Page Eight Davenport director o By TONY SCHWARTZ Elizabeth Davenport, active in student affairs at the University for 14 years, has been named di- rector of the Office of Special Serv- ices and Programs (OSSP). Under last spring's reorganiza- tion of the Office of Student Serv- ices, OSSP was conceived as a di- vision with direct responsibility to student organizations. It will seek to consolidate a variety of student services under one administrative jurisdiction. Davenport sees OSSP's function as a "striking force of specially skilled people to deal with needs of student organizations and special constituencies in a flexible man- ner." After receiving her bachelor's and master's degree from the Uni- versity, Davenport served in a variety of student-affair positions. She was a force behind the in- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, October 14, 1971 named as 'U' anti-w (Continued from Page 1) goes with the "crimes" that he has inflicted upon the people of this country-continuing the war itiation of co-ed housing, the co- and his economic policies. ordination of drug and sex educa- Workshop leaders discussed the tion programs and the student "Evict Nixon" campaign as a groups exploring problems of dis- whole, and expressed their desire crimination. that enough people would back the Under OSSP will fall groups like campaign to make Nixon a symbol the International Center, the Of- of political injustice. fice of Religious Affairs and com- To do this, organizers are hold- munity services. OSSP will also ing a rally in Washington Oct. assume jurisdiction over the medi- 23-26, where protesters can regis- ation service (dealing with student ter their dissatisfaction with Nixon. landlord disputes), the women's Economics Prof. Frederic Scher- office and the school and govern- er, speaking on the economic costs ment advocates. of the Vietnam war, said U.S. mil- "OSSP will help to provide the itary expenditures are expected to out - of - classroom education pro- increase steadily, rather than drop, gramming. It will be a -centralized over the next few years. He said information source where we act weapons systems presently under as facilitators," says Davenport. development might cost over $250 billion in the 1970's. In an effort to reach a greater U number of students, OSSP will em- U.S. taxpayers are footing the ploy a multi-media approach in- bill for these expenditures and are cluding leaflets, radio announce- willing to do so as long as they ments and advertisements. are given material goods, added I ar workshops varied Echoes of Buffalo Springfield Wayne County Jail same despite suit (Continued from Page 1) The plaintiffs' attack on the plan' has covered all areas including' suicides and assaults, health care and drug addiction, vermin con- trol, recreation, discipline, and the reduction of occupancy in the jail. In addition, attorney for the plain- tiffs Neal Bush contends that the county officials have ignored the immediate problems such as dental and psychiatric care, lack of beds, and th'e lack of, any mechanism for discipline hearings. Plaintiff attorneys contend that the . officials have not provided anything at all and that "lives are wasting" in the jail as a result. In a fiery rebuttal Tuesday, attor- ney for the plaintiffs Justin Ravitz expressed his disgust at the offi- cials and the courts responses. "The defendants are criminals," he charged, "and these whole pro- ceedings are beginning to become a farce." During Tuesday's proceedings, it, became apparent that some pro- gress towards a long run solution may have been made as a result of the hearing. But attorneys for the plaintiffs charge that immedi- ate solutions remain of utmost pri- ority, and that the defendants have made no plans to solve them. At that time, defense witness Robert Fitzpatrick, chairman of the Wayne County Commissioners, testified that the commission had already resolved in a meeting last week to begin building a new counlty jail within 14' months and to begin renovating the present jail Nov. 1. -completion of a s e r i e s of studies to determine the size, type of facility and location by April 1, 1972; -renovation of the present jail beginning Nov. 1, 1971 and should the study indicate a use for the old jail along with the new, cell sizes will be increased; -authorization of additional staff; and -inclusion in the new jail such services and facilities as recrea- tion programs, a drug withdrawal program and a library. N The proceedings Tuesday con- cerned provision of recreational facilities for the inmates. Cross had contended that the defendants had considered numerable pro- posals for recreation, but found "insurmountable problems" with them all. During T u e s d a y 's testimony Judge Victor Baum charged that the defense did not even seem to have a plan and all they were say- ing was "we can't do any more about recreation than is being done now." At the present time prison- ers have no recreation other than a place to occasionally play chess, checkers and cards. Ravitz commented that "the judges show tremendous concern for assaults, assaults which they agreed stemmed from the lack of physical activity. But they show no concern for the defendants who hoernn nnidlr d ha hv ial and concern on the part of the officials, the only way to force them to do something is "by lock- ing them in the jail." Plaintiff attorneys say that this unconcern and the lack of concrete proposals is characteristic of every point in the plan. Last May's court order required that while the defendants are still using the present structure, they -should submit for court approval within 30 days (mid-June) a plan for a suitable recreation facility. They added they did not want the area facility to be confined to the area where the prisoners can play the table games. Now, Ravitz charged it is Octo- ber already and the defendants have not even proposed anything except continued use of the same area-something the court specifi- cally said was not enough. Further, he brought out the lack of action concerning another point of their plan-attempted suicides. "It is already October," Ravitz said, "and nothing has happened. The defense has misrepresented the facts by saying nothing can be done. We can prove that com- munity people have offered pro- grams and they have been flatly rejected." ' economics Prof. Daniel Fusfeld. He claimed Americans have traded their power to effect government decisions for economic abundance. Political developments i n s i d e- Vietnam and international develop- ments that led to that involvement were explored in a seminar entitled "Vietnam, Internal Developments and the International Scene." The discussion was sponsored by the Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars (CCAS). John Whitmore, a professor of Vietnamese history, detailed Amer- ican support for the French co- lonial forces, American sponsor- ship of the Diem regime following French withdrawal, and the change of support in 1963 and 1964 from Diem to individual military strong- men, such as President Nguyen Van Thieu. Zoology Prof. Richard Cellarius was the featured speaker at the Ecology Center's seminar on Chem- ical Defoliation in Vietnam. The discussion ranged over a wide variety of topics, among them the long term effects of defoliation and herbicides on the ecosystems of Vietnam, the buildup of herbi- cides-and pesticides on the human body, and the danger to unborn babies presented by chemical and biological warfare. Led by representatives of Wo- men Uniting to End the War (WUEW), the workshop "Peace- What Women Can Do" focused on feasible economic actions. Citing the universal role of wo- men, WUEW emphasized "no spending" -days as a potentially effective method ofsindividual par- ticipation in the anti-war move- ment. Two workshops were held spe- cifically to deal with aspects of non-violence. The first, sponsored by the Michigan Institute for Non- Violence, concentrated on the phi- losophy of non-violence and con- sidered the concepts of love, ag- gression, cooperation, and compe- tition. The second was more involved with direct non-violent action, with concentration on training programs to assure that non-violent action remains non-violent. The workshop discussed the tactics of guerrilla theater and certain exercises in planning and executing long-range non-violent strategies. A workshop entitled "Another Vietnam in Pakistan? The Crisis in Bangladesh" concentrated on the plight of East Pakistan. Prof. Rhodes Murphy, director of the Center for Chinese Studies, moder- ated the discussion. He contended that the United States has been giving aid to West Pakistan, thus increasing the suffering in Bangla- desh (East Pakistan). Members of the Interfaith Coun- cil conducted a workshop entitled, "Daily Death Toll - White House Project for November." The pur- pose of the workshop was to begin to mobilize concern for upcoming action in Washington in which groups of 300-400 persons will fast in front of the White House begin- ning Nov. 8. According to Bill Hutchinson, state coordinator for the Daily fc October Special Death Toll Project, the action is! designed to "dramatize the, con- tinued cruelty and victimization ofE the Indochinese." This story was written by Gene Robinson from information compiled by reporters Daniel Jacobs, John Clements, Bruce Rubenstein, Sue Stephenson, Howard Brick, Rachel Goodstein, Linda Rosenthal, Kevin Behrens, Ricky Gladstone, Jan Bene- detti, Peter Campbell, Cathy Lilly, and Ruthanne Gordon. October's moon A bright Harvest Moon and shortening days are among the astronomical features of October, according to University astrono- my Prof. Hazel Losh. Defined as the full moon near- est the autumnal equinox, the Harvest Moon will first appear Oct. 4. The peculiarity of this moon, Losh notes, is that it rises at very nearly the same hour for several nights in succession. The reddish hue of the Harvest Moon while near the horizon is attributable tothe earth'sratmos- phere, she explains. Another feature of October 'is the noticeable shortening of days, Losh says. Twelve-hour days be- gin the month, but they will be reduced to 10 hours and 20 min- utes by the end of October. Revolution letters The University's Clements Li- brary and the Rhode Island His- torical Society will jointly pub- lish the correspondence of Gen. Nathanael Greene of the Ameri- can Revolution. A series of four or five volumes will be published with a grant from the National Historical Pub- lications Commission, an arm of the National Archives. Greene was a Rhode Island Quaker who showed great military talent at young age. He was made a brigadier general in 1775 and served actively in the field until 1778 when Washington made him quartermaster general to get sup- plies for the Army. He returned to active field du- ties in 1780 and commanded in the South until the close of the war. He died in 1786. (Continued from Page 2) sounding like an old rhythm and blues standard but weighted by stupid lyrics. The first Pilgrimage of Wish- bone Ash (Decca DL 75295) de- monstrates that, with a 1 i t t 1e hard work, these boys could un- seat Ten Years After as Brit- ain's lousiest blues-rock band. Just listen to "Jailbait" a n d the ten-minute live version of "Where Were You Tomorrow?" When Wishbone Ash aren't spining their wheels, they make good use of the studio w i t h weird guitar instrumentals. About the only cut here which didn't offend my ears was a pretty thing called "Lullabye." Much more pleasant is an al- bum by English Gypsy (Decca DL 75299). Echoes of the Buf- falo Springfield (they're gone, sob sob) abound, especially on "Feel about country fine," where bassist David McCarthy's vocal sounds like Neil and Steve at the same time, no kidding! This album kicks off with Gyp- sy asking the musical question "What makes a man a man?" as John Knapp's 12-string gui- tar fails to lift the song out of the "dumb" category. Next is "Keep on trying," with a characteristically bad vocal and an acoustic riff plucked from the ; Beatles' "Here Comes the Sun." English Gypsy isn't any- thing to write home about but the band clicks at times a n d shows some definite potential. On the country side is Mel Tillis' Greatest Hits,sVolume 2 (Kappa tKS 3653). Mel is the guy who breaks up the folks on TV withhisstuttering; when he sings, however, the stutter dis- appears. Here he does some un- original material in blah fash- ion, digging up some fine old- ies by Harlan Howard and even giving "Games People P 1 a y" another go-round. If you're woman enough, Dun- hill spews forth yet another al- bum from Steppenwolf, t h i s SATURDAY NIGHT An erotic mystery, a phantas- magorical film by Nagisa Os- hima, "Japan's esthetically and politically most radical film- maker." Diary of a Shinuku Burglar in the JAPAN festival ARM/Michigan Film Society at Natural Science Aud. 7:30 and 9:15 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14 Statistics Seminar: Prof. J. Wendel, "Some Limit Theorems for Random Walks with Drift," 2440 Mason Hall, 3 pm. Physics Seminar: P. Ghosh, "The 3 deg. K Background Radiation," 2046 Randall Lab, 4 pm. Speech Dept. Performance: ".The Room," and "The Flies," Arena Thea- tre, Frieze Bldg., 4:10 pm. International Night: Indonesian Food, Mich. League Cafeteria, 5-7:15 pm. India Students As ;ociation, Diwali Celebration Oct. 17, 5:00 PM, Scharling Aud. School of Education Building._ Call for reservation-764-2547 or 769- 7369. Bach Club,Oc ig.14, 8:00 PM, South Quad West Lounge. Flutes & piano play Bach, Telemann. Gay Liberation Community Potluck, Oct. 15, 6:30 PM, Canterbury. one For Ladies Only (DSX 50- 110). Once again the Steppen- wolfers puff out their brawny chests and ball their way through ten heavy rockers. The title cut is typically-churning stuff, with a vocal theme sand- wiched around a long piano- based instrumental, all done with the usual competence and lack of originality. The slide guitar on "Shackles and Chains" may be a band first, for y o u trivia-lovers. Michigan Union Dining Room Buffet Lunch Mon.-Fri. OPEN FOOTBALL WEEKENDS Dinner on Fridays Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner on Saturdays Need a Football.*Ticket! Got One to Sell Come to UAC's Ticket Exchange Friday 1:00-5:00 MAIN LOBBY-UNION For more info-763-1 107 Mars Bonfire wrote three of these songs but none of them approaches his fiery oldie "Born to be Wild." One, called "Tenderness," is a tear-jerker boringly done by John Kay. Most of side two runs togeth- er, but I did notice one instru- mental stuck in there some- where. If you want to know where Steppenwolf is at, open up the cover and take a gander at the penis-shaped sports car pictured inside. What a bunch of freaky guys, ha ha ha! 4 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I I Last week, however, the comn- ave ot proviae aa pnysicai missioners' plan contained only activity, and have instead called vague references to studies of a in the cops." new jail and nothing at all about Concluding, Ravitz said that the enlargement of the present jail. C Defense attorney George Cross told only way to end this lack of action the judges that he had not under- stood their order to mean that the ",}p4y jail cells had to meet the space W rite-O n w requirements outlined in the order. "I just for the life of me cannot understand how anyone who could (Continued from Page 1) read could misinterpret our opin- Meanwhile, Write-On is taking ion," fumed Judge Maher. no chances with the lives and1 The attorneys for the plaintiffs prospective grade-points of its cli- this plan is new, developed ents. It maintains confidential filest say that eeastweek and of its customers, and claims to do Tuesday, and therefore in no way everything possible to prevent n- excuse the commissioners from the formation leaks. contempt charges. The attorneys In addition, they advise custo-f for the plaintiffs were told to hold mers to retype their papers before their questions as to the origin of handing them in, giving the stu-t this new proposal until the con- dent an opportunity to add addi- tempt portion of the hearing, re- tional material and delete words stricting their questions to the "their teachers know they don't plan itself. use." The commissioners' new plan No cases involving such papers included: have yet been brought before Uni-, versity officials. Observers attrib- -construction of a new jail by ute this to the fact that the group JTan. 1, 1973;-I - - - - __- __ -- -- BULLETIN President Nixon has asked the American Bar Association to in- vestigate the qualifications of six possible nominees for two U.S. Supreme Court vacancies he will fill next week. The candidates are: Sen. Rob- ert Byrd (D-W.Va.), lawyer Herschel Friday and Judges Mildred Lillie, Sylvia Bacon, Paul Roney, and Charles Clark. rrites papers has been operating for such a short time that no one has -yet been caught. Despite official disapproval of their enterprise, e m p 1 o y e s of Write-On seem to be relatively unconcerned. " I debated the morality of it for about 30 seconds," says one writer, a senior in history, "and then I thought, well, life is a farce anyway so what the hell?" Try Our New HAIRSTYLISTS! . Gerry Erickson * Dennis Shaner DASCOLA BARBERS near Michigan Theater Professional Hair Stylists and Barbers OUR REPUTATION IS ON THE LINE Michigan Union Barbers I I Daily Classifieds Get Results Phone 764-0558 ,41 PLAIN Donuts 75c doz. 1Oc each 55c 1/2 doz. at Lord Nelson's 1315 S. University Rent your I TV & Air Conditioner D riTA i c RooAL...m t.e.With....V................E- .. Hi Fi Studio WO sWAGE OWNERS , WAGON WERKE , Q C SI Tsf -Ad 121 W. Washington NO 8-7942 FALL TUNE-UP SALE -COUPON- I' WITH THIS COUPON A COMPLETE TUNE-UP Wr Be INCLUDING PLUGS AND POINTS, VALUE ADJUSTMENT Warner Bros. presents:-only 12.95 SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE LZR AND WARRANTEED WORK 1245 Rosewood, Ann Arbor-Phone: 662-2576 : GOOD FOREVER produced by P. Yarrow (of Peter, Paul and Mary) mmO appearing with: Poco, Peter Yarrow, Paul Stookey, J. Denver, John Conyers and Eugene McCarthy at U. of D., Monday, Oct. 18--8 P.M. anti drug-abuse benefit 50c admission -____for the German Dept. Production FRIDAY NOON LUNCHEON of BUFFET-35c Brecht/Weill's "Further Reflections on Youth Culture" Die Dreigroschenoper i m