THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, April 14, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Sunday, April 14, 1974 ...,,.._ Ir T STEVE'S LUNCH GOOD FOOD AT LOW, LOW PRICES We Specialize in Home Cooking FAST & FRIENDLY SERVICE BY MR. & MRS. LEE STEVE'S LUNCH 1313 S. UNIVERSITYs tel. 769-2288 All good things must come to an end ... GRADUATE STUDENTS WELCOME I "Bug GRAD COFFEE HOUR WEDNESDAY 8-10 p.m. West Conference Room, 4th Floor RACKHAM ... but sad as it is, this is the last Sunday Magazine 'till the fall. We hope we've added a touch of joy to other- wise dreary winter Sundays, and in any event, from our vantage point we can truthfully say, "Everything was beautiful and nothing hurt." Next year, of course, we hope to be better and bigger in that order. In that pursuit, our newly appointed co- editors, Laura Berman and Howie Brick, will be soaking up valuable professional experience this summer. Ms. Berman will be reporting for Knight Newspapers' Wash- ington Bureau, Mr. Brick for Pulitzer Prizewinning News- day. Contributing Editor Mary Long will go to the Washington Monthly. For the record, retiring Magazine Editor Martin Porter will turn it loose for the Atlanta Journal, and Tony Schwartz will be pursuing a dance career locally. Design Editor Rolfe Tessem will be filming Tiger Base- I ball for WJBK-TV in Detroit. Thanks for reading, and you over until fall. we hope Parade will hold I JOIN GEO VOTE ON RATIFICATION OF CONSTITUTION * FISHBOWL: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, 11 to 1. 0 Come to our office, daily 1 1 to 2. 3m BLA twe MEN[ Al Box AN .. a, .111 ........:°. . ... ...: OK COMEDY white liars o plays by PETER SHAFFER DELSSOHN THEATRE * or, send someone from your department to pick up a ratification packet. nn+rm-. ;.y . +' . r . ?S f yr. '} . 'frjry'.;; ; f ' i .y., $ ;r : dr s: 1 YEAR (continued from Page 3) no longer believe we can play an important role. A few years ago, faced with the lack of a role, we created one --Street Politics - and we all became street politicians. But now, we have no energy for that. Impeachment, important though it is, is the job of Leon Jawor- ski and Peter Rodino, and we're generally content to let them take care of it. We tune in to Walter Cronkite every night to see how they're doing. COULD fill several volumes with what didn't happen on campus this year - LSA re- forms, stopping construction of a McDonald's, etc. - but that makes for rather dreary reading. So, I search for something that did happen and I find . . Streaking. Streaking happened. It was in all the newspapers, on the television, and I even saw streakers one day on the Diag. When I was home over break, my parents asked me whether I thought streaking was "some kind of protest or something." The idea had simply never oc- curred to me. So I thought about it antecedents before answering. (Had flag-pole sitting been a symbolic, existential expression of the loneliness of modern man? Was gold-fish swallowing once an indirect protest against ris- ing tuna and cod prices?) "No," I said, ,"I tend to doubt it." "So why do they do it?" I said I didn't know, which is PRIL 17-20, 1974 8:00 P.M. TUESDAY .April 16,'74 TICKETS: $2.50, $3.00 x Office opens 10 a.m. daily N ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE more or less true, since I'm not a streaker. But it seems safe to say that streaking stems from a desire to shock or offend a "world-at-large" which seems otherwise unconscious of our existence. When I was in high school, people used to pull down their pants, and hang the bare asses out of car windows as they cruised around town. Sort of a fleeting "Fuck You" to the whole world, I guess. * * * T0 SOME, what I've written so far is contradicted by the results of the spring elections. The Human Rights Party gave us the chance to vote to control their landlords and de-control their marijuana and we respond- ed by going to the polls in large numbers. In fact, we even elect- ed one of their candidates - a self-proclaimed radical lesbian- to the city council. I don't think we were con- scious, however, of being part of a trend or counter-trend. Few if any of us were, during the course of the campaign, converted into socialists or homosexuals. And, I suspect, many of us who voted for HRP feel no closer to the party's leadership than we do to the people on the impeach- ment or tuition hike committees. But the Democrats irked many of us. There was something deeply cynical about their cam- paign, as though they werectak- ing it for granted that we had become more conservative, lost our ideals, would refuse to vote for a radical lesbian. We students don't like to be- lieve we are ignorant and bigot- t t 5 ,, Justice in South Africa h NOON-Luncheon Soup & Sandwich, i at GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe 4:00 p.m.-Lecture, 1035 Angell Hall. 5:30 p.m.-Dinner and discussion with students in the Law Club. ALBIE SACHS, South African attorney, B.A., LLB., Capetown University, with the Capetown Bar 1957- 66 doing mostly Civil Rights work. His work led to being "detained" in solitary 1964 and again in 1966 when he was given an "exit permit" to Eng- land. He took a PhD. from Sussex University and since 1 970 has been a Lecturer in Law at South Hampton. in addition to JAIL DIARY and STEPHANIE ON TRIAL dealing with his and his wife's experiences he has published JUSTICE IN SOUTH AFRICA (U. Calif. Press). I I GOOD NEWS SAVE $7O.on Hewlett-Packards HP-35 and H P-45 Pocket Calculators ""- ELECTION - UNIVERSITY HOUSING COUNCIL VACANCIES-All seats; 1/2 year term. President and 7 Dorm Districts. ELIGIBILITY-All Candidates must be residents of University Housing. FILING AND PETITION DEADLINE-April 16 at 4:00 p.m. HOW AND WHERE-All Candidates must sign list at the SGC Office, 3rd floor, Michigan Union. WHEN-The election will be held during pre- registration. For more information, call-Alan Bercovitz, Election direc- tor, 764-7705, David Fave, UHC President, 764-6634. - -GET INVOLVED GIVE A DAMN ABOUT WHERE YOU LIVE! ed, although many of us are. And we tend to eventually abandon politicians who openly insult us by appealing to these instincts. (N ELECTION night, I went with some friends, to cele- brate at the Del-Rio. Even with the aid of a series of drinks, the affair was somewhat wooden: "Well, how do you feel?" "Great! I feel real fine. Looks like HRP is here to stay. They'll sure keep the Dems on their toes." "Yeah. And we got Colburn." "Yeah. Really." "I'm real pleased." "Yeah..... ." "That exam today was a real bite!" "That mother! That was the worst exam I've ever seen. 'Jesus! 35 pictures in that class and he's got to pick one of the three I didn't see." "I really burned. I think I'll get a C. Maybe a D." "Let's not talk about it." "OK ... you hear from any of those places yet?" "Yeah,dthis afternoon." "What'd they say?" "They said no. They wanted someone else. They said they needed to hire a woman, prefer- ably a black woman. "It figures . ." A ND LATER I left. As I was walking home, my thoughts shifted from the fantasy of driv- ing the Republicans out of City Hall to the good job I wanted so bad. I wondered about mak- ing a choice. I knew what. it would have been two years ago, when we were marching together and the only future was the next demonstration. And I knew by contrast what it would be today. Only it was election night, I was feeling nostalgic and I didn't want to think about it. I I Effective April 1 5th Hewlett Packard lowered the price of the H-P-35 from $295.00 to $225.00 and the HP-45 from $395.00 to $325.00. I I I IN STOCK for immediate delivery including the fully programmable HP-65 UL RICH'S Bookstore 549 E. Univ. Ave. In cooperation with the Office of Ethics and Religion PHONE 662-4403 J I. f" . . . . . ....£ ...... ? .. .. '. . . . .:" . . .. i . '. . i . -<> ,' 4 APR IL 17-8:00 p.m. AT THE UNION GALLERY R 1st floor Michigan Union 9 featuring dancers VETA GOLER, JAN APSECHE, SALLY TURNER, MARY ANNE MOSES Composed by GERHARD SCHLANSKY A LIVING SCULT PUR E EV ENT U U . f Trade one tough summer for two great years. you see news happen call The Army ROTC Basic Camp. It's tough because you'll be making up for the entire first two years of the Army ROTC Four-Year Program. Tiwo years in only six weeks. During this time, while we're toughening up your body a little, we'll be even tougher on your mind. By asking you to complete a concentrated course of study covering all the topics you missed. But when you return to college in the fall, you can look forward to two pretty great years. You'll be earning an extra $100 a month, up to ten months a year. And you'll also be earning an officer's commission while you're earning your college degree. If you're transferring from junior college, or for some other reason you couldn't take the first two years of ROTC, look into the Army ROTC Two-Year Program. Army ROTC. The more you look at it, the better it looks. 76- DAILY I W -IS .M.