Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY. ,,v:.v.. S. S High Court plans to rule on gov. workers' political rights Astronauts end ascent Daily Official Bulletin (Continued from Page 1) in for your go." And he added: "It better be a go," and the astro- nauts laughed. The checked the -,vstems "h By AP and UPI brief to the Court that Gesell had or articles about classified CIA 'm111e d hasn't ch aged,"J.ch Itt manifold hasn't changed," Schmitt WASHINGTON - The Supreme removed "a cornerstone of the material without the agency's con- said. Court yesterday agreed to review merit civil service system." sent. "The RCS (reaction control sys- federal and state laws that keep The court also: Marchetti, of Vienna, Va., argued tem) hasn't changed. Ascent water some 5.5 million government work- -Dismissed an appeal by Moose that the restraint imposed by two'hasn't changed. The batteries have- ers from partisan political activity. Lodge 107 in Harrisburg, Pa., from lower courts was contrary to free- n't changed. The federal law, known as the a Pennsylvania Supreme C o u r t dom of speech and to a 1971 ruling "Oh, my golly, only we have Hatch Act, was struck down in decision that it must admit blacks that newspapers could publish por- changed." July by ( three-judge panel here as guests if it serves any guests tions of the Pentagon papers. . And again they laughed. on grounds that it is overly broad at all. The government said Marchetti, and violates the workers' F i r s t The lodge had ar ued that by the who has written a novel about the "Oh, I'll tell you," said Schmitt. Amendment rights. same reasoning the dining room agency's operations, signed a con- "That's something everyone's got An Oklahoma law was upheld, of every private home in the coun- tract like all other CIA employes to do once in their life." -meanwhile, in February by another try would be open to the publicInot to disclose any classified in- Once they disembarked, Mission three-judge panel in Oklahoma City once guests who were not mem- formation, intelligence or know- Control had to interrupt the two as a reasonable way to promote in- bers of the family ate there. ledge. moon venturers firmly as theya tegrity in the public service. The appeal was dismissed unani- The former executive assistant chattered excitedly about their The Supreme Court will begin to mously "for want of a substantial ;to the deputy director of the CIA ing site. resolve the Hatch Act conflict with question." . needed the votes of four justices to As Schmitt raced about his tasks hearings in early spring. A final Last J 6-3 vote the high be heard. He missed by one, with on the lunar surface, Houston decision is expected by the end court indirectly upheld the lodge's only Justices William Douglas, Wil- warned him that telemetry showed of June. xt ham Brennan Jr. and Potter Ste- his suit cooling water wastwarm- racial exclusivity by finding it had wart agreeable to consider his ap- ing up and advised him to regu-j The federal law has been on the no constitutional obligation to serve late it or slow down. books since 1939 and was upheld Negroes simply because it held a peal. by the Supreme Court in 1947- Pennsylvania liquor license. -Let stand a lower court ruling "I'm just a hot geologist, that's Since then, however, the concept Both cases stem from the same which business spokesmen s a i d all," Schmitt replied.' of the First Amendment's guaran- incident: the refusal ofmthe lodge would legalize union demands for Cernan invited Schmitt to stop tee of freedom of association has ,in 19tto servedinner toK ero companywide bargaining. work for a moment and take a broadened. rvis_ a black who is majorit lead- The dispute arose during a 1967l f T t . L . 1 i f : l 1 I r ' +K t i } . E . ' 1 I i { TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12 From the most airless prairie DAY CALENDAR ever touched by man, came the School of Music: Tuba Student Re- melodious tones of Cernan: "Oh, cital, SM Recital Hall, 12:30 pm. bttky m no onthe oneprarie Physics Special Seminar: A. Bussian. bu'y me not on the lone prairie, Echo Lake, "An Optical Model of High where the coyotes howl and the Energy Nucleon Interactions, 2038 Ran- winds blow free." dall Lab, 2 pm. Cernil ws had pu to eep Physics Seminar: T. Brown. Beil Tel. Cernan was hard put to keep up Labs. "Electronic Surface States Out- with the bubbly, vocal Schmitt. As side Liquid Helium," P&A Colloquium he stood on the footpads of the Rm., 4 pm. lunar lander, Challenger, he said: Physics Seminar: R. 'Worden Ruther- ford Lab, "Rg-egeut"208Rn "As I step off at the surface of dall Lab, 4 pm Taurus-Littrow, we'd like to dedi- Anthropology: J. Fischer, Tulane U., cate the first step of Apollo 17 to "Panapran Words for Large Numbers," Rack ham Amnph., 4 pm. all those who made it possible." school of Music: Flute Student Re- And then his composure left him. cital, SM Recital Hall, 4:30 pm. Afroamerican & African Studies Lee- "Jack, I'm out here. Oh, my ture: H. G. Lawrence, Oakland U.,; "The golly. Unbelievable. Unbelievable," I Presence of Africans in the New he shouted to his moon-mate, whose World Beforetolumbus," 2402 Mason Hall, 7 pm. nickname is Jack. School of Music: U. Symphonic wind Mission Control awakened the Ensemble, Sydney Hodkinson, con- astronautsearlyyesterdayfor ctor; Daniel Eller, piano guest colo- asrnus ery ysedy fo ist, Hill Aud., 8 pm. their big day by playing a record- Residential College Concert: Residen- ing of the pop song "City of New tial Coll. Singers, RC Aud., 8 pm. Orleans," which includes the Zoology Lecture: A. S.,Romer, M- phrase, Good morning, America mate Evolution," Rackham Amph., 8 -the name of the ship. pm. Tuesday, December 12, 197: for people who walk on the earth tt EARTH SHOES simulate walking bare- foot in sand Give Soweane You Love Immecdiately straightens one's postutre. R EARTH SHOES for Xmas Incredibly Comfortable EARTH BOOTS and GIFT CERTIFICATES Now Available a~IO 662-0757 OPEN 10 A.M.-6 P.M. HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL 302 N. FIFTH AVE. tI The Most Useful Coupon You May Ever Rip Ou Judge Gerhard Gesell delayed' the effect of his decision on the Hatch Act in July until it could be appealed by the Justice Depart- ment. The Department said in its tc~, QW %W1 i 1aU1y er of the state House of Repre- strike against the Phelps-Dodge, "Ah," jeered the geologist,j sentatives. Corp., by 33 locals representing "you've seen one earth and you've -Refused to hear the claim by employes of the copper firm. seen them all." the father of one of the four stu- The National Labor Relations They started joking. dents slain in the Kent State shoot- Board upheld an unfair labor prac-i Schmitt, referring 'to a rake for ings in May 1970, that Ohio is un- tices charge against the unions but collecting samples, parodied Wil- constitutionally shielding itself a U.S. appeals court overruled the liam Shakespeare: "My kingdom from damage suits. The justices finding. for a scoop." noted that the issue raised by Ar-- - thur Krause, whose daughter Al- lison was killed, presented no sub- stantial federal question. UAC PRODUCTION -Rejected, 6-3, an appeal by Victor Marchetti, a former official of the Central Intelligence Agency COME ON OUT AND PARTY (CIA) banned from writing books with Say lt, Sell It, Seek lt-Thru Daily Classifieds AD COPY: s axaE m =is --T-- _. unIiversity cellar december hours 9 am to 10 pm weekdays 9 am to 5 pm Saturdays 12 am to 5 pm Sundays SALM AGUNDI "AFTER CLASSES BASH" UNCONTRACTED CLASSIFIED RATES WORDS I day 2 days 3 days 4 days 5 days 6 days add. 0-10 1.00 2.00 2.40 3.20 3 90 4.50 .55 11-15 1.5 2.30 2.90 3.q0 480 5.60 .75 16-20 1.30 '2.60 3.60 4.80 5.90 6.80 .85 21-25 1.55 3.10 4.30 5.70 7.00 8.10 1.05." 26-30 1.30 3.60 5.00 6.60 8 10 9.40 1.20 31-35 2.05 4.10 5.65 7.40 9.05 1 u.50 1.35 36-40 2.30 4.60 6.30 8.20 10.00 11.60 1.50' 41-45 2.55 5.10 6.95 9 00 10.95 12.70 1.65 46-50 2.80 5.60 7.60 9.80 11.90 13.80 1.80, INCH ES 1 2.80 5.60 7.60 9.80 11.90 13.80 1.80 2 5.20 10.40 14.65 19 1-0 23 45 27.60 3.60 3 7.40 14.80 21.10 27.60 34.00 40.20 5.40 4 9.40 18.80 26.95 35.30 43.55 51.60 7.20 5 11.20 22.40 32.20 42.20 52.10 61.80 9.00 N B.: Each group of characters counts as one word Hyphenated words over 5 characters count as two words (this includes telephone numbers) 10 lines eauals 1 inch 5 words per line WORDS NO. OF DAYS DESIRED PRICE NAME PHONE DEC. 14-90 p.m. to 12 p.m. I I I UNION BALLROOM For A&, bookings call A Productions 769-0800 ADDRESS checks payable to: THE MICHIGAN DAILY 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48104 $1 at the door r 1 NEW LS&A The following is a listing of recent changes or additions to the course listing for the College of LS&A, effective Winter 1973. Any questions about the courses listed be- cou SES I TER '73 low should be referred to the sponsoring department. The secretary there should also be able to tell you about any courses which do not appear on this list. Other sources of course information include the Fresh- man-Sophomore (1213), Junior-Senior (1223) and Student (1018) Counseling Offices, located on the first floor of Angell Hall.(+ = see catalog for more information) AFRO-AMERICAN and AFRICAN STUDIES cross-lists the following courses, winter '73: +AFRO/POLI SCI 351 ( AFRICA." SAMOFF. 2-4) "THE STRUGGLE FOR S. +AFRO/POLI SCI 451 (2-4) "GOVERNMENTS & POLITICS OF LATIN AMERICA." SAMOFF. AFRO/'R.C. HUMSA312E(4) "AFRO-LITERATURE." MICHELENA, RAMSEY. Sampling of the trends of black literature in the Americas; em- phasis on contemporary written works (intranslation, when ap- propriate) of all genres; attention will necessarily be paid to the history of black arts. Paintings, sculpture, performing arts will be examined. Three, areas of maior concentration: Afro-American, Afro-French, Afro-Hispanic. Approach will be chronological & geographical. AFRO 334/SPEECH COMM. & THEATRE 333 (3) "BLACK THEATRE WORKSHOP." YOUNG. The beginning course in acting taught from a black perspective with lab work in voice and movement. AMERICAN STUDIES/HUMS./UNIV. CRSE. 402 (3) "AMERI- CAN FOLKLORE." LOCKWOOD A general introduction to the study of folklore: origins, forms, functions, processes of transmission, and methods of collection and analysis of verbal and nonverbal traditional expression. Em- phasis will be placed on American Folklore, but comparative material will be drawn from a variety of societies. Special con- cern will be given to the role of folklore in contemporary life. ANTHRO!LINGUISTICS 141 (4) "LANGUAGE IN SOCIETY." BURLING. An introduction to the systematic study of language and of the place, of language in society. Fundamental concepts of linguistics will be considered and applied to the role of folklore in contem- porary life. ANTHRO 455 (3) "WEST EUROPEAN PEASANTS SINCE FEUDALISM." BLOK. (ONE OFFERING ONLY) Relation of commercialization and State Formation Processes to the Transformations of West European Peasantries. ANTHRO 460, 473-now 3-4 credits. ANTHRO 583 - now 4 credits. BEARDSLEY ANTHRO 486 3) "ANDEAN CIVILIZATION." EARLS. (ONE OFFERING ONLY) A structural analysis of kinship, political organization and cos- mology in the Inka Empire and among the modern Quechua and Aymara communities. ASTRONOMY 112 (4) "INTRODUCTORY ASTRONOMY: STARS, NEBULAE, AND GALAXIES." TESKE, MOHLER. Prerequisits no longer exclude students who have taken college physics. +CCS 573, 574 - prerequisite changed to "CCS 476" CCS 575 (3) "COMPILER CONSTRUCTION." CCS 476, Pre- requisite. RIDDLE (Formerly "Data structures and com- piling Techniques.") Introduction to compiling techniques including parsing algorithms, semantic processing and optimization. With the aid of a compiler writing system, the student implements-a compilter for a substan- tial programming language. CCS 662/CICE 668 (3) ,"ADVANCED THEORY OF SYS- TEMS AND AUTOMATA." Prereq. CCS 552, or ECE 467, and Math 517 or P.I.' ZEIGLER. (Formerly "Algebraic Theory of Automata.") The concepts & formalisms of mathematical systems theory are introduced. The relation between structure and behavior and the decomposition of systems are. discussed in the context of finite automata, linear systems and tree automata. The use of systems concepts in modelling is also considered. ENGLISH 342 (3) "LITERATURE & CULTURE." (ONE OF- FERING ONLY) Section 001: "Modern African Literature" JOHNSON. (Cross listed with AAAS) The literature of modern Africa. A study of significant works written mainly in English by important African writers in the light of the forces and influences that have shaped modern Afri- can literature from inside and outside. Section 002: "Literature of the Modern South" GIPSON. A study of major Southern writers considered in light of social and cultural factors which contributed to the development of a uniquely modernist literature. Attention will be given to the criti- cism and representative creative writing of fugitive-agrarians and to the fiction of William Faulkner, Katherine Ann Porter, Thomas Wolfe, Erskine Caldwell, and Ellen Glasgow. ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES 420, 421. Add to the prereqs. in catalog: "Permission must be granted by Director prior to enrollment. FELL - JAPANESE 493 (2) "METHODS OF TEACHING JAP- ANESE AS A SECOND LANGUAGE." NAGARA, KATO. Course is designed to prepare our graduate students to teach fundamental Japanese courses. Theories of historical development and methods of teaching will be discussed. Students will be fa- miliarized with aural-oral teaching techniques and introduced to the use of audio-visual aids. Class visitations and practice teach- ing will be an integral part of the course. GREAT BOOKS 203 (4) "GREAT BOOKS OF THE MODERN WORLD" Will examine a number of the philosophical, literary, and scien- tific works which are central to modern culture. HISTORY 496 (4UG;3G) "PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHONALY- SIS." HOLMES. Will focus on the, interpretation of philosophy, psychoanalysis and history as a methodological approach toward an interpretative nnlvsis of the relationshin betweon the individual and society. HISTORY 437, 438, 469, 477, 478, 511, 535, 565, 566, 663 - please see Departmental office secretaries for information about changes in course title, credit hours, description, and/or course number, effective Winter '73. JOURNALISM/SNR 476 (3) "WRITING ABOUT ENVIRON- MENT." SANDMAN. P.I. and 301/302. To equip students with requisite researching, writing and editing skills needed to communicate with general audences about their own environmental work or the environmental work of others. JOURNALISM 544, 590, 591 (now 490) - see department sec- retary for changes effective Winter '73. NELL 570 (3-4) "LITERARY ANALYSIS AND THEORY 11, (Seminar) WINDFUHR. Recent theoretical approaches to literature and analytical meth- odology. Working material; selected specimens from Near Eastern Literatures. PHYSICS 126-- sections 025, 026. ZORN. (in cooperation with R.C.) "Physics of Photography." These special lecture, rec. sections of P-126 will concentrate on the physics of photographic process and of the related apparatus. Electromagnetism, optics, and atomic structure will be discussed with a continuing emphasis on the understanding of these points most relevant to photography. Course will not cover actual camera or darkroom techniques, nor will there. be much consideration of the chem, related to photog- raphy. More info: Jens Zorn, 1070 Randall Lab/111 Green, East Quad (764-4450) PHYSICS 256 "REVOLUTIONARY CONCEPTS OF MODERN PHYSICS." (2) HENYEY. Primarily a lecture course. See department for specific topics to be covered. PHYSICS 285 "PHYSICS OF MUSIC." (3) WEINREICH. Lectures/Lab, designed to acquaint the student with the physical basis of music. No prior formal knowledge of either physics or music theory is required; reasonably strong interest in music is assumed, as well as a willingness to combine ear and mind in an attempt to analyze the ohenomena involved. Topics: nature of sound, properties of musical tones, dynamics of vibrating bodies, harmonic series . .. etc. PHYSICS/R.C. SOC. SCI. 211 (3) "ARE THERE GLOBAL CRISES?" KANE. Critical study of social, global and environmental problems with a scientific or technological aspect. Attention is paid to separat- ing the social or political aspects of a problem from the tech- nological ones and to understanding alternative technological futures. Implications of the finite earth are studied in terms of population, resources, energy use, pollution an( possible environ- mental catastrophe, etc. No science background is assumed. In- terested non-science majors from diverse fields encouraged, science majors allowed. POLITICAL SCIENCE 443, 449 - see dept. secretary for course modifications, Winter '73. ROMANCE LANGUAGES-SPANISH 206 (1) "PRACTICAL SPANISH." A continubtion course in the active practical use of Spanish, for non-concentrators who wish to keep their proficiency. All work done in class periods. 2 hrs. per week. SLAVIC 446 (3) ''COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF 20TH CEN- TURY RUSSIAN, ENGLISH, AMERICAN POETRY. BRODSKY. A continuation of Russian 445. Content, goals, audience will be similar to those of 445. SOCIOLOGY 376, 377, 378, 551 /SW 502: delete from Announce- ment, effective Winter '73. SOC. 541 (3) "CONTEMPORARY JAPANESE SOCIETY: CON- VERGENCE THEORY" (Formerly Soc. 422.) SOC. 436 (4) "INTRODUCTION TO URBAN RESEARCH." TILLY. Soc. 210 and 336, prereq. SPEECH COMM. & THEATRE 517; Sp./Journ. 420 - delete from Announcement; Speech 482, 333, 211 -- see dept. for modifications, effective Winter, '73. Full-term University courses, new for Winter, and announced earlier include 402, "AMERICAN FOLKLORE;" 405, "WINTER ECOLOGY;" 450, "HUMAN GROWTH AND DEVELOP- MENT." Please see the departmental office personnel (2501 LS&A Bldg) for further information. ZOOLOGY 220 (4) HUBBELL, VANDERMEER, HAIRSTON. Zoology 106 or equivalent. Primarily for Inteflex students; others by P.I. The diversity of animal life and the biological world in which man has evolved. Presentation of the principles of population dynamics and ecological constraints on man's future, with em- phasis on evolutionary mechanisms and the importance of the comparative method of scientific thought. The following University Courses are all mini-courses; they will be less than a- full-term in length, and are for one offering only: Winter, 1973. Further information on each course will be made available in and around the Counselinq offices later in the term, when one can register via a drop/add form for no more than two mini-courses for this term. Other mini-courses are anticipated for the Winter; please watch for information as it is circulated prior to the registration/first class meeting of the particular mini-course. UNIV. COURSE 414 (1) " ITY CONFERENCE." ONE OFFERING ONLY. THE COMING EUROPEAN SECUR- ZIMMERMAN, M.C.. This mini-course will be concerned with European security prob- lems after the Nixon-Soviet leadership talks this year. Four public lecturesrand small se.minar sections. Short papers. (March, '73) Speakers include Dr. Robin Remington, M.I.T.; A. Rloss Johnson, Rand Corp.; Dr. Arsen Jovanovic, U. of Pittsburgh; on additional European scholar or two. Watch for further announcements in and around Counseling Offices. Pass/fail. UNIV. COURSE 317 (1} "COMMODITY FORM SOCIETIES AND THE LITERATURE OF LATIN AMERICA." ONE OF- CHEMISTRY 117 (1) KUCZKOWSKI. "INTRODUCTION TO TEACHING." (see Department) CLASSICAL STUDIES. LATIN 453 (3) "SALLUST" SHACKLETON-BAILEY.