Poge Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 24, 1971 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 24, 1971 HIJISTUDIO SALES-SERVICE-RENTAL Dual, Shure, Sony, Zenith, Yamaha, Voice of Music, Superex, Teac, Kenwood, AGS, Pilot, Jansen, Ampex, KLH, Dumont, JVC, Fisher, Sherwood, Marantz, Toshiba Concertone, Dynaco, Stanton, Research, Lansing, LWE, Pickering, Scott, Motorola, Acoustic, Viking, Norelco, Garrard, Dolby "B" WHAT'S NEW? in High Fidelity Speakers After more than five years of development , "It's Electronic Suspension" STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF U. of M. ACAPULCO 12-26-1-2 ... $259 1-2-1-9 ......$199 JAMAICA 12-25-1-1 ... $249 1-1-1-8.......$209 NASSAU 12-26-1-2 ... $199 1-2-1-10 .... $169 FREEPORT 12-27-1-4 ... $199 ALL TRIPS INCLUDE: * Round Trip Jet Air * Transfers * Welcome Party 9 Accommodations Based on 4 to a Room FOR DETAILS CALL: OWEN PERLMAN, 663-2044 LARRY KAUFMAN, 764-7692 STEVEN EDER, 763-2790 NICK LUBNICK, 482-8262 For Further Details and Eu- rope Information Call Steven Zacks, 483-4850 Fight set on waste FUTURE PLANS ANNOUNCED Evict Nixon' actions continue in D.C. A the only really new thing in speakers in 10 years zero LW I re .nnc Best transient response achieved OUR PRICES? We try to be as competitive as pos- sible .. . We o f f e r "Package Discounts" tContinued from Page 1) PCPJ housing organizers expect file" government permit and or- at least 2,000 persons from out- ganizers are expecting no trouble. of-town, however. treatment However, Davis told the press, , Meanwhile, the "People's Panel" Continued from Page 1) if Nixon does not set the date to continued with day's sessions, deal- The Washtenaw Environmental morrow, "that should be the signal ing mostly with the Indochina war. Council, a coalition of local con- for us to go to the White House Hearing from a number of wit- servationsts, is also expected to and serve him with an eviction nesses, ranging from anti-war ac- join in the fight against WRC. notice. tivists to a former army intelli- FrinithedMametsupeintendentCThis the group plans to do Tues- gence agent, the panel considered thFre ty's Departent of Publc day, in a 9 a.m. sit-in ceremony the question of whether Nixon is Workcit's, preitetatftheb around the White House. Permits "winding down the war" as the Works, predicted that the WRC have been granted for a demon- White House has claimed. plan would not go into effect for stration on the Ellipse, across the Princeton Prof Richard Falk an at least eight years. street from the White House, but Printntrnfticardlaldthn Harris said $5 million has been the group plans to go closer, expert in international law told the allottedors theconstructiongofnsspanel that the United States is sewageretentionbtha cnstrin Although there has been no of- guilty of war crimes in four areas; seAgeor. etade tiohash insyinannficial PCPJ warning of possible .-.-- - --- - -- -- A H a dtha tarrests, leaders say privately that seek court action for permission "anyone who doesn't expect to get to build the basins, if the contr busted is naive, and training versy concerning sewage treat-sessions in civil disobedience are ment seriously delays implementa- planned before the Tuesday action. tion of treatment expansion. Sources said yesterday that both e City officials have also express- police and national guardsmen ed concern over transportation of were being placed on alert, but effluent from Washtenaw County neither organization would com- to the central plant. Smit called ment when reached last night. As part of the dedication of its the plan "wasteful," citing it as However, PCPJ leaders say, "We new North Campustbuilding, the an example of "transportation for don't expect the guard although University's Computing Center is transportation's sake." we know they'll be kept ready." sponsoring a series of free public lectures entitled "The Problems Harris quoted figures showing Sidney Peck, a PCPJ leader also and Future of Computing," that Plan II is more expensive present at the press conference, The series consists of three lec- than the one advocated by the city. stressed that "this is not intended tures to be given by distinguished In addition, Councilman Robert as a mass mobilization." computing scientists. All the lec- Faber (D-Second Ward) cited the Davis agreed, adding that "the tures will be held at 8 p.m. in increased possibility of a break in masses" will come during the Chrysler Center Aud. the line with each extra mile the scheduled Nov. 6 anti-war demon- The first lecture is scheduled raw sewage travels and subsequent strations which PCPJ is co-spon- for Oct. 26. Dr. E. F. Codd of the damage to the environment. soring. IBM Research Laboratory in San ..............mmm..... mmmmmmmmm.m. mmmmmm m- mm--... Jose, Calif.. will speak on "The Viability of Large, Integrated, and iharrl Ta f' RaCC" the most serious of which he de- scribed as "crimes against peace." The United States, he said, "is in violation of the prohibition against recourse to war except in situations of self-defense." America's conduct, he said. vio- lates three other tenents of inter- national law as well. America, he explained, has perpetrated "ille- gal" tactics during the war, 'crimes against humanity, and "genocide" against the Indochinese people. ' Other witnesses detailed more specific cases of alleged United States misconduct in Indochina. Much of the testimony centered on descriptions of the so-called "automated battlefields" w h i c h witness Art Kanegis of the Ameri- can Friends Service Committee said is a tactic designed to "re- place men with machines." Due to increasing discontent among soldiers as well as the American public, Kanegis and othei's concluded, the American governmentchas deemed it neces- sary to move in the direction of an totally automated battliefield. He quoted one general as com- menting, "we wire the Ho Chi Minh trail like a pinball machine and we plug it in each night." Fred Branfman, a journalist in Laos, testified that the sensor-di- rected air-strikes have destroyed "virtually every village" on Laos' Plain of Jars while insurgent Pathet Lao forces have been little affected by the assaults. -L,+ - I", +1 -. F. , ," ,., Howard Zinn told the panel that to continue the- war "depends on the acquiesence of the American people and the deception of the American people by the govern- ment." Others urged that this alleged deception be countered by educa- tion of the American public. Tran Van Dinh, former South Vietnamese ambassador to the U.S., told panelists that "most Americans are not informed" of the PRG's peace plan. If the public were aware of the plan-which basically includes re- turn of Americanprisoners in ex- change for withdrawal of Ameri- can troops - it would gain wide acceptance, he said. M inrity p lan lags (Continued from Page 1) that the education school is not seriously looking for minority group members, it is going to make recruiting that much hard- er." Loving says the education school needs a large financial in- vestment in the area of minority recruiting if it is going to reach the 20 per cent minority levels it is commited to. Under the 1969 agreement stu- BRING YOUR RECORD, HEAR & COMPARE Achieving finally the electronic engineer's dream speaker to amplifier inverse feedback The original Hi-Fi Studio of Ann Arbor specializing in Hi-Fi com- ponents since the dawn of the art-we are familiar with most of the brands of Hi-Fi equipment in the world ..' About service and waranties we insist on providing our customers with our own fast service when required. We spare our customers the long delay, inconvenience and expense of shipping their units oway for service. 3 I HOURS M T W Th F S. open 10 a.m. to 9 6 7 6 .9 6 121 WEST WASHINGTON 668-7942 . ' ' . .. # ><: ; ..., f - I Read and Use downtown Ann Arbor Daily Classifiec. Across from Old German Restaurant E. Sul o 2APE IS AN ASSAULT AGAINST All WOMEN rganize to defend your sisters . . .and yourself WOMEN'S CRISIS CENTER TRAINING SESSION in COUNSELING and SELF DEFENSE NDAY, Oct. 24, at 1:00 p.m. in 1510 SAB s ojShared Data Bases." Later in the afternoon, various dents and faculty members in the The second lecture, scheduled witnesses spoke on the effect school formed the Black Caucus, ANOTHER s for Nov. 5, is entitled "The Chang- American foreign policy is having an organization that would re- S ing Balance in Information Sys- at home. cruit minority group students and _ * tems." Boston University history Prof. faculty members. _- 1 famous ----~~- ~-.-_ -- - - -- Although the agreement pro- PAPPA j*vided that the organization would l iL' receive financial support along CE NELAIre eadsI 1 1C with "released time" for its mem- SN bLers to recruit, no funds were al- ' ' (Continued from Page 1) M c I n ti ir e then led prayers located to the Black Caucus yet * c McIntire carried a red, white which were f o11 o w e d by the this year, according to Jesse Dun- PEI I I and blue umbrella designed as a speeches. The crowd was well- gy, chairman of the group. A L circular American flag. behaved, and the wet weather Thus, most recruiting in the McIntire, known for his extreme seemed not to dampen their spir- school is now done only through i right wing views, said he had ex- its. personal contacts between educa- OPEN 24 HOURS ' pected over 50,000 for the march. Before the march arrived at the tion school students and faculty B a s He said he thought that victory Capitol, several members of Viet- members here and students and Breakfast served anytime , nam Veterans Against the War faculty members in other colleges ! nawith a search for peace. (VVAW), were denied permission in the state and around the na- "Of e'refor eace" heby police to read parts of the I i said. "But we want a peace that Declaration ofrndependence toWe should be out in the col- 51 Li will beecrighteousf andpesecure." E bwill be righteous and secure. the marchers as they, kalked by. leges and junior colleges recruit- When the marchers arrived at heing,' Dungy says, but that, with- the Capitol, McIntire led them in' At the Capitol they were again out money, he says, this just isn't *a a patriotic chant. "How many of denied permission to read the Dec- possible. . . j you love America? How many of laration before McIntire's group Besides the lack of recruiting, 1 Oc off on Whoppers with this coupon : you trust in God? How many of arrived, and subsequently were not: Black Caucus members believe the *you are against the Communists? 'permitted to cross the street to school does not have equitable en- u a reganstthCo mu ist?_ermttdtosthsreetsc oodos ot av eqitbl How many of you are against the the gathering of the marchers. trance criteria for admitting mi- Democrats?" Police contended that the VVAW nority group recruits. ' OFFER EXPIRES OCTOBER 29 I The chant continued for about were not members of the march According to Nels Lehsten, edu- '10 minutes, with the crowd cheer- and as observers they were re- cation school registrar, the school ' wwwwwwwwmmwwwwwwwwwwwmmwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww! ing after each question. quired to remain across the street. Continued on Page 10) ,r A CALL 662-5400 for information WE REFUSE TO .BE VICTIMS ANY LONGER i Subscribe to The Michigan Daily 1 A University Activities Center and Students International MASS MEETING - Thurs., October 28th, 8:00 P.M. Union Ballroom EUROPE $165 ROUND TRIP JETS by Caledonian-Bua, Capitol, KLM Royal Dutch Airlines " " FULL DINNER WITH W CONTINENTAL BREAKF COMPLIMENTARY OPEN INE !*NON-STOP JET FAST o CANCELLATION PRIVILEGES N BAR 0 DEPOSIT HOLDS SEAT ITS, SNACKS 0 FINANCING ARRANGEMENTS CHRISTMAS FLIGHTS 1971 VACATION FLIGHTS NASSAU: Thanksgiving, Christmas or Spring Breaks Eight days and seven nights at the fabulous Montagu Beach or the Pilot House Hotels . . . free transportation between hotel and airport . . . secluded private beach . . . free towel, chaise lounge, mats at beach or pool ... free use of private tennis courts . . . live music, entertainment and dancing nightly . . . discotheque nightly in "singles bar" . . . "Happy Hour" every evening . ,. Available at hotel/beach: sailing, snorkeling, scuba diving with lessons . . motorcycle, bike, car rentals . . . deep sea fishing, golf, horseback riding- at sizable discounts to SI card-holders. : , 'i 3 . ; fi: r . -; , :. ,r,. . ;4' jV. k mil' e-f,' t: 1', k i . . 0 COMPLIMENTARY FRU Air- Craft DC-8 B-lot DC-8 DC-8 Seats 100 186 195 60 Air Car. CAP CAL KLM AT Fit. No. 213 215 205 207 Routing Det/ London/Det Det/London/Det Det/Amsterdam/Det Det/Munich/Det Deport/Return Cost 12/18-1/5 $160 12/23-1/9 $150 12/26-1/11 $160 12/27-1/9 $150 Chg. $15 $15 $15 $19 SPRING & SUMMER FLIGHTS 1972 B-707 DC-8 B-701 DC-8 DC-8 B-141 DC-8 B-707 DC-8 B-701 186 250 186 80 80 480 195 186 195 186 CAL CAP CAL UNI UNI UNI KLM CAL KLM CAL 515 517 523 525 527 303 529 519 521 531 Det/London/Det Det/Ams/Lon/Det Det/London/Det NY/London/NY NY/London/NY Det/Athens/Det Det/Ams/Lon/Det Det/London/Det Det/Ams/Lon/Det Det/London/Det 5/2-6/2 5/4-6/24 5/15-8/15 5/31-8/17 6/10-8/1 6/10-8/10 7/2-8/25 7/10-8/10 8/1-9/1 7/2-9/2 $154 $154 $185 $168 $180 $307 $215 $210 $200 $210 $15 $15 $20 $21 $19 $19 $14 $19 $19 $19 Total $175 $165 $175 $169 $169 $169 $205 $189 $199 $326 $229 $229 $219 $229 Departures: NOVEMBER 24-28th DECEMBER 28-JAN. 4th MARCH 4-11th Non-stop jet transportation: Ground arrangements at (Quad) Montagu Beach Hotel (Doubl): Price: $109 $ 70 $100* 4 *Taxes, Tips & Services: additional $3 for Quads; $15 for Doubles. SKI THE AUSTRIAN ALPS: $279 DC-8 KLM 209 Det/Munich/Det 12/27-1 9 $279 Taxes, tips, plus $20 gratuities Price includes round trip jet air fare, 12 nights hotel accommo- dations, transfers between Munich Airport and hotel. Skiing at Innsbruck, Austria; excursions available to ski resorts in northern Italy, Lech, St. Anton. MEXICO: 1/3-1 10 $189 C990 149 Mod 105 Det/Acapulco/Det Above price includes round trip air fare ,.7 nights bungalow or hotel accommodations on 40 acres of palm trees and gardens . . . transfers to and from airport . . Options such as horseback riding are extra, but are available. SPAI UN Above price includes dations at the Playa between hotel and a N: 3/5-3/12 $219 GREECE, CHINA, JAPAN 41 301 Det Malagi Det Other trips to be offered by UAC-SI include weekly west coast departures via China Airways ... just over $400 round trip s round trip air fare . . . 4 nights accommo- Scheduled departures from San Francisco to Tokyo or Hong Kong imarHotl .. Dily reafas . Trasfes ". .Other offerings will be Spring flights to Athens, aboard mar Hotel . . . Daily breakfast . . . Transfers jumbo 747's non-stop from Detroit. irport. See for yourself how a country, birthplace of democracy, is faring under the present rule of the military junta.. just over $300 round trip; tours available at your request. OPEN ONLY TO FACULTY, STAFF, STUDENTS & IMMEDIATE FAMILIES OF THIS UNIVERSITY. ALUMNI ELIGIBLE FOR CERTAIN FLIGHTS; PLEASE CONTACT OUR OFFICES. STUDENT/YOUTH FARE University Activities Center now offers scheduled departures through student youth fares; choose your own dates: leave when YOU.want; return when YOU want (or book an open return; tickets valid up to one year) . Regular round trip economy class fares are presently: NY/Amsterdam/NY NY/Copenhagen/NY NY/Bruxelles/NY NY/Stockholm/NY NY/Helsinki/NY $200 Low $210 $200 $210 $210 $220 Peak $228 $220 $228 $230 NY London NY NY Munich NY NY Paris NY NY Oslo NY NY Hamburg NY. $200 Low $210 $200 $210 $210 $220 Peak $228 $220 $228 $228 For 14 years, UAC Travel has provided reliable and economical travel services to the University of Michigan community. In 1969 the decision was made to jointly sponsor the university travel program with Students International, a non-profit service organization staffed by U-M students and alumni. Over the post three years, thistdecision has proven to be one of foresight and excellence through which you, the students, faculty, staff and your families have benefitted. In administering flights and providing travel services for the UAC program, Students International was able to lend its five years of ex- perience in the travel area. Today UAC-SI offers a travel program developed with a combined total of 19 years' experience and featuring: I) the best available prices and services from the airline industry; 2) on expanded and comprehensive range of travel services, some of which were previously unavailable to UAC alone; 3) two sign-up offices in convenient locations to serve the campus community; 4) on efficient, computerized accounting system; Other destinations available; departures also from: Detroit, Chicago (add $62); Boston, D.C., Houston, L.A., Milwaukee, Denver, Bate- timore, Philadelphia and more. Please call our offices for qualifications, peak periods and further information. Also available are daily jet flights to Europe via Icelandic Airlines. These flights are open to everybody-no group or age qualifications- and start as low as $165 NY/Luxembourg/NY (youth fare). TRAVEL SERVICES I I . I