Poge Six.- THE Mlt CHIGAN DAILY _- 4l ....r% L!01L aJullluuyi 1,4%JY.v-{1ILJC1 r ; Page Six THE MI ~~I fl.4=J, I ~Y~SI~P.f~* I I I -MEDIATRICS presents Warren Beatty Faye Dunaway BONIEand CYD SAT. SUN. Nov. 16 Nov. 17 7:30-9:30 Nat. Sci. Aud. $1 presents Winnie the Pooh IN THE MUSICAL "100 AKER WOOD" TUESDAY, NOV. 19-7:30 WEDNESDAY, NOV. 20-7:30a THURSDAY, NOV. 21-2:00 FRIDAY, NOV. 22-7:30 SATURDAY, NOV. 23-2:00 & 7:30 SUNDAY, NOV. 24--11:00 & 7:30 Schorling Auditorium School of Ed. U-M Ticksets available now at Mich. Union Ticket Desk 9-5 $1.00 children $1.50 adults Information 763.1107 or 668-6724 I LOOKING BACK THE WEEK IN REVIEW Black enrollment dips IT APPEARED last week that the University had caught itself between old promises and new realities. As the Regents learned Thursday, black en- rollment has dipped from a high of 7.3 per cent one year ago to an even seven per cent- despite the University's 1970 vow to seek a 10 per cent black enrollment level by fall 1973. The 1970 promise grew out of the Black Action Movement's lengthy, effective strike against the University. George Good- man, who directi the Opportun- ity Program and leads the search for new minority ap- plicants, told the Regents he still thinks the 10 per cent plateau can be reached. But that becomes more difficult to believe after a drop in black enrollment since the promised 1973 deadline. Unlike last year, when the announcement of the 7.3 per DECEMBER GRADUATE? If you are graduating in December you must order your CAP & GOWN no later than NOV. 19 at, UNIVERSITY CELLAR 769-7940 cent figure was accompanied only by standard short explana- tions and vows of better ef- forts in the future, last week's V figures brought a round of grim reflection from administrators. Frank Rhodes, vice president for academic affairs, admitted he was "very disappointed" with the drop in black enroll- ment, and candidly allowed that BAM's demands were being met "much more slowly than any- one expected." A crucial revela- tion came from Associate Ad- missions Director Lance Erick- son, who said the University "hasn't established a specific deadline" for hitting the ten per cent level. "I AM NOT encouraged by our overall picture," said Good- man, acknowledging that the income cut-off line for minority aid recipients tends to exclude families who have barely es- caned the poverty bracket. He said it is time for that cut-off svstem to be re-evaluated. He blamed the fall in black admissions on inflation, saying black families at the middle income level-who cannot qual- ifv for aid-are discouraged from sending children here due to high tuition levels. He spoke with pride, -however, of the program's improving retention rate of 86 ner cent. In the past, the commitment to BAM's goals has been complicated by the delayed problems of keeping black students here once they enrolled. Today, a lot of administrators mist be glad that last week's news arrived in the placid, apathetic fall of 1974 rather than . the militant, volatile springs of a few years ago. The BAM strike literally crip-I y?(<:::>+ ;_X <::Q(o::;; V ~. y BOOK SALE 0 See Saturday's Papers For Details of CENTICORE'S Huge One Day SALE TODAY, Only! SUNDAY, Nov. 17 (enlicore Bookshop 36 MAYNARDo IS THE NEW BUILDING A BOONDOGGLE? The new Arts and Architecture Building, shown above, cost the' University a wee $8.5 million and was billed as a cheap, innovative and unusually functional structure. But don't ask the architecture experts! As The Daily reported this week, professors and students alike are c omplaining that the building is an uncomfortable, impractical energy waster. Architecture Dean Robert Metcalf (right) insists, "The building functions fairly well in terms of what it was designed to do," but urban planning Prof. Allen Feldt gripes, "I t's hard to belieye that an architecture college got a building like this." EXHIBITION and SALE of . A Oriental Art An outstanding selection of antique oriental * i woodblock prints plus original etchings, wood- D cuts, lithographs by contemporary oriental print-- Smakers. r Union alery 1st floor Michigan Union 4 November 18 & 19-10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Arranged by Marson Ltd., Baltimore, Maryland 21208 (Purchases May Be Charged) pled the campus for several weeks as thousands of students boycotted classes, picketed buildings and disrupted meet- ings in support of the enroll- ment demands. Times and, people have changed; if the latest enrollment information sparks a new campus uprising,! it will come as a surprise. j The capacity of black stu- dents and their white supporters to pressure the University on the demands is probably mini- mal. As blacks scheduled a meeting today at Trotter House to discuss the latest enrollment announcement, former BAM organizer Henry Bernard Clay wistfully predicted that the news would reach the deaf ears of students "interested only in their own survival. Pressure tactics THURSDAY'S Regents meet- ing had another moment of truth for the University as Gerald Dunn (D-Lansing) charg- ed that some officials "clearly violated our position of neu- trality" during .the recent suc- cessful campaign to organize campus clerical workers into a union. Dunn, considered the most liberal Regent, blasted the Personnel Office for passing out subtly anti-union literature to the University staff. "If we were neutral," said' Dunn, "we certainly went over- board in pointing out the defects of the union." As The Daily reported last month, the Per- sonnel Office, in leaflets and briefings, stressed that either of the two unions seeking to organize the clericals have high membership dues and supposed- ly little influence with the Uni- versity. Chief Financial Officer Wil- bur Pierpont claimed the bias charge was only Dunn's opinion, but as RegentkLawrence Linde- mer (R-Stockbridge) pointed out, it really doesn't matter now. "If Pierpont wanted to be biased," said Lindemer, he didn't succeed, since the cals voted to unionize." * * * Opening the files The Regents kept hogging the local spotlight Friday as they voted to put a freeze on all student records until newly en- acted federal law takes full effect, requiring student access to confidential material. The freeze warns administrators against purging the files. The resolution sprung from the alarming news earlier this week that Harvard and several other schools are purging files rather than allowing access. The new law takes effect Tues- day, but the University decided to use the allotted 45-day re- sponse period and hold all files until January-leaving Congress time to consider amendments to the new law. cleri- College (LSA) Counseling Dean Charles Morris admitted Friday he had "heard that several de- partments in LSA had destroyed files earlier this term"--chiefly graduate students' recommenda- tion letters. But Morris, said the purging must have stopped after a di- rective asking preservation of all student records was cir- culated earlier this fall. He did not know the extent of file de- struction. -DAN BIDDLE --0 WHILE THE cially has vard's purging University offi- rejected Har- tactic, Literary First Prasb tcrian Church 1432 ashtenaw (bctwcn 1Kill So. Universitp SAMPSON by G. F. HANDEL PRESENTED BY First Presbyterian Church Choirs DONALD BRYANT, Director with orchestra and soloists SUNDAY AFTERNOON, NOV. 17,14 P.M., hWrc Christ, campus, and comuniMt. violence divides. God u nites. The community of God. Make it your way. RIAL tEUGIOINAMERICAWLU 1 a1 AAEC~r~adlk fplpiiilMAsv Osr4 001ue ) I r The Department of Near Eastern Studies announces a 1-CREDIT MINI-COURSE Division 495 Course 413 Archaelogical History of the Middle Euphrates Valley & Its Cultural Relationships OTHER FACULTY AND VISITORS INVOLVED: t-zmtvu-MI.is a name you can trust for quality. Tiey give you all the best warranties, including the industry's exclusive 5-year picture tube wananty (see warranty insept)-with authorized MASTERCARE service centers and factory-approved parts available all across the U.S.A. Sets with features like these sell for as much as $150 in stores. Now, get a supervalue by buying direct from RESPONSE INDUSTRIES, INC. ONLY $99.95 FOR THE ADMIRAL PACESETTER 12" (meas. diag.) 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