy It., American Motors Service Headquarters 2448 Washtenaw 434-2424 Ann Arbor - Ypsilanti - Washtenaw County Show Room Hours 9 to 9, Fri. and Sat. 'til 6 How do you want to remember the first Sunday of Spring? HELD OVER today only: I MIA I _ .1 An audio visual experience by John Pierce. BLACK LIGHT-STROBE PHOTO SILKSCREENS, PHOTOGRAPHS AND DRAWINGS Students must fill out a credit application for each course ex- plaining what their course would be about, whether he/she will eneed a teacher or wishes to study independently, and where and whendthe class would be held. The student and the adviser then de- cide how the courses should be evaluated. True to the "free" spirit of the school, there is no set time for the opening and closing of Pio- neer Two. The teacher who a'- rives first opens the doors in the mornings, and the one who leaves last closes up. Usually students de- cide when and where a class mteets. At noon, a student food co-op makes lunch. Students in the co-I 20% OFF ALL, NEW BOOKS ECOLOGY CENTER 417 Detroit Street 1-7 P.M. NATURAL FOOD REFRESHMENTS (except hardcover textbooks) INCLUDING PAPERBACK TEXTBOOKS ! ______ _ i SGC char ec (Continued from Page 1) to certify the e'ecti n 'esults. In a letter interview. Silver- stein said he wa "c'onvinced that the ballet-stfVirg did occur last election." "I firm'v believe." he continued, "that s-me -f this year's results are false. I am gathering evi- dence to prove 'A and would be willing to take a -olygraph test myself to prove my sincerity." 1Losing nregi(1antigl candidate? Lee Gill said he was "fully satis- fied with C&R', investigations" and was dropping his call for a new election. Bill Jacobs and Lou Glazer of} GROUP were elected president and vice-president of SGC this week with a total of 1881 votes. Trailing behind the front-runners were Greg Kateff and Aime Rouss- man of Rap wi' h 1530 votes, fol- lowed by Scott Seligman and Richard Steinberg of STUT with 1165, Lee Gill and Jeff Doan of the Integrity party with 740, and Chris Rodgers and Jeff Sollinger with 173 votes. In the council races GROUP candidate Mela Wyeth led the winners with 960 votes, followed by Bill Dobbs of STUT with 860.91,4 Vida McClain of RAP with 777.79, GROUP's David Smith with 538.44 votes and Keith Murphy of RAP with 530.44.. In the PIRGIM race the certi- fied winners were Cheryl Hughes, 830 votes, John Yates, 641, Margo Yellinu, 544.45, Bill Krebaum, 389 .03, Jay Tower, 322.71, Mike' Peisner, 286.65, Mary Viviano. ?71.56, and Dodson with 253.15- votes. BOOKS ON: Indians, Women, Zen, backpacking, macrobiotics, bicycling, communes, love your body, domes, encounter groups, film, revolutions, cooking, self-awareness, Yaqui Ways of Knowledge, Nijinsky, free schools, occult, etc. BOOKS BY: Brautigan, Perls, Borges, Kerouac, Laing, Tarkel, Firestone, Colin, Fletcher, A.B.C. De Birdy, Bucky Fuller, Indians, women, Pearce, Chillingsworth, Casteneda, Royko, Kropotkin, Hesse, Battelheim, Big Rock Candy Mountain, et al. AT EU THE CELLAR in the union basement SALE ENDS SUNDAY! I People are not just the cause of the"population proble They're also theictims0 MARCH ART FAIR WHEN: Sunday, March 26,12-6 P.M. WHERE: Michigan Union Ballroom WHAT: Artists Displaying and Selling Their Crafts WHO: Open to Everyone; No Admission Charge ARTISTS: If you are interested in selling or displaying your work at the March Art Fair, stop in at room 240 Michigan Union or call 764-7409 for information and registration. Registration deadline is March 24. FLARES Your Choice $5 reg. to $24 I 1, SPONSORED BY: STUDENT GOVERNMENT COUNCIL UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER OFFICES OF SPECIAL SERVICES AND PROGRAMS 1 Traffic jams. Overcrowded schools. Inadequate housing. 'Increasing unemployment. Pollution. Almost any urban, social and environmental problem you can name is fast becoming a nightmare. And in one way or another affects us all. Of course, these problems would still exis't even if popula- tion growth were zero, because population growth is not.their basic cause. Therefore solving them must obviously become society's number one priority. However, the pressures of an ever-increasing population tend to intensify our problems. And make them harder to solve. (By the year 2000, Census Bureau projections estimate our population could grow close to 300 million. That's about 100 million more people to house, transport, educate, feed and clean up after!) This intensifying of problems by sheer numbers of people can also occur in individual house- holds. For just as "too many people" make society's problems more difficult to solve, the A Xa TIS SOT Giant-size 42-millimeter automatic date-telling T-12's, the newest of a ln ieo ehia long line of technical big-leaguers by Tissot. Top: shows the day as well as the date, and has rotating insde elapsed-time scale. In stainless steel, $125 Lower: the Navigator with \\ \II\ rotating inside 24-hour scale. Stainless steei, $120 State Street at Liberty FOREST FIRES BURN MORE THAN TREES And are ready for it-- emotionally, and not just financially. There's also only one time to have that child: when it's wanted. When it can be a welcome addition rather than an accidental burden. Unfortunately, research has consistently shown that not Especially from thoughtful people who understand how unplanned pregnancies can intensify the already severe problems society has still to solve. People who will, at the very least, help others understand that the population problem not only has a cause. It has victims.