Friday, May 24, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Fi,.My2,17 H IHGNDIYPg ~~n 'I'm innocent,' Colson claims at breakfast Ozone offers free lunches OWOSSO (UPI) - Former White House Aide Charles Col- son told a small interdenomi- national religious group yester- day he is innocent of all charges leveled against him in connec- tion with Watergate and related *ffairs. "I know in my own heart that I am innocent of all of t he charges that I stand accused of at this moment," Colson said in a speech before the YWCA Prayer Breakfast in this small Michigan agricultural commun- ity near Lansing. COLSON, who has stated that he turned to religion in t h is "dark moment of history," was a former high-level presidential aide charged with conspiracy in the Ellsberg break-in case. Colson is one of five defend- ants, including John Erlichman, President Nixon's former No. 2 aide, allegedly connected w i t h the White House special investi- gative "'plumbers" that Nixon established at the time Daniel Ellsberg leaked copies of the Pentagon papers on the origins of the Vietnam War. "This is no less a time of trial for the nation than for those few of us who are caught in the eye of the great Water- gate storm in Washington," Col- son said. COLSON SAID the goal of achievement is not wrong but "achieving to simply gratify one's own ego, which has hap- pened to so many of us in high governmental and business posi- tions, is to worship a false god." Colson added that he could not recall any other "great ca- tastrophes of modern histpry" that haven't been caused by a few men "driven by an excess of personal pride and personal ambition." By PAT HINSBERG , Through the dual efforts of Ozone House and the Salvation Army, Ann Arbor's needy now have recourse to an organized free lunch program. The pro- gram, run at the Salvation Army at 220 E. Washington, serves lunches from noon to i p.m. Monday through Saturday. The program, which concen- trates on serving hot, substan- tial lunches, can accommodate up to 30 persons a day. Al- though individuals are techni- cally limited to five free meals, Linda Chapin, orga'nizer if the- program for Ozone House says, "My personal philosophy is that no deserving person will be turn- ed away." OZONE HOUSE hopes to lo- cate jobs and housing for lunch recipients who need them. Chap- in also expects. that the lunch center will facilitate Ozone House's counseling service f ox runaways by enabling them to make contact with persons who might not otherwise take ad- vantage of the service. Staffed primarily by volun- teers, the program, although funded partially by the city and federal government, welcomes any donations of food or time. Interested persons can contact Linda Chapin at Ozone House, 769-640. L~IVo Philosophy prof to teach computer history course By TIM OBOJSKI For. those who shrink f r o m the unwearying pace of technol- ogy, a course entitled "T h e History of Computers" will come as little comfort. Nevertheless, computer de- velopment is far enough p a s t infancy to have collected a his- tory and has affected our lives enough to give cause for speak- ing of it. THE NEW course, more pros- aically known as Computer and Communication Sciences 50 6, was proposed and will be taught this fall by Prof. Arthur Burks. "The course will be directed at juniors, seniors, and grad- uate students in computer stu- dies, and engineering, and sci- ence or mathematics students who have used. computers," Burks noted. "I will try to com- bine technical detail with gen- eral historical context. Some of Burks' own articles will be used. BURKS, better known as an instructor in the philosophy de- partment, is uniquely qualified to teach the course. He was one of the princinal designers of the first general-purpos.e electric di- gital computers, forefather of all modern electronic comput- ers. A section of the computer. known as E AC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Com- puter), was brought to the Uni- versity under Burks' auspices, where it is on dislay in the Frieze Building. The vintage 1945 machine still operates and will be used to solve simple problems as part of the course. WORK ON ENIAC was begun in 1943 by the Army Ordnance Corps, which needed rapidly cal- culations of artillery shell tra- jectories. Although completed too late to aid the World War II effort, "ENIAC was a b I e to reduce the composition of fir- ing tables from a matter of months to a matter of days," Burks says. ENIAC solved its first problem in December 1945, an H-bomb problem that re- mains classified. ENIAC work- ed at one thousand times the speed of other computers of its day, adding and subtracting 10 or 20-digit numbers in one eight- thousandth of a second. Burks became involved in the research, development, de- sign, and construction of ENIAC while an instructor of electrical engineering at the University of Pennsylvania's Moore School of Electrical Engineering. This 1941 position was an out- growth of a free government course in electrical engineering which Burks took after gaining a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan the same year. "Phil- osophy was in a deprĀ°-,ian then," Burks recalls. AFTER A BRIEF sojourn as professor of philosophy at Swarthmore College, Burks came to the University of Michigan where he has stayed -for 21 years. Burks has served as a corpor- ate and government consultant on computers, and since 1956 has directed the Logic of Com- puters Group, a small govern- ment-supported research group here. He helped start the Univer- sity's graduate program in com- puter and communication sci- ences in 1957. In 1967 this pro- gram became a department in the College of Literature, Cci- ence, and the Arts. MARX BROTHERS in COCOANUTS 1929 U The original fob four's screen debut in their hit Broadway musical comedy (by George Kaufman). Groucho tries to sell some boous Florida land aginst the mai cap efforts of Chico and Harpo. Chico at the auction is one of his very best scenes. Short: Laurel and Hardy's The Musie Box, SAT.: Kinugasa's GATE OF HELL WED.: Preminger's LAURA E m TONIGHT at Architecture CINEMA GUILD 7:30 & 9:30 Ad. adm. $1 - The Ann Arbor Gay Liberation Front presents: s -PHILADELPHIA --GLASS STORY MANAGERIE l with Cary Grant, Jimmy Stewart with Sam Waterston "THE PHILADELPHIA STOR (fits the written by Tennessee Williams curious taents of Hepburn like a coat oft "N " A quite lovely production of an excep- ouick-drv enamel. It is said-to have been tionally lrvely play. HEPBURN'S Amanda written for her. Its shiny surface reflects is a wonderfully effective blend of South- perfectly from her gaunt, bony face. Its ern gentility ant fierce determination." lnuid action becomes her lean, rangy -N.Y. Times. body. Its brittle smart-talk suits her "Spectacular!"-Newsweek msetallic voice. And when Hepburn sets "It absolutely thrilled me"'-Tennessee out to play Hepburn, she is a sight to I Williams. behold!"--Life. 8 P.M. 10 P AMA /l;Modern Languages both films Friday Aud. 3 and SaturdayI EE. Washington at Thayer