MIR Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 13 1974 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY I- m Make your photo appointments now at the Diag or call 764-0561 after 7 p.m. Yearbook reservations are also being taken. . + 41t1 tip..:: S ' ''+9 :;4t ' '. EASTERN DELI and COFFEE HOUSE Hillel's Deli goes Oriental with Arab- Jewish Food: Falafil, Himmus, Oriental Jewish Music and Atmosphere. Find Out and Act on Conditions of Iraq, and Syrian Jews Sunday, October 13 6:00-8:30 P.M. H IL L E L-1429 Hill St. l I p ti tc e: p o e a C b Ia tl C RAVEL MICH. UNION 763-214 DOMESTIC FLIGHTS SPECIAL FARES SAVE 20% THANKSGIVING-Deadline Oct. 28 NEW YORK CHRISTMAS-Deadline Nov. 19 NEW YORK LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO DALLAS All Flights on Scheduled American Airlines-Non Stop Jets FOR FURTHER DETAILS-CONTACT M& TRAVEL Profs head for woods I. International Student I.D.s Now Available M DI ER f~e. C VEL MICH. UNION 763-21 e kQAIN FUITC A London at Christmas Dec. 24, 1974-Jan. 6, 1975t a On ly8371.61 Flight on Scheduled Airline Jets for further details contact S TRAVEL SIGN UP DEADLINE NOV. 20 International Student I.D.s Now Available i RAVEL MICH. UNIO I bAATIN FLI'IHT SKI UTAH SPECIAL WINTER SKI WEEK DEC. 24-31, 1974 '282.00 triple occupancy $291.00 double occupancy (INCLUDES: *round-trip air transportation from Detroit on American Airlines. " accommodations at the Temple Square Hotel in Salt ( Loke City. r round-trip transfer from airport to hotel. ( daily lift passes at 6 resort areas-Alta, Briqhton, Park City, Park West, Snowbird, and Solitude. for further details and reservations, contact: U.A.C. Travel Center International Student I.D.s Now Available (Continued from Page 1) "The program is a unique op- portunity to bring together what we often keep in separate com- artments of our lives," the rofessor continues. "To learn o sail is as honorable a thing o learn as to read (poet Rob- rt) Frost." STUDENTS will live in sim- le cabins without the luxuries! f heating and adjacent show- rs. A professional cook will ssume culinary duties, but lark expects the students , to e responsible for all other spects of survival. The professors warn that hree day rains, and mosquitoes will all be part of life in the woods. Clark asserts with Em- rsonian toughness: "We don't want bitchers and moaners who can't take a little roughing it." In the academic department, nrollment in three two-credit ourses is required for the ampers-uh, students: Major American Authors to 1870, The New England Experience in Poetry, and Creative Writing, which will focus on individual ournals. Clark explains, "Na- ture will tie in with writing. ometimes we'll ask a student o follow a chipmunk all day nd describe the experience." BALANCING out the pro- gram's intellectual cast will be, ailing, canoeing, hiking, andI mountain climbing. Clark hopesI ^ L o~w~ MAI wc,-doAkersd So IS S~I'.$t*Wf C(oj c V -Pd. Pol. Adv. MONEY BACK. GUARANTEED! Examination Tutoring Lsat, Gre, Dat, Mcat TEST CENTER 662-3700 that "it will be a very physical experience with a lot of walking and running . . . We're going to stay away from mechanical thugs like water-skiing." Clark laments students' lack of sensitivity to changing weath- er conditions: "You go to the library, and snow becomes a; thing to curse." He promises, "What we doj and study will have to be phasedI into natural cycles. When it's good for climbing, we'll climb. When it's windy, we'll teach sailing. When it's calm, we'll teach canoeing." SINCE NO real camp coun-, selors will be on hand to offer instruction, Clark emphasizes, "We'll rely on students to bring in different skills." A Thoreau-style social life may be in order since Clark says there will be no tourists a r o u n d, and Wolfeboro, the nearest town, is five miles away -and not a hotbed of activity. According to Clark, the camp director welcomes the group with few restrictions, except that "he will not countenance marijuana or drinking on camp premises."; Clark and McNamara will meet with students interested in the woodland venture on Nov. 18. 1 -- , , tyunmen surrender (Continued from Page 1) through it to safety. nh A BLACK secretary in the building, Gloria Gilmer, ear- lier had been lowered to free- dom on a fire ladder at an ad-j joining building after suffering! a bullet wound in the takeover. A spokesman at Jackson Hos- pital said she was in fair con- dition. Watergate trial opens (Continued from Page 1) president to back up Ehrlich- mnan's claim that he unsuccess- fully urged Nixon to make a full n-blic disclosure on the original Watergate break-in within a few weeks after the break-in* oc- curred. Sources familiar with Ehr- lichman's defense strategy have said his lawyers will try to show that Haldeman and Nixon kept Ehrlichman in the dark for months on the real reason why the original investigation into the break-in was being sup- pressed. Whatever their role, if any, in the cover-up, each of the defendants is planning his ap- peal to the jurors based in part or wholly on his relationship to Nixon. JACOB STEIN, the lawyer for Kenneth Parkinson, one of the two lesser known defendants, frequently makes that state- ment although he concedes that "my client never met Richard Nixon." Another important strategy element for both sides is how Nixon might tell his part of the cover-up story. Sirica is not expected until late this week to deal with the F question of whether Nixon's ill health will prevent his testi- mony - or whether the ex- president's testimony is requir- ed at all. There is a dim chance that Nixon might be questioned in California and his testimony videotaped for use in the court- room. ro secution sources have said Nixon's testimony, while re- quired for strictly legal rea- sons, may hurt their cause. I Venus di--W hat? The normally nude Venus di Milo in Martha Cook hall got dressed in school colors for the big game. The cul- prit could not be found. SPECIAL --Dinner includes: Choice of Soup, Vegetarian Cassarole, Salad, and Beverage. becoul"_ A ae ~A JALT~i Yh*CU 0UO'JSV v i s A T c p -r ~ . & T I ( C4 .NT S -Pd. Pol.Adv. BAKER'S BONUS WHOLE WHEAT FLOUR DEAF SMITH ORGANIC BREAD FLOUR-$1.25/5 LBS. WHITE FLOUR STONEGROUND, UNBLEACHED-$1.00/5 LBS. SUNFLOWER SEED FREAKS! RAW SUNFLOWER SEEDS-89c/LB. NEED A CHANGE ? Would you like to have a blind date without a third party beinq involved and you make the first and final decision? If so. maybe we con be of service to you. For more information, clip below and return to: SINGLES SERVICES, INC. P. 0. BOX 32003 -----_ DETROIT, MICH. 48232-- --- Name Address____________ City_________ State Zip AMe DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Day Calendar Tong-Soon Kwak, Mary Lou Robin- Sunday, October 13 son, Herman Taylor, organ Doctor- Music School: 14th Annual Conf. a1s, Hill Aud., 4:15 pm; Carillon re- on Organ Music. Hill. Anud. cital, Hudson Ladd, Burton Tower, TV Ctr.: The Music Shop: Rock: 7-8 pm. Tilt with a Lilt, wwJ TV, channel Inmate Project: 3,000 Years and 4, noon. Life; With Intent to Harm, Ander- ' Musical Society: Heen Baba Dance son Rm., Union, 7:30 pm. Ensemble from Sri Lanka, Rack- A-V Ctr.: Dylan Thomas Memoir; ham, 2:30 pm. E. E. Cummings: The Making of a UM-Dearborn: Heather Russell, Poet, Pendleton Arts Info. Otr., 2nd soprano, Ray Sealey, guitarist, Fair Fir., Union, 8 pm. Lane Ctr., 7:30 p n. Music School: Composers Forum, Music School: Eugen F. Gmeiner, Recital Hall, 8 pm; Faculty Organ organist, Hill Aud., 8:30 pm. Recital, Hill Aud., 8:30 pm. Monday, October 14 WUOM: Panel discussion, "Soar- THE MICHIGAN DAILY ing Food Prices & Famine: A Look at U.S. Agriculture Policy," with Volume LXXXV, No. 34 Agric. Sec., Butz & Sen. Humphrey,; Sunday, October 13, 1974 9:55 am. is edited and managed by students Values Seminar: E. Conf. Rm., at the University of Michigan. News Rackham, noon- :30 pm., phone 764-0562. Second class postage High Energy Seminar: &. Kane, paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. "Who Needs Quarks?" P&A Colloq. Published d a i l y Tuesday through Rm., 4:15 pm. Sunday morning during the Univer- Music School: Graham Purkerson, sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann --Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription w rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); vT~GTA 19RILL R. L(.C $11 local mftil (Michigan and-Ohio); AY? $12 non-local mail (other states and C1epn bl cHOULTZ Iforeign). d$HOULT lofuISummer session published Ties- XSA ,pt day through Saturday morning. SAGTTA9.a V,, t aI~TNv Subscriptionrates: $5.50 by carrier MARso e SOuSR (campus area); $6.00 local - mail MARTLN (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- -Pd. Pol. Adv. -- I The School of Joplin, Gershwin, EDEN WHOLE EARTH GROCERY and RESTAURANT 330 MAYNARD 10-7 MONDAY-SATURDAY and Broadway in a AT POPS CONCERT U. of M. Chamber Choir Ragtime Ensemble STAN FORD U U A ENGINEERING III FRIDAY, NOV. 1-8:00 p.m. STAGS VS. CLE HILL AUDITORIUM [I III SUNDAY, OCT. 13-7:30 p.m. -------------------- --- ------------- TICKET ORDER No. tickets Amount I I 1 1 General Admission: $2.00 .............-. Student Admission: $1.50 Send check and stamped, self-addressed en- velope to: U. of M. Chamber Choir, School I of Music, Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104. I ------- the professional art of opplyinq science to the optimum conversion of natural resources to the benefit of man." Stanford School of Enqineerinci's wide-ranginc craduate proarams offer qualified men and women exciting avenues to reward mci. satisfyinq, professional careers. The Stanford School of Engineering is searching for graduate students from amoni aualified maiors in engineering, mathematics, and the. sciences. A representative from the school will be on campus to discuss Stanford's ten engineering departments and interdisciplinary proarams, research opportunities, the financial assistance available, and other aspects of engineerinc at Stanford. 0 Monday, October 14 Make arrangements to meet him through " Engineerinq Placement Service Or write to 0 Stanford School of Engineering, Stanford, Calif. 94305 See Team Canada Stars I'' Gerry Cheevers 11 and IL- 1 1 Marc Tardiff =-s* at 516 E. LIBERTY YOST FIELD HOUSE BEER NIGHT TICKETS: $3 and $2 SUNDAYS-$1.50/pitcher a E II III