Wednesday, October 18, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Wednesdqy, October 18, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pcge Seven I I OCTOBER PHOTOGRAPHY CLASSES ALL SUPPLIES FURNISHED Classes limited in size to 6 people. Register now to assure your spot. Classes meet 1 nite a week for 6 weeks. C!asses begin week of Oct. 23. BEGINNERS learn to use your equipment right. You will learn to expose film properly and develop it the first session. Then you will learn to make your own enlargements up to 8x1 0. You will have 6 darkroom sessions and FIELD TRIP. Classes meet on Monday or Tuesday nite from 7-10 p.m. Total Cost $50. ADVANCED classes are on either Wednesday or Thursday nites from 7-10 p.m. Also 6 darkrom sessions and 1 field trip. Learn to shoot under lights. Print for proper contrast. Also included are kodalithing-toning-solariza- tion- mural making. Total Cost $60. OPEN HOUSE MONDAY, OCT. 16-:30 Ann Arbor Photography Workshops Located at Sight & Sound Inc. 7155 JACKSON RD., ANN ARBOR, MICH.-665-3316 TEXAS TOUR McGovern hits GOP tactics 'U' survival seminar tries mnountaineering I FORT WORTH, Tex. (P) - Demo- of Democratic officials." headed back to Washington to tape crat presidential candidate George Talking to a noon-hour -ally that a half-hour broadcast on economic McGovern repeatedly accusing attracted a police-estimated crowd issues that will be televised na- By KATHY RICKE lines and the rapelle rope. But as President Nixon of hiring an al- of 5,000 to a downtown Fort Worth tioMally Friday night. oountain climbcg is more rig- she stepped back to the edge of leged "sabotage squad," insisted park, McGovern added, "I d) not Meanwhile in Washington, Mc- cumn 15 students learned Sunday from her face and her hands start yesterday he does not enjoy mak- enjoy that part of campaigning Govern's media advertising manag- during a wilderness survival class. ed to shake. ing campaign attacks. which comes from attacking the er, Morris Dees, said the .esponse Mountaineering is only one part of With some last minute 'instruc- He contended at virtually every opposition. I'd much rather : a 1 k to the McGovern campaign tele- the Freshman-Sophomore Seminar, tions and soothing words, however, stop during a two-day Texas tour about the issues and principles in casts have been very good. Survival in the Wilderness. The she stepped backward and over ihe that the Nixon campaign 'ins em- which I believe. Sployed "a network of more than 50 "But there are certain dangero.s Dees said that by midday Mp(n- course is designed to make people edge. Gently letting the -ope out, operatives to forge letters, imper- trends that have been set in 1)o- day $670,000 had been contributed more capable of interacting with she leaned back until her body was sonate officials of various Demo- tign by this present administration by mail as a direct result of the the wilderness and to enjoy it more almost perpendicular to the waII cratic campaigns, incite riots, is- that we must talk about because candidate's Oct. 10 television pro- while damaging it less. of rock. sue phony press releases in she they jeopardize the freedoms and gram in which he described his A short drive brought the stu The descent was slow and a lit- names of others, withhold evidence constitutional rights on which our plan for disengaging U.S. mlitary dents and instructors to Grand tIe precarious at first,: but as she from a grand jury, illegally enter system of government depends." 'forces from Southeast Asia. Apo- Ledge, the only nearby place in the got the hang of it her feet bounced the offices of the opposition party, Fort Worth was the final stop on ther $250,000 is expected as a re- state suitable for practicing moun- a little more against the rock, giv- steal private files and unlawfully McGovern's fourth Texas campaign sult of the speech. tah sclimbing. ing the illusion of flying. wiretap the private conversations swing. From there the .andidate This leads the campaign mnanag- The air was cold, but few noticed She reached the bottom and gave ers to believe that enough money at as the system of ropes and con- the signal to haul the rope back. from donors mailing in an average tinentals (metal pulleys) were set "I never thought I could do that," ya of$20 ach wll b suffcien to utp to catch any accidental falls, she said with. a smile, "T was can ugeahdwill e scntagnand an experienced mountaineer, ocan use and pay all his campaign enlisted the aid of three fellow In addition to mountaineering, M afia lindsinessiclimbers to help the novices. His students in the Natural Resources With three weeks to go, Nixon confidence in the equipment and department survival course have is still leading McGovern by more his enthusiasm for rapelling (lower- studied how to construct emergency NEW YORK (RP- The bugging and wiretaps were legal - both than 25 percentage points in the ing oneself down a cliff on a rope) shelters, how to recognize edible of the Mafia's trailer headquarters were court authorized, said Gold, shed polls. helped most people over the first animal life in survival situations, in a Brooklyn junkyard has re- !redicting the first indictments in "But as the senator is find of step. and how to trap and prepare it in vialed that almost 200 outwardly his investigation within 10 days. saying," said Gary Hart, his cam- When everything was in place, the most nutritious .way. legitimate businesses here h a v e Service of 676 subpoenas was con- paign manager, "the only poll that Henry asked for volunteers. While Students also have heard lectures been infiltrated by the underworld, tinling. counts is on election day. I think most of the class hesitated, one on finding wild edible plants and Dist. Atty. Eugene Gold said yes- Gold had anno'onced Mond1;yv the the last 10 days of this campaign student shakily stepped forward to insects, as well as guest speakers terday. bugging of the gray and b I u e are going to be gangbusters in be roped into the system. from Outward Bound (an outdoor "They run the f-ll gamut of busi- trailer, parked in the Bargain Auto terms of a wholesale shift of senti- She seemed confident enough as survival program) and a member ness activities in this city,.' he told Parts Inc., junkyard on, Avenue D ment." Henry helped her tie into the safety of a mountain rescue team. I a u Speaking of humor f 0 0 UA(C4O wdlmL. A Contemporary Discussions presents CHRIS MILLER editor of the NATIONAL LAMPOON will give a free lecture Thurs., Oct. 19 at 3:00 p.m. in the Michigan Union Ballroom a City Hall news conference. "You in Brooklyn. He called it the mob's name it! There's hardly a business "simmit headquarters." in the city not subject to it." Gold said the first lead to the f Authorities long have been aware trailer cane last December when of mob infiltration of business, but several police investigators were have found it difficult to establish assigned to pose as Christmas tree specific links. Gold indicated he vendors near a Brooklyn bar. Out I of thei 1 i f1 mnt in th ,A I ' l im- DAILY OFFICIAL BU LLET IN I was relying on information over- heard at the trailer. He said legi- timate businessmen have given his investigation little cooperation. "There is no doubt that the bugs STEAMY CRUST "Hot spots" in the earth's crust, where steam or hot water rise to the surface through fis- sures, previously were the only known areas where geothermal heat could be tapped to provide electric power. Thermal mapping now permits geologists to locate additional sources that can be reached by drilling. of ther r n ormation, e II ; m T ed, grew "the most massive inves-' tigation in the history of law c-a forcement in this country." The prosecutorssaid his office has motion and still pictures taken from Nazareth Roman Catholic high school across the street from the junkyard that reveal "tVie com- ings and goings of prominent nem- bers of the five organized crime families of New York City and other people." Gold also claimed to have more than 1.6 million feet of audio tape of telephone wiretaps and bugged conversations within the 40 by 15 foot trailer. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official pubication of the Univer- sity of Mic'igan. Notices should be sent in TYV WRITTEN FORM to 4019 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of the &y' prev.eding publication and by 2p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only, Student organization notices are not acceptel for publication. For more information, 'phone 764-9270. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18 DAY CALENDAR Psychiatry Lecture: K. Tooley, "Fam ily Interaction Patterns With Som Child Abuse Cases," Children's Psyci Hosp. Aud., 10:15 am. Commission for Women: Home Heath Lounge, Michigan Union, 11 an Anatomy Seminar: S. Feinberg, stu- dent seminar, 4804 Med. Sci. II 1:10 pm. Statistics Seminar: W. L. Root, "Lin- ear Estimation in System Identifica- tion Theory." 3227 Angell Hall, 4 pm. Physics Colloquium: J. Keuffel, Univ. of Utah, "High Energy Physics with Cosmic Ray Muons - Recent Re- search & Future Outlook," P&A Col- loq. Rm., 4 pm. Psych 171 Film Series: "But What If The Dream Comes True?" UGLI Multi- purpose Rm., 4,pm. Journalism Lecture: Russell Myers, n- comic strip artist, "Broom-Hilda and ne Me." Aud. A, Journalism Dept., 4:10 :h pm. IEEE and Coll. of Engineering Lec- er ture: W. Dickenson, Data Systems m. Branch, Nassau, "The Apollo Com- munication System," Chrysler Center, 8 pm. 'Grad Coffee Hour: E. Conf. im. Rackbam, 8 pm. Music School: University Chamber Choir, T. Hilbish, conductor, Hill Aud, 8 pm. UAC: "The Beatles: Away with Words," Power Center, 8, 10 pm. Rive, Gauche: Middle East language night, 1024 Hill St., 9 pm. CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3200 SAB Mademoiselle Competitions: i) Fic- tion & Poetry Competition: for un- dergrad men & women; winners re- ceive cash prizes & publication of their work. 2) Mademoiselle College Board/ Guest Editor Competition: 1972-73: ,brochure now available; check this of- fice for complete details. The Dept. of Speech Communication and Theatre H w --- k 1972-1973 Ticket Information: Individual Tickets; Thurs., Sun., Mon. $1 Fri. and Sat. $1.50 Season Subscriptions Thursday $3.00 Fri. and Sat. $4.00 NO RESERVED SEATS PROUCTONS EN DGAME by SAMUEL BECKETT Oct. 19-22; 24-28 Arena Theatre OLD TIMES by HAROLD PINTER Nov., 30, Dec. 3-4 Community Center Project E. Washington The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel by DAVIDKABE Feb. 15-17 Trueblood Aud. The Architect and the Empire of Assyria. by FERNANDO ARABEL March 29-31 Arena Theatre I WASHTENAW COUNTY HUMAN RIGHTS PARTY Open Meeting AGENDA: 1 U Daily Cassifieds + ECONOMICAL ECOLOGICAL I 1) Campaign '72: Analysis. Direction and CARROTS Cnr. S. Division & Liberty Recycled and Imported Clothing Wed. & Thurs., Oct. 18 & 19 on most velvet New shipment of clothes from Fursto jeans at lowest prices in town NG HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 12-6; Sat. 11-6; Sun. 2-5 .----------------------- ORDER BLANK Name MAIL ORDERS TO: Address University Players City- State___- Department of Speech SUniversity of Michigan PhoneZip _ - Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 Faculty fl Student Q Ann Arbor n Visitor r, CHECK ONE: f I enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope. Please I mail my tickets. F-1 I enclose no envelope. Hold my tickets at the Box Office. I will pick them up. I ENCLOSE $ FOR DAY SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS ITHURSDAY ____ I SEASON: FRIDAY AND SATURDAY* SATURDAY AND MONDAY _ OLD TIMES will be presented Thursday, Nov. 30, I Sunday, December 3 and Monday, December 4. 2) City Council-What To Do Next. 3) Platform Adoption. THURSDAY, OCT. 19th 7:30 p.m. 304 South Thayer 761-6650 FREE PARKI .Iii I ,i BIG GEORGE MAKES THE COMPETITION OTHERS TRY TO MEET! i 6mwm R E A 3 L T Y Anoher Big George COMPONENT SPECIAL .c t . . . .. , r' t. 1 S SONY The heart of the system is this Sony AM/FMJ FM Stereo receiver. With an IHF power rating (8 ohms) of 100 watts, it will provide distor- tion free sound for years. Unusually sensitive FM and AM tuner sections. DUAL Finish the system with this fine Dual au- tomatic /manual turntable package. It in- cludes the turntable with variable speed, anti-skate and much more, a base, Just cover, and Shure M-75 stereo cartridge. s E R V C E 0 N T E G ELECTRO-VOICE Start the system with a pair of E-V speakers. They are two-way systems with a 10" woofer and an independ- ent 21/" tweeter. Variable level control on the backs. Acoustic suspension design assures big, clean sound. Genuine walnut veneer exterior. Reg. $672.30 Now XSAVE NOW 47230 $200.0 ... temporary and part time as well as full time University Employees other than Hospital Employees ... OPEN invitation to join the University of Michigan Employees' Credit Union. Lending and Saving services, group auto and home- owners insurance premium payments on payroll deductions and mnnv n. ,'.-L. h a-r r~ a-.ct ia rna'r rcnr mC rv S E A 4v P~L...If1NAw Hours: Mon. - Fri.: 9 to 9, Sat.: 9 to 6I I U"' I I I