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September 13, 1972 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-09-13

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Wednesday, September 13, 1972

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Seven

Wednesday, September 1 3, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Seven

news bries
by The Associated Press
NEW YORK GOV. NELSON ROCKEFFELLER yesterday
praised a state commission report on the Attica rebellion which

Harvey
accused of'
nepotism

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condemned his role in the four-day prison riot in which 43 people Washtenaw County Sheriff Doug-
died. las Harvey was accused of nepo-
The report said that Rockefeller should have visited the prison tEsm by County Commissioner
before he ordered police to storm it and suppress the riot. because both Harvey's wife and
However, the governor praised the commission for a "monumental son are on the sheriff department's
job of investigating and reporting." He did not refer to its finding payroll.
that he should have gone to the prison. The charges came Monday when
Issued a year after the rebellion-bloddiest in American prison two letters from Quenon to various;
history-the report was .highly critical of the prison system, officials county committees charged Har-
who planned the assault, the "vengeful reprisals" against the prisoners, vey with "crass nepotism."
and officials who spread false reports of prisoner atrocities. The first letter brought up points.
about Harvey's wife and son. Har-
STRIKING TEACHERS defied court orders to return to work vey's wife Margaret is presently
yesterday in school districts in Massachusetts and New York. earning $7,834 a year and is in
Elsewhere, teacher's strikes kept schools closed in Pennsylvania, crgeson,theanl' ki hens Huatry
Illinois, Rhode Island and Indiana. last month, is presently making
...In a Boston suburb, teachers stayed away from schools for the $9,633. Prior to the time he was
third day despite a court order, served Monday on nine union officials. deputized, he was making $9,427 a
Classes were canceled yesterday for ,a Long Island school district year as a non-sworn jail guard.
after the teachers union president, vowed to defy a court order and The second letter stated that a
blockade the school with pickets. county-owned car was recentlys
Strikes continued in Philadelphia and a dozen school districts in sold to Harvey's brother for $800-
western Pennsylvania. Teachers in six Rhode Island districts are still about half the "book value," ac-
without contracts. cording to Quenon.
w t rHowever, Harry Klinger of Klin-
TEN ESTEURPEANGOVRNMNTS cte totoger-Warner Pontiac told the Ann
TEN WEST EUROPEAN GOVERNMENTS acted yesterday to. Arbor News yesterday that $800
put down political terrorism and to set up a European monetary could easily be the price of such
fund. Both actions were steps toward unity of the new Common a vehicle at an auction sale.
Market meeting at Frascati, Italy. No action was taken on Quenon's
The guns and grenades of the Arab terrorists ,at the Munich c h a r g e s.tCommissioner Fred
Olympic Games brought the issre of terrorism to the fore. Ministers Schwall of the law enforcement
of finance and foreign affairs of the Common Market countries decided rcommittee, said the charges "de
unanimously to take a joint stand in the United Nations against Harvey is running for re-election
terrorists, and tighten cooperation among their own security forces. this fall on the American Party
The new monetary fund will start operations next year as the ticket.
forerunner of an integrated central bank for the 10 governments with
a common currency to challenge the dominance of the U.S. dollar on
world markets.
ISRAEL WARNED YESTERD4Y it will strike against Arab
terrorists with all its force and skill, but said the Olympic killings
would not halt the search for peace in the Middle East.
In a special debate on the massacre, which. killed 11 Israelis, five A n n
terrorists and a West German policeman, Premier Golda Meir told
the Knesset, Israel's parliament, that "the terrorists cannot weaken
our desire for peace."

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
.::
The Daily Official Bulletin is an Colloq. Rm., 4 pm.
official publication of the Univer- GENERAL NOTICES
sity of Michigan. Notices should be Graduate Record . Examination: Ap-
sent in TYFWRITTEN FORM to plication blanks available in 3014 Rack-
409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of ham Bldg. for Grad. Record Exac, given
tby~ ypeeig ulcto n Sat., Oct. 28; applics. due in Prince-
buy.p.m.Friday for Saturday and to. N.J. before Oct. 3.
Sunday. Items appear once only. Course Mart Course. in Law: No. 316.
Student organization notices are "Wome and the Law," Lee., MW 12.
not accepte for publication. For 429 Mason; No. 317,"Laweand Social
more information, phone 7fi4-9270, iChange," Lec., W 7 pm, 35 Angell Hall,
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13 Sec. 002 MT 1 pm, 1509 CC Little, Sec.
DAY CALENDAR 003 TTh 3 pm, 116 MLB; No. 318. "En-
Commission for Women: Homer vironmental Law," Sec. 001 TTh 11
Heath Lounge. Mich. Union. 11 am. am, W 8 pm. 1433 Mason. Sec. 002 W 8
Psych. 171 Film Series: "Legacy of pm, 411 Mason, WF 11 am, 3518 Frieze;
Anne Frank, Obedience," UGLI Multi- No. 319 "Constitutional Criminal Pro-
purpose Rm.. 4 pm. cedure," Lec., W 7 pm, Nat. Sci. Aud.,
Physics Colloquium: A. Rich, "Re- Sec. 002 TTh 4 pm, 411 Mason, Sec. "003
port on: 1) U/M Astrophysics Pro- MTh 3 pm., 3532 Frieze, Sec. 004 TTh
gram; 2) Fermi Summer School on 4 pm, 2203 Angell, Sec. 005 WF 9 am.
Experimental Gravitation (is Weber 2443 Mason, Sec. 006 TTh 7 pm, 451
seeing Gravitational Radiation?)" P&A Mason, Sec. 007 TTh 3 pm. 3032 Frieze.

i

WASHTENAW COMMUNITY COLLEGE
SHORT TERM
Mechanic Training Program
FIRST QUARTER
Small Gas Engines 060
STARTS TUESDAY, SEPT. 19, 1972, Six (6) Weeks, 7:00-10:00 p.m.
Principles and service procedures are studied with
special emphasis placed on servicing live units.
Tune Up 043
STARTS THURSDAY, SEPT. 21, 1972, Six (6) Weeks, 7:00-10:00 p.m.
This class will cover the fundamentals necessary for proper tune up.
Students will rective practical experience on their own vehicles.
Saturday's Mechanic 059
STARTS SATURDAY, SEPT. 23, 1972, Six (6) Weeks, 9:00-12:00 a.m.
This course covers minor testing and repair procedures, minor tune up,
lubrication and cooling systems. Students will receive practical
experience on their own vehicles.

The Union Gallery,
First Floor
MICHIGAN UN ION
530 South State
Telephone 761-2924
FIRST JURY
The Gallery is accepting art work for the
first jury from September 11 through Sep-
tember 20. Artists may submit their work
at the gallery from 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m. Monday through Friday.

LOCATION:

Washtenow Community College
Automotive Service Center
5115 Carpenter Road
Ypsilanti, Michigan

COST: $20.00
Phone Number: 434-1555

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II

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ORGANIZ

I m.:.
ATION NOTICES
15 8:00 PM. Michigan League Con-
.fe 3" 4

BElT MIDRASH
Program in Jewish Studies
Fall '72 Schedule ofCore
Hebrew Language (all levels)
Modern Hebrew & Israeli Literature
The Individual and the State
Basic Judaism
The Jewish Ethical Imperative:
a) The Ethics, of Se*uality
b) The Ethics of Imprisonment
Martin Buber: The Man & His Philosophy
The Jew in American Politics
Flowers from Hell: A Survey of Holocaust Literature
Hassidism and Studies in Jewish Mysticism
Registration wil lake plc SC e ptember 11, 12, 13 & 1
7:00-9:00 p.m., Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill Street
Cosponsored: B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation and College of Jewish Studies

SEPT. 12

Vietnam Veterans Against the War
Meeting, Sept. 13, 8:00 PM, 3rd floor,
SAB. Fall Organizing,
UM Volleyball Club Organ. Meeting
Thura. Sept. 21, 7:30 PM. Faculty
Lounge Michigan Union.
History Undergraduate Assoc. Mass
Meeting. 5:10PM, Ugli Multi purpose
.room. Sept. 14.
lflLDaH Stud. Group Meeting Sept.

erence rooms 3Aa4
SEPT. 13
UM volleyball Culb Organ. Meet-
ing, Thurs. Sept. 21 7:30 PM Faculty
Lounge, Mich. Union.
U of .M. Baha'i Stud. Group Meeting
Sept. 15, 8:00 PM Michigan League
Conf. Rooms 3 & 4.
History Undergraduate Assoc. Mass
Meeting. 5:00 PM, UGLI Multi-purpose
room. Sept. 14.

WILD'S

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12

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Are you still
reading
the way your
parents read?
In the first grade, when you were taught
to read "Run Spot Run," you had to read it
out loud. Word-by-word. Later, in the second
grade, you were asked to read silently. But
you couldn't do it.
You'stopped reading out loud, but you
continued to say every word to yourself.
Chances are, you're doing it right now.
This means that you read only as fast
as you talk. About 250 to 300 words per
minute. (Guiness' Book of World Records
lists John F. Kennedy as delivering the fast-
est speech on record: 327 words per
minute.)
The Evelyn Wood Course teaches you
to read without mentally saying each word
to yourself. Instead of reading one word at
a time, you'll learn to read groups of words.
To see how natural this is, look at the
dot over the line in bold type.
grass is green
You immediately see all three words.
Now look at the dot between the next two
lines of type.
and it grows
when it rains
With training, you'll learn to use your
innate ability to see groups of words.
As an Evelyn Wood graduate, you'll be
able to read between 1,000 and 3,000
words per minute . . . depending on the.
difficulty of the material.
At 1,000 words per minute, you'll be
able to read a text book like Hofstadtler's
American Political Tradition and finish
each chapter in 11 minutes.
At 2,000 words per minute, you'll be
able to read a magazine like Time or News-

1
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week and finish each page in 31 seconds.
At 3,000 words per minute, you'll be
able to read the 447 page novel The God-
lather in 1 hour and 4 minutes:
These are documented statistics based
on the results of the 450,000 people who
have enrolled in the Evelyn Wood course
since its inception in 1959.
The course isn't complicated. There
are no machines. There are no notes to
take. And you don't have to memorize any-
thing.
95% of our graduates have improved
their reading ability by an average of 4.7
times. On rare occasions, a graduate's read-
ing ability isn't improved by at least 3 times.
In these instances, the tuition is completely
refunded.
Take a free
Mini-Lesson
on Evelyn Wood.
Do you want to see how the course
works?
Then take a free Mini-Lesson.TM The,
Mini-Lesson is an hour long peek at what
the Evelyn Wood course offers.
We'll show you how it's possible to
accelerate your speed without skipping a
single word. You'll have a chance to try -your
hand at it, and before it's over, you'll actually
increase your reading speed. (You'll only
increase it a little, but it's a start.)
We'll show you how we can extend your
memory. And we'll show you how we make
chapter outlining obsolete.
Take a Mini-Lesson this week. It's a
wild hour. And it's free.

'" a
i

" Blue Denim-Super Slims,
Bells, Straights
" Corduroy Jeans-Pin Whale,
Brushed

U of M STUDENT UNION
530 S. State St.

MON.,

TUES.,

SEPT. 11 SEPT. 1z
6:30or 830 p.m.6:30 or 830pm.

WED.,
SEPT. 13
6:30 or 8:30 p.m.

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