F~yage Ten* THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, April 6, 1976 GOING-OUT-OF-BUSINESS SALE DAVID'S BOOKS 529 E. LIBERTY Prints & Posters ........... 40 % off New Books...............40 % off Used Hardcovers,..........40% off Used Paperbacks..........60% off Calendars ................70% off Shelving, etc. ALBERT'S COPYING Will Continue in Business at the SAME LOCATION for Years into the future. I China revolt halted Howard Hughes dies at 70; af^r day of fighting sudden stroke apparent cause Extra . . .extra . . .read all1 about it. The A i r Force ROTC has full, 2-year schol- arships? That isn't new but full tuition, fees, textbook aal lowance, plus $100 a month tax-free doesn't get old either. You can't get one if you don't apply early. Find out how. Contact: AFROTC, North Hall, Phone 764-2403.I _ I I (Continued from Page 1) 1 ly "detained by the masses" men were controlling entry into for questioning. the square yesterday morning, The final act of violence was crowds learned the wreaths had in late afternoon when the door been removed and began jostl- to a stone building in the south- ing the unarmed militiamen and east corner of the square was police. Some Chinese tooks caps battered down and a fire start- and armbands from militiamen, ed. the reports said. Defying officials, secondary IT WAS THEN that Mayor Wu; school youths pinned new Teh's appeal was broadcast. wreaths to the Martyrs' Monu- "Today, in Tien An Men, evil ment in Tien An Men. men carried out sabotage, Roared on by the crowd, they sowed dissension and carried raised a photograph of Premier out anti-revolutionary activi- Chou. The demonstrators then ties," he stated. surged across to the steps of He called on the masses to the Great Hall of the People, leave the square. But as night apparently to present a petition- fell several thousands remain- They failed and as skirmishes ed and no end was in sight. developed a car was overturn- During the day unarmed ed. Youth danced cheerfully on troops and workers' militia tried its underside. to maintain order but were (Continued from Page 1) fnied he okayed the book. Irv-; ing and flying giant planes, and ing and his wife, Edith, went to+ pioneering aviation routes prison for fraud. round the world and parlaying ! HUGHES WAS EMBROILED rights to a unique oil drill bit ! in litigation and government in- into a multimillion dollar inter- vestigations for the last 15 years national business empire. of life, but never showed his Despite his eccentric reclu- face in a courtroom or congres- sion, Hughes' name still made sional hearing room.1 headlines around the world on The latest nonshow by the several occasions in recent s u p e r w e a l t h y, super-; years. secret Hughes, who died Mon- In 1971, writer Clifford Irving day, was his failure to appear' announced that he was writing March 8 before the Securities an authorized biography of and Exchange Commission here Hughes. A man who said he was to answer questions about his Hughes, in a conference tele- Summa Corp. phone call with reporters, de- Besides the suits and investi-s gations, Hughes' name surfac- ed in connection with Water- gate, as well as a top-secret CIA mission. And one court case filed list August claiming he was already dead. Hughes built a family oil drill- ing bit business into a diversi- fied complex that over the years included manufacturing of planes, helicopters, spacecraft and electronic devices. He pro- duced movies and owned stu- dios, owned airlines and became a major economic force in Ne- vada with purchase of hotels, casinos, land and mines valued at $300 million. 6:30 A.M.-10:00 P.M. 994-4028 i, Weather Reporters Zawinul, Shorter, Pastorius, Thompson- " -r Back arket and Acuna give their WedtherRPO/ neludrngl "segant PeoPf steners more than naHeadnu I! Muldaur, Young in concert A STUDENT SAID to be from Tsinghua University was grab- bed by the crowd, his hands were tied and he was beaten up. Correspondents and other for- eigners in the crowd were watched warily. They were warned not to take photographs, some had film ripped fromj cameras and a few were brief- careful to avoid clashes. Au- thorities made no attempt toI break up the crowd and ap- peared to be hoping the demon- strators would eventually dis- perse quietly. Gold was established as the standard for U.S. currency un- der the Gold Standard Act, March 14, 1900. (Continued from Page 5) schmaltzy "Old Rocking Chair" to Neil Sedaka's slinky "Sad' Eyes." Venerable drummer Earl Palmer added experienced New Orleans percussion heritage to the Sweet H a r m o n y Revue rhythm section on these two numbers, while John Burton's winds merged nicely with Gar- rett's rich trombone tone. Keyboardist Finnegan demon- strated late '60s blues organ fi- nesse with an excellent perform- ance of the great blues classic "I've Got to Find Me A Part- Time Love." Finnegan's howl- ing blues voice and sassy Ham- mond organ lines perfectly cap- tured the lamenting spirit, com- plete with the mandatory "Oh, yeah" and "Lawd, Lawd." OVERALL, Muldaur's set re- flected - like her new album - just how much Maria relishes "sweet harmony" as part of her act. She made it clear that she performs only what she wants to, refusing requests for her album staple "The Work Song" as an encore. Indeed, both Muldaur and Young are artists who seem to really enjoy their work. In style and in form, they often under- take radically different music. But when Muldaur joined Suzi and Jesse Young for short har- monic passages in "Jambalaya" and "Light Shine," their com- mon interest immediately be- dame apparent: good tunes.per- formed with pleasure and a dash of love. It was a most rewarding evening. I they've bargained for Once again. Weather Repo - Indisputably 5 incomparable. Black Market'. On Columbia Records and Tapes. LSA Students The College of LSA does not provide for adequate student participation in college decision-making. That is why the LSA Student Government is continually working for meaningul student representation College committees. It also means that those student seats that do exist on College committees are even more critical to students. The LSA Student Government is now interviewing for openings on the following committees: COLLEGE CURRICULUM COMMITTEE LSA ADMINISTRATIVE BOARD STUDENT-FACULTY BOARD COLLEGE ADMISSIONS COMMITTEE SIGN UP for on INTERVIEW in Room 4000 Michigan Union DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION is FRIDAY, April 9, 1976 at 5:00 p.m. Terms to run for the 1976-77 school year mom" I1 I (&Ja44ee,at /Plle/ We are now t a k i n g reservations for PASSOVER SEDERS and all other Pass- over meals. ALL RESERVATIONS MUST BE MADE BY FRIDAY, APRIL 9 CALL 663-3336 s I MSA Election TODAY-Thursday Vote YES Automatic MSA Funding (proposal i) MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY * CMA#AW'WAStEG. e 1976COS INC. r i I STUDE T ELECTI0 OTE TODAY! Michi = MSA ELECTION POLLS ACROSS CAMPUS gan Student Assembly (M.S.A.) MSA BALLOT QUESTIONS A-CIA/NSA RECRUITMENT Should CIA/NSA be allowed to versity of Michigan campus? ! y, 4 . f s - NEW CENTRAL STUDENT GOVERNMENT - 9 ONE-YEAR AT-LARGE SEATS - 4 HALF-YEAR AT-LARGE SEATS MSA CANDIDATES-at-large seats RICHARD G. DAVID (Indep./Bus. Ad.-Jr.) G. J. (Jasper) DiGIUSEPPE (Indep. /LSA-Jr.) "Worked to establish Legal Advocate, spoke in opposition to 1975 dorm lottery before Regents " DAVID SILVER (Indep./LSA-H-Fr.) "I am interested in a responsible and efficient government designed to serve the community" GERALD C. TIMMIS (Indep./LSA-Soph.) "Member of Argonauts (University Group); participated pe- tition drive against oil drilling in Pigeon River Valley." JANEY KATZ (Indep./LSA-H-Fr.) "MSA needs open minds and independent thinkers, not party loyalties." MARK M. MOOREHEAD (Indep./Educ.-Jr.) "If you don't want the same 'type' of people in MSA, vote for the independents." JIM POWERS (Indep./LSA-Fr.) "I'll strive to make MSA an effective, open and honest or- ganization, satisfying the students' needs." DAVID FLEETHAM (Indep./LSA-Fr.) "Would like students to have more voice in their own edu- cation; attempt to reduce LSA language requirement." JEAN NUECHTERLEIN (Responsible Alternative Party/ LSA-Sr.) "To offer the students an alternative to the current irres- ponsible courtsacking political hacks." BOB MATTHEWSs(Responsible Alternative Party/Rack.-Gr. "To offer the students an alternative to- the current irres- ponsible courtsacking politicalrhacks." S. JOHN KELLY (MOVE/LSA-Jr.) "I pltdge to make MSA into something the students can be proud of." MIKE NASH (MOVE/Enl.--Fr.) "I believe in honesty and fair representation for tomorrow " DAN BROWNING (MOVE/LSA-Soph.) Improved relations and increased interaction with Univer- sity administrations; previous experience in student govern- ments." F. SCOTT KELLMAN (MOVE/LSA-Soph.) "would like MSA more oriented toward basic goal of sup- port and services for students and student organizations." CALVIN A. LUKER (Student Organizinq Committee/LSA- Senior. ) "U-Council chairperson, rewriting U judicial code; concern- ed about administrative non-support of past promises- minorities, tuition, etc." MICHAEL L. TAYLOR (Student Organizinq Committee/ LSA-RC-Fr. ) "I work with groups like P.B.C.. N.A S.C., and UA.W. and serve on the LSA Administrative Board" WENDY J. GOODMAN (Student Orqanizinq Committee/ LSA-RC--Fr. ) "Concerned with affirmative action and doing something to control rising educational costs Working with UFw." RICK SCHEICH (REFORM/LSA-Jr.) "Former Director of Student Organizations and Student Government member at Ctntral Mich. Univ." DAVID W. SMITH (REFORM/Rack.--Gr.) "Experienced graduate student.running to restore respon- sibility to student government." IRVING FREEMAN (REFORM/LSA-Jr.) "Member Housing Council, LSA-SG, Vice-chair constitution- al convention, will force student government to obey its BRIAN LASKEY (Campus Coalition/LSA-Jr.) rules " Chair of Constitutional Convention for Student Govt., Treasurer College Young Democrats, University Housing Council representative." DONNA SKELCY (Campus Coalition/LSA-Fr.) "Farmworkers Support Committee volunteer; C.C. has been strongest advocate of lettuce/grape boycott in U-Housing." KENNETH K. WANG (Campus Coalition/LSA-Soph.) "C.C. created student government's minority affairs com- mittee which inclumbents have since abolished. We will restore." CRAIG ZANOT (Campus Coalition/LSA-Jr.) "As Budget Priorities Committee member, will continue to work for financial reform in Student Government" SUSAN VOSTRIZANSKY (Campus Coalition/Nurs.-Fr.) "I will work on behalf of women's issues in Student Gov- ernment and Democratic Party organizations." MICHAEL SPENNY (Students' Riqhts Party/LSA-Jr.) GEORGE GUS MORRIS (Student Riqhts' Party/LSA-Soph.) "I plan to represent the rights of the students more effec- tively than present office holders." TIMOTHY O'NEILL (Student Riqhts' Party/Nat. Res.-Fr.) "I plan to represent students in a more effective, honest manner than present MSA members." STEWART L. MANDELL (Screw MSA/LSA-Jr.) BOB GARBER (Screw MSA/LSA-Sr.) "Student Government has been screwing the students for years. It's time students said screw you!" recruit students on the Uni- (yes/no) B-HEALTH INSURANCE Should the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA), which is the new central student government on this campus, continue to offerathe student body a comprehensive Health Insurance Program? (agree/disagree) C-SERVICES TO STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS Shouldthe Michigan Student Assembly (MSA), which is the new central student government on this campus, continue to provide services to student groups such as access to mimeo and office equipment, scheduling of meeting rooms, and the Student Information Center? (agree/disagree) D-VOTER REGISTRATION Should the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) continue to serve as a voter registration center for students? (agree/disagree) E-INTRA-UNIVERSITY LOBBYING Should the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) continue to lobby for student's nedes and interests with the University administration? (agree/disagree) F-STUDENT APPOINTMENTS TO U-M COMMITTEES Should the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) continue to appoint students to University committees (e.g. Academic Af- fairs Advisory Committee, Budget Priorities, Committte, U. Cellar Board of Directors, State Relations)? (agree/disagree) G-STUDENT LEGAL ADVOCATE Should the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) continue to support a Student Legal Advocate Program? (agree/disagree) H-CENTRAL STUDENT GOVERNMENT Should there be a central student government for the Ann Arbor Campus of the University of Michigan? (agree/disagree) I--FUNDING Should theGMichigan Student Assembly (MSA), which is the new central student government on this campus, continue to receive the same level ofstudent fees as the previoustcentral student governmtnt received in the Fall 1975 term-that is 75c per student per term with 30c being reserved for the Legal Advocate Program? (yes/no) J-MSA CLARIFICATION PLAN Shall the All-Campus Constitution be amended to define the Assembly's ability to perform functions of the Steering Com- mittee; to define how non-voting officers' positions are cre- ated and filled: to define the term of office of School and College Representatives; to clarify the Judiciary role in MSA elections; to establish an effective date for amendments; and to establish the constitutionality of governments whose mem- bership includes representatives from bodies within its con- stituency? (See complete text at polls) (yes/no) K-RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MSA AND OTHER GOVERNMENTS PLAN Shall the All-Campus Constitution be amended to state that all student governments shall abide by the Student Bill of Rights and prohibit the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) from enacting rules which govern the internal operations of other student governments? Shall a section be added which requires all student governments to conduct elections which are free from fraud. and give ample opportunity for voting LSA Student Government - PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION - 7 ONE-YEAR SEATS AT-LARGE - 2 HALF-YEAR SEATS AT-LARGE LSA CANDIDATES PRESIDENTIAL SLATES (1) DAN BEJESKY (Pres.), PESC-Jr. DICK BRAZEE (VP), PESC-Soph. (2) BRIAN LASKEY (Pres.)-Jr. RACHEL SOLOM (VP)-Jr. AT-LARGE SEATS IRVING FREEMAN-Jr. LAURIE BETH GOLD, PESC- GARY TAYLOR-Fr. Fr. BILL KATOVSKY-Fr. JODI WOLENS, PESC-Soph. SHAREEN OBER-Fr. JAN YEGHISSIAN, PESC-Jr. THOMAS REEDER-Fr. SUSAN P. LESSENCO, PESC BRIAN LASKEY-Sr. -Jr. STEVEN B. GRUBER, PESC- Fr. LSA BALLOT QUESTIONS 1. Shall the LSA Government Constitution, Artivle VI, Sec- tion B, be amended to read: . . An interviewino Board shall be composed of the Executive Council and the Chairperson of the LSA Judi- ciary, except when the Chairpersons term on the Judici- arv is expiring and he/she is reapplying. In that case, the LSA Judiciary shall select from among its members whose terms are not expiring, a member for the interviewing board " 2. Shall the LSA Student Government Constitution, Article VI, Section B, Paragraph 1, be amended to read: "The Vice-President shall preside at meetings of the In- terviewing Board." PIRGIM-UM LOCAL BOARD OF DIRECTORS -9 SEATS TO BE ELECTED CANDIDATES: KATHY TAYLOR**, ERIC M. FERSHT* KEN JARBOE JEFF ROSS* JOHN CABLE RACHEL SOLOM ":Incumbent by election last ' Incumbent by appointment GREG HESTERBERG* KEVIN BEACH SCOTT FINK BOB KOHORST JOAN GIBSON TIM KUNIN** MOE PASKINS year. to fill vacancy. GERALD T. WOLKE (Screw MSA/Phr.-Jr.) "I seek to inject the solutions of liberty into the masses of the student body." Board for 0 I A AMY J. BLUMENTHAL {Student Orgonizinq Committee/ I 1 in