pogo Two:, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November 8, 1974 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November 8, 1974 U MARION BRANDO, EVA MARIE SAINT in ON THE WATERFRONT (1954) directed by ELIA KAZAN Winner of 8 Academy Awards, includinq Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Director, Best Supportinq Actress FRIDAY, NOV. 8 at7 & 9 p.m. Room 100, Hutchins Hall Law School LAW FREE. NON-LAW $1.00 THE LAW SCHOOL FILM SERIES Lawyers group cheers Attica defendant, Suporter at show By ANDREA LILLY "Attica means . . ." shoutedI Rev. "Mama" Stroble - Smith and the crowd roared back "fight back!" "Attica is . . ." she shouted again, and the crowd again re- sponded loudly, "all of us!" Rev. Stroble-Smith, mother of Attica defendant Shango Stroble- Smith, and Attica defendant John Hill spoke yesterday at the law school to about 200 peqple. In 1971, prisoners rioted at Attica, a New York state maxi- mum security prison. During that disorder several guards and 39 inmates were killed. Jn his speech, Hill tried to explain what happened during the disurbance and why. "The brothers at Attica are fighting to be able to call them- -DECEMBER selves human beings," said Hill. "I was there," he continued, "and I felt the hot fiery steel." Hill described "the day of the seige" - Sept. 13, 1971- when state troopers retook the prison. He fell from a 20 foot catwalk into the mud below. After the fall he recalls, "I saw ,a state trooper standing over me with a gun saying, 'crawl nigger' (Hill is an American Indian) and I said, 'I've been crawling too long' and he shot me in the head." Hill verbally painted what he saw around him in D-yard of Attica prison when he finally gained consciousness. "You see Attica every day," said Hill. "I was a victim be- fore I even went to Attica, you all are. You are being chan- neled into the American dream and it just don't exist any more, the American dream is a night- mare.' Hill has been charged with the first degree murder of a prison guard during the, Attica uprising. He is accused of hav- ing thrown the man through a window at the prison-where all windows are barred. All of this happened to Hill when he was 19. By law, he should not have been at a maxi- mum security prison unless he was 21.{ He is now out of jail, after, finishing his term for a pre- vious crime, on $7500 bail., When Rev. "Mama" Stroble- Smith got up to speak, the crowd readily responded to her chants. "A t t i c a mean fight back!" she shouted over and over and each time the crowd answered louder than before. "They say that change takes time," she said. "I say that it doesn't take time for change. "We are going to fight for every stroke. Wherever the, struggle we are going to be t h e r e!" Stroble - Smith con-j tinued. In concluding she said, "We are not trying to overthrow the' government, we are just trying to overhaul it." The program was sponsored' by the local chapter of the Na- tional Lawyers Guild to raise money for the Attica defense! fund. Briekley appoted ofEMIT (Continued from Page 1) al-mnai-staff review committee, before final regental approval. LANEY said that the review board, "was in° essence a kind of window dressing committee, with no power whatsoever, no nower to screen candidates, no nower to rank them, no input as to recommending persons to in- vite for interviews." The Facul- ty Senate voted earlier this fall not to send representatives to the review body, he said. The four final candidates for the 550,000 a year position were Bricklev; Dr. Harold Abel, pres- ident of the Castleton, Vermont State College; State Board of Edlcation director John Porter; and Dr. Clifford Clark, an ad- ministrator at the State Uni- versity of New York at Bing- hamton. Clark and Porter with- drew their names before visit- ing the campus for interviews. There was some controversy over the lievitnant governor's background. Brickley's experi- ence in higher education has been as a part-time political science and law instructor at the University of Detroit, Wayne State University, The University of Michigan Dearborn campus, and the Cooley Law School in Lansing. PROF. Fred Anderson, presi- dent of the EMU chapter of the American Association of Univer- sity Professors (AAUP), said "department heads did not think very favorably of him. He did not have the qualifications that Dr. Abel had." Reports have been circulating that Abel was discouraged by regents, eager to appoint Brick- lev. Abel could not be reached for comment last night. EMU regents are appointed by the tn prnn,.tori rht vps. [4 t: COMIMIT YOURSELF TMiE PRIESTHOOD? GRADUATE? If you are graduating in December you must o r d e r your CAP & GOWN no later than NOV. 19 at UNIVERSITY CELLAR 769-7940 n. Why be a priest? Certainly, in times as difficult as these we live in, being a priest is a lot harder today than it was in years past. And committing oneself to anything for any amount of time seems to be one of the conflicts of our modern age. But the priesthood is a challenge. A big one. Today, more than ever before in history, men and women. young and old, are searching for religious meaning, for withdrawal from isolation and alienation to joyful community experiences, for Good News in the midst of discouragement and hope in the place of pessimism. The Paulists are trying to minister to these needs. As a contemporary religious community serving the American people, our mission is to communicate the love of Christ to people. Every Paulist is a missionary: in the pulpit or the parish house. . . on campus or in the inner-city .-- with the spoken or the printed word . ,.he is communicating to people. His mission is to all of America. His message is love: the love of Christ for all people. It isn't easy but the Paulist welcomes commitment. Welcomes the challenge. If you are interested in the Paulist and other noteworthy coMpon- way of life, send for the Paulist Papers. ents are ON SALE this week at Write to: Father Don C. Campbell, Room 101 East Lansing, Ann Arbor, Dearborn Detroit, East Detroit, Royal Oak 415 WEST 59TH ST NEW YORK.NY.10019 5Le During the presentation the documentary motion picture "Attica" was shown. It is a dramatic portrayal of what hap-' pened at the prison - as told' from the inmates' point of view. a= '-' T with the support of ART WORLDS and j METCCthe MICHIGAN COUNCIL for the ARTS PRESENTS I 1[fT1Ii A 'TV'fI 1E -S -__ - ! , a i r 1 AP Photo No mandate AFL-CIO president George Meany walks with the aid of two metal canes as he arrives for a press conference in Wash- ington. He said he did not think Tuesday's election was a mandate for the Democratic party, "it was a vote against the party which happened to- be represented at the White House." Meany has bursitis in his hip. I I ey the errms o e g year, II ISG C renewable terms. Four of the present members were appoint- AND 4 e ed by Milliken. AS president, Brickley is ex- pected to face serious campus D J N C E ( problems. The university has re- cently suffered from reduced every Friday & Saturday evening at 9:00 en neendd building pro- AfContinued from Page ) grams and feelings of state this b 't instead stated at one budgetary neglect also helped to +,point that if The Daily ran theen'Soerspeidcy ART W ORLDS storhe'would have to cancel At a press conference yester- S2 1112 S. Main---Ann Arbor'the election- day, Brickley refused to say 2j. ,y orlHe later refused comment of whether his expertise in state Tel. 668-6244 or 668-6222 the subject before the phone government would be used to callEin question was made. garner a larger share of the Admission $1.50 .iIN OTHER action SGC ques- state's higher education budget tioned at length Legal Advocate for EMU. T and other noteworthy compon- Tom Bentley concerning the ac- But the president-elect did Tonite and Tomorrow ents are ON SALE this week at tion he has taken on several acknowledge that while he heads the imaginary menagery in )Imatters the council is pursuing the 20,000 student campus, Qui altyhif 1 in court. "EMU will always be well rep- REYNARDQTHE FOX J uestioning centered around resented when decisions are Q yCoiponent tth Rlht rne the fact that the police have made as to what institutions will Next Week East Lansing, Ann Arbor, Dearborn taken no action on an SGC mo- receive what." Detroit, East Detroit, Royal Oak tion to press criminal charges Brickley said that he would h C C P A U Rochester, Southgate, Livonia against Former Presidents Lee work to try to define EMU's - ----- - - Gill and Bill Jacobs and Former role and to "find a mission for Treasurer David Schaper. this institution." He will also ' r? w Bentley stated that the police have to deal with the problem = Iwere waiting until SGC was of angry labor unions. j" I sure of the action it wanted The AAUP is now engaged in taken on the criminal suits. collective bargaining with the There is currently a motion university on terms of a new pending before SGC on whether contract. Negotiations are con- to drop the criminal charges. tmnuing. ' THIS TWO-VOLUME WORK is the only of a woman pulling back her hair. The $ complete edition in book form of Picas- ecstatic sensuality of sight and touch- p° so's famous "347 Gravures" available this is what Picasso celebrates in ,these ? anywhere. The artist has specified that engravings. Leafing through them is like no other book edition may ever be pub- listening to the MASS in B MINOR or lished. Since only a limited number of THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO: one cannot copies of this edition was produced, it is finish without feeling that there is now, likely that the set will ultimately become as always, hope for man and joy in his 218 N. DIVISION 665-0606 a much sought-after collector's item. condition. THE PARABLES "Picassos most trenchant exploration of THE TWO-VOLUME BOXED SET, weigh- asexuali Asnever befre, the a day-lna workshop on some of the beau- sterndseemsabt o nerbef thidllcenimatic saings of Jesus i ' ing 22%2 pounds, is extraordinarily beau- master seems bent on describina that idyllic SATURDAY, NOV. 9-10 A.M.-4 P.M. c}0 tiful. The volumes are bound in a lustrous state wherein the spirit and flesh are LUNCH PROVIDED-please call to recister te9s black fabric, with Picasso's signature stamped in gold foil on covers and "A staggerin performance . . they burn spines, and they are enclosed within a Yndk Tes N"-John Canadavp The NewEl elegant, felt-lined presentation box ofYNew from AlphaElectronics natural and black woven linen. A felt- "Mesmerizing . . . If I had a choice amonq lined divider separates the two volumes. al the works Picasso has produced, I would take this one without hesitation."-Armand St. Clair, Revue de Pariss PICASSO 347 is astonishingly faithful to the original impressions and is the most "My most souht-after-and p o s s ib I v satisfactory art book ever made by tech- scandalous-work . . . An abidin celebra- niques of mass production . . . I believe tion of life itself."-Pablo Picasso this series is one of the great works of _ art of our century. It is something worth Now at Cer ticore living with . . . The scenes are not par- Published at 150.00 nographic; they are erotic. That is, Picas- Guaranteed! Buy directly 5oepese exaiywihdgnt n from manufacturer and save ' j.'Hso expresses sexuality with dignity and CENTICORE'S PRICE . on this excellent solid state joy. He exults in sexuality, finding it in burglar/fire alarm system. the demonic energy with which an artist $ l9l}jDesigned specifically for } paints a woman, and in the liquid line *c>,apartment installation, tis system requires no outside t key and can be installed THUS BOOK IS A LIMITED EDITION - VERY FEW COPIES AVAILABLE simply, with no cutting or TLVIdrilling. This is possible because of a unique electron- ic delay on the exit/entry 8a... f mechanism which enables the systems to be turned off 4+ and on from inside yourapart- ment. Compare these features Emergency panic switch .'witl alarm sstems costing poecsai stnhdo hundreds of dollars more: o sagainstfrontdoor - Three magneticwindow Solid-state circuitry to s.m*rswitches signal forced entry handle any othercommon Thermo-sensitive fire sensor units on the market: detector. smoke, vibration,optic ryI ! 'eeconicd'ay intrusion detector, etc. LEE INNSUIJEc 1 As advertised in Playboy, this great outfit by phenomenally popular. Lee Innsbrucks have distinctive styling of a sure winner. In a rugged, with colors to match. Lee has been the look and brushed denim The Lee Jacket $20.00 Mcatchina Flare $16.00 I I