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March 12, 1975 - Image 2

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1975-03-12

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Page Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wednesday, March 121 19 7

THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, March 12, 19 1~

COLLEGE GRADUATES!
Move ahead in a challenging new
career in the field of law,
Be a
LAWYER'S ASSISTANT
When you complete this intensive 12-week course for
college graduates offered in cooperation with the National
Center for Legal Training at ..
ROOSEVELT
..University in downtown Chicago, you are qualfied to
assume paralegal responsibilities as a skilled member of
the leal team.
SPECIALIZE in Corporations, Estates, Trusts and Wills,
Litigation, Real Estate and Mortgages.
SPRING SESSION: March 3-May 30, 1975
SUMMER SESSION: June 9-August 29. 1975
FALL SESSION: September 22-December 22, 1975
Recruiter on Campus Mar. 13
.rrmr mm m............. mm.. m . ......mm.. . .. -
Lawyer's Assistant Proaram I
* College of Continuing EducationE
- ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY itnk
430 South Michian Avenue t
Chicaqo, Illinois 60605, Phone: (312) 341-3882r
r
Please se n d me information on Roosevelt's Lawyer's r
E Assistant Program. I am interest in (check one) _.Spring
-Summer __Fall session. I
E Name
Address _
mCity State Zip t
if you are a dreamer, come in,
If you are a dreamer,
A wisher, a liar,
A hope-er, a pray-er,
A magic bean buyer...
Come in ..for where the sidewalk ends,
Shel Silverstein's world begins. You'll meet
a boy who turns into a TV set, a girl who
eats a whale. The Unicorn and
the Bloath live there, andp
so does Sarah Cynthia
Sylvia Stout who will not -
take the garbage out.
Shel Silverstein's masterful
collection of poems and
drawings is "tender, funny,
sentimental, philosophical,
and ridiculous in turn,
and for all ages, including
mine."-William Cole,
Saturday Review/World
$7.95
i ,
the poems and drawings of
Shel Silverstein
author of The Giving Tree
3 G, New Yw/k 1622
1817

Johnson, East Wind GAY BROTHEL:
Cnnfer nOS«hbi Victorian sex scandal

I

of Asian advocate.

suppressed

by Queen
ad the po- rant was issued.

By ELLEN BRESLOW
East Wind, an Asian-American
student group, met with Vice!
President for Student Services
Henry Jo hn s on over spring
break to discuss the possibility
of establishing an advocate for
its constituency.
This negotiating session was
part of a series of meetings ar-
ranged by President Robben
Fleming as a direct result of
last month's sit-in in the Ad-
ministration Bldg.
THE FOUR-MEMBER nego-1
tiating team from East Wind
entered the sessions determined
to obtain a "commitment from
Johnson to get specific person-!
nel in student services to deal
with the problems of Asian-
Americans as a m i n o r i t y
group."
Hmvever, the two days of ses-
sions did not result in the ap-
'injitment of an advocate. Ac-
cording to Johnson, because of
the crrent hiring freeze and
the establishment of a study on
al minority advocates, it is
"too nremature to make a com-
mitment."

seems to feel that "they (the
administration) are not con-
cerned of the worth of minority
advocacy."
T H E MEETINGS between

LONDON (/P) -- Queen Vic- public prosecu
toria's family and government lice commissi
leaders of the day hushed up prosecute Lord
Buckingham Palace's reported is referred toh
connection to a sex scandal, as "Mr. Brown
that shocked Britain 75 years ent laws forb

tor an

East Wind and Johnson resulted ago, according to official docu-
in the'settlement of four points: ments opened this week for the
* Johnson will study the in- first time.
dividual problems presented by The scandal centered on a
East Wind;m male homosexual brothel in:
n The number of Asian-Amer- ondon's Cleveland Street al-:
ill be inean wndepartmen iflegedly frequented by Lord Ar-
eis binceasetd wheit"thur Somerset, equerry to the
he is able to do it"; Prince of Wales, and other
* A Student Services Com- prominent men.
mission will study the role of
advocates and the need for one: DETAILS of the affair came
to represent Asian-Americans; to light when the director of
and public prosecutions opened rele-
* Johnson will imoress upon vant documents to public in-
the rest of the administration spection. Until recently, the de-
that Asian-Americans should be! partment kept the wraps on of-
considered a minority group , ficial documents for 100 years.
-lon¢ with blacks, Chicanos and The papers confirm rumors
Native Americans. 'rife at the time that such lead-
Despite the agreement on i ers as the Prince of Wales and;
these four points, East Wind the prime minister, Lord Salis-
negotiator Jeff Lee said the ses- bur
sions merely "postponed the from prevented authorities
Asin -Ameica is sii one fomprosecuting Lord Somer-
Asian -American issue once set. The Prince of Wales, the!
" v stmis t eldest son of Queen Victoria,
."Obviously the administration became King Edward VII-.
is only going to do what they!arVeL
want to and we can just keep The documents also revealed
on yelling louder and louder," that officials at the time wrote
he added. that Lord Somerset's attorney
---boasted that if the peer was
taken to court "a very dis-
tinguished person will be in-
n -~ns' !volved-PAV."

"gross indece
male homosexu
However, the
retary, Lord
Lord Salisbury
ers were again
cause of Lord
tion in society
cause they fea
nent Britons
plicated.
THE THEN
tor of public
Cuffee, wrote
of Wales was"
and sent hig
saries to the
partment and
missioner's o
Somerset's be
The prince
"didn't believ
and wished to
to clear Lord S
must have som
Soon after,S
country - befo

oner wanted to
I Somerset, who THE PAPERS also include
in the documents evidence that distinguished cli-
n," under string- ents of the brothel tried to
idding acts of bribe the male prostitutes of
ency" between Cleveland Street to go abroad
ials. before they could be called as
e then home sec- witnesses.
Halsbury, plus The Times of London describ-
ed the documents in yester-
st this partly be- dayspaper as "an illuminating
Somerset's posi- example of the Victorian high
and partly be- establishment closing ranks and
fred other proms- pulling strings to protect its
would be im- errant members."
w The London Evening Standard
quoted H. Montgomery Hyde,
assistant direc- author of a 1970 book on the
prosecutions, H. scandal, as saying that Lord
that the PrincesH Arthur Somerset left England
thageat tat nefor Boulogne, France, "and
h-powgredtis-tesubsequently to Constantinople,
h-powered emis- where I believe he offered his
prosecutor's de-! services to the sultan."
the police corn-! Hyde said the Prince of
ffice on Lord iWales wrote to Lord Salisbury
half. expressing satisfaction that
, Cuffee said, Lord Somerset had been allow-
e a word of it ed to leave but suggesting that
concern himself if he ever dared return he
Somerset ... and should be permitted only a brief
nething settled." visit to his parents. It is not
Somerset left the known whether he ever re-
re an arrest war- turned.

Madeline Cheng, an active
member of the student group

e
P

-If,

HAVING TROUBLE CHOOSING A
MAJOR OR OCCUPATION?
A special vocational clinic will be start-
ing soon at the Univeristy of Michigan
Counseling Center.
Pre-reistr7tion necessary. For information and
registration roll 764-9466, or stop in at the

tsi

U geology course
i n Wyoming plagued
by weak enrollment

THAT REFERRED to Prince
Albert Victor, the black sheep
among Queen Victoria's chil-
dren. The prince's name had
earlier been mentioned in the
"Jack the Ripper" murders
that terrorized London.
The documents do not men-
tion Prnice Albert further. They
show the attorney general; the

Counseling Center-1007

E. Huron

COTROL OF
TENSION-ANXIETY
through Behavioral Psychology
WORKSHOP:
Sunday, March 16-1-5 p.m.
Campus Inn
(Other identical low-fee workshops to come)
BASIC TRAINING IN:
Proairessive relaxation and
Deep muscle relaxation techniques
DEMONSTRATION OF:
Biofeedback conditionina
(Use of an electric monitor)
Coqnitive modelinq and assertion trainina strateqies
COMPARISON WITH:
Techniques from transactional analysis
and Rational Emotive Theroov
To register, call Terry Boothman-662-4026
BEHAVIOR SCIENCE SERVICES
743 Packard, Ann Arbor
4'

Undergraduate Political Science
Assoc. General Meeting
"POLITICAL SCIENCE
AND

E
I
h
t

By TOM PRESTONt
With a week to go before the I
application deadline, a Univer-
sity geology course based in
Wyoming has received only half
the enrollment expected and the1
department's staff is both be- i
wildered and dismayed. 1
"We're very concerned at this ;
point, although anything could
happen in the next week," re-
marked Prof. Charles Smith,
chairman of the geology depart-
ment.
DESPITE the low, enrollment,
it is not expected that the eight-t
credit course will be cancelled.
In the past, the program,
which includes two months of
intensive study in Jacksoni
Hole, Wyoming, has been filled
to capacity.
Smith conjectures that this
year's low enrollment may be

due to the economy and the
high cost of the course.
"If a week goes by and we
don't receive about 20 more ap-
plicants, we can only guess
that people just don't have the
money to participate, probably
because of the economy," he
said.
AVERAGE cost for the eight
weeks of field study, including
tuition and transportation is
about $600. Because of the
course's popularity in the past,
the department doubled the
maximum enrollment from 30
to 60 last year.
Although 54 students
went out to Wyoming last sum-
mer, only 30 have signed up so
far this year. If the number of
requests for the coourse con-
tinues to drop in the future,
the maximum enrollment may
be changed back to 30.

CAREER PLANNING"
THURSDAY, MARCH 13
7:30 P.M.
407 MASON HALL
College Juniors
Give Yourself a Head Start!
Adelphi can help you be
a Lawyer's Assistant
Here's your invitation to a rewarding career opportunity:
The, new world of the legal assistant. You can be a skilled
member of a top legal team with the potential for an
outstanding and active career, and you can help more
people to avail themselves of legal service.
You can start this unique program this summer!
PART I: 8 week summer session between the. iunior and
senior year-June 16-August 12, 1975. Intro-
duction to Law & General Practice.

THE MEDIEVAL &

RENAISSANCE COLLEGIUM
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW AVAILABLE.FOR
1. Residence in the MARC House, located in
the N Entryway of the Law Quad.
2. The Post of G r a d u a t e Resident in the
MARC House.
The Graduate Resident's Room & Board are
paid by the Collegium.
APPLICATIONS MAY BE PICKED UP
AT N-12, THE LAW QUAD
For more information, call 763-2066 from 12-4 p.m.

PART 11: 4 week summer session after graduation-June
14-July 16, 1976. Specialized training in Cor-
porations; Estates, Trusts & Wills; Litigation; or
Real Estate and Mortgages.
FOR MORE INFORMATION contact your University Place-
ment Office or Adelphi University, Dept. LA 3-4, The
Lawyer's Assistant Program, Garden City, New York
11530; (516) 294-8700, ext. 7604, 7605.

i

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