Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sund, day, March 28, 1,976 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunc iay, March28, 1976 MONDAY, MAR. 29-4-6 P.M.-AUD. B, ANGELL YANKEES and COWBOYS from DALLAS to WATERGATE Six talks by Carl Oglesby highlighting significant points in the decade covered by New Left politics of the 60's-through the SDS/Weather/Greening of American transformation-to the present "Post-Watergate" period. CARL OGLESB1Y) Carl will also be mteting with 2 classes in Residential College with Marilyn Young. Tues., 11-12:30: Foreign Policy & Vietnam-Room 126 E. Quad 1 Tues., 2-3:30: Literature &Politics-Room 126 E. Quad Carl will be in-residence for three weeks supported by a group of students and faculty together with University and Campus Ministry organizations. There will be oppor- tunities for extended conversations with him around material from the talks and any other subiect of mutual interest. Please contact Guild House, 802 Monroe, 662-5189 or Ethics and Religion, 3204 Union, 764-7442. I London 76, IR SS By AP and Reuter LONDON - Seventy-six peo- ple, including several children, were injured here yesterday when a bomb planted without warning by Irish guerrillas ex- ploded at a crowded exhibition center. a A blast injures responsible "A fine film." -Penelope Gilliatt. The New Yorker "Swept,, Away. SHOWTIMES Today at 1, 3, 5, 7&9 M.I 611rsity I i "Love _._._ i i Revised Schedule for Biology 105: Introduction to Biology The information in the printed T that follows is the one that will DIVISION 328 Time Schedule is incorrect. The schedule be used for the Fall Term. Section 001 Section 002 *Lecture Discussion 002 Recitation Sectiona Section Section Sectiona Section 003 003 004 004 005 005 006 005 007 007 Discussion Recitation Discussion Recitation Discussion Recitation Discussion Recitation Discussion Recitation Discussion Recitation Discussion M 12:00-2:00 Tu 9-10 Thur 3-5 p.m. Tu 10-11 Thur 3-5 p.m. Tu 11-12 Thur 3-5 p.m. Tu 9-10 Thur 7-9 p.m. Tu 10-11 Thur 7-9 p.m. Tu 11-12 Th 7-9 p.m. Tu 9-10 Fri 1-3 p.m. Tu 10-11 Fri 1-3 p.m.' Tu 11-12 Fri 1-3 GEORGE p.m. EASTABROOK Aud B AH 3056 4014 3056 NS 3082 NS 3056 NS 3056 NS 1053 NS 3056 NS 1053 NS 2111 NS 1053 NS TBA 2111 NS 3056 NS 2111 NS 2111 NS 2111 NS TBA NS NS I I E d i S 1 t E { 7 I I t !i i t i I i NOW SHOWING Not Now Darling Today at 5:30-7:15-9:00 special cildrens' matinee 1. & 3 S A he t e P one 60 40 4 tAMp u S. I Theotre Phone 668-6416 tyenemy". 0OO This is a religious precept that challenges the mind. Love my en- emy when I can barely deal calmly with my in-laws? Yet this hard say- ing has validity in a world where even a small act of violence has such unforeseeable repercussions. Scientific advances have heighten- ed our mutual vulnerability. Only love and non-violence can sustain us. We may concede violence is in all of us. So is God. Try His way. It works. Get together with your family, friends, neighbors, or co- workers to discuss the problems of violence and how you can work to- gether to help solve them. For a helpful discussion guide and.fur- ther information write: Religion In American Life, 475 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017. Play an active role in your communityRIAL and help show the way. R , AERANL s trik e settled (Continued from Page 1) more than 12 hours of talks Fri- day. "Both sides have agreed to keep quiet on the details un- til after the (EMU) Board of Regents has ratified the con- tract,". he said. While the next meeting of university regents is not sched- uled until the third Wednesday in April, Hawks felt that "They may consent to an earlier meet- ing in this special case." Midwest's Larest Selection of European Charters Canadian and U.S. from $259 CALL 769-1776 -Great Places TRAVEL CONSULTANTS 216 S. 4th Ave, Ann Arbor Four of the injured lost limbs and two were in critical condi- tion after emergency operations, according to hospital spokes- men. POLICE SAID the bomb, the fourteenth in London this year EMIU in what security sources have called the Irish Republican Ar- my (IRA) "spring offensive" contained about two pounds of explosives. It was hidden in a garbage can near an escalator! on the first floor of the Olym- pia Center. "There were bleeding bodies lying all over the floor," one witness said. "People were running and screaming to the exits and others just standingI around crying."j A Scotland Yard spokesman said the bomber apparently aimed for maximum casualties by placing the device in a plas- tic trash container in a "do-it- yourself" section of the home products show. About 15,000 persons attending the exhibiton in the hall located at Earl's Court were evacuated. POLICE said the location of the bomb - was deliberately chosen to kill or maim as many people as possible. It was the worst explosion in London since 1973 when a car bomb went off near the Old Bailey central criminal court, injuring 244 people. Detective Chief Superinten- dent Jim Nevill, deputy head of' the anti-terrorist squad, said it was "mere chance" that there had been no fatalities at the Olympia Center. THE FIRST floor of the Olym- pia building, crammed with visitors at the time, was filled The community of God. Make it your wa. with cries and scream after the blast as dozen of people fell bleeding to the floor. One young man, who was injured and did not want to be identified, said: "Me and my grilfriend were about 15 yards from the rub- bish bin when suddenly a lot of white smoke started coming out of it. Then, it just went off. I saw it in slow motion - a bang and then these bits flying up in the air." JOHN JACQUES, of London, saw "bleeding bodies lying all over the floor. One young wo- man I tried to comfort had a hole in her thigh big enough for me to put my hand in." Dorothy Yerby, of Hanwell in Middlesex, said: "We were two of the lucky ones. If my boy- friend and I had been ten yards back, we would have been among the bodies on the floor." "People started to run screaming in the panic to get away," Yerby said. "I had to climb over bodies. There were ten or 12. One man's leg was in shreds. It was gruesome and I tried not to look." A man with an Irish accent 'and quoting a codeword later telephoned a newspaper office in Manchester, saying: "This is a warning to the British govern- ment to take their troops out of Northern Ireland. More bombs are on the way if this demand is not met." SHRP blames ills on student apathy ARAMC S14 d h*NWAMEW fA71~W PeWVM ji * NOTICE * POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE FOR WORK STUDY STUDENTS Please see Beth or Cassie 420 MAYNARD-764-0560 (Continued from Page 1) mostly about Democratic party platforms through their unions and blue collar workers can't relate to a far leftist lifestyle. Meanwhile, student support is waning. "I haven't seen as much student interest in city, government this year as last SHRP MEMBER Larry Bas- sett, however, contends that the party really has no place at all in the electoral process. He points out that the SHRP has a rapid turnover of sympathizers, while the city's other political figures have permanent, hard- core support. Section 008 008 Section 009 009 Recitation Section 010 Discussion 010 Recitation year," said Kohn. "Electoral politics demands some kind of continuity," re- Kohn hopes to recapture stu- marked Bassett, so the party dent interest by campaigning in has directed more of its efforts the dorms, especially E a s t to dealing with long-term issues Quad, this week. than with temporal candidates. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN "., r.!..4,r"f:r}{}} :J:;":::F}I~~f:{:{Y$S 5,.:""{:;;?.:"}"";;;;: :"ii::'^.::.i;:;:t;r:%:" itvS{ ;;v'' ;}~; *Regular use of the lab in Room 2004 is necessary to complete course requirements. It is open Tues., Wed., Thurs., 1-10 p.m. Students should plan 3 hour blocks of lab time per week, a pre-lab discussion period on Tuesday and a post lab recitation on Thursday or Friday. All students must register for Section 1 and also one other section. Questions concernina enrollment should be directed to Barbara Bowen, 2017 Nat. Sci. Biol. 105 may be substituted wherever Biol. 106 is a prerequisite; those who elect. Biol. 105 after completina Biol. 100 will lose credit for the earlier course. U NOW LEASING FOR FALL!v ROOMS at Newly Renovated CHABAD HOUSE 715 HILL ST. (Corner Oakland and Hill) With a Newly Modern KOSHER Food Service on Premises! SPACE LIMITED (non-Coed) $' For Information Call: s ., Sunday, March 28 Day Calendar TV Ctr.: Artist at Work. The Eyes Have It, wwJ TV, channel 4, noon. WUOM: The States of the 'Union - NPR bicentennial documentaary; featured state, Nebraska, 1 pm. UAC Musket: Hello Dolly, Power, 2 pm only. Music School: Degree Recitals - Randolph Blouse, trumpet, Recital Hall, 2 pm; Pamela Dameron, pi- ano, Recital Hall, 4 m; Eric Maddox, piano, Recital Hall, 6 pm; Herman Taylor, DMA organ, Hill Aud., 8 pm; Diane Zola, soprano, Recital Hall, 8 pm; Chamber Orchestra, Hill Aud., 4 pm; aMaizin' Blues, Rack- ham Aud., 7:30 pm; Horn Recital -- Cady Rm., Stearns, 8 pm. C PLPAI orrm MB&M I S.missing out on some of the DAILIES because of delivery mistakes? DNA "Committee B Report" Mon.: March 29 Rackham Amphitheater 12:15-2:00 FEATURING: Prof. Shaw Livermore "B" member & chairman of "Univ. Values Seminar" DROBNY FU RTADO PACKARD WORK IN FIBER March 1-April 4 UNION GA[ERY First Floor MICHIGAN UNION T-F 10-6, S S 12-6 PTP: "Feelin' Good," musical tri- bute to black entertainers, Nat'l Theatre Co., Trueblood Theatre, Frieze, 8 pm. Hillel: Emil Fackenheim, {'This Moment in Jewish History," Hillel, 8 pm. Monday, March 29 WUOM. t'Guernica," program on war w/dramatic excerpts, readings by Sandburg & Burton, newscast by E. R. Murroy, & music, 10 am. CEW: "Alternative Family Styles and Patterns," 328-330 Thompson St., noon. william Cook Lectures on Ameri- can Institutions: Richard E. Neu- stadt, Presidential Power Revisited: Reflections on Johnson and Nixon, Legitimacy and Loyalty," 100 Hut- ihins Hall, 3:15 pm. Anthropology: Maxwell Owusu, "Ethnography of Africa: The Use- fulness of the Useless," E. Conf. Rm., Rackham, 4 pm. Industrial, Operations Eng.: Paul Maine, TRW Inc., Cleveland, OH, "Human Relations Aspects of Men- ufacturing," W. Eng., 4 nm. Guild House. Carl Oglesby, "Dal- las II. An Effort to get at the Truth of the Killing of JFK," Aud. B, Angell, 4-6 pm. Physics: T. Pawicki, Argonne Nat'l Lab, "f, f' and A02 Interfer- ence in Pi - p - K plus K -n," 2038 Randall Lab, 4:15 pm. Physiology Lectures, Films: "Di- gestion and Organic Metabolism," S. Lec. Hall, Med. Sdi. II, 7 pm. Musical society: Pennsylvania Ballet. Power, 8 pm. Music School: Degree Recital - Bruce Cowan, DMA clarinet, Re- cital Hall, 8 pm. Summer Placement 3200 SAB, 763-4117 Camp Sequoia. Mi. Coed. Will in- terview Mon. Apr. 5, from 1 to 5. Openings include Riding (western) and Riflery Instr. Register. Camp Tamarack, Mi. Coed. Will interview Weds. Mar. 31, from 9 to 5. Remaining openings include nurses, bus driver, male counselors in all fields, case/social worker, asst. cooks and kitchen staff. Reg- ist er. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVI, No. 145 sunday, March 28, 1976 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a 1 y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; .$7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. OR 0 - disagree with a bill we sent you for THE DAILY? WE'D LIKE TO TRY TO STRAIGHT- EN OUT THAT PROBLEM, BUT WE co-) s 1, ) CAN'T IF YOU DON'T LET US DORM RESIDENTS VOTE in the University Housing Council Election THIS WEEK KNOW ABOUT IT. II I fl it I