Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday,. October 28, 1975 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 28, 1975 ............. * GENERALISSIMO FIGHTS OFF FEVER Franco remains in critical condition Commensal: Get to know a prof (Col part of against monopoi FBI seeks FALN )ntinued from Page 1) ! demands independance for the "a coordinated attack island. In 1967, Puerto Ricans yanki government and voted overwhelmingly to main- y capitalist institu- tain their territorial status. The group's communi- The FALN has been blamed ad Puerto Rico as a tar- for at least 10 explosions in the g with the three main- New York area, including five ies, but there was no that occurred one yaer ago any trouble on the is- Sunday. The FALN also claim- MADRID, Spain (P) - Gen. son-in-law a n d grandchildren Francisco Franco remained in during the afternoon. grave condition yesterday but A previous bulletin said Fran- fought off a light fever and co had lost a slight fever re- spoke with his children and corded earlier in the day and! grandchildren after surviving a that he was "tranquil and lu- night at the brink of death. cid" with a regular heart beat Doctors reported the 82-year- and pulse. I old generalissimo had made no progress against his "cardiac insufficiency" and i n t e r n a l bleeding t h a t began Sunday night. A MEDICAL bulletin issued at midnight-6 p.m. EST yesterday -said Franco was resting nor- mally. A palace spokesman re- ported the chief of state had "conversed" with his daughter,. Visitors streamed in and out of the Pardo Palace where Fran- co has been bedridden since coming down with an attack of influenza 11 days ago followed by heart attacks. They paid re- spect to the family but were not allowed to she the chief of state. U.N. Secretary - General Kurt one of his stops to 'try and medi- ate the dispute over the Spanish Sahara, where Morocco plans to send 350,000 unarmed civilians into the area to claim sovereign- ty over the Spanish colony. He met with Premier Carlos Arias Navarro and Foreign Minister Pedro Cortina. Politicians expressed concern over a lengthening power va-1 cuum and there was renewed talk of a power transfer to Franco's hand-picked . heir, 37- year-old Prince Juan Carlos de Borbon. The transfer, which would end 36 years of Franco's authoritarian rule, c o u 1 d be either by the general's own de- stitutional procedure declaring that Franco is physically unable By JAY LEVIN to continue in office. Thanks to a new literary col- Political sources s a i d the lege (LSA) program and the Spanish c a b i n e t had hoped dean's office, you can now Franco would transfer power party down with a prof or just last week, before a series of have someone older and wiser heart seizures began. to chat with outside the class- room. n a ti ti z c n s 0 Waldheim arrived in Madrid on cree or by a complicated con- INVITATIONS are then tended to the students for ner, drinks or whatever the fessor fancies. ex- din- pro- tions." que liste get alon land cit word of liz Jon jeiryfSpoctacular9 NE SHIMMERING WATERS" LIQUIDSILVERAT ITS FINEST. THE NAVAJO LOOK S S 2 for 1 SPECIAL STUDENTS & FACULTY ONLY 0 LIQUID SILVER (SHIMMERING WATERS) strung with your choice of turquoise, corral, heshi or mother of pearl. REGULAR $12.95 SPECIAL 2 for 1' W SILVER & TURQUOISE RINGS REGULAR $29.95 SPECIAL 2 for 1} The above is genuine INDIAN JEWELRY not a cheap imitotion. YES, aenuine silver (not plated) with authentic stones. LIMIT TOTAL OF I SPECIAL PER CUSTOMER, 0 THE PUKA & HESHI LOOK, REGULAR $2.95 SPECIAL 2 for 11 2 LOCATIONS-OPEN 7 DAYS * Gift Shop in Marriott Inn and Win Schuler's Restaurant, Plymouth Rd. at 23 Expressway. Hours 7 a.m. to11 p.m. * Downtown location. Gift shop in Ann Arbor Inn, corner of Huron and S. '40 4th Ave. Hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. + & 20% OFF ENTIRE JEWELRY LINE. Come in and see the latest New York & Paris Fashions.I Marriott 769-9800 and Ann Arbor Inn (downtown) 769-9500 Phone and ask for Gift Shop IF WE RUN OUT OF A CERTAIN STYLE YOU RECEIVE A RAIN CHECK' UNDERLINING the growing nervousness in official circles, a top army general served no- tice that his troops were ready to "form a line of combat." Lt. Gen. Carlos Franco Gon- zalez-Llanos, new head of the Galicia military region, said military action might be neces- sary "in defense of the integrity of the country and the order within it." He was speaking at his swearing-in ceremony. There was no sign, however, that anti - government f o r c e s planned to move against the re- gime with Franco sidelined. Ter- rorist activity appeared at a standstill, exactly one month af- ter the executions of five guer- rillas sparked a wave of police ambushes and killings. Six Penn State graduates are on the Nittany Lion coachinng staff. Called the "Commensal Pro- gram ("commensal" referring to those who eat together), the LSA folks plan to provide a means for students and faculty members to get together in- formally. THE PROGRAM will allow students to meet professors with whom t h e y normarily would not come into contact in class. "It can be done over dinner; a 1i t t1e occasion - beer, or Cokes," said John Meeker, as- sistant to the dean of LSA and' supervisor of the program. "We want to keep it as simple as pos- sible, trying not to create a big bureaucracy." Student and faculty volunteer to take part in the program. The dean's office unites the in- terested parties by randomly assigning ten of the interested LSA underclasspeople to each faculty member. "We've had a very good re- sponse,' commented Meeker, citing fifty definite faculty vol unteers and an additional fifty "who'd like to, but not this fall." The program sprouted from the Joint Student-Faculty Policy Committee. "WE CAN'T envision close friends and academic counsel- ing," said Meeker, "but we're working in the academic tradi- tion of students and faculty get- ting to know one another." Meeker hopes the r andom groupskcanhget together once per term. "The c h e m i s t r y of some groups can cause the meetings to continue," he said, "but with others, once will be enough." TERRY BROWN, of the Dormitory Service, is involved ing student interest gram. coordinator Counseling with arous- in the pro- WHO KILLED JFK? See: RUSH TO JUDGMENT documentary on the conspiracy to assas- sinate President Kennedy. With: THE ZAPRUDER FILM Wed., Oct. 29-7 & 9 p.m. Not. Sci. Aud.-$1.50 PLUS: don't miss MARK LANE- Sunday, Nov. 2-Hill Aud. 7:30p.m. $1.25 "The response was quite goodi at Couzens," said Brown, "and we're in the process of doing it in other dorms" with flyers and' Resident Advisor (RA) help. "I think it will be successful,"' Brown added. Journalism professors P a u 1 Jess and John Stevens have al- ready volunteered their names to the dean's office. YOUR BUCK BUYS MRIE AT STEAK 64 ® BEEF BURGERS OCHICKEN * FISH FRY land. ed responsibility for a January In addition they called for blast at historic Fraunces Tav- the release of five jailed Puer- ern, in which four persons were to Rican Nationalists, killed. Four of them were convicted The police said the bombs at of participating in the 1954 the banks - two First National shooting at the House of Rep- City branches, a Chase Manhat- resentatives in which five con- ton branch and an office of the gressmen were injured. The National Westminster Bank fifth, Oscar Collazo, was con- Ltd. - were high-vield explo- victed for his role in the abor- sive devices similar to the ones tive attemnt on President Har- used in the Frannces Tavern ry Truman's life in 1950. c lr vo yt. Th bomb at the mission The FALN, which is scarcelv waq a low-yield pipe bomb, they known in Puerto Rico, basically soid. DA.TIY OFFICIAL RT'JETIN Page 7 SET 11 picas L4 November 7. 1975 - Upjohn & Tuesday, October 28 I Univ. of Penn./Wharton Grad. Dt- WUOM: "The Domination of Na- vision ture: Its social origins," 9:55 am. For liberal arts graduates who Intl. Ctr.: B. Cartwright, "Prob- want a teaching certificate in Eng- lems of Criminal Justice in the lish. Social Sciences, Math, or Biol. USA," 603 E. Madison, noon. Sciences. Duke Univ. has a MAT. CEW: Reports from Returning Paid teaching internship of $6000- Women Series, Dean Falk, tNeuro- $8000. Tuition is $1500. Good place- anatomy of Old World Monkeys: ment record for the graduates of The Relationship to Human Evolu- this program. Apply before Feb. 1, tion." 328 Thompson. 1:30 pm. 1976 to irector of Coop Program SIMS: Introductory Lecture,! in Teacher Education, 'Dept. of Transcendental Meditation Prog., Edie., Duke Univ., Durham N.C. Kuenzel Rm., Union, 2 & 8 pm. 27708. Physics: Rm. 205 Physics-Astrono- I Univ. of So. Calif. offers MA in my Bldg., S. L. Hsu, U-M, "Raman Judicial Admin. to prepare for Spectra of Polypeptides," 3 pm. court administration or research. Physics: Rm. 2038 Randall Lab.. Write Center for Admin. of Justice, K. Marko, U-M, "QED Experiments 3601 S. Flower St., Los Angeles on Orthopositronlum," 4 pom. 90007. Physics: Rm. 1041 Randall Lab.. Andover Teaching Fellowship P. G. O. Freund, Univ. of Chicago, ' pays $4500 plus room & board, for 4 pm. n liberal arts graduates desiring Great Lakes Research: B. Manny, Iyear of teaching experience. Con- "Randall W. Owens' Annual Nu- tact Phillips Academy, a private trient Cycles of an Undisturbed residential college prep school, An- Nearshore Ecosystem." White Aud., dover, Massachusetts. Cooeey La., 4 pm. I Summer co~ rse in "Publishing Res. College Lee. Series: Max ! Procedures" at Harvard, to prepare Heirich, "Non-Western Medicine: for a career in book & mag. pub. Old Techniques and New Discov- Write Mrs. Diggory Venn, 10. ar- eries." Greene Lounge, E. Quad, 7 WieMs ° pm.den St., Cambridge, Massachusetts RICS: meeting for those inter-!018 ested in officiating basketball, Coli- seum lobby, 7:30 pm. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Physiology/A-V Ctr.: films on Volume LXXXVI, No. 47 circulation, kidney function. S. Lee.! Tuesday, October 28, 1975 Hall. Med. Set. IT, 8 pm. is edited and managed by students Music: Univ. Choir, Thomas Hil- at the University of Michigan. News bish, director, Hill, 8 pm. ri'onen 764-0562. Second class postaae Music: Contemporary Directions,. pid at Ann Arbor. Michigan 48106. George Wilson, director, Rackham Published d a I I y Tuesday through Aud., 8 pm. Sunday morning during the Univer- Recritig oncamus:sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription November 3, 1975 - Georgetown rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- Univ. Law Center tars>; $13 by mail outside Ann Ar- November 4, 1975 - American bor Grad. Sch. of International Mngt. Summer session published Tues- & Howard Univ. & GAP Stores & clay through Saturday morning. Wayne State Univ./Med Center. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann November 5, 1975 - Roosevelt Arbor; $7.50 by mail. outside Ann Univ. & Aetna Life & Cas,1alty &' Arbo(r. Michigan Dept. of Social Work WHY WALK FARTHER! LEVI'S BRAND ' Open Daily 11 AM-9 PM " Low Prices :e No Tipping Available at Wild's Varsity Shop A' FEATURING: " Denim Bells " Brush Denims " Corduroys " Ponatella 0 Work Shirts Knit Slaks 0 Flannel Shirts *Boot Jeans " Pre-Wash Slaks 0 Denim Jackets 3035 Washtenaw across from Lee Oldsmobile I Wild's Varsity Shop 311 S. STATE STREET ..___..... .. __ f ! RESIDENTS OF THE EARTH and a SPIRIT OF PLACE '7:30 FRIDAY, Oct. 31 7 :30 FRIDAY, Nov. 7 Thomas Banyacya Interpreter for Hopi Religious Elders Oren Lyons Onandaga, Faith Keeper "We come, then, to both a necessity to change and a possibility to do so. In attempting to contrast the world, views of the American Indian with the imported assumptions of the immigrants who have been unable to find roots in this land, we can do no-worse than to identify otlernative paths to choose. The choice, of course, is another matter." GOD IS RED, Vine Deloria, Jr. PENDLETON LOUNGE, 2nd floor Mich. Union OFFICE OF ETHICS AND RELIGION-764-7442 HUNTING SEASON EXTENDED Due to an unexpected, tho welcome, display of enthusiasm for appts. the 4 MICHIGANENSIAN has scheduled. an additional week of senior por- trait shootings. Appts. are being taken for MONDAY, NOV. 10-FRIDAY, NOV. 14