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October 25, 1972 - Image 7

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-10-25

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Y ednescloy, October 25, 1972

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Seven

Wed nesdoy, October 25, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Mini-Courses in Relig on, Voting Behavior
BEGIN THIS WEEK
BEGNNING TODAY! 'Religion and the A elican Academic Scene"
Dr. Noel Freedman, M.C.-Penny Kramer, T.F.
(Info: 764-4475)
ORIENTATION REGISTRATION: TONIGHT, OCTOBER 25, 8 P.M.
2402 MASON HALL
LECTURERS: Krister Stendahl, Dean, Harvard Divinity School
Theodore Gill, Chairman of Division of Humanities, John Jay College.
Robert Bellah, Princeton Center for Advanced Studies.
Total class meetings: (8) -October 25-November 13
BEGINNING TOMORROW! "Voting Behavior & American Presidential Politics"
Dr. Warren E. Miller, M.C.
(Info: 763-3403)
FIRST CLASS MEETING REGISTRATION: TOMORROW, OCTOBER
26, 3-5 P.M.-LECTURE ROOM NO. 1, MLB
CLASS MEETINGS, with reading period between November 9 and December 7:
October 26, November 2, November 9
December 7, December 14, December 21
Registration for both mini-courses should be done on a DropAdd form, which you obtain from
your counselor and bring to the first class meeting for "division" signature. The courses are for one
credit, on a poss foil basis. The registration deadline for "Religion .." is October 30, for "Vot-
ing . . ." is November 2.

Summer Jobs in Washington, D.C.'
Sponsored by U-M Summer Intern Proqrom
Jobs in Congressional Offices,
Executive Agencies, Lobbying Groups,
News Media
MASS MEETING
THURSDAY
UNDERGRADUATES ONLY
7:30, Oct.26-Multipurpose Room, 3rd floor UGLI

IMcGovern blasts Nixon's war
policies and campaign funding

rI

GIVE

To the

Student Blood Bank

DAYTON, Ohio (A) - Sen.
George McGovern said yesterday
any pre-election settlement of the
Vietnam war would mean Presi-
dent Nixon has let it run on un-
necessarily for four years "pure-
ly to avoid criticism from the
right-wing war hawks back home."
McGovern said in a series of
appearances in New York and
Ohio that Nixon could have ended
the war four years ago on the
same terms available now.-
Rather than destroy his presi-
dential candidacy which stemmed
from an antiwar stance, McGov-
ern told an interviewer that any
settlement now "would destroy Mr.
Nixon. I can't imagine anybody
voting for him in view of what he's
done in the last four years."
Listing a series of questions he
said he would ask Nixon if the
President agrees to debate him,
McGovern noted that 20,000 Ameri-
cans have died in Vietnam and
that $60 billion has been spent
there since the start of the Nixon
administration.
"Did you make all these sacri-
fices to save your own political
face from right-wing criticism?"

he asked of Nixon.
McGovern made the same point
in three television and radio inter-I
views in New York and to a
chilled crowd of several thousand
gathered in a drizzle to hear him
speak from the courthouse steps
in Dayton.
Earlier, on the CBS morning
news, McGovern was asked what
he thought the chance was for aa
Vietnam settlement.
"I hope there is," he said. "The
great tragedy, that is overwhelm-
ing to me, and I would think to
the American people, is that any
settlement that comes now in the
closing days of this election cam-
paign, is the same kind of settle-
ment we could have had four
years ago.
I Ronald Ziegler, White Housej
Press Secretary, responded to Mc-I
Govern's charges, saying "it'sI
preposterous" to suggest the ad-
ministration would proceed withj
intricate and serious negotiations
with one eye on the election-season
calendar.
Asked about indications t h eI
North Vietnamese might now be
willing to include South Vietna-

mese President Nguyen Van Thieu
in a coalition government, McGov-
ern said the Communists have al-
ways indicated they would accept
elements of the Thieu regime.
In a television interview in Day-
ton, McGovern was asked what he
would do if Thieu balked at a set-
tlement under the terms current-
ly being discussed.
"I'd just cut off his water,"-Mc-
Govern replied. "He's been blac.k-
mailing the United States for about
five years now. Congress first lost
control of foreign policy to the
President, now the President has
lost control of it to General Thieu."
In his Dayton speech, McGovern
hit hard at his allegation of wide-
spread corruption within the Nixon
administration, the subject of a
nationwide speech he has taped
for showing on a paid telecast to
be shown tomorrow evening.
Accusing Nixon of concealing a
|$20-million secret fund, a figure
he had said earlier had been men-
tioned by Newsweek magazine,
McGovern said the late Preskzent
I Dwight Eisenhower made Nixon
"come clean" about an $19,000
fund in 1952.

Tuesday, Oct. 31
Wed., Nov. 1
Turs., Nov. 2

11-5

Union Ballroom
Call 76-GUIDE

1'

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Wednesday, October 25 Rackham, 8 p.m
DAY CALENDAR University Players: Beckett's."End
Continuing Education for Women game," Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg,
Conversation: "Beyond the Classroom: 8 p.m.
Alternative Careers for Teachers," CEW UAC' Homecoming '72, "Those Were
Center, 330 Thompson, 10 a.m. the Days . . ." Beach Party Flicks,
Anatomy Seminar: M. D. Ross, "His- Plaza, 8 p.m.
tochemical and Scanning Electron Mi- I Increased Computing Demands Open
croscopic Studies of the Organic and Meeting: Lecture Hall 1, Mod.- Langs.,
Inorganic Components of Octoconia," Bldg., 8 p.m.
4804 Med. Sci. II, 1:10 p.m. Mini-course No. 410: "Conference dn
Statistics Seminar: W. L. Grichting, Religion and the American Academic
"Sampling Problems in a National Stu- Scene," begins with orientation/iegis-
dy of Organizations." 3227 Angell Hall, tration mtg.; bring "Add" forins to be
4 p.m, signed, 2402 Mason Hall, 8 p.m.
Botany-Zoology Seminar: P. Smouse, Rive Gauche: women in China Work-
"The Analysis of Multiple Species Hy- shop, 1024 Hill St., 9 p.m.
bridization in the Genus PINUS," 1400
Chem. Bldg., 4 p.m. CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT
Physics Colloquium: w. J. Escher. 3200- S.A.B.
Escher Tech. Assoc., "Hydrogen Energy FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICER exams
Systems," P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 p.m. for U.S. Dept. of State and U.S. In-
Industrial and Operations Engin. Se- formation Agency will be given Sat.,
:inar: F. Glover, Univ. of Colorado & Dec. 2;, application deadline, Oct 31;
DCA, New Computational Results for applic. available in CAREER PLAN-
Streamlined Network and Transporta- NING.
tion Methods," 402 w Engin., 4 p.m. THE CELIA M. HOWARD FELLOW-
Psych. 171 Film Series: "To Die To- SHIPS: 111. State Federation of Busi-
day," UGLI Multipurpose Rm., 4 pm. ness & Professional Women's Clubs of-
Student Lab Theatre: Guare's "Mu- fers financial assistance for Grad. Stu-
zeeka," and May's "Adaptation," Com- dy to prepare for careers in State &.
munity High School, 4:10 p.m. Federal Gov't. & Foreign Serv. Ck this
Music School: Contemporary Festival: riffice for complete info.
Contemporary Directions Ensemble. EDUCATION DIVISION INTERVIEWS
Sydney Hodkinson, conductor, Rack- October 27
ham Aud., 8 p.m. East Lansing, Mi. P.S.-Al- Elem.
Grad Coffee Hour: E. Conf. Rm., fields; call 764-7459 for appts.
THE EFFECTS OF CHEMICAL
WARFARE IN VIETNAM
ALL CAMPUS SLIDE-SHOW
TON ITE, Oct. 25-7:30& 9:30
1800 Washtenaw
sponsored by Delta Gamma
presented by Interfaith Council for-Peace
NOV. 3-5 Hillel Weekend at Tamarack NOV. 34
"Where I Am as a Jew Today"
with
Rabbi Everett Gendler
paci fist-farmer--rabbi
Founder-Huvurat Shalom (Boston)

creative traditional services study groups
Israeli dancing midnight flicks
Information reservations Hillel 663-4129
or Joan 764-5695
DEADLINE: Monday, Oct. 30

f

THE WOODROW WILSON SCHOOL OF
PUBLIC AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
Princeton University
will interview men and women interested in

careers in:
GOVERNMENT SERVICE
URBAN PLANNING
JOURNALISM

ELECTORA
POLICY RE
INTERNAT
RELATI(

ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMII
POLICY MENT
at Univerity of Michig
Career Planning & Place
on Mondoy, October 30,

L POLITICS
ESEARCH
TIONAL
ONS
C DEVELOP-
an--
ement
1972

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