Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 30, 1973 I Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 30, 1973 I t------ _ __ - -------r i 'I in concert AND Second Band to be Announced Proceeds go to Drug Help, Ozone House, Cornmunity Switchboard & Creative Arts WOMEN'S FAIR "WHAT WOMEN ARE DOING" FRIDAY, OCT. 5, 1973 Markley, Mojo win in dorm popularity STORE CLOSES EARLY: Henderson Rm. Michigan League 1 1 :30 a.m.-8:30 p.m. activities for children 11 Entertainment, History, Art, Work, Politics Workshop 8:00 HILL ADD. 8l.08h OCT. 13th TICKETS: 4.50, 4.00, 3.50, 2.50. Avail- able: Mich. Union, Discount Records S.U., World Hdqtrs., Ned-Ypsi, Hud- K s O_ ON SAL E NOW H THE PROGRAMI N JUDAIC STUDIES and THE DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY present Professor Raoul Hilberg UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT on "Jewish Self-Government Under the Nazis: The Case of the Warsaw Ghetto" on TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2 Bin B116 Modern Languages Bldg. at 4:10 p.m.' (Continued from Page 1) "It's just a smaller, homier unit. The building is less institutional, there's an older, homier style," she says. She gives the staff and the pro- gram a lot of credit, but she says, "You could take some of the programs, put them in the larger dorms, and not have the same effect." At onettime, Mosher-Jordan had the reputation of being white, up- per-class, suburban dorm. But last year, in light of efforts 'o change that, only about 3S per cent of the residents decided to re- turn, and the University took ad- vantage to fill the extra space with a less homogeneous group. FRANK JAMES, '77, a psychol- ogy major, sat in one of Mosher's big lounges, looking at the English tudor woodwork, the comfortable easy chairs, and the huge ornate beams in the ceiling. "I'm going to stay here as long as I can," he said. "It's lik-3 a house,there's carpeting and nice furniture instead of plastic. We've even got a fireplace," he added. "I've visited South Quad and Burs- l r i ley. South Quad is like a project." NOT EVERYBODY there is as happy as he is. One girl claims she ended up there because the Uni-. versity lost her housing applica-. tion, and one woman, who admit- ted she was really a "spy from! Bursley" said, "I hate it here. Mosher is ugly." A pre-med student sat behind the piano quite at home. Bach's Two- Part Inventions filled the room. "Take a look at this lounge," he said. "Picture it on a wintry eve- ning at three o'clock, with music playing and a fire in the fire- place - that's why I like it. ' Expanded A&P boycott hurts 1business, employe~s (Continued from Page 1) Members of the Human Rights cause of the picketeers." Party, Democratic Party, Word of Then Taylor gets a little angry. God Christian community, Traba- "Me being a member of the AFL- jadores de la Raza (Workers for CIO, I'm concerned about my dues the Race, the Chicano social work being used against me-to lay my organization of the University workers off. I have 27 years of sen- School of Social Work), university iority and I'm guaranteed my 40 students and some seventh- and hours a week," he says, "But I'm I ninth-graders from area schools concerned about my members." carried signs, chanted and sang "Don't get me wrong," Taylor yesterday in hopes of tuning in says, "I know farm workers are A&P's deaf ear to the UFW's de- fighting for their workers, but I'm mands. fighting for mine.'' The grape b o y c o t t involves -- ------ --- Guild, Franzia and Gallo wines. Or, as one picketer says, "any wines J from Modesto, Calif." This in- preside n tcludes Boone's Farm, Red Moun- tain, Ripple, Thunderbirds and * ~Spinada. I Three young black girls hap- pened along the sidewalk and de- cided playfully to join i the pic- from Paged1) ket. But not everyone was. as ommittee date back to a declaration amiable to the picketers. Franklin Roosevelt on March 5, 1933, One young woman shopper, leav- om's banks. ing the store with a bag of grocer- )and Charles Mathias (R-N.Y.), coies was askedtbya picketer to take one of his information sheets and read it. vare that they have been living under She stuck her nose in the air for over 40 years. and brushed the picketer off, re- tors said the laws, many of them plying gruffly, "Aw, get off my ority to proclaim a state of national back." t citizens in detention camps, and ortation and radio and television A THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 2 powers rear (Continued1 The 470 laws examined by the co of national emergency by President F when he temporarily closed the nati Senator Frank Church (D-Idaho) chairmen of the committee said: "MOST U.S. CITIZENS are unam declared state of national emergency In a joint statement, the senat passed hastily, give a president auth emergency and seize property, put regulate private enterprise, transp broadcasts. the only hift store with over 110 brands, strong ,arrantees, full repair service Published at 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 Owner - Board for Student Publications 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 Bond or Stockholders - none. Average Press Run - 6900 Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. LUNCH-DISCUSSION TUESDAY, OCT. 2 12:00 NOON U YU. of M. INTERNATIONAL CENTER SUBJECT: "Language: Barrier or Blessing to Communication" SPEAKER: JOHN C. CATFORD PROFESSOR OF LINGUISTICS Cost: SOc Sponsored by: For Reservations Ecumenical Campus Center Call 662-5529 International Center Sunday, September 30, 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 University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and 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). 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It's 1.9 microvolts fm sensitivity surpasses anything in its price range. Light touch, pushbutton operation makes the Miracord 620u automatic turntable as easy on you, as it is on your records. This precision instrument can be calibrated to track as lightly as the cartridge will permit, in this case, the ADC 90Q which will track at a very respectable 3/ grams. A base and dustcover are also included. Lack of space is no longer a legitimate excuse. n $449" I F Q 0 00t Out of the Whirlwind for those who once were and are no more-a program in memoriam to the 6,000,000 Jews victim of the Nazi holocaust. They came to get the intellectuals AND I DID NOTHING They came to get the socialists AND I DID NOTHING They came to get the Protestants AND I DID .NOTHING They came to get the Catholics AND I DID NOTHING They came to get the Jews AND I DID NOTHING When they came to get me, there was no one left. SEPT. 30-7:30 P.M.-Symposium on GENOCIDE: THE ARMENIANS, THE BIAFRANS, THE AMERICAN INDIANS. PROFESSOR ARAM YENGOY- AN, PROFESSOR GODFREY UZOIGWE, MR. MOOSE PAMP OCT. 2-8:00 P.M.-THE MECHANICS OF DESTRUCTION: a lecture by PROFESSOR RAOUL HILBERG, author of "The Destruction of the Euro- pean Jews." 1. The onset and development of the final soluction. 2. The administration of transport to the death camps. 3. Geography of the death camp. OCT. 4-8:00 P.M.-The Gypsies too, were victims: their history and and tragedy by PROFESSOR WILLIAM LOCKWOOD, U of M. MOVIE, GYPSIES." OCT. 7-8:00 P.M.-MOVIE, "THE GARDEN OF THE FINZI-CONTINIS." ADMISSION 50c 1 122 ewt ann arbor 668-8328 ' _ _ c:... ..li. .( T.... L. 1._I S F: n +4.i +.. rlnv r.rinn nrntnPtlni'1 n r I m