Page Two VALUABLE COUPON. WOR' ONE BIG delicious MR. TO with purchase of a 14" P and this coupon SUBMARINES & PI 1327 S, University FREE, FAST DELIVER Y!! 66 Offer good for pickup, dine-in, or FREEC 1327S. University location on Coupon expires Oct. 2, 19 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September 26, 1974 I TH $1.39 NY SUB izza I k I I I 2 eVeuava *AJR 5B.fl'A5NLf ~ RN SIALL FAt O~A SS.~ E'Iow1oNAY PT.&ss &C:EAT,. f Wk e NEXT YOLL BE T-LINC ME TRaES Ur-e fN OTHER SHARE THE WEALTH Your knowledge and skills are needed for upcoming ACTION proiects in 49 states and 58 developing countries. ACTION is PEACE CORPS-VISTA is people helping people help themselves. Talk to PEACE CORPS-VISTA recruiters about projects for Engineers, Architects, Businesspersons, Health-Medical Personnel, Planners and Educators Sept. 30 through Oct. 3 atCareer Planning and Placement. Sign-up today for an interview. (Continued from Page 1) ONE CARDIOLOGIST, who asked not to be named, said, "In patients where we've made this diagnosis, I haven't seen any- one die. If the anti-coagulant drugs are effective, he should make an uneventful recovery." tery, could be employed break up the blockage. to! (Continued from Page 1) IN NIXON'S case, Weg said, "will to live was fantastically important." Doctors in Long Beach have said that the for- mer president's morale was high. f BURSLEY TOO HAD much on his mind last night. He is presently pushing a transporta- tion bond proposal which he says would dramatically im- prove mass transit in southeast-, ern Michigan. "The population in this part of the state will double byl 1990," Bursley said. It would stated, and "if you think we have traffic problems now, just wait until then." Bursley says he thinks that the effects df Watergate could "conceivably" hurt Republican candidates running for nation- al offices. "I don't think that it will hurt the local candidates like county commissioners be- cause they dor't have anything Clot imperils Nixon GOP goes Italian According to Willis, embo- Dr. Weg said that the phle- lisms are not uncommon. bitis that has troubled Nixon "Many of us have tiny pulmo- since his Middle East trip in nary emboli in our lungs after the spring should have been riding in a car or a plane for treated at that time. "But," the a long period of time. They doctor said, "he isn't the first or form when the body is in a fix- the last person not to listen to ed position where blood doesn't advice." circulate." take approximately 15 years to to do with national politics," he build the proposed system, he added. ZZA DELIVERY at ly. 974 Calley ordered freed . ; I! The most common treatments DA*l O for blood clots, according to the four doctors, would be applica-; tion of anti-coagulant medi- Day Calendar cines. If they were not effec-I tive, surgical techniques such Thursda ficial Bulletin ay, September 26 as blocking or filtering an ar- The University of Michigan mmml Ai { ' ' j , , .;, ; k , S a AU7500 INTEGRATED 14 rIr AMPLIFIER REG. $340 Now $272 Model lf 4 watts RMS A SU i per channel Reg. $459_ NOW $379 .I Artists and Craftsmen Guild PRESENTS: The 2nd Annual COMMUNITY ARTS & CRAFTS FAIR WHERE? WHEN? Farmer's Sunday, 0 Market, Ann Arbor ctober 6, 1:00-7:00 p.m. WUOM: Continued live coverage, Sen. Rules Com, hearings on con- firmation of Nelson Rockefeller as v-p, 10 am. Pendleton Arts Inf. Ctr.: "Open Hearth," Patrick Crean, fencing master, PTP "Cyrano", Union, noon. Naval Arch., Marine Eng.: R. A. Yagle, "Operational Approaches to Reducing the Risk of Oil Spills from Collisions and Groundings," 311 W. Eng., 3:10 pm. MHRI: Bruce Pappas, Carleton Univ., Ottawa, Canada, "Specula- tions on the Psychopharmacology of Behavior with Special Reference to a Model of Drug Self-Adminis- tration," 1057 MHRI, 3:45 pm. Future Worlds: Men, Whales, Dolphins, speakers, "Saving the Whales," Rackham, 7 pm. Festival of Life: Baba Muktanan- da, "Sidda Meditation and Kunda- lini Yoga," Power Ctr., 7:30 pm. Music School: Kurt-Erich Eickel "Mexican Folk Music and Aaron Copeland's El Salon Mexico," Recital Hall, 8 pm. Women's Studies: Film series, Nobody's Victim: It Happens to Us; Lavendar, Aud. C, Angell, 8 pm. A there's thru Classified LAST CALL Mixed Leagues Sign Up Now Union Lanes (Continued from Page 1) tentions were that Calley was denied the right of confrontation with witnesses when the mili- tary judge refused to subpoena high-ranking Army officials and that Calley was convicted on charges and specifications "im- properly drawn." CALLEY, 31, was convicted 3% years ago for the murders of 22 Vietnamese civilians at My Lai. He was sentenced to life imprisonment but that sen- tence was reduced by military review to 10 years. The former Army lieutenant has been confined to the dis- ciplinary barracks at Ft. Leav- enworth, Kan., since Elliott took his appeal under advise- ment June 25. Before he was sent to Ft. Leavenworth Calley had been confined to quarters at Ft. Benning, Ga., since short- ly after his conviction until Feb. 11 of this year when he was released on bail. Calley has less than two Imonths to serve. before he is eligible for parole review. How- ever, the Army expected to ap- neal Elliott's ruling and could file a brief staying the release order. HOUSTON GORDON, Calley's chief attorney, said he thinks President Gerald Ford will de- cide whether to press the ap- peal. ,Gordon said the Army should now "stop persecuting him" and dron the anpeal in light of re- cent concessions allowed draft evaders and the presidential pardon of Nixon. The Army could seek a stay of Elliott's order by filing di- rectly with the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Or- leans. Calley has less than two months to serve before he is eligible for parole review. His attorney could not b reached immediately for com- ment on the Army's decision t appeal. WHAT? 100 Artists and Craftspeople demonstrating and selling their work WHO? Open to everyone, no admission charge This will be the Guild's last outdoor show of the 1974 season. One hundredi artists and craftspeople from all over Michigan will be at the Farmer's Market to sell their work. Come to the fair to learn as well as to buy; many participants will be demonstrating their techniques. Come watch the I potters at their wheels; the weavers at their looms, and the artists at their easels. 4 Also: ART AUCTION Beginning at 4 p.m. the Guild will be holding an auction. Over 100 dif- ferent art objects will be auctioned off. Come join in the festivities! Artists and craftspeople interested in participating in , the f a i r should contact the Guild House, 2N Michigan Union, 668-7884, no later than Thursday, September 26 at 5 p.m. -I -- -I--. TUNERS TU50 Reg. $260 NOW $208 CENTICORE BOOKSHOPS are now taking orders for MODEL TU505 Reg. $180 NOW $144 THE FOUR-CHANNEL GAME , LES 0 o ER by CARLOS CASTANEDA TALES OF POWER will arrive at Centicore very very soon. Phone us now. Give us your name and number. We will let you know the day it arrives. THE SANSUE R50 How can you lose with the total capability built into this receiver at such a modest price? It's an AM/FM 2-Channel/4-Channel Receiver-Decoder-Synthesizer- Amplifier-Control-Center. It can adapt to any type of 4-channel technique now in existence or proposed for future use. Decode all compatibly matrixed 4-channel recordings and broadcasts. Synthesize two extra rear channels from any conventional 2-channel stereo recording, broadcast or other source. Play any discrete 4-channel source, tape or other. And total control over every function. What else could you want? 60 watts of total IHF music power with less than 1% total harmonic or IM distortion. Walnut cabinet included. $239.95. SAL EL P IC E $9 "what's going to happen to me, don Juan?" "Years ago you bid for power. You have followed the hard- ships of learning, faithfully, without fretting or rushing. You are now at the edge of the day." Few if any literary events can match in excitements and sur- prise the publication of Carlos Castaneda's new book-the account of the fulfillment of his extraordinary apprenticeship in the mysteries of sorcery. For in this astonishing, luminous and terrifying work, Carlos Castaneda at last completes the journey into the world of sorcery that began with his now- legendary meeting with don Juan. Drawn back by the knowl- edge that the sorcerer's task has not been completed. Cas- taneda returns to experience the final, awesome secrets of the sorcerer's explanation of the world, to learn, in don Juan's world and his own, the last lesson of a unique and arduous apprenticeship. For until now don Juan has performed his acts of power in his world, the dry, barren deserts and mesas of his birth, a world in which he seems to exist as naturally as the chaparral and the rocks. Now, in a sudden and unex- pected encounter, don Juan appears in Castaneda's modern and urban world, at ease in a well-tailored suit, carrying out his lessons of power in the crowded and busy streets of Cas- taneda's world- using that world, as he uses everything, to unfold the wings of Carlos Castaneda's perception. In a sense, Castaneda's three earlier books-The Teachings of Don Juan, A Separate Reality and Journey to Ixtian-each of them the story of a daring and triumphant Journey into the unknown, have merely been the long preparation for Tales of Power, in which don Juan's task of educating Castaneda, of making him a man of knowledge and a man of power, is brought to a conclusion in a series of dazzling tricks, visions and lessons and ends in an explanation that is at once an initiation and a deeply moving farewell. As surprising, mysterious and powerful as Castaneda's previous books have been, Tales of Power goes far beyond them. It is don Juan's final statement, the completion of Castaneda's marvelous and unique experience, the reader's unique oppor- tunity to open, like Castaneda, "the door to the unknown." AP Photo Sentimental journey Carol Skeenes of Florence, N.J., gets the knack of an old- fashioned style of riding at a "clinic" aimed at reviving sidesaddle. 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