Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, May 23{ 1974 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, May 23 1974 Hearst charged in 2 kidnapings Davison talks Hears chogeclabout zodiac, (Continued Irom Pate 1) victim had become ; kidnap In San Diego, Steven Wod, commandeering s e v e r a ve- suspect. Hearst is charged wlh whm Hearst had been planning predictions hicles and kidnaping a teen- 19 counts in the indictment and to marry, said, "I believe it ager an a Hollywuou iman, the ras sia tie insasujs.'y pd' ''.--L later released unharmed. Hearst reportedly told the teen-ager, Tom Matthews, 18, that she emptied a clip of bul- lets from a semiautomaic :ifle to cover the Harrises -s thev fled after the shoplift'i:ig at- tempt. Busch said it was t!se first case he knew of where a kidnap MAXIMUM sentence" for con- viction on the robbery and kid- nap charges is life imprison- ment. Bail was set in advance of the trio's capture at 5150,10 each. Conviction on toe federal charges could carry a naximuni penalty of 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Fed.rsl bail was set at $500,000 each. Patty to come back, at least in a psychological way. "If I can believe all the re- ports I have been hearing," he told the San Diego Union Tues- day night, "it appears Patty is committed to what she is doing. It seems the more we appeal, to her, the more it aggravates the situation." AnnI Arbor Program endangered drinkers guzzleb (cvsistieed fron e er they were the Rolling Stones' favorite drink," explains one bartender half seriously. "Hell, it also looks real great just sitting in the glass," he adds. BUT THE popularity of mixed drinks seems to depend on the season and the type of crowd and some unknown factor that might welt be the barometric pressure, according to another bartender. In the heat of summer, "the light drinks" llarvey Wallban- gers, Tom Collinses, gin and tonics, and just about every imaginable flavor of sour seem most popular. Under less sultry conditions, tastes turn more toward con- coctions which depend on Scotch or Bourbon for their punch. HOWEVER, there are the "nine-to-five business t y p e s" who prefer martinis, Manhat- tans, and other cocktails re- gardless of the snowdrifts' size or the spring showers' fre- quency. _ ._, _ _ w/ (Continued from Page 3) IRONICALLY, low participa- tion by the faculty is one of the arguments being used to back the Executive Committee's ef- fort to change the program. "We went back to the original charter of the Course Mart," committee m e m b e r Eckstein says, "and found that there is a discrepaucy between charter and practice. The courses were not to be taught by undergrads. "It was intended that there would be considerable faculty involvement in the program. On the whole, faculty involvement has been nominal," Eckstein says. TIllS, ACCORDING to Course Mart members, is what brought in students to keep the program alive, and what keeps it going. "If undergrads aren't allowed to teach, then professors are go- ing to have to," coordinator Zastrow says. "But who's going to pay them? We don't have money, they don't get paid for teaching out of their depart- ments, because they don't have money to throw around either." Whatever the faculty may think, students in general ap- prove of the program, accord- ing to Harold Marsden, assist- ant to the college's Administra- tive Board. "STUDENT support should be defined by enrollment," he says. "We all know that in terms of Course Mart courses, they all fill up quite fast. From the point of view of the actual teacher, it's marvelous. I've never heard any complaints." Daily Official Bulletin Thiusday. May 23 uay Calendar WUOM: A discussion, "Presenting Past Pleasures". from the U-M mini- course "Ann Abor: The First 300 Years', 91.7 M55n, t0:10 am. Macromolecular Research Center. J. Schelten, Oak Ridge National La- boratory "Chain Conformation in ttse Potymers PMMA, Polystyrenr and Polyethsylene studied iy umati Ange Neutron Scattering": 1041 nandall Lab., 4 p.m. Career Planning & Placement 3200 sAB, 764-7456 tnterviewing on Campus, Tues- day, June 4,1974 - IBM (for var- ous locations) BS/MS: All disci- plines for Marketing & system.En- gineering Trainees & BS/MS: Comp. Set., Matla, Phsicsa, Chsem. or equiv- atenttor Syatem Anaiysas & Pro- gramming. Dec. '73, May '74 and Spring-Summer grads are encour- aged to sign up for an interview at CP&P. (Continued from Page 1) He said that medical astrol- ogy is based on the principle that every part of the body corresponds with a sign "as if you were curled in a circle." The body goes from Aries at the head to Pisces at the feet. DAVISON, who believes in re- incarnation, says, "One is pre- conditioned in previous life- times" for interest in astrology. He says that he subsconsciously always felt an interest in astrol- ogy and he just needed some- thing to spark it off. He became consciously interested at the age of 29. He claimed that people who publish syndicated astrology col- umns in newspapers apd maga- zines are justified "as long as they are not misleading people into thinking that they are giv- ing all astrology has to offer," adding, "I feel that people have to earn a living." His advice to astrologers was to "become your own author- ity." He told them to learn the basic principles and then as- serted, "Don't be afraid to ex- perinfent." Davison's stop in the city is part of a month-long whirlwind tour in which he will give as- trology lectures in 12 major cities of the United States. AroundA2 A meeting of the secretarial subcommittee of the Commis- sion for Woman will hear repre- sentatives of the Black Secre- taries Organization today at noon in Rm. 2224 of the School of Education Bldg. A citizens' workshop today on energy and the environment, led by Atomic Energy Commis- sion scientist Runll Wood and sponsored by the Detrolt Sci- ence Center, will feature an electronic game allowing people to make simulated energy de- cisions balancing environmen- tal needs with energy require- ments. The" seminar will he held at from 2 to 4:30 pom.in the School of Education's Rm. 1322. TV tonight 6:10 2 4 7 11 13 News 9 Andy Griffith 211 voyage to the Bottomo @t the Sea 24 ABC News-Siith/ Reasoner 30 Your Futare is New 501 Star Trek 56 International and UM- mestic Conflict 6:30 1 11 CBS News-Walter Cronkite 4 13 NBC News-Jhn Chancellor 7 ABC News-Cmtth/ Reasoner 9 1 Dream o1 Jeannie 24 Dick Van Dyke 30 Lilias. Toasand Tysu 7:00.. =Troth or Consequene 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Bieverly nHillbillies 11 To Tell the Tenth 13 what's My Line? -2 0iRelman 24 nowling for lollers 30 Imnlpressians sa Mission: Impossible 56 Consumer Game 7:30 2 what's My Line? 4 Toil Asked For It 7 New Treesure Hunt 9 Bewitched-Comedy i1 Hollywood Squares 13 Troth or Consequences 26 Denny Mtain--Variety 24 Let's Make a Deal 30 About Town 56 Consumer Buy-lIane 8:00 2 11 The Waltons 4 13 Flip wilson 7 24 Chopper One 9 ROQ-Music 30 56 Advocates 511 Hogan's Heroes 1:30 7 24 Firehouse 9 stampeders 20 appy Though Married 5 Merv Gritfin 9:00 2 11 Movie "Jay o[the Morning" 1965 4 13 Ironside 7 24 Kung Fu "The Squawmnan" 9 News-David Compton 20 wrestling 30 University Forum 56W ar ad Peace 9:311 9 Countrytiae 36 Theater in America "Monkey, Monkey, Bottlie o Beer, How Many Monkeys Have We Here'?" 10:00.7 24 Sreets o1San Francisco S selidh 20 Seven Hundred Club 50 Perry Mason 10:30 9 CC Hewsnagazine 56 Lenex Quartet: Haydn's Opus 76 11:09 2 4 7 11 13 24 News 9 CBC News-Lloyd Robertson 50 Night Gallery 11:30 2 Movie "T-he Judge nsd Jake Wyler 1972 Bette Davis 4 13 Johnny Carson 7 14 Entertainmint HaSlao Fame Awards 0 News 11 Moie Elzabeth Tayior Malo Bao~ "RefTeotlias in a Galden Eye" 19 506Movie "A Stolew- Life' 1140 New Places, New Friends, New Ideas SHARE IN A NEW EXPERIENCE STUDY/TRAVEL ABROAD CONTACT CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY EARN UP TO 8 HOURS CREDIT Undergrads/Grads Complete Long. Requirement 1974 SUMMER PROGRAM OFFERINGS-APPLY NOW! SPAIN Salamanca Barcelona FRANCE . ITALY. GERMAN . Paris Piris + Art Dilon Nice Aki/Arignon Spanish Language, Civilization, History, Lit, Art, Guitar & Donce CU/CFS Theatre Workshop French Language & Culture, Art History, Literature, Theatre, French Cuisine talian l anguage & Civilization, Perugie Drowing, Painting, Sculpture, Perugia + Art Ceramics, Art History Florence Heidelberg German Language & Civilization view"a REPEAT PERFORMANCE Big k/P Record Sale SAVE NOW! SAVE 8G! janduI at STATE STIUET end of the diag I language NEW 1974 SUMMER PROGRAMS * Russian Language & Culture-Leningrad, Moscow * African Civilization, Anthro, Ecology-Nairobi * Scandinavian Studies, Danish Art and Achi ectue-Copenhagen " International Studies, Political Science, Economics-Geneva " Portuguese Language & Cuture-Coimbra * Spanish Language, Latin American Studies-Bogota, Columbia " English Literature, History, Orama-London, Canterbury * Ancient/Madern Greek Civitization-Athens, Greece All programs include special excursions & tours, round-'trip jet transpor- tation, ALL European connections, room & board, tuition, f e es, U-M Profs--Program Advisors. Director of Summer Programs: DR. GLEN R. GALE Rackham Student Government is currently soliciting applications for two graduate student seats on theL S and A library committee. Interested parties should contact the R. S. 0.ofice at 2006 Rackham Building or callt 3-0109. Applications /Information/Appointnents 216 South State Street, Suite 1 (above Marti Walker- 662-5575 Liu- I -,wqw i.