Page Two . THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, February, 1, ,1977 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, February~ 1, 1977 i I RULED NON-STUDENT: Are hun1ted houses.0 -L -WA L L./ A -ML %wlw N_.JL AL q w L/ \I. -W L/ a/W i. L. A. I ..n.- . . _-4 Slides of Vietnam Today and Songs by the cast of HAIR When HAIR was running on Broadway in the late 60's, the numbers of Americans and Vietnamese killed were written on large billboards in the lobby. The Vietnam war is over but the damage to hospitals, rice fields, and entire villages remains. CANTERBURY HOUSE is sponsoring HAIR in Lydia Mendelssohn The- ater, February 17 through 20, as a benefit for Friendshipment, people to people aid for the reconstruction of Vietnam. One dollar from each ticket will go for materials to help Vietnam rebuild itself. ON THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3 AT NOON, Barbara Fuller will present a program of slides from her recent trip to Vietnam in the Pendleton Arts Information Center on the second floor of the Michigan Union. The cast of HAIR will perform a number of songs from the show. Admission is free. Thursday, February 3-12 noon Pendleton Room SECOND FLOOR, MICHIGAN UNION STUDENTS! The Peer Counselors in Assertiveness Training at Counseling Services are offering FREE ON-GOING GROUPS_ IN ASSERTIVENESS TRAINING FEATURING: -beginning and advanced groups of 4 to 6 people. -meeting 2 hours weekly for 6 to 8 weeks. with a supportive atmosphere. -teaching learning skills of use in different life situations. -and focusing on individual assertion issues. -men's, women's and co-ed groups available. To register for an interview, or for more information, stop by Counseling Services, 3300 Michigan Union, Mon.-Fri., 9-5 or call 764-8312. Registration ends Tuesday, February 8th. really haunted? CS Ousts Luker Luker failed to' appear at a1 Luker to vacate his MSA seat (Continued from Page 1) As a part of their investiga-j tion, they took photographs which showed unexplained blobs of light. "THERE WERE TWO TIMES' she (the woman resident) said that it (the apparition) was right in front of her face, and both times her face was ob- literated by light," Gaynor ex- plained. Other pictures, which were 4aken when some sore of presence was "sensed," were completely bleached out. Control pictures taken when the woman did not make such claims turned out normally. All the photographs were examined by experts who could not de- termine a technical reason why the film "should not have been developed normally. For the past several months, Taff and Gaynor have been af- filiated with the Neuropsychiat- ric Institute at U.C.L.A., and have been travelling around Cal- ifornia investigating "haunted houses" and giving ESP dem- onstrations. DURING THESE sessions the parapsychologists said in an in- terview yesterday, complete re- laxation of mind and body are necessary. The effects of alco- hol, sedative drugs or hypnosis tend to make people better at We meet student housing nees. By PATTI MONTEMURRI. predicting situations, last nam- BM es, physical disorders, etc. The Central Student Judiciar "We're presuming that people (CSJ) has ruled that forme have an innate ability which can Michigan Student Assembli be developed," Taff said. But (MSA) President Calvin Luke he added that only 15 per cent must vacate his current on of the people in their demonstra- year MSA seat because he gra tion sessions respond to train- uated in December and is n ing. an enrolled student. CSJ hearing last Wednesday to y defend his 1ISA membership r against charges brought by fel- y low member Brian Laskey. Ir e- d- ot LAST FRIDAY, the four CSJ members who attended the Wednesday hearing unanimously approved an opinion ordering Dorm residents greet two parapsycholo gists skeptically (Continued fromPage 1) 1 "What is their background?" tric Institute researchers Barry askoi East Quad resident Ra- Taff and Kerry Gaynor. mone Stevens. "Do they have a l ull ".Al -- j aa u y ia.ia THE DORM councils of Alice Lloyd (home of the Pilot Pro- gram), East Quad, (home of the Residential College), and Mosh- er-Jordan voted to appropriate funds out of dorm dues. The University Activities Center (UAC) also allocated money to the presentation, as did Mich- igan Student Assembly (MSA), LSA Student Government (LSASG), and the Engineering Council. Jeff Lebow, a freshman engi- neering student, coordinated the lectures. "Although I was skeptical. at first about anything having to do with the supernatural,," he said, "I really flipped when I heard these fantastic stories and read documented reports about some amazing parapsychology cases." Lebow said he thought stu- dents would be interested in a parapsychology presentation, as the University offers no courses dealing with the topic. NOT EVERYONE was so en- thiisias'ic. Vociferous opposition was expressed by dorm resi- dents. Mosher-Jordan House Council member Sheila Fitzgerald said she thought the dorm monies could have been better used to back educational and public service workshops. Fitzgerald said she was put off by the "un- professional approach" of the parapsychologists. - T { degree in ghost-hunting or some- thing?" LSASG treasurer Jane McCas- lin defended her organization's allocation. She said that while the twelve elected members of LSASG could not be sure what would appeal ' to all students, they could assume that such a presentation would be interest- ing to most. Residential College-East Quid Assembly representative Luke Jordan stood behind the speak- ers: "Our impression was that their work has much scientific basis and that we are lucky to get them at all before they con- tinue their research in England and become world-renowned." David Laverty, a Lloyd fresh- man, is suspicious of the mo- tives of the two speakers, and said that the event is being "played up too much and is really a.promotional campaign. Most serious researchers don't exploit their subject matter in such a fashion. They're just try- ing to seek publicity for their cause and the movie that is to be based on their work." Another dorm resident, Roy Frye, expressed his disinterest in appraising the situation: "I don't believe in parapsy- chology - it's like a fanatic re- ligion," he said. "I don't like seeing my dorm dues being wasted on two magicians." because .he is in violation of a section of the All-Campus Con- stitution. The document directs that an MSA seat become va- cant upon the holder's gradua- tion. Since Luker did not enroll as a continuing student before the beginning of the current term, the CSJ declared him ineligible for MSA membership. However, the ruling, written by CSJ member Bob Morton, does not mean an MSA meln- ber automatically loses his or her seat upon graduation. If an MSA member enrolls at the be- ginning of the following term, that person will retain member- ship, the opinion said. LUKER HAD considered en- rolling as a Non-Candidate for Degree student before CRISP ended last Friday. But even if hg had registered, he still would have lost his seat because he failed ,to meet the January 7 enrollment deadline. Luker's seat will remain va- cant until April, when the next MSA campus elections are held. Luker, who served as MSA president from April to Decem- ber, 1976 expressed little con- cern last week over the appar- ent finale of his three-year in- volvement with the organization. He is now managing the City Council campaign of First Ward candidate Zane Q.lukalns. Govinda's fires all employees The Inter-Cooperative Council provides non-profit resident controlled housing for over 600 people in 23 co-op houses. * Reasonable cost * Member/Resident control G Gain practical experience I (Continued from Page 1) Krishna group, and called the restaurant a misuse of the Krishna name. "WE DO HAVE a chain of restaurants under the name 'Go- vinda'," said Ramananda Raya from Detroit's Krishna ashram (residential and spiritual unit.) "These people in Ann Arbor just took the name," he con- tinued. "It's along the lines of a misrepresentation." When Ann Arbor Govinda's opened. Raya said he was "dis- mayed" to learn that fHare Krishna had failed to secure ex- clusive right to the Govinda trademark. "THE PERSON who started it used to be a (Krishna) devotee, but he gave up that life. He took up sinful activities such as gambling and liquor," -Raya added, but refused to identify the specific owner of whom he spoke. Raya stated that the food at Ann Arbor Govinda's did not meet the dietary requirements of the Krishna philosophy. He said that his group had been offered the job of managing Go- vinda's but had refused. Co-owner Stavapriay denied any attempt to represent Go- vinda's as connected to the Krishna movement. However. Govinda's . walls are covered wi'h paintings of the life of Krishna (Govinda), and former employees report that the kitch- en staff was expected to make offerings to Krishna on an altar in the back of the restaurant. GOVINDA'S MENU also im- plies that the restaurant is staffed by Krishna devotees. "Here at Govinda's," it reads, "we are preserving in practice the ancien Vedic culture . . We at Govinda's would like to acknowledge our eternal indebt- edness to our spiritual leader and guide, His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prab- hupada." Swami ,Prabhupada is the head of the Hare Krishna sect. Meanwhile, the dismissals at Govinda's have left many form- er employees in a precarious fi- nancial condition. "We have no money, no work,". complained Paula Hickey. She and other- former staffers expressed fear that management would try to block them from-'receiving un- employment benefi's by claim- ing that they had quit rather than been -laid off. "I'm terribly devastated that this beautiful cooperative thing - you can see the brotherhood nd sisterhood we have here (at the employees meeting) - has been brushed," Kathy Shenkar remarked. i U Classifieds at the University of Michigan 4002 Michigan Union 662-4414 I [ i RACKHAM GRADUATE STUDENTS: IF YOU INTEND TO GRADUATE this term with either a Masters Degree or an Intermediate Degree awarded by the Rackham Graduate School, you must submit a Diploma Application to the Records Office, Room 1014, Rackham Graduate School, no later than 4:00 p.m., Friday, Feb. 4, 1977, in order to be placed on the May 1977 Degree List. Diploma applications are available intithe Rack- ham Graduate School, Room 1014, as well as in your Department or Program Office. Nazis did not kill Jews--N U prof (Continued from Page 1) publication first reached Northwestern campus. the -..- r m .i I LEONARD BERNSTEIN'S tMASS ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY by the Howard Hangar Performers Tuesday, Feb. 15-7:30 p.m. ANN ARBOR'S FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH STATE & HURON STS. Ticket donations for non-students are $3, $2 donation for students; ($2 non-students and $1.50 students for groups of 15 or more ordered in advance) from the Wesley Foundation, in person or by mail. 602 E. Huron St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108. Tickets and more information 9-12 & 12:30-3 week- days. 668-6881. SHORTLY AFTER the two largest Chicago newspapers printed a stof'y about the book on January 26, the Northwest- ern campus switchboard was jammed as thousands of peo- ple called to object to Butz's theory. A Jewish faculty group print- ed an advertisement in last Friday's Daily Northwestern to "express profound sorrow and outrage ... at the allegation that the murder of millions of Euro- pean Jews is a hoax." The ad proclaims the signers' belief in academic freedom, while ex- pressing concern that the book might add academic legitimacy to heretofore non-academic anti- Semitic trends. Rabbi Marc Gellman, head of the Evanston chapter of Hillel, said the Northwestern admin- istration's reaction to the con- troversy thus'- far has been to defend Butz's right of free speech, while failing to object strongly enough to Butz' s views. A NORTHWESTERN Univer- sity official, Raymond Mack, is- sued a statement last week in which he indicated that the school's administration dis- agrees with Butz's, statements. The statement was endorsed by the president of the University Board of Trustees. Talk siow host Steve Edwards interviewed Butz on his Chica- go-based ABC televis show Friday night. He descbed the professor as "very unomforta- ble" and "somewhat defensive." At one point, Edwards asked Butz if he was an "overt anti Semite." After a pause, Butz replied: "No." Edwards said of Butz, "I don't think he convinc- ed anybody (of his theory)." A survivor of Auschwitz and a woman who says she lost over 40 relatives in concentration camps were among the guests for the second half of Edwards' show. Edwards invited Butz to stay, but he refused. Butz camre to Northwestern in 1966, and has tenure. 16 r. A h PTP Febnrary Attractions so, antont dck/wv's George Axer est Acor- in-Residenoe February 16.2a The First Natonal Touring Companya Ithe AND ?a//// AWARD-WINNING FREEPOE.,T ,29O0 7 days & 7 nights at. oliday Inn on the Beach FRI., MARCH 4th to SAT., MARCH 12th Quad occupancy (Double. occupancy available;