Tuesday, October 26, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Tuesday, October 26, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~Woman tells of Chinese travels N.Y. Black Panther '21' lawyer, Gerald Lef court, talks to Law school students Michigan Union Billiards By JEANNE FOX "I consider the experience of going to China my -greatest education," said Ann Tompkins Sunday. . Tompkins. returned last year after living in mainland China for five years, spoke to a crowd of about 250 at the Natural Science Aud. in a speech spon- sored by the Committee of Con- cerned Asian Scholars. She had come to discuss "the cultural revolution - a participant's view." Tompkins went to China in November, 1965 where she taught English at the Peking Language Institute. In her speech she described how one phase of the Cultural Revolu- tion, the Red Guards, began in Peking. "The cultural' revolution was personally led by Mao Tse-tung. It was an act on his part to en- courage criticism." Tompkins XEROX COPIES Fast perfect copies every time. Come and see our convenient location. 4c rate available DISCOUNT COPY SERVICE 1217 S. University 769-0560 said. Then she went on to de- scribe how the real beginning occurred in March 1966 when a woman professor criticized the president of Peking University in a "dodsibu", a large Chinese poster with written criticism. This surprised a number of people, she said, because the president was a member of the Communist party. On dodsibus of their own they counter- charged that the professor was a counter-revolutionary to criti- cize a party member. Soon the entire school was covered with posters as other people put up their comments. Then, in June 1966, Tompkins said that Mao asked the woman to broadcast her complaints over national radio. Later, stu- dents from another school wrote Mao with criticisms of their school official. "His reply was 'It is right to rebel against re- actionaries,"' Tompkins said. "He encouraged the students and guided them." She added that soon students and teach- ers from all the schools in Pe- king were involved, including her own school, and they event- ually called themselves the Red Guard. Tompkins said that she de- cided to come back to the Unit- ed States in April 1966, when Mao said "World war will either lead to revolution or stop revo- lution. Let the preparations start now." She added, "When I heard that I tried to figure -out what it meant and how to apply it ... I thought that it would be better for me if I were among my own people." She now lives in San Fran- cisco and is chairwoman of the U.S. Friendship Association. This is an organization which promotes friendship between China and the U.S. By KATHY INGLEY lawyers can help fight Lefcourt be free to return to its former Radical lawyer Gerald Lef- told his audience is the packing capacity, Lefcourt continued. court, speaking in the law stu- of the Supreme Court by the Although the Panther 21 case dents' lounge yesterday, said that Nixon administration. The Senate itself revealed many flaws in the law students must decide where currently rejects only candidates government and judicial system, Ito commit themselves: "Corporate who are deemed totally unfit, but the jury's action in the case en- law is somehow corrupting; you its traditional role has been more couraged Lefcourt. In an incredi- get used to a certain income and political, evaluating the politics of bly complex case Lefcourt said- life style," he said. prospective justices. complete with government agents, Lefcourt, who defended the Lawyers should point .out this electronic bugging, and bails too Black Panther "21" in New York role and help create an atmos- high to pay- the jury had to rule last year, continued, "Lawyers phere in which the Senate would on each of 156 counts have to reject the notion of pro- tecting corporate wealth. They should help people fight repres- sive government and corpora- tions." One of the important problems is getting people to exercise the power they do have-to keep the " S. ".@@ present administration from abus- ; ing their civil liberties, he ex- plained. Another serious problem which Free Instructions. Thurs., Oct. 28 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Billiard Room Free Exhibition Nov. 4 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. JIMMY CARAS Union Ballroom APPEARING NOW- -GRANT GREENS Albums: "Visitors" and "Green is Beautiful" HELD OVER Fine Food, Cocktails, Dinner pe Seven Days M nday-Friday 11 a.i. to 2 a.m. Saturday and Sunday 319 S. FOUR TH AVE. 4 5 p.m. to 2 a.m. ' 761-3548 x For the student body: LEVI'S CORDUROY Slim Fits .. (All Colors) $6.98 HOUSING OFFICE IN-RESIDENCE STAFF POSITIONS for 1972-73 ANNOUNCED applicants required informational meetings being held Nov. 8-12 (SEE BELOW) OPENINGS IN . TRADITIONAL RESIDENCE HALLS a PILOT PROGRAM 9 RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE BAITS--November 8, Monday, 7:00 P.M.- BARBOUR--November 10, Wednesday, 6:30 Thieme Lounge P.M.-Newberry Dining Room BURSLEY-November 8, Monday, 7:00 P.M. OXFORD - November 10, Wednesday, 7:00 --Resident Advisors-West Dining Room P.M.-Seeley Study Room BURSLEY-November 8, Monday, 8:30 P.M. WEST QUAD-November 10, Wednesday, -Resident Directors-West Dining Room 7:30 P.M.-Dining Room No. 1 COUZENS-November 9, Tuesday, 7:00 P.M. -Assembly Room SOUTH QUAD - November 10, Wednesday, MOSHER-JORDAN - November 9, Tuesday, 8:30 P.M.-East Lounge 8:00 P.M.-Mosher Lounge MARKLEY - November 11, Thursday, 7:00 STOCKWELL - November 9, Tuesday, 9:00 P.M.-Dining Room No. 3 P.M.-Conference Room FLETCHER-November 12, Friday, 8:00 P.M. NEWBERRY-November 10, Wednesday, 6:30 -First Floor Lounge P.M.-Newberry Dining Room PLEASE ATTEND THE MEETING AT THE HALL OF YOUR CHOICE PILOT PROGRAM-after January 10, 1972, contact Tom Lobe, Alice Lloyd Hall, 764-7521 RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE-after January 4, 1972, contact Norman Snustad, East Quad, 764-0133 General qualification for most positions-graduate student or experienced undergraduate with demon- strated ability to aid other students personally and educationally. Selection is by students and staff. 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Flavors Flavors Limit 2 Expires 11/1/71 Limit 1 Expires 11/l/71 Limit 2 Expires 1I1/ 1/71 Limit 2 Expires 11/1/71 e COUPON EVERY DAY PRICE SPECIAL COUPON SYLVANIA SPECIAL EVERY DAY PRICE OPAQUE KODAK INSTAMATIC ONESIZE ONESIZE Flash CubesSTRETCH Colr FlmPanty Hose Panty Hose $2.00 ValueC Colors Colors Limit 2 Expires 11/1/71 No Limit No Limit No Limit .4 If you have begun to look around for of ___ a good home music system that won't list -- set your bank account back by more mo than four hu'ndred dollars, you may spe have become confused by the vast spe selection of componens tnow on the The market. sp qA If you have tried to educate yourself wh {i. by reading up in some audio maga- of4 zines, you have probably become rec further confused by hard to believe fyir and perplexing advertising claims. on You figure that of all the products "Sc L available, some might sound Wonder- "H ful, some Mediocre, and some Terrible. The Some will prove to be Ultimately Re- mi liable, and others will more or less is b quickly Disintegrate. ac C Clearly you want a music system lou which will be both Wonderful (so you bili will be Happy,) and Ultimately Re- smi liable( so you and your investment Th will be Secure.) rec We can help you; please read on. en We describe a four-hundred dollar the component system which represents int more value and reliabiilty than has ran previously been available. (A year tior ago it would have been necessary to spend at least five hundred dollars to bring home this amount of perform- ance.) Two new products make this system possible: the new Smaller Advent Loudspeakers and the new. Kenwood KR-4130 FM stereo receiver. The Smaller Advent Loudspeakers are just like the original Advent Loud- speakers in every quantifiable and audible respect, except that they are smaller, less expensive and won't play as loud. This means that on most kinds musical material, and under most ening conditions likely to apply in ost homes, the Smaller Advent Loud- eaker is the equal of any loud- eaker system available. e Smaller Advent is the only eaker under one hundred dollars ich can reproduce the lowest tones a pipe organ (if they are on the cord!), and which maintains a satis- ng octave-to-octave musical balance almost all source material. ounds unbelievable," you say. ow can they do it?" e Smaller Advent Loudspeaker is raculous, but it is not a mystery. It based on proven, albeit creative, oustical engineering. To build a dspeaker with full low bass capa- ities Advent has had to give up a all around of efficiency. e Kenwood KR-4130 that we are ommending provides more than ough power to satisfy both you and Advents: it delivers 21 watts RMS o four ohms, across the entire audio nge, at les than 0.5% total distor- n. (RMS is the most demanding of the various power-rating systems, and is the one used by engineers rather than by advertising men.) Because the Kenwood KR-4130 and the Smaller Advent speakers are of such high quality, they will together cleanly produce any distortion, rumble, wow, or flutter that is con- tributed by a less than excellent turntable/cartridge combination. We therefore recommend the Garrard SL55B automatic turntable with a Shure M44E cartridge. The 55B has a good heavy platter, a smooth and gentle changing mechanism, and a convenient cueing control. The Shure cartridge reproduces high frequencies with exceptional clarity; it therefore complements the high frequency cap- abilities of the Kenwood receiver and the Advent loudspeakers. The system price is $399.95.* All components are guaranteed for two years, parts and labor. There are no little options to surprise you. Only good sound and sheer product value for your dollars. 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