Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 31, 1971 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday1 October 31, 1971 f Anti-war show held SENATE ACTION: (Continued from page 1) The band, however, voted against the proposal for a peace symbol formation. Sources said the band felt it did not have enough time to practice the formation. It was also reported that the band con- sidered the idea "old hat," having marched in such a formation at the 1970 Rose Bowl game. In a compromise agreement, therefore, the officials decided to allow the observance, but stated that only the anti-war veterans would be allowed on the field with the band Dave Gordon, spokesman for the Ann Arbor Coalition to End the War (AACEW) and a sponsor of the petition drive, said his organi- zation was "very pleased" with the agreement. Questioned last night, many spectators agreed that the uncon- ventional halftime was "an emo- tional experience in good taste and amazingly effective." Most recommended this type of half- time show be repeated periodically. Many said they were pleased with the dignity and solemnity of the show. "It got its point across without being maudilin or upsetting," said Lois Epstein, wife of an alumnus. Her husband Marvin Epstein, '51, called the show "fantastic." He said it gave the University a stamp of uniqueness that distin- guished it from the "sterile, insti- tutionalized Hollywood razzamatazz halftimes" of other universities. World leaders, Nixon,* blast foreign aid cuts Union examines new role (Continued from page 1) parity is. underway. Parity would give the students an effective ma- jority because the chairman, vot- ing only in case of a tie, is the student president of UAC. The board is presently compos- ed of an equal number of facul- ty, students and alumni. Judy Kursman, '72, a board member who favors parity, ex- plains that "as student usage in- creases there should be more di- rect control by its constituency." Although there appears to. be concensus that the union is in a transitional period of revitaliza- tion, there is disagreements as to its implication. John Stamm, a board member and Professor of Industrial Rela- tions believes "the board should be maintained. Hopefully more students will use the Union in the future but I believe it would be acting too fast and too soon to overhaul the composition of the board." Osterheld's second major con- clusion - that student services should be transferred to the Union-is effectively under way. In May of 1969 a committee was appointed to allot space and or- der priorities for the project. As a result, the odyssey began when the Office of Special Serv- lees and Programs was relocated on the Union's third floor in reno- vated hotel rooms. The transition was difficult, as complaints arose among some students.who got lost in the maze of the Union and were confused by the varied locations of student organizations. A second group of organiza- tions, led by the Student Govern- ment Council (SGC) and Black Student Union (BSU), followed suit in May of 1971 and moved to the Union. A new set of complaints, center- ing around a lack of adequate fur- niture and or operational neces- sities, arose. In September, the Office of Student Services (OSS) packed up and joined its colleagues on the third floor., The final move will involve all remaining student organizations. They ,will be located in 60 reno- vated hotel rooms on the fourth. floor. Vic Gutman, director of student organizations, described the move as an attempt to "centralize stu- dent activities in an effort to make the Union more student oriented." He added that when the moves are completed, adequate signs should diffuse the complaint of student confusion. The final major finding of the Osterheld report was that the basement cafeteria food service was both A financial drain and the beneficiary of generally low student use. In an effort to reverse this trend, a regental decision was made this summer to loan the Un- ion $300,000 in student fees to renovate the cafeteria. According to Stanford Wells, Union manager, the revonation will not entail a remodeling of the decor; rather it will be designed to make the operation a less cost- ly fast-food operation. "We will use the funds to streamline serv- ices and renovate equipment," he said. Nonetheless, a large majority of students recently interviewed ex- pressed concern about the low quality of the food offered and the unappetizing atmosphere of the cafeteria. Dennis Webster, manager of the U. Cellar book store which ad- joins the cafeteria, believes that "the food service as it is present- ly operated and appears headed in the future is not a valuable serv- ice to students." A secon~d renovation of a food service in the Union has met with widespread enthusiasm. The University Club, previously open only to the faculty, will soon open its membership to students, faculty, alumni and non-academic staff. After considerable difficulty, the club obtained a liquor license. The manager, Richard Greenfield, has promised that emphasis on the menu will be on quality rather than quantity. According to Samuel Estep, a law school professor involved in the expansion of the club, there was a desire to increase the op- portunity for informal gatherings among the different elements of the University community. 'The University has long had no- toriously inadequate informal gathering facilities for all mem- bers of its community. Now, there ise a possibility that increased stu- dent interest in the Union will bring about student control; and the possible construction of a Stu- dentUnion has also been men- tioned. As one student involved in the attempt to bring the Union back to life put it. "The building has a lot of potential but it also has a lot of tradition behind its institu- tions. If there are going to be changes, there is still a struggle ahead." (Continued from page 1) bring it to a vote-and chances of that are considered slim. Final action on the bill saw such staunch liberals as majority leader Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.), F o r e i g n Relations Committee chairman J.W. Fulbright (D-Ark.) and Frank Church (D-Idaho) cli- max a growing disenchantment with current foreign aid policies. Part of the group these Sena- tors represented are said to have felt the current $5 billion of un- earmarked Agency for Interna- tional Development (AID) funds not included in the bill would be adequate until a better foreign policy could be adopted. Mansfield said "the program itsself will not die suddenly but more likely will die a lingering death." Many U.S. foreign expenditures are outside the aid program, Sen. Church said in a speech Friday against the bill. He said the real amount of annual U.S. foreign aid is $10 billion-compared with the $3 billion in the bill. Only eight Democrats voted for the bill along with 19 Republicans, while 26 Democrats and 15 Re- publicans .opposed it. Though ab- sentees would have the strength to turn the outcome, they appear- ed evenly divided for and against the aid measure. In Lima, Peru, delegates to a meeting of 95 of the world's de- veloping nations expressed both sadness and anger over rejection of the foreign aid program. Most of the more than 1,500 representatives of African, Asian and Latin - American nations learned of the Senate decision reading this morning's newspa- pers. "It is sad that the United States is withdrawing from its responsi- bilities as a world power," said AAUP group Monmohan Sivols of India. "The step will affect a great many poor countries." The delegates are meeting in Lima to attempt to draw up a common position for the third United Nations Conference on Trade and Developinent to be held in Santiago, Chile, next April. The bulk of U.S. support for Southeast Asia is contained in the $21.3 billion military procurement bill, though the dead aid measure carried $341 million for U.S. as- sistance to Cambodia. The aid bill also carried funds for selling modern weapons, mainly Phantom jets, to Israel; some $250 million for relief of Pakistani refugees; $139 million for United Nations special pro- grams; $309 million for the Alli- ance for Progress, and funds for a variety of international assist- ance programs. The $2.9 billion total of the aid bill was $500 million below what the House voted and $600 million below the administration request. Before the entire bill was re- jected, the Senate had voted to cut $160 million in development loans and $113 million in mili- tary aid; rejected another pro- posal to cut U.S. financial sup- port of the United Nations; and scrapped a House rider to cut off arms aid and sales to the Greek military dictatorship. All of these acts went down the drain with the bill, along with the many restrictive amendments inserted in it by the Foreign Re- lations Committee. ' E DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31 Day Calendar TVyCenter Film: "Understanding Money: Your Interest in Interest," WWJ-TV. Channel 4, Noon. Family Recreation Program: for fac- ulty, staff and married students, All Sports Bldg. facilities, 1:30-5:30 pm. Hillel Foundation: A. Yengoyan, "The Armenion Incident," and G. Uzoigwe, "The Biafran Incident," 1429 Hill St., 7 pm. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1 SACUA: President's Conference Rm, Admin. Bldg., 4 pm. Physics Lcture: T. Devlin, Rutgers, "The CERN Hyperon Beam and Tour- ists View of SomeROther Experiments," P&A Colloquium Rm., 4 pm. Nuclear Colloquium: D. Burke, Mc- Master U., Ontario, "Single Nucleon Transfer Reactions on Heavy Deformed Nuclei," 143 Chrysler Ctr, N. Campus, 4 pm. Physical Education Classes: Second half-term classes in Ski Conditioning, Volleyball, Diving, Slimnastics, Figure Control, and Swim and Trim begin week of November 1. St. Joseph Mercy Hosp. Needs Volun- teers: Orientation classes will be held Nov. 1, 2, and 3 at 7 pm. at the hosp.; call the volunteer ofc. at 665-4141 to register, or stop in at N. Office Bldg. between 8 and 5 pm. Placement Service INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS, week of Nov. 8; call 763-1363 or stop in to make appt. Northwestern Univ. Grad Sch, of Mgt. Prudential Councilfor Opportunity in Grad Mgt. Internal Revenue Serv. Tennessee Valley Authority New York Life Ins, Lewis & Clark Law Sch. PEACE CORPS & VISTA REPS will be on campus all week, Nov. 8-11; appts. not needed, just drop in room 3532 S.A.B. STUDENTS WHO SUBMITTED GRAD II FORMS: printouts are back, may be picked up at CPP, 3rd floor, S.A.B, THEY ARE HERE AT LAST-Appli- cationssfor summer jobsin Federal Agencies; includes pamphlet which gives considerable info on govt. em- ployment for freshmen thru grad stu- dents. INTERVIEW: Camp Mataponi, Maine - Girls --Will interview on campus Nov. 2, 10-12. Openings: asst, heads, age 25. Waterfront, landsports, arts & crafts, nature, campcraft and tripping, age 20. Details avail; register by phone, 764-7460 or in person. GAY 90's SING ALONG-BANJO BAND Entertainment Tues.-Sun. 9:30 Fri., Sat. & Sun. family entertainment starting at 6 PIZZA & ITALIAN FOOD COLOR TV Mon. Night for NFL football games 114 E. WASHINGTON ST. OPEN 4:00 DAILY eANpLE r ndsoo e~ EAVIN SUPL .1a $tt *,a M~mL a D~~~S B~P" A CEOFPETRE ~25U lqP44 - -d - iIP ,EI NEOI4...ES IE 0 6 COCR ~ 5 E~iTeR Op MR iFRN S M1 4 views tenure (Continued from page 1) "to establish a mechanism to re- place faculty members who are incompetent". "I don't believe we can defend automatic pay in- creases without merit considera- tions", he added. Speaking on salary policy in Britain Friday night, Associate Secretary T.R. Weaver of the British Department of Education and Science, presented a differ- ent view of the relationship be- tween the University and govern- ment. Weaver emphasized the autono- my of British universities. "Aca- demics run their own shop," he said. U-M STUDENT BLOOD BANK Tues., Nov. 2-11-5 Wed., Nov. 3-1-1 at: First Floor Michigan Union Info: Call 16-Guide GIVE A LITTLE. F, 11i N A Cultural Affairs BILLIARDS TABLE TENNIS BOWLING FOOSBALL UNION presents Art Print Loan 1911 THE "MASTERS" WORKS AT STUDENT RENTAL PRICES Nov. 1-5-3:00-5:00 p.m. Nov. 6-9:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. 2nd fl. Union-Small Ballroom r WASHINGTON SUMMER INTERN PROGRAM congressional offices, executive agencies, lobbying groups, news media open to all undergraduate students. Mass Meeting-Tues. 7:30 p.m. UGLI Multipurpose Room-Nov. 2 i Happy Halloween! from Thi Ann raaf COUPON 2 2FREE PEPSIS Z with any Med. or Lg. Pizza (1 coupon per pizza) I U' U) I@4 .I .,I mIp I