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November 23, 1971 - Image 9

Resource type:
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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-11-23

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Tuesday, November 23, 1971

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Nine

Tuesday, November 23, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine

SGC considers action on
print co-op controversy
( Continued from page 1) ; He claimed he did not have the
print co-op. According to SGC Ex-" authority to return the money be-
ecutive Vice President Jerry Ros- cause it had already been allocated
enblatt, the print co-op board had to BEDL by the Student Print Co-
no authority to make this move. op.
Last week, ARM gave SGC a DePue also said that BEDL "in-
check for slightly less than $1,500 tends" to return the money to the
to cover the allocation made to Student Print Co-op.
the print co-op. At that meeting, BEDL spokesmen refused to
Barb Goldman abruptly resigned comment on the issue.
from Council, charging SGC is a ~-~
"tinker - toy, non - representative n-.
body." Radical igoup
Several days later, the check;
bounced on the basis of insuffic-
ient funds. Following that, ARM p a 1ns courses
spokesman George DePue stopped (Continued from page 1
payment on the check, explaining ByCsingemstei
that habnmi aken to of- y spring semester '72. PESC

NEW STRUCTURE OPENS
Language casses set for new buildin
By PETER DECAMP
Although the building is not to-
tally completed, the new Modernf
Languages Building on Washing-
ton St. is beginning to come into
use.
The building, erected largely -
to alleviate shortages of office -*
space in the nearby Frieze Bldg.
still has some external work to
be completed but the offices are
being occupied.
The building basically consists
of offices, a few seminar rooms
on the top two floors, classrooms
in the basement, and two lectur e
auditoriums on the first mloor
According to Bland Leverette,

HERTZ IS SELLING
NOT-SO-USED CARS
Priced to saveol moue I
WE HAVE A WIDE SELECTION OF
1971

fer the check originally
.. . . .. . ...a n

" Mustangs
" Torinos
" Ford Galaxie 500's
" LTD's

" Cougars
" Impalas
" Pintos
" Malibus

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U-M STUDENTS, FA
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9 Days o
SPANIS
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Rates based on Double t
$249
DEC. 26-JAN,
INCLUDES
* ROUND TRIP JE
TRANSPORTAI
A WELCOME SAN(
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* MANY TOUR OP
For further informat
HELENE BEDNA
769-0165

hopes to be offering a "super- senior administrative associate in
course" -- a package schedule of charge of space and equipment,
.... >: four courses, a semester's worth the building will house the most
CULTY, of credit, pre-organized by co-op- modern audio - visual equipment
erating PESC faculty. in the University and sometime in
Ieothe near future the language lab
in Inside the classroom, PESC will be located there.
plans individual study and aroup The equipment has not been de-
1 work to avoid the traditional livered yet however, and probab-
teacher - student relationship. some of it has not even been
A The object is to get away from! yodrdsm fi
Occupancy non-productive forms of competi- Occupants of the building will
ion," Sklar says. - include faculty from the Slavic,
.3 Asked about the role of students Romance and Germanic language
in PESC, Statman says he thinks departments and part of the his-
student participation is important tory department.
T as a testing ground for faculty The Frieze building, which now
N l ideas. holds thelanguage classrooms,
Founded mainly by members of will bestaken over by faculty of the
an earlier faculty group with sim ar-Eastern language and litera-
anerirfcly ru ihsm tune department, after a slight
PTJONS ilar orientations, the Radical Col- reovationg
ion call. lege, PESC has been meeting since
4RSH ealthsya.Sarsy te The building is the third in the
RSH early this year. Sklar says the
present organization grew out of campus area to be built by Albert
"ongoing concern of people with Kahn Associates, a Detroit archi-
.creating forms-places where stu- tectural firm. The others were HillF
dents and faculty could work to- Auditorium (1914) and the Bur-
gether as equals for common ton Tower (1936).
goals."_

Daily--Terry McCarthy

All are well-equipped, professionally maintainec

and highly dependable-
For information call

1" /CZ

DEMAND DIVERSITY:
College lecture business never letter,
but radical speakers cannot capitalize

1-729-520C

T

Read and

Use Daily Classified

.............................................

NEW YORK UP)-Abbie Hoffman "The students here are not
is down. Buffalo Bob is up and ested. We want to get into
Ralph Nader reigns as superstar areas. Social things and
this year on the college lecture things are pretty big."

inter-
wider
black

Thanksgiving Special
FROM WEDNESDAY NOON THROUGH SUNDAY AT 6 P.M,
RENT A NEW FORD OR CHEVY FOR THE LOW RATE OF:

He says the founders also want-
ed to "overcome a tendency to-
ward factionalism and fragmen-
tation" among social movements
by an effort "toward unity and
coming together."

Two research projects aimed at
developing drugs to produce early
abortions either by pill of injec-
tion are included in a new $1.089,-
428 federal grant to the Univer-
sity's Center for Population Plan-
ning. The center is a unit of the
School of Public health.
One study will involve im-
planting a transducer into the
uterus of 15 female volunteers.
The other will seek an antibody
which will cause rejection of the
early fetus allowing repeated
abortions with minimal effect on
the patient.
The two projects are among;
seven scientific investigations to
be funded for three years for
$572.036 by the U.S. Agency for
International Development (AID).!

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ciruit.
"The radical speakers are off
now. They had their run," says
Robert Walker, whose American
Program Bureau in Boston books
more than half the people who
speak on American college cam-
puses.
"Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Ru-
bin are still getting dates. but they
are not in demand like last y-ar."
Politics - radical or straight -
usually won't fill. an auditorium.
Black Panther Bobby Seale and
former Tennessee Sen. Albert Gore
recently spoke at Stanford Uni-
versity in California. Seale drew
200 people in an auditorium that
seats 500; Gore drew 200 in a 400
seat hall.
"We want to get away from
strictly political speakers," said
Boodie Venetianer, a student at
Kansas State Teachers College in
Emporia, Kan., who runs that
school's campus speakers program.

Black poetess Nikki Giovanni is
one of the hotter properties on the
college circuit. Her fee went from
$50 last year to $2 000 this fall,
said Richard Fulton, head of the
New York agency that handles her.
Charles Hurst Jr., president of
Malcolm X College in Chicago, is
also strong on campuses through-
out the country, especially with
black student groups.
The fees garnered by campus
speakers range from a few hun-
dred to a few thousand dollars.
Nader, Gregory and.Georgia State
Rep. Julian Bond, the top attrac-
tions on campus, get up to $4,000
an appearance, said Walker, whose
agency handles all of them, but
they will often scale down fees or
appear for free.
The speaker business is big busi-
ness. Walker said the American
Program Bureau will bill $4 mil-
lion this year, with the company
retaining 20 to 40 per cent. The

FREE
DELIVERY
AND
PICKUP

speakers use the agencies to avoid
the paperwork of dealing with
snores of individual colleges,
The nostalgia kick has hit the
colleges. Pinky Lee, zany child-
ren's television star of the 1950s,
draws well with a lecture on the
art of slapstick. Buster Crabbe is
doing well with a package that in-
cludes his early Tarzan - and Flash
Gordon movies.
"We could not get Howdy Doody,
so we had Buffalo Bob Smith. He
was tremendous." said John Fa-
hey, director of s t u d e n t union
activities at the university of
Hartford in Connecticut. "The
students really get into it. They
enjoy seeing someone who was
important to them when they
were children."
Smith was the puppet's sidekick
on the popular children's televis-
ion show in the 1950s
For a popular speaker, the cam-
pus scene can be a lucrative source
of income. Nader speaks at an
average of a half dozen colleges
a week. As is the case with many
speakers, however, much of his in-
come goes to his 'organization.
"You don't mind paying a Nader
or a Gregory when you know how
they are using the money to sup-
port causes you believe in," says
one college program director.
CORRECTION
Pictures of Profs. Charles
Morris and William Brown
were inadvertently switched in
'he Sunday edition of The
Daily. The Daily sincerely re-
grets the error.
- - -

$22..5Oand

only 7c

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Go ahead. Check out the competition in town, then see us. Econo-
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Save at Econo-Car
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Congratulations
Wolverines!
On to Pasadena!

I

ECONO-CAR - call 663-2033

. I __'

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without law school.
When you become a Lawyer's Assistant, you'll be
doing work traditionally done by lawyers-work we
think you'll find challenging and responsible. And
Lawyer's Assistants are now so critically needed that
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2
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NOTE: If registration for this seminar is filled, come any-
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The Institute for
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13th floor, 401 Walnut St., Phila., Pa. 19106
(215) WA 5-0905
When you come back from Thanksgiving,
there'll be a one-week instant festival
Orson Welles
Nov. 30-Dec. 5
TUESDAY double-bill MACBETH-Welles,
Jeannette Nolar, Dan O'Herlihy. LADY
FROM SHANGHAI - Welles, Rita Hay-
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Wednesday seldom-seen intrigue
JOURNEY INTO FEAR
screenplay Joseph Cotton; Welles, Cotton,
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Agnes Moorehead
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Bells . . . $8.00
Boot Jeans . $7.50
Pre-Shrunk . $7.50
Super Slims $700

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