Thursday, September 3, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page 5even Thursday, September 3, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven 4. N Steak and Eggs fAT CAMPUS GRILL RESTAURANT 808 S. State St. Welfare protesters continue church sit-in POLITICAL REASONS? 'U' grad denied post at Nebraska college (Continued from Page 1) SUBSCRIBE NOW 1r ir t.au M aiIll ins in Ann Arbor include the pre- dominantly white Wit". The sit-in started at First Presbyterian Church on Aug. 19. Negotiations with the church broke down two days later when Charles Thomas of ,EEIL and Sandra Gtrard of WO were asked to leavq and a temporary injunction forbidding thm to disrupt services was granted by Washtenaw County Circuit Judge William Ager. After a hearing on Aug. 24 to show cause why they should re- main in the building, Thomas, Mrs. Girard and their agents and representatives were bar- red from the churches by ano- ther injunction. Hank Bryan, vice president of aDL, says he expects that injunction to be served on the people still sitting in Friday at the First Presbyterian Church. The second church takeover came on Aug. 25, when t h e groups staged a brief sit-in at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church.. They abandoned the church when Thomas, Mrs. Mnerson and two woman 'sup- porters were arrested on tres- passing charges. The four are presently out on bond and a hearing on a motion to dismiss charges will be held Sept. 29. 1 After the arrests, negotiations resumed and on Aug. 29, an ad hoc group of laymen and clergy was formed to represent nine churches in the negotiations. The number has since been raised to 10. On Monday, representatives of the ad hoc coalition met with. representatives of the welfare groups for a work session. Tuesday morning, after a sparsely attended Diag rally, members of the BEDL and W RO led a few student supporters to the First Methodist Church, where they began another sit in. Since that time, five to twelve people have remained in the office of the senior minister,' Rev. Hoover Rupert. Tuesday evening, the Board of Trustees of the First Metho- dist Churhe met and made a temporary decision not to take' legal action as long as the occu- pation remained in the one of- fice room and did not disrupt the normal activities of the church. The administrative board yes- terday enlarged on that decis- ion by authorizing its leaders to seek legal action if it be- comes necessary, in order to protect the property of t h e , church. Instead of holding the ne- gotiating session that was to be held on Tuesday, the coalition of churches met privately and drafted a resolution stating that they "do not recognize BEDL as sufficiently represent- ative of the poor in Washtenaw County to administer any funds the churches might make avail- able." Call 764-0558 111-1 UNIVERSIJY PLAYERS -Associated Press Mad, Madder, Maddox Clenching his fist for emphasis,. Georgia Gov.. Lester Maddox announces at a news conference yesterdaythat he has written President Nixon to protest the indictment of two Augusta, Ga. police officers. Maddox accused the federal government of turn- ing policemen into scapegoats. STA TEMENTS ISSUED: MayorJplice union dispute RAM case By STEVE KOPPMAN A University graduate stu- dent has been denied an instructorship by the Uni- versity of Nebraska Board of R e g e n t s for reasons which were apparently poli- tical., The student, Michael D a v is, Grad, has been a leading ad- vocate of increased student participation in University de- cision-making. He was notified last May that he had been tentatively ac- cepted for the post at Nebraska, but in August, the Nebraska Regents held a closed session and. ordered the school to stop processing Davis' application. The Nebraska Regents have not officially stated their rea- sons for rejecting Davis, bu t Regent Edward Schwartzkopf has said the decision was made because the board did not ap- prove of his "social conduct." Schwartzkopf said the regents had "received information which alerted us, so we kept working on it." Davis, a doctoral candidate In the philosophy department, is a former administrative vice pre- sident of Student Government Council. He was on the commit- tee that drafted a set of Re- gents By-laws proposing that students be given the power to make and enforce all rules gov- erning non-academic conduct. In March, he staged a four-day fast in the Administration Bldg. to support the adoption of the proposed bylaws. Davis is cur- rently a member of Central Stu- dent Judiciary. He had been recommended for the post at Nebraska by .the chairman of that university's philosophy department and: the dean of the school's College of Arts and Sciences. Davis has requested' the, of- ficial reasons for the Nebraska Regents decision, but has on 1 y been informed that the Board will meet again on Sept. 14 and will then consider a reply to him. The Davis case has caused a major furor in Nebraska. Two of the state's three major*news- papers have supported the re- gental decision. Prof. Jerry' Petr, vice -presi-, dent of Nebraska's chapter of the American Association of University Professors, said the association had an interest in determining if the Regental re- jection of Davis has involved "any breach of academic hiring procedures." "I don't know exactly how they based their decisions," said Petr. "Davis had very good aca- demic standings." Davis has been reappointed here as a teaching fellow. He will teach two introductory phi- losophy courses this term. DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH PLAYBILL 19,701971 The statement proposed "the immediate- creation of a community-wide association' to which we invite: BEDL, WRO, NAACP, BULJ, Model Cities, Community Center, OEO, repre- sentatives of the churches and other organizations concerned with the poor and disadvant- aged, to meet the needs of the black and white poor in Wash- tenaw County." Early yesterday morning, the executive board of the Ann Ar- bor chapter of the New Mobili- zation Committee to End the War in Vietnam passed a reso- lution in support of the WRO and BEDL demands. (Continued from Page 1) between police and students sup- porting the BAM demands. The Ann Arbor Police Officers Association announced yesterday that its attorney has sent a let- ter to Harris demanding that he retract the statement. The letter threatens a libel suit against the mayor if the statement is not re- tracted. The name of ficer involved in1 cident has not public. the police of- the alleged in- been made 10 !e I bertolt brechts THE CAUCASIAN CHALK CIRCLE B lacks hit orientation I October 7-10 Trueblood (Continued from Page 1) - Program, the Michigan Union and University Activities Cent- er helped prepare and put on the program, Short says. However, he says he has had problems in finding places to accommodate 230 participants. At the presentations by black organizations yesterday, B S U president Oliver Spear said the group""s planning to resume a Black Liberation School, which was begun last April with 60 students. Then, it was called the Black Tutorial. This year, between 6:30 and 9 a.m. each weekday, BSU plans to provide breakfast for public school students and education about black history. Spear said that volunteers are needed to cook, teach the children ,an d drive them to school before the program can begin. Harris based his three page statement on a report released by a three-man committee com- posed of Assistant City Admin- istrator Donald Borut, City At- torney Jerold Lax, and acting Human Rights Director Robert Hunter.J In the statement Harris urg- ed that the police officer in' question be prosecuted immed- iately for a criminal act. The officer allegedly attempted to strike a black youth with his nightstick while the youth was pinned to the ground by anoth- er officer. Patrolman Paul Bunten, pre- sident of the police officers as- sociation, referred to the state- men as "libelous" and said that the mayor "publicly prejudiced the guilt of one of our officers." nikos kazontzakis's THE ODYSSEY-A Modern Sequel November 4-7 Trueblood R.Iii a play from the. BLACK THEATRE DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is, an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 L. S. A. Bldg., before 2 p.m., of the day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday- and Sunday. Items ap- pear once only. Student organiza- tion notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3 Day Calendar Mich. Memorial-Phoenix Project in- vites Univ. faculty to submit requests for grants to support research within scope of the term "peaceful uses of nuclear energy." Requests for grants of $3,000 or less most appropriate. Re- turn applies. to Phoenix Proj. by Sept. 25; obtain applies. at Phoenix Mem. Lab. on No. Campus, or call 764-6213. Elizabeth Sargent Lee Medical History Prize: awarded to jr. or sr. premed. stu- dents in College of LS&A for best essay on hist. of medicine. Freshmen in the med. sch.lwho on Joint Prog. in Lib. Arts & Med. also eligible. 1) Prizes of December 2-5 Lydia Mendelssohn $500.00 and $200.00. 1) manuscript shd. be typed, double spaced, on one side of paper only on reg. sized manuscript paper, 3) manuscripts shd. be 3,000- 5,000 wds. long, 4) submit two copies, 5) manuscripts shd. be left at Rm 1220 Angell Hall by Dec. 1, 1970. Museum of Art, Exhibits Museum, Gen. Library and UGLI will all be CLOSED Labor Day. They will keep their regular hrs. for Saturday and Sunday. Placement Service ENGINEERING PLACEMENT sNew "GRAD II" computerized pre- selection placement service now avail. to srs. and grad students who expect to accept reg. employment within nexct 12 mo. Register immediately at Engin. Placement Service, 128 H, W. Engin. Bldg. Deadline, Sept. 15. General Division 3200 SAB Jobs in Ann Arbor area will be listed in DOB as we receive them. Complete list - 3200 S.A.B. Edsel B. Ford Instit., Res. Asst., BS in chem. or biol., supervised work on grant-supported cholesterol and lipid res. projects. Federal-Mogul Corp.; International , . shakespeare's January 27-30 Trueblood Mkt. Trainee, AB in bus, ad., or engr., assmt. in U.S., then overseas. Uof M Personnel Offlce: Systems Analyst and Senior Programmer, BA in math, physics, or engr. plus 2 years PL-1 or COBOL. Wayne County Community Coll. - Mgr. of Information Services, degree desirable, exper. in media, prefer sub- stantial academic exper., teaching or admin. work. Xerox Corp., BS in any major for sales rep. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Christian Science Organization testi- mony meeting, Thursday, September 3, 7:30 p.m. Room 3545 SAB. The Ageless science of Yoga. In- struction in the yoga exercises as taught by qualified instructors. Spon- sored by the Self-Realization Fellow- ship. Call Linda after 6:00 p.m. at 761-9825.- Free University Steering Committee meeting - first one - if you're in- terested, -you're invited. 2nd floor of Michigan Union (UAC offices) Sun., Sept. 6, 7:00. / Gay Liberation Meeting, Thursday, September 3, 8:30 p.m. 3R - Michigan Union. Meeting to select a Women's Organ- ization Advocate in the Office of Stu- dent Organizations:A Search, and Re- commendations Committee will be formed at a meeting beginning 7:30, September 3, Main Floor SAB. Buy Books at STUDGNT 800K SERVICE The Noisiest Place john whiting's THE, DEVILS in Town 1215 South University 761-0700 February 1720 Trueblood 1 C ocC 1 4 O 6 to be announced A PREMIERE PRODUCTION March 17-40 Truebuod A . l~6 z I I I "We want to be your Barber" Open daily 8:30-5:30 Dascola UM Barbers formerly Lee's E. Univ. off S. Univ. I spa s 1. I I