Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY t uesdoy, December 1 U, 19 tlf l~og TwlveTHE ICHGANDAIY I esdy, ecemer 0, V t i'i i'-'4i. .r . ., _ .. . :' ^:'hr ij:;}iii:{;:.;:;: THOUSANDS ON FILE 24 HOUR RUSH DELIVERY " ORIGINAL CUSTOM RESEARCH PREPARED " " PROFESSIONAL THESIS ASSISTANCE if Sind On* Dollar for Your Descriptive Mail-Order Catalogue, OR Call: MINUTE RESEARCH CO. 1360 N. SANDBURG, #11602 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60610 312-337-2704 Hours: MF 11 to 5 * Sat. 11 to 3 All.u9,I, Sold or .Ra. rch P., I Only Angela Davis plans to return to the classroom HQ \NL kI) Just anote about our Holiday Hifi Sale._ 2455 S. STATE ROAD... BETWEEN THE CAMPUS AND BRIARWOOD. 9, Who will fill these positions? HAVE YOU CONSIDERED A CAREER IN ... OFFICE OCCUPATION HELP WANTED MARKETING Office Manager or MANAGEMENT? Marketing Aide Davis ----, I i I I Wanted: TEMPORARY PARENTS HOMES FOR TEENAGERS ANY ADULT (S) CONSIDERED 1 day to 2 weeks CALL Ozone House 769-6540 LOS ANGELES (Reuter) - Black activist Angela Davis, a member of the Communist Party's Central Committee, is planning to return to philosophy teaching early next year, the career that first launched her into nationwide controversy. Acquitted by an all-white jury in 1972 of plotting a bloody courtroom shootout in a court- house near San Francisco two years before, she has devoted her time since to public speak- ing on behalf of other prisoners,' the Communist Party and an anti-racist organization. THE SPEAKING tours have meant constant travelling both here and abroad for the tall, slim woman who now lives in a working class, largely black suburb in Oakland on the east side of San Francisco Bay. At many of her United States rallies she had to speak behind a bullet proof glass enclosure because of scores of threats dailyuagainst her life. "But I would like to get back to teaching," she said in an interview. "After all, that was what I was trained to do." A PUPIL of the philosopher of the new left, Dr. Herbert Mar- cuse, a European who teaches in San Diego, Davis graduated with honors from Brandeis Uni- versity in Massachusetts, and later studied the philosophy of Immanuel Kant in Frankfurt, Germany. In 1968 she accepted a position in the philosophy of UCLA. The storm broke around her a year later when the Univer- sity's Board of Regents, prodded by California's conservative Governor Ronald Reagan, fired her from the post for her Com- munist Party membership. DAVIS, NOW 30, knows that more controversy may lie ahead of her tas she looks. around for a teaching post. Af- ter she had what she calls en- tirely informal talks with San Francisco State University about teaching there, newspaper stories appeared that she had formally applied for a job and had been turned down. "The whole story was a com- plete surprise to me. I just had informal discussions with the university. I didn't make any application. I have no idea how it leaked out." "What I am really interested in doing now is something on the theory of the oppression of women," shetsays. "There's been a lot of talk about it, but not much theoretical research. "IN JAIL I wrote a long piece on the utilization of Marxism to develop a theory on the oppres- sion of women. I haven't had time to go over it. "It was presented before a group of philosophers while I was in jail. Now I would like to go over it and refine it and publish it in order to hold a seminar and teach on it." Davis says she never sought to become a public figure and she finds her life as a political activist "at times very frus- trating and emotionally drain- ing." SHE SAYS she felt .obliged to fight for other prisoners after her own release because people around the world had done so much for her when she was in prison. "I do not believe I would be free today if it had not been for the world-wide free Angela Davis movement," she says. "Despite my own disinclina- tion to speak before masses of people and press conferences and all that, I feel I have a responsibility for those who struggle for me, to use the position I have now to get the message across, to help other human beings." SHE SAYS she feels that the strong controversy that sur- rounded her as a Communist is now abating, partly as a result of the detente between the U.S. and the Communist powers on the international scene. "I think we have got over a large part of the cold war hys- teria, mainly because of the detente," she says. - - Become ,musically Secretary1 DO YOU HAVE TIME ON YOUR HANDS? Washtenaw Community College Business and Industrial Management Division WINTER COURSE OFFERING INCLUDES: 122 East Washington Street Ann Arbor Accounting Business Law Data Processing Shorthand Business Machines Human Relations I I Business Communciations Typewriting Office Systems & Proceures Office Management Principles of Management Principles of Marketing FOR COURSE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL 971-6300, EXT. 461 For REGISTRATION call 971-6300, Ext. 402 Courses begin January 7, 1975 REGISTER NOW ... TODAY GET THE MOST OUT OF THE HOLIDAYS STranscendental Meditation y 9 Introductor Lecture Tonight 8p.m. KUENZAL ROOM, MICH. UNION Further Infor. 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Save now at our 7th Annual Holiday Hifi Sale. 122'h t Es asntft% ont Sli tre 122 East Washington street Ann Arbor I WS Co PLAI OR .:. missing out on some of the DAILIES because of delivery Cmistakes? R~r) 0 . . disagree with a bill we sent you for THE DAILY? WE'D LIKE TO TRY TO STRAIGHT- EN OUT THAT PROBLEM, BUT WE CAN'T IF YOU DON'T LET US KNOW ABOUT IT. II El I. 1!