Page To'
S A
YPSI BIMBO'S
482-7130 OPEN NIGHTLY
Presents the Fabulous
SUNDAY FUNNIES
FRI.-SAT.-SUN.-ONLY
This band's final performance will be
New Year's Eve-BE HERE!
* *COMING DEC. 16& 17**
Salem Witchcraft!
SUNDAY NIGHT is LADIES NIGHT
MON. & TUES. is Pitcher Night-NO COVER
THE MICHIGAN DAILY'
Wednesday, December 11, 1974
TH ICIA DIYWensy eeme 1_17
Lowest U.S. Bookstore
Prices for
New (unused) Books
Also-Used & Rare
Books (unique gifts)
9 A.M.-12 MIDNIGHT
7 DAYS A WEEK
529 E. LIBERTY
663-8441
HAND MADE AUTHENTIC
SHOW
WAND
SALE
DEC. 13th, 14th, & 15th
3DAYS ONLY FRI. & SAT. 10 a.m.-9 p.m.
SUNDAY 12 noon-8 pm.
BRIARWOOD HILTON INN
1-94 at STATE ST.-ANN ARBOR, MI.
WHOLESALE BUYERS WELCOME SUNDAY
Presented by DINO
AMERICAN TRADERS ASSOCIATION
3137 WEST LAWRENCE CHICAGO
2an
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U-M Students:
THE UNIVERSITY'S ENRICHMENT PROGRAM
offers you the opportunity to take courses dur-
ing Winter Term in the Practical and Voca-
tional Arts at the Washtenaw Community Col-
lege Campus. This winter's course selection
includes Auto Services, Welding, Typing, Black
Art, Carpentry, Photography, etc. The cost is
$12.50 per credit hour with the registration
fee waivered for U-M sudents. FOR MORE
INFORMATION AND COURSE REGISTRATION
CALL WCC AT 971-6311.
CRAVEL MICH.I ININ 763-2
.: March 2nd-Oth
8 Days & 7 Nights
et AirJamaica
from Detroit
PRICE INCLUDES:
0 Round trip jet between
Detroit and Monteqjo)
Bov, Jamaica
H Hotel tips and taxes.
9 7 nicghts accommodations
at the Luxury 'Turtle
DEADLINEBeach Towers' on a
DEADLINEbeautiful white sand beach.
0Round trip transfers from
5 JANUARY L25, 1975 y our hotel and the
airport.
ONLY $292 per person
WE ARE LIMITED TO ONLY 60 SEATS
FIRST COME-FIRST SERVE
Senators
confirm
Rockefeller
(Continued from Page 1)
Senate they would vot agansti
the nomination because they felt
the former New YorK governor
lacks good judgment and is not
sensitive to the great influence
represented by his family's
wealth.
* t
Violence
divides,
God
unites.
ine*I
community
of God.
Make it
your way.
EP~ ~~D gp.£DAh*QC~
Student Counseling Office
slashes through red tape
By SUSAN ADES
Students flock to the Student Counseling
Office (SCO) for advice on how to cut the
University red tape.
The student-staffed service in 1018 Angell
Hall takes off where the general LSA coun-
seling office grinds to a halt in the academic
advice-giving grid.
As one student seeking advice about an
incomplete, explained, "The attitude at SCO
is how-can-you-buck-the-system."
SCO, crammed with information but often
neglected by students who are unaware of
its existence, soars in popularity during the
drop-add period and at the end of the term
when students are fighting to drop tough
courses.
"We have a unique perspective on the
University," says Peter Honeyman, one of
SCO's four program coordinators. "The LSA
Counseling Office doesn't have the time or
the inclination we have."
SCO boasts a large file with names of vol-
unteers in every major who can offer first-
hand information about their areas of con-
centration. Its ten to 15 staffers schedule reg-
ular office hours to accommodate walk-in stu-
dents.
SCO ALSO works to keep the Course Mart
program they sponsor alive and growing.
Next semester the Course Mart Committee
expects to sponsor 30 student-taught credit
and non-credit classes.
Administrators underscore the advantages
of SCO, and LSA counselors often refer stu-
dents to the office.
According to Chuck Judge, associate direc-
tor of the LSA academic counseling office,
"Most of us feel very good about SCO and
Course Mart."
HE DESCRIBES SCO as an "institution-
alized grapevine" whose main purpose is to
"find best how .to make exceptions to regula-
tions."
Judge characterizes SCO's advice as
"qualitative," and distinguished it from the
LSA counseling office's
However, he expresses concern over what
he called "the dwindling of SCO's pioneer
spirit."
He explains, "Since so many of their staff
have not worked in the office for a number
of years there aren't as many who are as
fullly aware as they might be of all the edu-
cational alternatives open to students."
However, Judge predicted that SCO will
again pick up speed and move into a more
enthusiastic and effective period.
With telephone services like Checkpoint
burgeoning in popularity, coordinator Herb
Trix cites another of SCO's advantages,
"Real people rather than machines answer
your phone calls."
Burmese soldiers retrieve
Thant's body from students
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now in stock
SR50
FULL SCIENTIFIC
CALCULATOR
$134.95
UNIVERSITY CELLAR
769-7940
Read and Use
Daily Classifieds
By Reuter
RANGOON, - About 1,000
troops and police armed with
tear gas raided Rangoon Uni-
versity campus early today and.
took the body of former United
Nations Secretary General U
Thant from a student - built
mausoleum to a tomb construct-
ed by his relatives in the city
center.
An estimated! 5,000 students
and Buddhist monks"were
around the campus tomb when
the police, firing tear gas shells,
moved in at about 2 a.m. local
time. But they offered no re-
sistance.
THE RAID followed a call on
Monday by Burma's director
general for higher education,
San Than Aung, for removal of
Thant's body from the campus
and for action to be taken
against the students who had
government building materials
to construct their mausoleum.
U Thant died of cancer in New
York on November 25 at the age!
of 65.
The students seized his body
Thursday shortly before it was
to be buried at a public cere-
mony and took it to the campus
where they built a mausoleum
with building material intended
for a new university building.
They buried him there Sunday.
THE STUDENTS said they
wanted a more fitting funeral
and a special tomb in his honor.
The relatives meanwhile hadI
built their own mausoleum, with
the help of the government,
near the Shwedagon Pagoda,
the country's most sacred Budd-
hist shrine.
The troops and policedetained
a large number of students and
monks and took them away in
a fleet of trucks.
NO SHOTS were believed to
have been fired.
3The monks and students had
been ordered to leave the uni-
versity, which along with all
other educational institutions in
Burma has been closed since
the body was seized, by midday
local time yesterday.
But they continued to guard
the mausoleum near the former
students union building which
was demolished during -student
riots in 1962, although their
numbers dwindled to about 5,000
as midnight approached.
U
THE
YEAR
OF TH
LE ALL-AMERICAN
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Public Accounting Career
Conference
Source Finance (national recruiting firm spe-
cializing in Financial and Accounting people)
has been retained by a number of Detroit area
Public Accounting firms (Non Big 8) to find
recent college graduates who have majored in
accounting to fill immediate requirements.
Unlike Big 8 firms, the travel requirement is
minimal and 'client contact experience will be
gained much sooner. Since client contact comes
much sooner, maturity and technical account-
ing skills must be self evident. In other words,
you must be able to operate on your own with-
in a short period of time.
To register for the Conference call Bob Luter
(formerly Personnel Manager of Coopers and
Lybrand in Detroit) or Howard Small, CPA,
collect at (313) 352-8860
If unable to call, fill out the attached coupon
and mail to: SOURCE FINANCE
26555 Evergreen Suite 205
Southfield, Michigan 48076
------------------------------1
NAME
Permanent1
(Add ress __________________
1 CITY TEL.NO -
l Graduation
Date Accntq. Hrs.
I-- ------------ ------- -------------
IlU t 4kiCu6
Christmas Trip to Bantf, Canada
January 2-8r
Join our friendly group and ski
at Canada's largest ski area.
Air fare, accommodations at Voyager
Inn, lift tickets, and ground transporta
tLion included for $300.
DEADLINE FOR RESERVATIONS DEC. 13
Further info: 665-7640
Weekend Trip to BOYNE, Jan. 17
Lift tickets, accommodations, meals-$55
Deposit $10-due Dec. 31. Final payment due Jan, 12
Further info: 663-9180
or write Mark Klein, 536 S. Forest 9J, Ann Arbor, 48104
4
Skibums. Show your colors.?
I'm Monica. I'm a skibum
I can spot another skibum a mile away
'Ihere s something about
the way they move,
the way they look...
thyand the way they dress.
. "The word is stvlc.
All kinds of style.
Sometimes just a sweater
and jeans... sometimes
top-of-the-line, name-brand
fashions.
Our skibum headquarters
in Ann Arbor is TEE & SKI.
Check out the parkas and sweaters. The gloves. Hats and goggles.
Warm-up suits. You name it. Three lines of famous-maker ski outfits,
specially designed to fit both your body and your budget.
Come on. Don't be shy.
Face it: Deep down,
you're a skibum, too.
f
WAREHOUSE PRICE SALE
SPEAKERS
SAVE 20% to 50%
on most name brands
Quantity and Product may be limited due
to fair trade regulations
TAPE DECKS
Akai 210d Auto Reverse $470 Now $399
Sa
To
So
So
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COMPON ENTS
ansui 210 Receiver $180 Now $129
oshiba SB404 Int Amp $289 Now $199
ony 7065 Receiver $550 Now $439
any 7055 Receiver $480 Now $359
ny 7045 Receiver $370 Now $296
Dynaco Pat 4 Pre Amp
Dynaco Stereo 120
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$184 Now $135
Sony 3150 50/50W Amp $250 Now $189
Sansui ORX 3000 Rec. $430 Now $299
Sony 1000 Decorders $100 Now $69
Pickering Cartridges $54 Now $24
MANY OTHER UNADVERTISED ITEMS
Show it! Come out of the closet!
Find your style at TEE &
I ~.L&
YV
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perscope 302A Cassette $190 Now $169
perscope td28 8 track $80 Now $49 TURNTABLES
chnics 858 us deck $300 Now $219 86 SB Semi Auto Table $170 Now $149
Sony PS 1100 Complete $130 Now $90
I HULLE
#t
W m fl
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