Page Twin THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 23, 19 t Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 2..~, lvii THE PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Play of the Month Series USHER APPLICATION NAME ADDRESS :....:".,,^. ^r::..;:.;;...................... oncentrator," Seminar Rm., Comp. Daily Official Bulletin E 7:30eapmcare ;;:- rce" GENE R NOTICESW o -m en s Sunday, September 23 DAY CALtNDAR TV Center: "Dickens World: The Phi- losophy of Love," WWJ-TV, Channel 4, noon. Music School: Faculty Chamber Con- cert. Rackham Aud., 4 pm. Make-up final examinations for Ger- will be given Tues., Sept. 25, 7:30-9:30 ma 0, 0,11,12,21 22 nd26 e rie s p.m., in the following rooms: 101 in 3217 MLB, 102 in 3301 MLB, 231 reg. in 3319 MLB; all others in 3310 MLB. Students must obtain written per- (Continued fr( mission from previous German instruc- tor, or coursesuprisokrandthensignleves"she explain held by WCC om Page 1) ned. ng, attended TELEPHONE AJ. of M. I.D. No. Monday, September 24 up in the German Dept. office by 5 Engineering Dept.: Slide lecture on p.m., Mon., Sept. 24. improving efficiency in the library, U. S. Gov't Scholarships for '74-75un- Transportation Lib., 3rd fl., UGLI, 10 der Fulbright -Hays Act: Applications am., 7:30 pm. due in Grad. Fellowship Ofc., 1014 Macromolecular Research Center: R. Rackham Bldg., Mon., Oct. 8. Call 764- Stein, U. of Mass., "The Study of the 2218 regarding eligibility reqs. Obtain Morphology of Solid Polymers by Light applic. form from 1014 Rackham; qual- Scattering," Chem. Bldg., Rm. 1200, 4 Ified & interested students should act pm.; now! Physics Seminar: J. Schwarz, Calif. Inst. of Tech., "Dual Field Theories for CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT Hadrons - What and Why," P-A Col-; 320 SAB, 764-7460 loq. Rm., 4 pm, FEDERAL SERVICE ENTRANCE EX- Carillon Recital:-Hudson Ladd, caril- AMS given monthly from Oct. thru lonneur, Burton Tower, 7 pm. July. Tests will be given Sat., Oct. 6, Computing Center: "Use of the Data & Thurs., Oct. 11. -- -- I Monday's meetin RULES 1. You must be a U of M student. 2. You must choose your series in order of preference. 3. Married students may send applications together. 4. This application must be mailed by U.S. mail NO SOONER THAN SEPTEMBER 25, 1973. (Mail to PTP Office, Mendelssohn Theatre, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104) 5. Include self-addressed return, stamped envelope PLEASE NUMBER CHOICE 1, 2, 3, 4 SERIES A: Saturday Evenings: Nov. 17, Dec. 15, Jan. 12, Jan. 26, Mar. 30 SERIES B: Sunday Evenings: Nov. 18, Dec. 16, Jan. 13, Jan. 27, Mar. 31 SERIES C: Saturday Matinees: Nov. 17, Dec. 15, Jan. 12, Jan. 26, Mar. 30 SERIES D: Sunday Matinees: Nov. 18, Dec. 16, Jan. 13, Jan. 27, Mar. 31 roughly 150 women, featured a movie on pelvic examination madea for medical students. Clinic speak- ers explained anatomical termin- ology and then broke the meeting' into small groups for discussion of: participants' health care concerns. Much discussion among women present centered around patients', powerlessness to influence medical' care. "Sometimes you go to see a. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 16 Sunday, September 23, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the U~niversity year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11 local mail (Michiganmand Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail (other states and foreign), doctor and you, feel like someone's doing you a big favor, or here's this big professional who really know's what he's doing," one wo- man commented. THE MEETING CLOSED with a demonstration of a pelvic self- examination, part ofthe group's stress on self-help for women in; medical matters. "We don't use self -exam in place of going to a doctor," a spokeswoman explained. "If we find something wrong we don't treat ourselves." She explained that self-exam is used to check for symptoms of in- fection and disease. "It's something women should know how to do, just like you look in your throat when it feels bad." NEEDED: STUDENTS WHO HAVE WORKED/STUDIED/TRAVELED ABROAD Who are willing you to share their insights and information a I VICE PRESIDENT Spiro Ag- new: Will he resign? Agnewuivr rumors increase (Continued from Page, 1) A source close to the Vice Presi; dent reported yesterday that Ag- new's, lawyers will go to court next week to try to halt the fed- eral investigation of him. The source did not say what reasons: his lawyers would use. AGNEW also permitted himself to be photographed in his office Friday receiving a petition from about 100 of his supporters in Con- gress urging him, "Hang in there, baby." Thomson said yesterday he was not in a position to deny flatly that. any negotiations were taking place{ with the Justice Department be- cause he was not familiar with the legal side of the investigation of the Vice President. But he said he regarded the re- ports of plea bargaining by Ag- new's lawyers as unsubstantiated rumors. IT WOULD BE totally unlike him to resign. The Vice President is not a quitter," Thomson said. "I just don't think it' adds up.", he said. Leftists banned by Chile govt. (Continued from Page 1) trade unions, the military, youth and women. YESTERDAY, in an interview with journalists, he added workers and peasants to these groups. But asked whether the new par- liament would be corporate-style, he said, "We are not fascists and neither are we going to impose a government of that form. Nor do we intend to stay in power indefi- nitely." Last night the Christian bemo- crats, who announced their back- ing for the military shortly after the coup but urged them to hand power back to the people as soon as possible, strongly denounced the plans for a new constitution. IN PREVIOUS statements the junta had said it would re-intro- duce a liberal economic system based on private enterprise, and that it would welcome foreign in-' vestment in the big five copper mines nationalized under Allende. Gen. Leigh's statement that 7,000 political prisoners were being held in Santiago's national football sta- dium followed earlier statements by junta members that the total was only 4,000 and that about 300 persons were being released each day. But the general said yesterday that the number of detainees was s t i 11 increasing. Correspondents here, still hear nightly sporadic outbreaks of firing in the capital, and the military are still carry- ing out heavily-armed sweeps in working class districts. LEIGH DID NOT identify the 30 senior members of the Allende ad- ministration deported to the ex- treme southern island of Dawson, where they are being held under military guard. But he said that the ban on marx- ist parties would be lifted once the country was normalized without indicating how long this would take. I i_ A # 7 thrI Classified If you can find the Michigan Union BOWLING Lanes you are smart enough to join a league COME IN TODAY AND SIGN UP 'WEF~ , - t DIMENSIONS OF RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE LECTURE & DISCUSSION SERIES WEDNESDAY AFTERNOONS 3-5 P.M. ANGELL HALL AUD. A SEPTEMBER 26, 1973 IN SEARCH OF THE INFINITE: DISCOVERING EASTERN RELIGIONS by MS. MARI SHORE, Educational Coordinator, Ethics & Reliigon, U of M OCTOBER 3, 1973 POLITICAL DIMENSIONS OF RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE by CARL OGLESBY, former SDS president, lecturer MIT, playwright (Major Hopwood) OCTOBER 10, 1973 YOGA AS A WAY OF LIFE by SWAMI SREEDHAR (hopefully) studies under sivanada OCTOBER 17, 1973 OCCULT SYMBOLOGY-AND ASTROLOGY AS A MEANS OF WORKING WITH COSMIC ENERGIES by LINN VANN CLEEF, astrologer, teacher, New York City OCTOBER 24, 1973 BIO-ENERGETICS AND ITS INTEGRATION WITH ASTROLOGY, MAGIC, YOGA, AND PSYCHOLOGY IN WHOLISTIC HEALING by RICHARD WOLF, astrologer, psychic, lay-therapist OCTOBER 31, 1973 POWER AND INNOCENCE IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR by DR. ED BANTELL, Profe.ssor of Psychology and Education, Oakland University, studied with Arthur Jerseld, Rollo May, R. D. Lang NOVEMBER 7, 1973 THE SANCTITY OF HUMAN LIFE IN THE LIGHT OF CONTEMPORARY VIOLENCE panel discussion by representatives of the Christian, Jewish and M o s I e m Traditions: REV. GEORGE GROSE, DR. A. MUHSIN EL-BIALI and JOHN F. ROTHMANN NOVEMBER 14, 1973 ETHICAL AND RELIGIOUS ISSUES BEING RAISED BY THE LIFE SCIENCES TODAY by DR. MARGARET MAXEY, professor of Religious Studies at University of Detroit } I NOVEMBER 28, 1973 (Not Aud. A-Instead Lecture Room No. 1025 Angell Hall) A SOCIOLOGIST LOOKS AT RELIGION hb DR. MAX HELRICH. rofessor of Sociolov. U of M EI I