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April 10, 1973 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-04-10

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Tuesday, Apri 10 1973

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Sever

THICIANDIY, e ee

I

Indian arms dispute
deadlocks settlement

ATTENTION!

. ..Display Advertisers

There are ONLY 10 MORE DAYS of publica-

tion this

term.

We will

resume

printing the

Michigan Daily

on May 9.

(Continued from Page 1)
Asked how the arms would be
safe-guarded in the teepee, Means
replied: "By the Pipe and the
CRS."
A Justice Department spokes-
man, Horace Webb, said that the
Indian's proposal had not yet been
turned over formally to the gov-
ernment. It did not appear to con-
form to the provisions of the ear-
lier agreement, Webb added.
Means said he and the other
Indian representatives who accom-
panied him to Washington would
leave this morning for Wounded
Knee if the government did not
accept their terms. Their money
had run out, he explained.
"If the offer isn't accepted, I
will return to Wounded Knee, no
arms will be placed in the teepee
and we will secure the borders
and drive back the armored per-
sonnel carriers," Means said.
Asked how long the occupation
of Wounded Knee would continue,

he replied: "For the rest of my
life."
Meanwhile, at the Capitol, the
House Indian affairs subcommittee
opened three days of hearings on
the Indian problems.
The first witness was Toby
Eagle Bull, a longtime Oglala
Sioux tribal officer who spoke for
the tribe rulers.
lie characterized the AIM lead-
ers as "a group of goons or gut-
ter rats if you want to call them
that.
"Some of our young people have
been taken in, too," Eagle Bull
said. "They have nothing better
to do. But this is the heart of the
matter. Because what we need on
our reservation is jobs.'
"The issue at Wounded Knee is
jobs," he said. "Give us jobs and
you won't have any Indian prob-
lem."
About 60 per cent of the Oglala
Sioux Indians are unemployed,
Eagle Bull said.

WHY CART ALL THOSE CLOTHES HOME?
reenes Box Storage
makes go ing9yhome
a cinll!
JUST CALL GREENE'S for one of our fabulous
Handi-Hampers storage boxes. Pack all the clothes
you won't wear until fall - Clothes you would
ordinarily pack up, take home, have cleaned, pack
up. again and bring back in the fall..
NOW, ALL YOU NEED TO DO is turn the Hamper
over to Greene's. They c I e a n the lot at regular
cleaning prices and store it in a refrigerated moth-
proof vault. When you return in the fall, call
Greene's again, your clothes will be taken out of the
vault, returned to you freshly pressed on hangers
and packed in neat polyethylene bags, ready for
your clothes closet.
PRICE? $4.95 plus regular cleaning and pressing
prices-includes $250.00 insurance. No payment
is due until your garments are returned.
Call NOrmandy 22543 or Stoic at
any Greene's Plant for Infornation
BOX DELIVERY & PICK UP o NO ADDED CHARGE

Daily Photo by KEN FINK

.w*vlw

- - - - - y~

Er XXXXWA

LIJ

d CAMPU^ c .

r

DESPITE
The Dust!
The Construction!r
'73 GREMLIN
FACTORY
AIR-CONDITIONED
STILL ONLY
*Base Price Stock Units
We lease American Motor cars
CAMPUS AMERICAN
American Motors Service Headquarters
2448 Washtenaw 434-2424
Show Room Hours 9 to 9, Friday and Saturday 'til 6

t

More slop from iMs. Nature
This was the scene on the Diag yesterday afternoon as students scurried between classes, buffeted by
high winds and drenched with the vile slop which passes for snow at this time of year. Elsewhere in
the state, the weather provided more than a slight i'iconvenience. The combination of wind and snow
triggered more flooding in already soggy areas of D .troit. Jefferson between 11 and 13 mile roads was
totally flooded.
DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

TUESDAY, APRIL 10
DAY CALENDAR
Bus. Admin. :.Annual business lead-
ership presentation & lecture, J.. Mil-
ler, Chairman of the Bd., Cummins En-
gne Co., Hale Aud., Bus. Ad.. 1 pm.
College Comm, on Alumni & Public
Rels.:R. Iglehart, "Arts & Its Custo-
mers." Arch. Atd. 1 pm.
Basebal: : Michigan vs. Bowling
Green. Fisher Stadium, 2 pm.
Future Worlds Lecture Series: A.
'larke, authorL. ife in the Year
2001.' Hill. 3 pm.
LSA Coffee Hour: Counseling offices,
student lounge, 1st if., Angell, 3 pm.
Inst. of Gerontology: S. Gaberkorn,
"Nursing & Aging: An Empathetic
Model," 3.3) Med. Sci. I, 3 pm.
Physics. R. Cicerone or R. Stolarski,
'Environmental Effects of the Space
Sbwt:le,' P-A Colloq, Rm.. 4 pm.
Stat istics: D. Gilliland, MSU,
'Baves Procedures That Solve the
Compound Decision Problem," 3209 An-
,ell, 4 pm.

History 104 Film: Ray's "Pather Pan- SUMMER PLACEMENT
chali," UGLI Multipurpose Rm., 7:30 212 SAB
pill. ANNThUNCEMEFNT';, I

Wit Pqtt

ANuiu~ur : wrign ra er-
CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT son A F. Oh. Openings on base for
cooks., ground equipment repair, trac-
3200 SAB, 764-7460: tor oper. laborer, mess attendants, Ex-
Voice of Amer. English Intern Prog.- cellent pay.
will accept a few applics., if material
sent immediately; audition tape, writ- NASA, Md. Announces Summer Inst.
ing samples, and resume reqnired. In- in Pub. Admin. Students must be en-

a

,Ipvwl

stucinsavi. nCareer Pln i
Placement. No interviews held on cam--
p us,
A rep. of Teacher Corps will be in
this office Apr. 13. Assignments in both
Elem. & Sec. levels throughout U. S.
BA degree required - receive TC & M's
in Educ. at end of 2 yr. prog.
INTERVIEWS: Sign up to interview
with Standard Oil of Ohio & Air Univ.
(Civilian positions) at Maxwell Air
Force Base on Apr. 11; Teacher Corps.
Apr. 13, and Bausch & Lomb, Apr. 18.
INTERVIEWING ON C A M P U S:
Student Comm. on Intern'l Affair (3
Admin. Staff positions in Was. D. C.
& limited no. of Regional grants offer-
ed to students on part-time basis, 10/
10 mo. grants) Wek. is Community-
oriented programming on foreign af-
fairs. On Sampus 4/12/73. NEOS CORP,
Nagoya, Japan - Need B degree any
major to teach Japanese Bus. Persons
English (2/yr assignment.) On cam-
pus 4/25,26, '73.

tering Jr. or Sr. yr. ase of this sum-
mer. Soc. Sci bkgrd. required. Applic.
INTERVIEW : Detroit Baptist Camp.
Will interviev Apr.t11, 9:30 to 12. Op-
enings for gen. counselors (m). Reg-
ister by phone, 763-4117, or in person.
Education Div., 3200 SAB: following
appointments can be made immediate-
ly by coming to our office or calling
764-7459.
Apr. 10: Racine, Wis. (Prairie Sch.)
-71em. Ed.: Lang. Arts, Lower Middle
Sch.: Eng., Math., High Sch.: Eng.,
Span.
Deorborn, MI. -- Spec. Ed.: Learning
Disabilities. Soc. Worker, Sch.: Nurse,
Elem. Media Spec., Read. Spec. Apr.
16-17: Englewood, Cl. (Federal Pro-
ject Title 8) - Emot. Dist., Teacher/
Coordinator (Educational diagnosis),
Apr. 18: Greenville, MI. - Elem. Ed.:
Speech Ther., Jr. High: Voc. Mus./
Eng., Math./Sci., High Sch.: Fre./Span.,
Voc. Mus./Eng.

III ililill iiiiiii'llill E X X X

i

BUSINESS OFFICE
406 W. Liberty St.
NO 23-23-1

CAMPUS
1213 So. University
NO 3-3016

WESTSI DE
1940 W. Stadium
NO 2-2543

I _ _ . _

1
1
J

flew maybellinE
A whole new tw
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eye shadow-.
Powder Twist is here' It's the first trul
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measured onto the little Pillow Wan'
apply, It goes on smoothly, evenly.
each Powder-T wist case holds hund
applications. T ry gentle Green, Brov

r

Petitions are being accepted
for next year s MUSKET:
9 Director
* Musical Director
Choreographer
" Set Designer
Apply NOW at 2nd floor Michigan Union,
UAC offices

FLAMENCO FREAKS
Internationally known Flamenco guitarist Juan
Serrano will be taking appointments for private
instruction this week. Call:
Ann Arbor Music Mart

9:30-9:00 MON.-SAT.

769-4980

336 S. State St.

_ __._

_ __ }
I

Applications DUE Friday, April

13

WANTED

i

'1st

Mojud@ Pantyose
TH E VERY TH ING Sr
SHEER, STRETCH
PANTYHOSE
BY MOJUD
Believe it. Real Mojud
quality and
famous Moudtfit-x
all together in
wear-like-crazy
pantyhose for only $1.00.
We call them "The Very Thing"
They're sheer and stretchy and
come in lots of smashy colors.
Pick 'emup right now at your
favorite hosiery store. With pantytop
or sheer-to-the-waist. The Very Thing.
It's a lot of leg for $1.00.
D Q Tkn \ J.-.-.,Thitr) rMPc in rinAnt P

for 1973-74 school year
Liberal Arts Seniors Interested in Teaching
Elementary or Secondary School
This is a 15 month program leading to an M.A.T.
degree; involves a flexible program of graduate
study which offers opportunities for paid teaching
internships. Begins June 25, 1973, runs through
August 1974. Automatic tuition scholarships for
both summer sessions.
MASTER OF ARTS IN TEACHING PROGRAM
NORTHWESTERN
UNIVERSITY
Evanston, Illinois
Deadline: May 15, 1973
For Information & on Application Form

CLIP AND MAIL TO:

Dolores E. Cross, Director
Master of Arts in Teaching
2003 Sheridan Road
Evanston, Illinois 60201

y auto-
st twice,
M-
id. Then
And
Jreds of
wn, Blue.

NAME

_,

ADDRESS---_-__-- - -
CITY

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