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October 18, 1970 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1970-10-18

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Sunday, October 18, 1970

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Seven

Sunday, October 1 8, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FRESH
APPLE CIDER
79c a Gallon
WITH THIS COUPON
Convenient Food Mart
1757 PLYMOUTH RD.
(next to Lums)

BEFORE CHRISTMAS
SKI THE EST
DECEMBER 19-24
U of M SKI CLUB
TRAVELS TO
MT. TREMBLANT, Quebec
Information and Signup:
MONDAY, OCT. 19--7:15 P.M.
Michigan Union Room 3-C

NOV. 3 GOAL:
U' students work for
state, local campaigns

Canadian police hunt
French separatists

(Oniar frmP~p1

1 -- --A- -C 4-u-

i

(Continued from Page >

nnly Orn r% Arnncr onnnsrl-i tfn Pv_

tUigiuuiiiy I " "p *ny rus"oge Lun te-
of candidates. Others, such as pand its efforts beyond the city,
Students to Support Austin and canvassing around the state.
Levin, emphasize name identifica- As Nov. 3 draws closer, cam-,
tion, paign efforts will be intensified.
There are also differences in Gov. William Milliken, state Sen.
canvassing methods. College Re- Robert Huber (R-Troy), Congress-
publicans is chiefly interested in man Marvin Esch (R-Ann Arbor)
determining areas of strength for also have plans to speak in Ann
the senior party, while Students Arbor.
for Hart have just completed a Other Democrats coming here
massive drive for voter registra- will include Sen. George McGov-
tion. ern and Ramsey Clark. The New
Several organizations are di- Republican Coalition is staging a
recting their efforts at the general campus "laissez-faire" day at the
Ann Arbor community by leaf- end of October to present, Harris
letting shopping centers and set- says, "our desire for a free mar-
ting up information tables. ket economy, one without govern-
Keith Hartwell of College Re- ment intervention."
publicans, says, "We lay off the Most of the groups have con-
campus, because the payoffs there flicting views about election re-
are not as good for Republicans sults. "Shifts can occur between
as in the Ann Arbor community." now and Nov. 3," says Semmel.
Students for Hart, with a mem- Hartwell predicts, "If the elec-
bership near 600, has been the tion were tomorrow, I'd say that

}
I
1
T

r

71

-nce ema-e independent of tne rest
A Quebec Provincial Police of Canada.
spokesman, reporting the latest The government motion is ex
arrest figures, said 153 were de- pected to come to a vote Moriday
tained in Montreal and 57 in Que- and Trudeau's Liberal party has
bec, the provincial capital. enough votes in the H o u s e of
Levesque urged the FLQ to ac- Commons to approve it.
cept the provincial government's Under the War Measures Act,
last offer and free the hostages. thousands of troops either already
The provincial government offer- in the province or flown in, were
ed to consider parole for 5 of the put under the control of the pro-
23 terrorists. Levesque blamed the vincial police, who number 13,000.
FLQ for "the military occupation Large numbers of police and
of Quebec." soldiers were assigned to the man-
Opposition to the government hunt.
motion in the House of Commons _ _
debate! was led by the Conserva-
tive and the New Democratic par-
ties.
Such opposition centers on the
clampdown on civil liberties un- e
der the 'act. Police m ay search gives 0wem
and arrest without warrant under
and arrest without warrant and
detain suspects without charges or (Continued from Page 1)
bail. The other major provision of
Robert Stanfield, leader of the the Internal Security Act, for
Conservatives, suggested the gov- which Nixon and Sen Karl E.
ernment introduce a bill n e x t Mundt (R-SD), can claim primary
week to deal with the terrorists authorship, created the Subversive
without relying on the sweeping Activities Control Board. The
powers of the war act. Trudeau board, assigned to identify "Com-
promised to consider this. munist front organizations," has
In outlawing the FLQ, the gov- had onlyi two cases in the past
ernment provided maximum pen- four years.
alties of five years in prison and Should the Emergency Deten-
$5,000 fines f o r anyone having tion Act be repealed, the govern-
anything to do with the move- ment still has a wide range of
ment, which wants Quebec Prov- powers for emergency situations.

I

knowhereyoucanfind
goodpi zzastoneground
homemadebreadand
barbecueddelights?
THE
CHARCOAL
HOUSE

Milliken, Hart and Eschv
win. Lenore doesn't stand a ch
because of her husband's mis
her sex and the bitter pri
fight."
Harris also says he is "afra:
Republicans will suffer in No
ber."
After the election, some o
groups will disband. Semmel
"Following Nov. 3, our evalua
will begin again." College Re
licans plan to work on the
Arbor mayoral campaign and
also nominate candidates to
dent Government Council.

would
hance
takes,
mary
id the
)vem-
f the
says,
ations

338 S. STATE 7:30-10 P.M.I

epub-
Ann : "s: :=:=:siiM~sss##iiia:::: is::.? :: ':: r::-::::sis s ion: Environmental Forum. Registra-
may tion: Rackhamn Lobby, 8:15 a.m.
Stu. DAILY OFFICIAL Organ Music Conference: Registra-
tion: Hill Auditorium, 9:30 a.m.
BULLETINiDepartment of History of Art and
~ J - Chinese Students Association Gallery
Tour: Professor Richard Edwards, His-
...............................................................!............ tory of Art, "In Pursuit of 'Antiquity"
sUNDAY, OcTOBER 18 33 Ming and Ch'ing Dynasty Paint-
____1_ ings: Museum of Art,, 3:00 p.m.,
Senate Assembly Meeting: Rackham
Day Calendar Amphitheater, 3:15 p.m.
High Energy Seminar: S. Ting, MIT,
Professional Theatre Program: "In the "Forbidden Decays of Vector Mesons,"
Patrofs.oaloTet pgra m erIntheP&A Colloq. Rm., 4 p.m.
Matter ofdJssRobertOtpenheimer" Composers Forum: School of Music
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 2:30 andj Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m.
8:00 p.m. Recital: Gordon Wilson, organ and
Degree Recital: Kenneth Scheffel, Grady Wilson, organ, Hill Aud., 8:30
tenor, School of Music Recital Hall, p.m.
4:30 p.m.

I

Recital: Samuel Lam, organ: H il1
Aud., 4:30 p.m.
Recital: Robert Clark, organ: H i ll
Aud., '8:30 p.m.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 19
Michigan Natural Resources Commis-
CAUTION:
HEAVY'
TRAFFIC

General Notices
Representative from Law School of
U. of Chicago will be on campus on
Monday, October 26, to interview stu-
dents in the study of law. Make ap-
pointments in 1223 Angell Hall.
Alpha Lambda Delta offers six $2,000
fellowships for grad study: any AI D
member who graduated 1968-70 and
qualifies academically is eligible; pick
up applics. from Nancy Hessler, 1011
SARI: must submit by.Jan. 12, 1971.
Placement Service
Interviews for week of Oct. 26. Appts.
may be made beginning tomorrow. aCli
763-1363.
Oct. 26 -Boy Scouts of America;
Georgia Inst. of Tech. - Sch. of In-
dustrial & Systems Engr. Oct. 27 -
Univ. of Rochester - Grad. Seh. of
Mgmt.; Wake Forest Univ. - Grad
School of Indus. gmt. Oct. 28 - Inst.
for Paralegal Training. Oct. 29 - U.S.
Bureau of the Census, Social Security
Admin., U.S. Civil Service Comm.

2 Days Only-Mon. and Tue., Oct. 19th-20th

I

TOWARD AN
OF HOM

UNDERSTANDING
IOSEXUALITY

Mr. Bill Christensen, Honeywell's Regional Service Manager, will head a
staff of Factory Technicians who will check and make MINOR Repairs to

I

your

(Four Week Seminar Series)
An introductory attempt to understand the problems of America's
homosexual minority from the points of view of sociology, psy-
chology, law, and theology. Special 'attention will be given to the
Model Penal Code, the Wolfenden, Quaker, and Hooker reports,
and to the homophile civil rights movement. Discussions will roise
the question: what might an enlightened religious viewpiont and
public policy be?
Although the seminar is open to all interested persons, attendance
will be limited to 25. To enroll, please phone or contact in person
the Office of Religious Affairs. An outline, biblography, and se-
lected papers for discussion will be distributed at the first session
on October 22 at 7 P.M. at the Guild House. All sessions will be
led by Lloyd Putnam, ORA Educational Director.
THURSDAYS: Oct. 22 and 29; Nov. 5 and 12
GUILD HOUSE-802 Monroe Street
7 P.M.
Sponsored by: The Office of Religious Affairs

A complete Display of all the latest Honeywell Products will be shov
by Mr. Bob English, Factory Representative and other Honeywell i
perts who will have the answers to most of your photo questions.

learning to read 3, 4, 5 times faster...improv-
ing comprehension, recall and study skills. Be
honest with yourself. Next semester's reading
and study loads will be no easier than this
semester. Even your grades will be just about
the same unless you do something about it.
Investigate now the advantages of a course
in Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics. Besides
increasing your reading efficiency from 3 to
10 times, we emphasize study and recall tech-
niques. We teach you "how to learn more
easily, more efficiently.
We talk about this at a Mini-Lesson.
"FREE"-Increase your reading speed on the spot
at one of the listed "Mini-Lessons."

2282 S.A.B.

I
Who 'Are You
Be proud of your beliefs. Stand up for your
convictions. Your time to stand up and be
counted is now. Good movements need
support and recognition.
Wear with pride a beautiful movement jacket. Each
jacket bears an emblem of your choice depicting
your ideas and beliefs. Every movement has a dif-
ferent color jacket for instant recognition. A dis-
tinctively styled jacket that you will be proud to
wear. Jackets feature zipper front and cadet type
collar.
ENVIRONMENT * PEACE * SPEAKERS BUREAU
BLACK PANTHER * BSU * ALL MOVEMENTS

764-7442

MINI-LESSON
SCHEDULE
UNIVERSITY OF MICH.
STUDENT UNION
530 S. State
3rd Floor
EASTERN MICH. UNIV.
NEWMAN CENTER
51 1 W roret (Across

WED.,
OCT. 21
6 P.M.
AND
8 P.M.
6 P.M.
AND

THURS.,
CT. 22
6 P.M.
AND
8 P.M.
6 P.M.
AND

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