Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, September 30, 1975 Page Two I HE MICHIGAN DAILY _ VETERAN MAKE YOUR WEEKEND PAY Michigan National Guard 483-3184 Fletcher Hall: The all male HOUSE VOTE SOUGHT: Fin*- ..... aorm nouoay nows aoout X1,.,11.)11111111,, LGC seeks CIA papers Free Instruction POCKET BILLIARDS THURSDAY Michigan Union 3 P.M. and 7 P.M. By KAREN SCHULKINS "Knock, knock." "Who's there?" "FLETCHER Hall." "Fletsher who?" "Fletch'uve never heard this place." of hi 603 eat librty - SHOWS TONIGHT at 7:00 and 9:00 OPEN at 6:45 THE LEAN, MEAN 30's, 3 WHEN AMERICA LAUGHED ...TO KEEP FROM CRING SHOWS TONIGHT at 7:00 and 9:00 OPEN at 6:45 T~wwil r~ mvi fr C the and HEAVY TRAFFIC! -r s f ® ulvu beionan TROGRA RMATO 454-,72 THIS IS IT, FOLKS F INA L DAYS The Movie Event you've been woitinq for is waiting SHOWS TODAY at 1-3-5-7-9 OPEN at 12:45 y u C1214 a's ad m verlai y g Geehe 66 B-64 6 LAST TIMES TONIGHT! WARHOL'S "FRANKENSTEIN and DRACULA" STARTING TOMORROW A NEW FILM EVERY DAY! I ~tIk;RCjL AKt' JAMES CAAN MA HA - cA i frIaU Ubtrty-I TC""E"Ei T FLETCHER Hall may well be the least-known building on cam- pus. For the record it's a small, pleasant - looking structure on Sybil Street, nestled among some private homes. And it's the only all-male dorm on cam- pus. The character in Fletcher Hall is unique, partly because the average resident is older than a typical dorm student. "A lot of people have heard bad things, like we're super jocks or fags, or don't know what a girl is," said Resident Advisor Rich Sheppard. "IT'S NOT a dorm, a frat, or home, but a collage," said five- year resident Gary Romeyn. "It's some place you can be proud of." "There are enough freshmen to keep it interesting and enough grads to keep it quiet," said four-year resident Steve Dear- ing. Many races, creeds, and coun- tries are represented here. "IT'S UNUSUAL because of the varied backgrounds of resi- dents from all over the world," said Sheppard. Dwellers have many reasons for coming, and for staying. Cost is one reason. An eight month lease (room) runs $510. Other reasons for its popularity include its location, its friendly atmosphere, cooking facilities, and quiet. "I thought about a dorm for about 50 seconds," said two-year resident Chuck Schatz. "Girls are distracting, it's noisy, and the people are crazy. It's much easier here than other places on campus." "I GOT stuck here. It was my third choice," said Assistant Resident AdvisorMike Dress- nack, "but as soon as you make some friends, it's ten to one that you'll stay. It has comara- derie.E veryone knows every- one else." However, Fletcher residents say they have no problem meet- ing women. "I've seen more girls in here this year than ever before," said Resident Director Reggie Greene. Co-ed picnics, baseball games, football games, and par- ties with other dorms prcavide plenty of opportunity for con- tact. FLETCHER traditions range from fire drills appropriately timed to announce its bi-annual picnics to y e a r I y awards for "Scholarship, Sportsmanship, and Fletchership." Those who make the dorm a better place to live are cited for "Fletcher- ship." One of the ways students do this is to chip in each year for something new. They now own furniture, a ping-pong table, a T.V., a refrigerator, and a pop machine. Fletcher also has an interest- ig history. It's founding father, Charles Hubard Mooney (Mich- igan, '97) organized the inde- pendent Dormitory Corporation to save the students from merci- less Ann Arbor landlords. MOONEY, with the help of alumni investments, built Flet- cher with the intention of turn- ing it over to the University within several years. Named after Regent Frank Ward Fletcher, the dorm was erected in 1922, the first all-male dormitory at Michigan. Fletcher suffered at first from poor maintenance and supervi- sion, and in November. 1929 came an even gerater blow to its already unsavory image. Two Fletcher students were ar- rested and six quarts of bonded 'whiskey and three quarts of apricotbrandy were seized in a Prohibition-era bust of a stu- dent-onerated bootleg distrib"- tion point based in Fletcher's; attic. By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - The Select House Intelligence Committee brushed aside White House of- fers of a compromise yesterday and voted to seek support of the full House in its battle for se- cret intelligence documents. The committee approved 10 to 3 a proposed House resolution declaring defiance of the com- mittee's subpoenas "to be a grave matter requiring appro- priate enforcement." THE HOUSE is not expected to take up the resolution before next week. The proposed resolution also directs Central Intelligence Di- rector Colby to turn over docu- ments subpoenaed by the com--' mittee on the 1968 Vietnam Tet offensive. Republican efforts to essen- tially write Ford's compromise proposal into the House resolu- tion and to provide that secret documents could be provided only to the committee and not the full 435-member House were rejected. THE COMMITTEE also re- jected an amendment by which the House would back all com- mittee subpoenaes except those that demanded such information as identities of secret U.S. agents, foreign agents, present intelligence activities and "dip- lomatic exchanges which are se- cret." Before the committee vote, Chairman Otis Pike, (D-N.Y.), said: "I do think it is time Con- gress took a stand. And it is time Congress said we need these pieces of information." Among the issues is whether the committee could have the names of secret agents which it requests. The committee has ob- jected to Ford's proposal that they could not have the names of any secret agents involved in operations which, if disclosed, would subject the agent to dan- ger of reprisals. WHEN A reporter asked Pike' if he believes the committee should have wholesale access to names of secret agents, Pike re- plied: "No, we're not suggest- ing that. We're suggesting that when we need it, we ought to be able to get it." In a statement, Colby said the resolution "goes to the heart of the question of whether the United States can conduct intel- ligence operations essential to the safety and welfare of our country." He said congressional probes should clarify the nature of modern intelligence, but in "a fashion that protects the essen- tial secrets of intelligence." "I BELIEVE the intelligence community has been forthcom- ing in responding to the legiti- mate needs of the congressional committees," he said. However, ". . . I cannot agree to the transfer of sensitive material in response to the Sept. 12 sub- poena in the absence of some agreed procedure as to its pos- sible disclosure." The confrontation became more bitter last week after Sec- retary of State Henry Kissinger ordered middle-level officials at the State Department not to tes- tify on policy on intelligence matters. He ruled that only sen- ior officials could do so. Pike has said the enforcement could be contempt of Congress citations against possibly Cen- tral Intelligence Director Wil- liam Colby or Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. ALL THREE Republicans present at a morning meeting urged more negotiations to work out a compromise with Ford and avoid the constitutional con- frontation over access to infor- mation. The committee's senior Re- publican, Rep. Robert McClory of Illinois, said the White House had promised him it would turn over volumes of secret informa- tion as soon as an agreement was reached. McClory said it would be pointless to instead take a time- consuming fight to the House. "WE'D BE heading for litiga- tion and a confrontation that would lead us nowhere," Mc- Clory said. Pike contended the conditions in Ford's compromise proposal, even one barring names of se- cret agents from the commit- tee, could be used "to withhold from this committee alomst any- thing they want to." Pike backed the assessment of Chief Counsel A. Searle Field that this would permit agencies to withhold not only the names of spies in Moscow but also the names of agents whose accurate intelligence was ignored for po- litical reasons. "If we were to accept this lan- guage it would completely shut down this investigation," Field said. Field said committee investi- gators have already found that one agent's report on a Middle East crisis was ignored "be- cause it conflicted with a politi- cal decision." In another case, he said, an agent's assessment was given great weight even though it was "obviously biased." A Symposium: BIOLOGICAL DETERMINISM: A CRITICAL APPRAISAL Social Structure-Tues., Sept. 30th "Ecological Determinism" JOHN VANDERMEER Division of Biological Sciences, University of Michigan 3:00 P.M.-RACKHAM AMPHITHEATRE "The 'Domination of Nature': Its Social Origins" MURRAY BOOKCHIN School of Metropolition and Community Studies, Ramapo College 7:30 P.M.-RACKHAM AMPHITHEATRE Workshops in E. Conference Room & E. Alcove Story says Hearst chose SLA (Continued from Page 1) cell to a hospital. MEANWHILE, in a tape re- leased from her Los Angeles After renovations and a brief jail cell, Ms. Harris said that stint as a women's dorm, the Hearst, whom she knew as men were back in Fletcher in "Tania," is "a truly beautiful 1960. woman" being manipulated by The dorm filled with "riwdyvsexist attorneys. Jocks," according to Wystan "As a woman, I clearly see Stevens, former resident an gywas a cruel manifestation of a now an Ann Arbor historian. male-dominated society where "One guy built a kayak in the women are defined by men as hallway," he said, "and a zo- being fragile, weak and unable' ology stu'dent boiled the head to make decisions for them- of a dissected monkey gn the selves," she said. bathroom. We played ping-pong, The Rolling Stone article, watched T.V., s t u d i e d, and' which will not appear on stands selpt." until later, quotes verbatim Altogether, Fletcher has his- from purported conversations tory, character, and color. It's among Hearst, Scott and fellow quiet, diverse, friendly, but most fugitives William and Emily of all, says Romeyn, it's "defi- Harris. It said it was Patty who nitely Fletcher." asked to join the terrorist Sym- - - - - bionese Liberation Army four weeks after her Feb. 4, 1974, kidnapping. THE MAGAZINE article does not deal with specifics of the bank robbery with which Hearst is charged. Its narration begins with the hours following the Los Angeles shootout. The article, entitled, "Tania's World, An Insider's Account of Patty Hearst on the Run," said Scott agreed to drive the three fugitives cross-country if they gave up all weapons, which they did after much protest. Their travels led to New York,} the Pennsylvania farmhouse andI finally to a Las Vegas motel where, the article said, Scott left Patty alone on Sept. 27, 1974, awaiting arrival of a "new team" of supporters, the Soliahs. The article concludes with Patty about to return to the San Francisco Bay area. ". . . She was dedicated to her new beliefs and she still called herself Tania," the writers said. "Extraordinary *... 'Lucia, 196 . . . is absolutely splendid, and reveals Mr. Sols's vast talent for comedy. I wish that it might be seen by all the sexes: it's the best discussion of equality (and inequality) I've seen on screen. -NORA SAYRE N.Y. Times LATIN AMERICAN FILM SERIES PRESENTS The Cuban Epic of Love r:):: ::,. : . .. . .. . DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ..Jr:}iJ"" Tuesday, September 30 Society Series, R. Kahn, "AlienationI Mgt. Training; Oct. 6, Burroughs Day Calendar and Addication: The Meaning' of Corp, Washington U. Law School, WUOM: Highlights from "Sympo- Work in America," Rackham Lec.I U. of Kentucky Grad Schools; Oct. sium of the Arts," in recognition Hall, 8 pm. ' 7, Dept. of State (Near Eastern & of 10th anniversary of legislation Physiology/A-v Ctr.: How I Ran South Asian Affairs), Washington establishing Nat'l Foundation on Out of Oxygen on Pike's Peak, S. & Lee U/Law. Oct. 8, Upjohn Co.- Arts & Humanities, 9:30 am. Lee. Hall, Med. Sci. II, S. Lec. Hall, Research positions, U. of Chicago/ North Engineering Library: Orien-' Med. Sci. II, 8 pm. Grad Schools; Oct. 9, Cargill, Inc., tation, 1002 Inst. of Science, Tech- IWY: Betty Friedan, "The Wo- Manufacturers Nat'l Bank, North- nology, 10 am. men's Movement in America: Where western Mutual Life Ins. Co.; Oct. CEW: Reports from Returning Are We? Where Are We Going?" 10, Carnegit-Mellon U/Grad Sc$. Women Series - Alice Smuts, "The Hill Aud., 8 pm. of Industrial Admin. Interviews at Emergence of Child Developmental General Notices Geology: Oct. 7 & 8, Texaco, Inc., Sciences, 1910-1930," 328-330 Thomp- CEW: Orientation, Grad Library. Oct. 9 & 10, Exxon Company, A. son. noon. Oc.;nterviews at Chem.: Upjohn Co.-i Biophysics: G. Yeh, "Annealing Tues.,Oct. 7; Undergrad Libar Organic MS, PhD & Analytical MS. Effects'Wed.,eOct. s, 7.30Popm. ,0,CEW; onta Intern'1 has announced the Effects and Mechanisms in Poly-I Scholarships, from $500-$2,000 of- Amelia Earhart elwship Awathe mers," 205 P&A, 3:30 pm. frd w nr ra Amelia Earhart Fellowship Awar40 Condensed Matter: T. Witt fered to women returning to UM af- ($3,000) to women for advanced Condnse Mater:T. W enter an interruption of at least 24 study & research in the areospace "Renormalizatian Scaling Symmetry consecutive mos.; appis, available, science; write: Zonta Intern's, 89 in Polymer Configurations," 2038 Oct. 1; due, Jan. 14; announce- E.vnBra St.CigoIl Randall Lab, 4 pm.E. Van Burean St., Chicago, III Theoretical Seminar: M. S. Chen, ment of winners, April 22, 1976; 60605; deadline: Jan. 1. Theoeticl Smina: M S. hen contact 328-330 Thimpson, 763-1353 "u-e Universality and Anomalous fortmore into. Law Day, Oct. 21 -- law schools Dileptons," 1041 Randall Lab, 4 Att. All Members of University will have reps on campus to dis- pm' Community: President's State of cuss programs admissions require- Great Lakes Research: D. Baker, the University -- Pres. Fleming ments, tentatively scheduled in "Meteorological Measurements11 will give his annual address to fac- League; keej in touch with CP&P around the Cook and Palisades Nu- ulty and, staff in Rackham Lee. for details. clear Plants," White Aud., Cooley I Hall, 8 pm, Mon., Oct. 6. Dis- Nat. Security Agency 1975 Profes- Lab, 4 pm. tinguished faculty awards will be sional Qualification Test given in Biological Determination -eries: presented after the address and a Ann Arbor Nov. 22; deadline appls. J. H. vandermeer, "Ecologica e- reception in the League will fol- Nov. 8; all liberal arts & math ma- terminism," 3 pm; M. Bookchin, Ilow. ors must take PQT before apply- "~The Domination of Nature: Its So.. ngt NA ap. atral val cial Origins," 7:30 pm, Rackham i Career Planning & Placement able at CP&P; NSA have sched- Amph. 3200 SAB, 764-7456 uled campus visits Nov. 11 & Feb. Humanities: Beyond the Protest- Interviews on campus: Sept. 30,: 23 ant Ethic: Work in a Technological Montgomery Ward & Co. for Retail - -.______ ~Appls. for Foreign Service Officer Examination to select cands. for U. S. State Dept. & U. S. Info Ag- ency availaable in this office; test the, a * * e a given in Ann Arbor Dec. 0; deadline " a b r""" " I apps. Oct. 31. Graduate Public Service Intern- ship: 2 yr. prog-Interns spend 20 T4 N G N ! !hrs. on job in State agency & also TONIGH T!!ro2r img enroll in 10 credit hrs. of grad VITTORIG DE SICA'S course work at Sangamon State U., at Springfried, Ill; grad prog is usually directly related, to prof. SE 7:15 only career in govt.; interns receive full tuition & fees, travel allowance; One of the first masterpieces of Italian neo-realism, made & a monthly stipend ($325 during in 1946. In terms of sheer emotional impact, SHOESHINE academic yr., $650 during summer) is brilliant. "If people cannot feel SHOESHINE, what can details available at CP&P. they *feel?"-.-Pauline Koel. In Italian with English sub- titles. And ________________________ and Revolution i INCLUDES: TOSSED SALAD BAKED POTATO HEARTHSTONE TOAST THURSDAY, OCT. 2 NAT. SCI. AUD. $1.50 8 P.M. ONLY Sponsored by the Group on Latin American issues AFTER 4:00 P.M. ROUGH RIDERS and LEVI'S BUSH JEANS are at SAM'S STORE o _ _ t _ YOUR BUCK BUYS MORE AT .. . v~ invrs FEL INI'S ROMA at 9 only Rather than a look at Rome by Fellini. this 1972 film is another dazzlinq look at Fellini with Rome as the back- ground. Includes a hilarious and irreverent Vatican fashion show and cameo appearances by Anna Maqnani and Gore Vidal. BOTH FILMS IN AUD. A, ANGELL HALL $1. 25 each or special double feature admission price ' -~ ~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY . Volume LXXXVI, No. 23 Tuesday, September 30, 1975 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108. Published d a i l y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Ar- bor., Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Presents I i "THE WOMEN'S MOVEMENT IN AMERICA. .. Un WHERE ARE WE? WHERE ARE WE GOING?" BETTY FRIEDAN SKY IG BETTY FRIEDAIN THE FIRST IN A SERIES OF SPEAKERS IN HONOR OF INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S YEAR