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September 02, 1970 - Image 18

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1970-09-02

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Page Six--Student' Activities

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wednesday, September 2, 1970

Page Six-Student Activities THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September 2, 1970
I T

11

The University Activities Center and Students International

Non-Profit Student

Organizations

present:

4A,
UNION-LEAGUE

Round trip jets by Caledonian (Scottish International Airlines), Pan American, &
Trans International Airlines-all non-stop jets/complete with meals and
complimentary drinks/cancellation privileges/
Deposit holds seats/financing arrangements are available

UAC and SI have combined their previously independent programs so as to offer the University
community a more comprehensive, reliable, and inexpensive program.
UAC-SI provides the opportunity for you to experience, vacation, or trip Europe, the Orient, or
the more palatable points of interest in America.
Through individual programs (see programs below) or inclusive tours, intra-European student
University of Michigi

flights, international I.D. cards, Eurail and Brit-rail passes, auto purchases, leases, rentals, trav-
elers checks, and associated student travel bureaus, we will try to assist you. For our Christmas
flights we can offer a wide variety of ski programs and packages to Kitzbuhel or St. Moritz.
UAC-Sl will be offering many weekend excursions to points of interest such as "show" or "con-
cert" trips to New York.
an 1970 Program

CHRISTMAS 1970

SUMMER 1971 (DETROIT DEPARTURES)

SUMMER 1971 (NEW YORK DEPARTURES)

Flight No.
SI 2000
SI 1007
SI 1005
SI 1006
sl 1008

Routing
Det-Lon-Det
NY-Mad-NY
Det-Ams-Det
NY-Lon-NY
Det-Hawaii-Det

Depart
12/22
12/20
12/21
12/19
12/20

Return
1/3
1/4
1/5
1 /5
1/3

Weeks Price

2
2
2
3
2

$175
$180
$175
$170
$249

Flight No.
SI 092
SI 1003
SI 093
SI 094
SI 1001
SI 085
SI 086
S1 095
SI 1004
SI 1009

Routing
Det-Lon-Det
Det-Lon-Det
Det-Lon-Det
Det-Lon--Det
Det--Lon-Det
Det--Lon-Det
Det-Lon-Det
Det-Lon-Det
Det-Lon-Det
Det-Tok-Det

Depart
5/5
5/6
5/5
5/15
# 6/15
6/28
6/29
7/2
8/1
7/31

Return
6/8
6/6
6/24
8/15
7/15
8/28
8/26
8/ 19
9/1
8/31

Weeks
4
4
7
12
4
8
8
6
4
4

Price
$159
$179
$159
$199
$199
$219
$219
$219
$219
$429

Flight'No.
SI 1002
SI 098
SI 114
SI 091

Routing.
NY-Lon-NY
NY-Lon-NY
NY-Lon-NY
NY-Lon-NY

Depart
5 13
5/14
6,26
6529

Return Weeks Price

6/25
8 13
9/1.
7,30

5
12
8
4

$169
$199
$219
$219

Open only to

U. of M. students, faculty,

staff, alumni, and their immediate families

SI

._/
%
..

Phone or stop in

or

1231 S. University
769-6871

Student Union Building

STUDENTS

f

INTERNATIONAL

RECORD

STORE..

SELLS RECORDS AT THE LOWEST PRICES IN ANN ARBOR
Students International, a non = profit s t u d e n t organization, wants to
benefit you with savings on things yo U need to buy. Our prices are not
arbitrarily changed from week to week, but r a ther offers you these
consistently low prices. For several months the S.I. store has provided
the Ann Arbor people with music at prices lower than ever before seen
in this area.

WHAT IS STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL?
Students international promotes international understanding and communications 6mong students of diverse cut-
tures through educational, cultural, economic and other related non-political activities. We work as a non-profit
cooperative to service and aid students cis they visit or study in foreign countries.
Students, the only-unorganized union, can avail themselves of tremendous savings and realize many goals by pre-
senting themselves as a group. Unions, organizations, and associations have successfully operated on this theory
for hundreds of years. Whether they were called guilds, cooperatives, or parties, they have existed as a vehicle to
actualize their goals. Students International was organized in part as a movement toward these ends.-
Students International offers a wide variety of services developed over the past 20 years by the national student
travel bureaus. These non-profit organizations, all affiliated with their national unions of students, exist solely
to develop and provide budget travel programs and facilities to their own students as well as to visiting students
from other countries.
In one visit to our campus office you can pick up: the International Student Youth P a s s, charter flights (trans-
Atlantic and intra-European), passport applications, rail passes, health certificates, travelers checks, books, rec-
ords, Xerox copies, and many other student services.
WHY WORK WITH UAC-SI?
Since 1965, students at the University of Michigan have organized themselves to charter aircraft to E u r o p e. The
prime movers in that effort were people interested in fostering interaction between students of different cultures.
Students International assumed responsibility for administering the University charters in order to provide contin-
uity of service from year to year
In 1969 it expanded its operations to other Big Ten schools starting with Michigan State University. Today, Students
international provides this continuity to over thirty schools in the midwest and eastern U.S.
Students international is not a travel agency. It is a student service organization whose travel operations are based
on a cooperative association of campus organizations sponsoring student charters. It does not accept commissions
from airlines. Its involvement in charters is limited to collective bargaining on behalf of the cooperating organiza-
tions and assisting in administration of the program. Its goal in providing these services is to increase the avalabil-
ity of low cost travel in order to promote international comity and communication among s t u d e n t s from many
societies.
WHAT ISA CHARTER FLIGHT?
Unquestionably, the best transportation to Europe is a campus charter; cheap and fast. However, f this is your first
time dealing with charter flights, several factors concerning cooperative air charters and their operation should be
understood.
The first is that flight times are always tentative. Both scheduled airlines (i.e., airlines flying at specific times ac-
cording to published schedules), and supplemental airlines (i.e., airlines flying when contracted by a group), sell
charter flights. Chartered aircraft are those planes not scheduled for any specific routing or time before they are
contracted. Only when they are leased can their flying schedule be arranged, and even then, they must fit around
the regularly scheduled flights. No precise time of departure can be determined until three weeks before depar-
ture, and then it must remain flexible.
The second point is that there is little or no difference between charters from scheduled or supplemental airlines.
A 11 _ _ rU_1 _ r . . 1 1 11 . . r 1 _ ! _. " . - , - _ _ -i -i _- - i - l _

41

4.98 l st

5.98
6.98

list
list

3.29
3.99
4.99
when available at

with many SpeCials,

2.99
complete selection of

.1

11

1

in

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