Tuesday, April 13, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven digMt tShe job done I NEWS STRIKES: I yi~rr lf F Environmentalist blasts F-f hnIDl 11 A n o s todays capitalist system in editor selection PT (Continued from Page 6)I FOR SALE SKIS: Fischer Superglass, 205 cm.; Very good condition $50 or best of- fer. Call Don 761-5491. 67B413 1973 NORTON COMMANDO 750 cc. Interstate. Good condition, runs well Includes extras. Best, offer, 665-2737. 29B416 MEN'S 10-SPEED BIKE. 23" frame, Simplex derailleur. Call 761-4568 after 5:00. 10B417 VW ENGINE-1500 cc, 6 volt, good condition; NEW 6 volt battery. Doug,; 665-8155, eves. 48B413 9 MO OLD double bed without frame for $50. 995-5437. 91B413 SHEEPSKIN COATS for men arf women. All sizes. Persian House of Imports. 769-8555. eBtu PERSONAL JEWISH GUY-Is it all over? The Daily stops printing soon and we've still gotten no further than anony- mous flowers (butthey were nice anon. flowers!) Reply in the usual manner, but this time without an- onymity (sp?) 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Thank you. 93F414 XEROX AND OFFSET By MIKE NORTON Seven staff members of the Michigan State News, student paper at Michigan State Univer- sity (MSU), walked out Sunday in a dispute over selection of next year's editor. The 17 staffers were protest- ing action by the MSU Board of Publications, which refused to appoint Steve Orr, the present managing editor, to the top edi- torial position. Orr had been en- dorsed by the entire staff. THE WALKOUT was intended, to halt operations at the State! News, but a skeletal crew of staff members headed by pres- ent editor John Tingwall pub- lished yesterday's paper none- theless. The MSU Board's official po- sition was that Orr could not be appointed to the position, which. opens next fall, unless he were willing to stay with the paper; all summer. Orr has already accepted a summer internship Famil Plot By KAREN SCHULKINS depends on - the ecosystem, deplete capital or pollute. In with the Detroit Free Press, and The capitalist system "is los- the production system and the addition, he maintains it is more would not be available. ing the ability to sustain itse economic system. He criticized} efficient. But, according to Joe Kirby,;said Barry Commoner, a noted the dynamics of theinteractions sports editor at the State News, biologist and environmentalist ! of these divisions saying, "The ADDRESSING another energy- the Board's true objection to before an audience at Rackham present system of determining related issue Commoner said of Orr stems from his repeated auditorium Sunday night. what to produce and how to the oil crisis, "The reason we stands in favor of student rights The present generation is un- produce it can't successfully are finding less is that we are -in particular, his organization der the delusion that they can't meet human needs." looking less. Oil companies cut of an abortive strike attempt at fight the system, he explained, He olames our current eco- back their attempts to find oil the paper. but he thinks they can work logical, economic and politcal in the U.S. because they believ- within its bounds for change. predicaments on the fact that ed they would make a larger "THEY JUST d o n' t like COMMONER defined three profits, eminating from the eco- profit by investing abroad. Steve," said Kirby. subset systems which society ' nomic system, and not the eco- "The function of oil companies The walkout, most staff mem- - system determines production. is not n'ecessarily to produce bers admit, has not been a suc- "The ecological crisis is caus- oil; but to get the largest return cess. All but a handful 'of the ed by the production system on investment," he added. original strikers have returned I spoiling the continuation of the On DNA or any other research to work. ecological processes on which it Commoner insisted scientists There is one possible solution !depends," the environmentalist must ask the basic question, to the problem, however. Mar said. "Who am I working for - so- to th ckrble, he ary ciety or someone else?" AnnChicksrthaw edth , B a's COMMONER cited examples DNA research serves scien- choice for the editorship, has agreed to step aside for Orr if ;of this trend ranging from nu- tists, and not society, he says, the Board will give him the ap-clear energy to DNA research. explaining that there are many pdntment The low cost of electricity way to accomplish the benefits from nuclear plants is their of DNA research. And looking ig around herea d Or By MAUREEN NOLAN only asset according to Com- into only one solution to the ig hs anhesidtyrrt'sThryeMrUREsEN Ntativemoner and even 'that will be problems does not help society, "If there's any hostility, its Three representatives of a lost i the next ten years." Commoner claims, completelyenexignoredas.themofeelingss directed against the Board of ; faculty group working on a cr1-He attributes the prospective Piibli tinn bPr1C thavv 1tmuo h 'mitaRr-s_ TO ALL MY FRIENDS in Speech Communications and Theatre You'- re the c~reatest. I'll mis you terribly. Sharon. 43F413 1: SURVIVAL. ANYONE? Fight the En- tropy Threat to the earth's ecol- ogy. Compost ordure. And garbage Or' anicallv. With a Clivus Mui- trum. It transforms wastes into pure. sweet-smelling humus, The Clivus Multrum system doesn't use ST water, is anaerobic, and requires! no chemical (nor any other) addi-I tives. Cheaper than flushers and BOA septic-tank systems - to say the men least. Want to know more? Write Kapl ECOLOGIC, INC (authori'ed disri- pare butors of the Clivus Multrum sys- and tem manufactured by Clivus Mul- 354-0 turn USA, Inc.) P.O. Box 1025, Ann Arbor, 48106. 70F417 WE'V want EXFRCISE HOUR Mon.-Thars. 5:30- Year 6:3J at sports Coliseum. ALL IN-S tud VI'rED!!! Ftc PERMANENT WLIGHT LOSS wHF Throiigh B e h a v i o r Modification. cuali Wight Control National. 994-0019. 1209 FIREWORKS! TI- B'iv direct. We ship throughout the invit T1 S Send for free price list today every Pur'hasers must be 18 yrs. or older 11 a Enclose copy of required Michigan State permits upon purchase. Ace; WET) 'irewot'ks Box 221, Conneaut. Ohio tradi 44030. Manufacturer, Importer, Whlslr.Dsrbtor cFtc:WE I fast. low cost duplicating COPY QUICK 217 S. University 769-0560 ffset Printing. Xerox Cnpies Xerox reductions. photostats Halftones, Typesetting and much more ARBOR INSTANT PRINTING UDENT ACCOUNTS WELCOMU 214 . 4th Ave. 994-4664 RD EXAM tutoring - enroll-' ts now being accepted for S.H.: an Tutoring Courses to pre- for the MCATS. DAT, LSAT. Nat. Dent. Boards. Call (313) 085, locally, 662-3149. cFte E GOT THE PHOTOS you'll tBut= a Michiganensian. U-M's in Review from Karl at the ent Publications Bldg. dF417 'RE MARGINAL PRICES buy ity diamonds--Austin Diamond, S University, 663-7151. cFtc HE CROSSEYED MOOSE es you to enjoy free coffee; 'v morning 613 E. Liberty-Open .M. cF417 'MND INVITATIONS - -od or' tinnal. Call 761-0942 anytime PARTICIPATE in the Blue (Continued from Page 5) prodigious comic talents. Wiliiam Devane is likewise excellent as the typically ur- bane (right down to the thin black moustache) Hitchcockian villain. He reads each of his sinister lines with suitable lip- smacking relish. Karen Black's characterization, unfortunately, is not a clearly developed as Devane's and her performance suffers as a result. TECHNICALLY, the film is another near - perfect Hitch- cock gem. Only in some tricky process shots does the camera betray the use of nleasant beck projection. Leonard J. South's camerawork is uniform- IV excellent, and John Williams' first - rate score per- fectly accentuates the film's playful mood. Its ads read, "You must see it twice," and in Family Plot's case this is no rash statement. See it first to enjoy a good story well told; see it again to study carefully and appreciate the masterful hand of Alfred Hitch- cock at work. rumcauons ecause iey ve completely ignored the feelings of the staff in this matter." PIRGIM election ti4ue or me uomirre isLre-I' diminishment of this advantage HE OFFERED an answer to port on DNA research to be to the fact that "the capital;the ills of the system, saying, presented to the Regents Thurs- costs of nuclear plants are ris- "The fact that the U.S. has not day, met with the Senate Advis- ing three times faster than coal evolved into the viable democ- ory Committee on University plants." This is because nu- racy envisioned by Thomas Affairs (SACUA) yesterday to clear plants must keep chang- Paine is not a strike against express concern over the meth- ing design due to technical dif- democracy - we need to evolve ods used to make ,decision on ficiilties. more. this controversial issue.' "The nuclear industry will "We need experiments, which Acting as spokespersons for poop out leaving us with radio- are likely to take place in Italy the faculty group were profes- active white elephants," Com- and France, to find our o'.wn way sors Marc Ross, Director of moner asserted. He favors solar to socialinsm in this country," Residential College; S u s a n energy which, he says, does not he said. Wright, of the Humanities de- - partment; and Max Heirch of the Sociology department. After a recount of ballots for the PIRGIM (Public Interest Research Group in Michigan) Board of Directors, cast in last week's student elections, the winners were: John Cable, with 200 votes; Eric Fersht, with THE THREE expressed the 407; 'Scott Fink, with 249; John group's concern for the proce- Gibson, with 258; Rick Hester- j dres to be used in making de- berg, with 304; Tim Kunin, with cisions about DNA research, 409; Jeff Ross, with 470; Ra- and for the importance of keep- chel Sollen, with 283; and ing the community informed Kathy Taylor, who got 611 votes, about all aspects of the re- EXPRESSIVE MOVEMENT WORKSHOP: Exploring human emotions with the whole body through spontaneous, individual and group motion. Sat., Apr 17. Margaret and Bob Blood. 769-0046. 47F416 FRIENDS LAKE COMMUNITY. 80, acre wildlife preserve near Chelsea: swvimining. canoeing, picnicing, camping. Membership s50 per adult. Brochure from Bloods, 2005 Penn- craft, Ann Arbor, Mich. 48103. 25F0417 Shield prescription program. Village Apothecary, 1112 S. University. cFtc EXERCISE HOUR T. and Th. 12-1 at Sports Coliseum. All invited. cF413 The votes were recounted be- cause only four ballots sepa- rated Cable from the next low-, est bidder, Deidre Feeney, who received 107 votes on the second count. The election got an "extreme- ly large" turnout, - 2,158 - ac- cording to Elections Director1 Tim Kunin. A total of 14 peo- ple were running for the nine available slots. search. Wright stated that "extreme care and extreme deliberation" must be exercised in making arv decisions. Ross maintdined that the Re- vents should have the final sayI "because of the gravity of the issue and because they are elected officials." He also saidI Ithat the faculty group hopes for "serious faculty debate" about DNA research. IS SORRY TO ANNOUNCE THAT H ESTER STREET is CANCELLED tonight INSTEAD: LAST TANGO IN PARIS (Bertolucci, 1973) Starrinq JEAN-PIERRE LEAUD. MARLON BRANDO, and MARIA SCHNEIDER. MUSIC by GATO BARBIERI. at 7 and 9:15 in AUD. A., Angell Hall