Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, January 22, 1972 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, January 22, 1972 CSJ HEARS CASE Suit calls RSG elections illegal (Continued from Page 1) Also, he did not consider it "proper" for the elections direc- tor to include with the ballot biog- raphies of the candidates or ar- guments for and against the'ref- erenda. Such descriptions were likely to be biased, he explained, and it is the responsibility of the individual candidates to cam- paign. Bamba assumed office after the ballot was printed. Slaughter is one of five write- in candidates running on a GROUP slate in the RSG elec-' tions. GROUP ran a slate of five can- didates in the SGC elections last Nov. John Koza, GROUP candidate in the SGC election and current SGC member, appears to be the instigator of recent criticism of RSG elections. Early last week, Koza mailed a letter to one-third of the Rack- ham students asking for a nega- tive vote on the three referenda which appear on the RSG ballot. The three RSG referenda re- solve that: -The graduate student gov- ments, through the Graduate Federation (GF) - proposed successor to the recently dis- solved Graduate Assembly (GA)- have the authority to make nomi- nations to faculty committees for- merly made by GA; -RSG be empowered to work with other graduaterand profes- sional college governments in seeking autonomy from SGC and CSJ in matters of representation, taxation and governance of grad- uate students, and that; -Fifty cents per term from the University fees paid by each Rack- ham student be used for the sup- port of RSG, that money not be- ing obtained in addition to any funds from student fees approv- ed by any other process. Candidates whose names appear on the RSG ballot include: Barry Bowman, Robert Johnson, Chris- topher Unger, Charles Stanton, Robert Edgeworth, John Tolan, and Rudolfo Arevalo Law Prof. Francis Allen, psy- chology Prof. Martin Gold and' Rep. Marvin Esch (R-Mich.) are among 40 nationally prominent persons in the fields of correc- tions, law and social science who have agreed to serve as consult- ants and advisory panelists on the National Assessment Study of Correctional Program for Juve- nile and Youthful Offenders, now being conducted at the Uni- versity. During the five year study, the relative effectiveness of major kinds of correctional programs for different juvenile and youth- ful offenders will be evaluated, and recommendations for new policies will be developed. PESC status now secure, Smith states (Continued from Page 1) a sudden 600 'people" from the community enroll in PESO classes, the administration ' may review their position. Other subjects discussed at yesterday's PESC meeting includ- ed the question of credentials and PESC's financial situation. A special "credentials commit- tee" has been appointed to nego- tiate with area schools to grant credit to non-students who suc- cessfully complete PESO courses. English prof. Hubert English, head of the literary college curriculum committee said yesterday, how- ever, that his committee has not yet been approached on the ques- tion of granting such credit to nonstudents. The University has received a grant of $19,965 from the Na.- tional Endowment for the Hu- manities for the first part of a study of the role of the French- man Caron de Beaumarchais in aiding the American Revolution. Beaumarchais was the author of the two famous plays, "The Barber of Seville" and "The Mar- riage of Figaro." From 1776 until 1778 he ran a fleet of ships bring- ing secret supplies to this coun- try to aid the revolutionaries. By JEFF WILLSON Activities Day, Jan. 15-23 in the Union Ballroom, is going to be dif- ferent this year than it has been before. Past Activity Days have been held during the first term to introduce freshmen to cam- pus groups. But this year a sec- ond Activities Day is being held as a community project. Instead of just inviting student groups to take part, the Univer- sity Activities Center (UAC), who sponsors Activities Day, is invit- ing all Ann Arbor groups. This will be the first step in UAC's plan to get campus groups, community groups, and individu- als closer together. Right now, a UAC spokesman says, there are many groups that people would be interested in joining but they don't know about them. Starting with Activities Day, the Office of Student Services (OSS) is hoping to make a list of groups in the Ann Arbor area so that people can find an activity they are interested in. They also plan to keep a file of people interest- ed in a specific activity where there is no existing group, so that other people interested in that activity will be referred to them. Organizers hope that this Ac- tivities Day will be more success- ful than the one held last fall, since freshmen are now settled and may be looking for something outside of homework to do. There are presently 36 organizations signed up for Activities Day, in- cluding Gay Liberation and a number of fraternities. Clubs day changed MAOR Theater Presents The Reading of the Play "Cain" by John Nemerov 4 I E Followed by a discussion by Mr. Yaacov Orland, Israeli playwright, producer, and director, on "Israeli Theater." Sat., Jan. 22, 8 p.m. at HILLEL, 1429 Hill -Admission Free- Movie of symbols, not men, If you've received a CUE SURVEY and haven't heard from anybody RETURN your completed SURVEY to the drop box in ROOM 112, BASEMENT LAW LIBRARY (2nd doorway on the right) by MONDAY, JAN. 24 or call Alan B. 763-2176 -thanx. CUE peop THIS MAN LIVES AT Theta X1 And He's Happy JUST FOR THE RUSH CHECK OUT THETA Xl 1345 Washtenaw Sunday-Thursday 7-10 p.m p (Continued from Page 2) of factual liberties not, however, in the name of drama. Sacco's hatred of incompetent defense attorney Moore, and Moore's Kunstlerlike role in making martyrs of the pair is only hint-' ed at. The double-bind of being scapegoats for the Right and martyrs for the Left is likewise barely touched. And the differ- ences between the defendants themselves is never probed. All of these omissions can un- doubtedly be chalked up to Mon- 4aldo's ogre hunt, less concerned with people than with politics. But a more mysterious exclusion is the emasculation of Vanzetti's moving courtroom speech, a speech which works both politi- cally and dramatically. How could anyone have trimmed these lines: If it had not been for this thing. I might have lived out my life talking at street cor- ners to scorning men. I might have die, unmarked, unknown, a failure. Now we are not a failure. This is our career and our triumph. Never in our full life can we hope to do such work for tolerance, for justice, for man's understanding of man, as now we do by acci- dent. That last moment belongs to us - that agony is our triumph. Dramatically bereft, the film also blunders along visually with repetitious two-shots, wobbly camera-work that tries to pass for cinema verite, pointless re- action shots seemingly stuck in on the theory that one cut is as good as another (when the ver- dict is announced, we get close- ups of practically everyone in the courtroom), and big, blurry objects, usually heads, thrust in the foreground. When in doubt, director Montaldo zeroes in on defense attorney Moore's san- dals (read "disrespect for court"), the jury foreman salut- ing the flag (read "one-hundred percenter"), and Judge Thayer smirking (read "railroad"). These things are annoyances. Much worse is Montaldo's visual treatment of Vanzetti's court- room speech, which matches the director's textual butchery. The camera begins with a close-up of Vanzetti and slowly zooms out to a medium close-up capturing the immobile Sacco. Perfectly acceptable. But then, as Van- zetti delivers his stirring last words, Montaldo cuts to a long- shot of the courtroom and all is lost. The words have been dwarfed by architecture; the man has been dwarfed by the film. In thesame vein, though less a matter of visual style than~ overall poor judgment - espe- cially strange since -Montaldo worked on Battle of Algiers - is the use of black and white for the prologue and execution, and color for all the rest. Sacco & Vanzetti seems to be one flim that clearly proves the case for monochrome; and though I'll be saying a good deal more about the mythology of the objective image when I review The Last Picture Show, suffice it to say here that we visualize Sacco and Vanzetti in terms of newsreels, and the visual poetry of our mind's eye is cast in that mold. Color only spiffs things up at the expense of th e poetry. And I for one don't think the Sacco-Vanzetti story needs eith- er Montaldo's political or aes- thetic polish. Vanzetti wrote shortly before his execution: What I wish-more than all else in this last hour of agony For the Student Body: LEVI S Corduroy Bells $8.50 CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty is that our case arid our fate shall be understood in their real being and serve as a tre- mendous lesson to the forces of freedom so that our suf- fering and death will not have been in vain. He, and we, shall have to wait a while longer for the movie version. ale ,1 .. v a .. .. .., ... F, ,... t,, ... .. Protein The Most Useful Coupon You May Ever Rip Out.. 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OF DAYS DESIRED PRICE NAME .PHONE _ ADDRESS- checks payable to: THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ann Arbor, MI 48104 420 Moynard Street N B.: Each group of characters counts as one word Hyphenated words overn5 characters count as two words (this includes telephone numbers) 10' lines ecquals 1 inch 5 words per line tr 4U~ I Pre-Inventory Clearance Sale r (JAN. 21st-JAN. 31st) Sheep Skin Afghan Coats $85.00 $60.00 Sheep Skin Afghan Coats (infants) ..........45.00 28.00 Hand Woven, hand embroidered' Blouses, Dresses and Men's Shirts ......,.....19.75 15.75 Embroidered Dresses...................22.00 15.00 Turkish Real Leather Coats ........ ... 82.50 60.00 Turkish Real Leather Pants (female) 80.00 50.00 Turkish Jewelry and Puzzle Rings ..................20% OFF Turkish Rug Bags ... ................. 1 2.50 8.50 ALL OTHER MERCHANDISE-25% OFF TURKISH GIFT SHOP{ 802 S. STATE ST. (between Hill & Packard) Order as many albums as you want! At half price! Complete the order form below. 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As of Feb. 1 st we are raising our prices to our customers. This increase will reflect only It's not the drink that kills, it's the drunk, the problem drinker, the abusive drinker, the drunk driver. This year he'll be involved in the killing nf at 1Paqt 95 000 neAnle H'll hb involved in at least 800.000 highwav 4