Page Eight- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 12, 1971 P a e E i H E M C I G A A L u s a , O t b r 1 , 1 7 Anti-war moratorium planned across nation CITY COUNCIL: Redistricting, voter registration debated (Continued from Page 1) which are planning anti-war pro- grams. In East Lansing, workshops and speeches will focus on the war, and a rally has been called for tomorrow afternoon. Numerous events are planned for the New York City area in- cluding speeches by Mayor John Lindsay, Bess Myerson Grant, Poet Pete Seeger and various 1 a b o r leaders at rallies and demonstra- tions in all parts of the city. Many Chicago area communities are holding small demonstrations and vigils, and the University of C h i c a g o is having a day - long teach-in on the war. In the Boston area, suburbs and towns have called picnics, rallies, and panel discussions on the war. B o s t o n University, Holy Cross. Boston College, and Tufts have planned anti-war activities and a march has been called for down- town Boston tomorrow aftern However, nothing has beer ganized at Harvard Universit3 Rallies have also been plan for Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, waukee, Los Angeles, and Francisco but none of thosed onstrations seem to have makings of a massive shove opposition to the war. However, the moratoriun reaching many communities have never independently pa: pated in nationally coordir anti - war programs. Worksl speeches, candlelight procesk and guerrilla theater have1 planned in such diverse locale Davidson College in North C lina; Davenport, Iowa; Roc land and Moline, Illinois; A querque, New Mexico; the Uni sity of Oklahoma; and score suburbs and residential comn ties which are planning sepa actions against the war. (Continued from Page 1) 1 Mil- action," James Stephenson San Fourth Ward) said. (R- The Republicans plan to intro- duce a resolution next week which would replace one of the Demo- cratic commission members with a Republican. Harris claimed yesterday that the move would be illegal as Coun- cil can not remove someone whomI they didn't appoint. Harris made the appointments to the boundary commission, and Council approved them. The debate over door-to-door registration was also divided along party lines, with Democrats gen- erally favoring such registration and Republicans expressing oppo- sition. Harris outlined three reasons why Ann Arbor should institute door-to-door registration: the 18- year-old vote, the state Supreme Court ruling which said students could vote in their college towns, and the fact that many Michigan cities have door-to-door registra- tion while Ann Arbor sloes not. In response to demands for more convenient registration for stu- dents, City Clerk Harold Saunders will be conducting a two-week on- campus voter registration drive beginning next Monday. Registra- tion will take place at the Mich- igan Union, Fishbowl, North Cam- pus Commons and other sites. Tables will also be set up on scheduled days at dormitories. If the door-to-door registration were approved, dormitory -ules would prevent registrars from going door- to-door in those buildings. In addition, Saunders will be. holding extra classes for deputy registrars tomorrow from 2-4 p.m. and 7:30-9:30 p.m. and Friday from 7:30-9:30 p.m. in City Council chambers, City Hall. Budget euts loom large (Continued from Page 1) gents at their meeting Thurs- day. Milliken last year ordered cut- backs totaling 1.5 per cent of the total appropriations. At the Uni- versity these cuts were accom- plished through across-the-board cutbacks in each department. In addition, University officials last fall ordered all units to sub- mit a plan for "saving" three per cent of their salary budgets to compensate for the anticipalld stringent state allocation this year. The "savings," incorporated into the fiscal 1971-72 budget, allowed the University to reallo- cate about $2.8 million into staff salary increase programs. Maddox talks Sunday at'U' (Continued from Page 1) the most serious problem confront- ing the United States today. Maddox said that neither black nor white children, parents, or communities are benefitting fromI what he termed the chaos and dis- order engulfing the public edu- cation system. "All are victims," he maintained. A wideranging question and ans- wer p e r i o d followed Maddox's speech. Commenting on the recent pris- on riots at Attica Correctional Facility, Maddox said the prison situation "will never be perfect" and added that he felt the prison- ers' revolt as another aspect of' "the war on law enforcement that is going on in this country today." Maddox, who during his term as governor initiated dramatic penal reforms in Georgia, supported New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller's decision to call in state troopers to, quell the prison rebellion. (Continued from Page 1) center their menus around fresh fruits, breads and grains, vege- tables and soups. Indian Summer, located at 315 S. State St. will open this week. According to owner Mark Hesse, all meals should cost between $1 and $2 and "will be prepared without taking shortcuts." The second area health food restaurant - Soybean Cellars, Inc.-is still in the construction stage and will not open for about six weeks. Situated in the old Veterans of Foreign Wars Hall on E. Lib- erty, Soybean Cellars will include a natural goods/food store - which will open within the next two weeks-in addition to the restaurant. For those preferring to cook their own meals, the Ann Arbor area currently sports five natu- ral food stores. Most of the stores offer a variety of grains, flours, wafers, NEW RESTAURANTS Organic food demand grows dried fruit, fresh fruit knd vege- tables, herbs, cereals and fresh- ly-baked goods.f The Food Co-op on 802 S. State just opened this past August and already has over 1,000 members. Applerose--another health food store on Liberty St.-is in the process of becoming a complete natural foods grocery store, ac- cording to owner Julian Moody. Despite the growing number of natural food stores in the city, store owners say they have am- ple business and no problems with competition. "We're all apparently making a living, and have good work- ing relationships w i t h each other," says Robert McKee, co- owner of Good Earth, a health food store in Kerrytown. Agreeing with McKee, Bill Bolduc, co-owner of Eden's Na- tural Food Store, says, "As far as I'm concerned, the more stores there are, the more peo- ple. will eat the food." The primary problei store owners run into is a shortage in supplies. However, people in the health food business are pleased at the increasing demand for natural food. "We believe that people can be better by eating organic food that is alive," says a worker in Your Health and Nutrition, lo- cated on Ashley St. 4 r K 0 Workshop on Defoliation DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .LS:: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12 Computing Ctr. .Short Course: J. Di- Giuseppe. "Use of the Data Concen- trator with MTS", Seminar Rm, Com- puting Center, N. Campus, 3-5 pm. Botany Seminar: M. Tatibana, Chiba Univ., Japan "Bosynthesis of Carba- myl Phosphate and its Control in Mammals," 1139 Nat. Sci., 4 pm. Physics Seminar: L. Stodolsky, SLAC, "Report ion the Cornell Photon Con- ference," P&A Colloquium Rm, 4 pm. School of Music: The Stanley Quar- tet, Rackhamn Aud., 8 p.m. General Notices Freshmen & Sophomores in LSA: You may make appointments for Ad- vanced Classification, first day was Oct. 11; 1213 Angell Hall. Sch. of Education: Walk-in Peer Counseling now available for students interested in,or already registered in the School of Education, Rm 1228 SEB, 8:30 to 4:45, Mon.-Fri. LUNCH-DISCUSSION TUESDAY, October 12 12:00 Noon U.M. INTERNATIONAL CENTER SUBJECT: "DEMOCRACY IN IRAN?" Speakers: Mrs. Maryam Hastings Rida Ebrahim Zadeh I Wed., 2 P.M.-Ecology 417 Detroit St. Center for info. 761-3186 Im Cost: 50c For Reservations Call 662-5529 U-M PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM USHER APPLICATION FOR THE MENDELSSOHN SPECIAL SERIES Sponso.red by Ecumenical Campus Center . JOIN THE SPORT OF THE SPACE AGE PARACHUTING SERVICE TECUMSEH, MICHIGAN Michigan's, Most Active Sports Parachuting Center HOME DROP ZONE OF U-M SKYDIVING CLUB SATURDAY, SUNDAY, HOLIDAYS I Lighthouse Fannydl~ Kansas City Jammers Rushfield NAME ADDRESS PHONE U-M ID No. I wish to usher for (indicate choice of series, 1st, 2nd): SERIES A SERIES B . REPORTING TIME OF 7 P.M. k *