Sunday,.October 25, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Sunday, October 25, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ., ,, i ATTENTION SOPH., JR., and SR. GIRLS PRACTICE FOR M CHEERLEADING TRYOUTS BEGIN MON., OCT. 26-7:00 Waterman 'Gymnasiurm TRYOUTS-NOV. 2 HAYDEN vs. FERENCY THURSDAY, OCT. 29 "Strategies for Changing America" Urban schools linked .s to municipal projects I WASHINGTON (IP) - The con- cept of combining schools w i t h such facilities as housing, office space and parking garages could ease the financial woes of urban school systems, according to a new educational study. The report on this concept - known as joint occupancy - add- ed that it might be especially helpful for school systems which need new facilities but have a How busy peopleNAE earn better grades constituency unwilling new bonds or taxes. to voteI J Ia / «I - 0 "Yi Cliff's Notes-remember the name it can mean lot in better literature grades.(Cliff's Il TI Notes are famous for fast, straight to the-point help. You get expert scene-b~-sceneR or chapter-by-chapter commentary. You get valuable, easy-to-understand discussion of maor characters, development of theme and plot, plus a helpful review section. Don't fight literature 369 N. MAPLE -learn to understand it with Cliffs Notes. (Maple Village Shopping Ctr.) OVER 175 TITLES $1 EACH OPEN 7 DAYS 662-4110 Get- Goae AS Ge" yesVo lo0e "'0. nn p DIAMOND 1209 S. University 663-7151 The report, written for the non- profit Educational Facilities lab- oratories by Evans Clinchy of Boston, outlines the approaches used in Pontiac, Mich., Philadel- phit, New York, Boston a n d Chicago to meet inner city school, housing and urban renewal prob- lems. Both public and private schools have used variations of the joint occupancy approach to continue educational plants in high c o s t land areas, states the Ford Foun- dation-funded report. Pontiac began planning, in 1966 an inner city project that will combine a school with other foris of community and cultural services and be called the Human Resources Center. The Center's primary function is to provide elementary educa- tion for about 2,000 children. But it also will house a variety of civil and social functions and agencies, such as the county health a n d mental health groups, the Urban League, the Office of Economic Opportunity, the local community college and recreational and soc- ial organizations. Much like the Pontiac projects is the Quincy School complex in Boston, which Clinchy writes, is planning an entire environment around a new elementary school. New York City is usually slow to make innovations in education- al facilities, Clinchy writes, but, "it rose eagerly at the chance to reduce the cost of building schools with income derived from the pri- vate part of joint-occupancy pro- jects." New York's P.S. 99 is an ex- ample. Built during the depression, P.S. 99 never had an auditorium or cafeteria although land was available. With help of a new law, a $1 million gym-auditor~urn-cafe- teria-community facility will be built with 224 upper-i n c o m e apartments above it. Bernadette Devlin, newly freed from a jail sentence for participa- tion in riots, waves to supporters in a small N. Ireland yillage yesterday. Devlin urged her supporters to stop rioting for civil rights and to work for them in other ways. GOVT. PROBE reshness of store food to be studied Bernadette's back Lim 0 One of the best substitutes for a Swedi h blonde -the cordless corduroy coat a la McGregor $60 r MI-CON AQUA*FILM The Contact Lens Wearers Solution to with this MONEY-SAVING On your purchase of Mi-Con Aqua-Film whenI presented to your favorite supplier. To validate this coupon please fill in below. OFF Name SAddress C _tyState zipW MR. DEALER: Mi-Con Laboratories, Inc., Wauconda, I1. 60084 will redeem this 25G coupon plus postage. Coupon void where prohibited by law, taxed or otherwise restricted. Sponsored by ti -he Ecumenical Campus Center II WASHINGTON M)-The federal government has reluctantly agreed to study what happens when food on grocery shelves is dated for freshness, the head of a House consumer panel said yesterday. Rep. Benjamin Rosenthal (D- N.Y.) who has been urging such a study for months, said the Agri- culture Department will begin ear- ly next month to monitor a food- dating program being started vol- untarily by the big Jewel super- market chain in Chicago. Rosenthal said that Jewel plans to stamp dates on such perishable items as meat, poultry, dairy pro- ducts and baked foods to show when they are old. Rosenthal said the study would give Congress information to de- cide whether to require such dat- ing by law. the government has never undertaken such a study, he said.{ Agriculture marketing special- ists will be looking to see how much attention shoppers actual- ly pay to the dates, how they like the idea, how much over-age foodt is wasted, what condition it is in when pulled from shelves and how much it costs to run a food-dating program. Some state and local govern- ments require by law that certain food products such as milk carry freshness dates, but there is no such federal requirement. The Jewel program apparently will cover a far wider range of foods than any other. Opponents of open food dating - chiefly food packagers and supermarket owners-say it would add to food prices and increase waste by prompting shoppers to pass up perfectly acceptable items for those a .day or so fresher. Ile. p Lis THE INDOCHINA WAR: Alternatives for the Future PROF. DAVID WURFEL Univ. of Ontario (4 months in S.E. Asia, Summer, 1970) 7:30 P.M. --SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25 First Presbyterian Church, 1432 Washtenaw 'U 310 S. STATE STREET Open Monday & Friday Nite 'ti1 8:30 I. American Express Uc. II " barin San lub& YU DINING ROOM &CARRY OUT - C- Ir8ufi !I Lafayette's FALL SALE Specials at I- __ . - Shop Jacobson's Mon.-TL 'es.-Wed.-Sat. 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M.; Thurs. and Fri. 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Special Purchase COLUMBIA '° _ C 8-Track TAPE PLAYEI Franchised Nationally *M introduces new Monday-Tuesday SPECIALS I'! Rf Mondays 2 Mr. Hams for $100 Tuesdays 2 Mr. Beefs for $120 Miss J joins the tweedy " " set in separates by College Town ...in mellow .beige of wool/nylon with flecks of color. 5-13 sizes. A. Tunic, cocoa pattern, $1$. Pant with sueded belt, $14. OrionO sweater in orange or' brown. 36-40 sizes, $11. B. Tabbed vest, $18. j1 Matching skirt, $15. f Yoked shirt, acetate/nylon Tremendous putchase of these famous Columbia Tape Players with very slight cabinet mars I but they're fully guaranteed el e c - tronically . . . look at this savings.. 8 8 I fidc a panorama of living music in k '_1) ,'grri Colored lights ... BLACK RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE (SIX WEEK SEMINAR) I. THE HISTORICAL BEGINNINGS a.-Religion in Africa b-Black Religion in the New World II. THE BLACK CHURCH IN AMERICA Ill. THE STOREFRONT CHURCH IV. BLACK THEOLOGY V. WARREN: Styles of Black Preaching. (KING) CLEAGE: Black Power and Christianity CONE: Black Theology and the Renewal of the Church The seminar will be led by Victor Wallin currently enrolled in the School of Social Work and working with the Office of Religious Affairs. He holds a graduate degree from Andrew's University in