Friday, July 7, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven F J ,T H Ag a K EMMS 5- READ -JACK ANDERSON- in DAILY OFFICIAL IIBULLETIN news briefs by The Associated Press The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYI2WRITTEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of the say preceding publicationand by 2 cpot. Fridaoy soc Saturday snd Sunday. Items appear once only, Student organization notices are not accepte3 for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. FRIDAY, JULY 7 CO M M ISSIO N EDGyInternational Folk Dance: Barbour CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT 320SAD SALES PEOPLE Jly , 972 INTERVIEW: Foremost Insurance Co., Gd. Ropids, Joly 13, icor FoPblic Eelotions Asst., pref. MA in adv., jour., comm. or related field; BA if exper. in pub. rel. or writing field; cal 74-740 for appts. beginning July 5 or come in to sell summer term subscriptions to person; resume by July 10 o r ANNOUNCEMENT: UCLA has a four- The Daily in the campus area. year grad. fellowship to be filled within omonti. gMic. gcoao with good scho- loti stndisg concct; rofesooc. C l Andy--7640Alexopoolno, Div. of Elec. Sciences, UCLA, L. A., Calif. 90024. Gay Liberation Front, new mem- from 10 a.m. to Noon, or 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. eitseting,rd July f r, hPM,Con- rP' ference Bi. 2lfooMicoign Union r- i { - south wing) Today (Fri.) GayLiberation, Coffee House, Can- terburynHos, July 7, 7-12:00 PM, All -re welcomed. Forest fires burn NEW OPENING more than trees STADIUM RESTAURANT AND PIZZERIA - 338 S. STATE Seafood, Chops, Steaks, Spaghetti HOMEMADE SPECIALS Every Day SPECIAL BREAKFAST - 99c 2 eggs; ham, bacon or sausage From 7 a.m.- 1 a m 50 CENTS OFF on medium and large pizzas after 5 p.m. HOURS: 7 A.M.-2 A.M. EVERY DAY u a z TV & Stre Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 LAROUSSE, ENCYCLOPEDIA CHAGALL LITHOGRAPHS 111: PABLO PICASSO. W. Boeck. OF BYZANTINE AND MEDIE- 1962-1968. Edited by Fernand 606 illus. including 46 color VAL ART. Ed. by Rene Huyghe. Moulo and Charles Sorlier. plates. An Abrams bookk, with s Over 100 art masterpieces illus. ,Sumptuously illus. with two ori- a fine biographical and critical4 F 36 in full color and numerous ginal lithographs for the jacket text. Pub. at $25.00. X5' maps. Magnificently illus. vo-' and frontispiece, 255 litho- Now $14.95 1 ume spanning hundreds of years graphs, 100 full-page repro-4 about all the arts-painting, ductions, 155 with color. The E sculpture, architecture, ceram- original Chagall frontispiece S ics,, metalwork, textiles, etc., alone has been sold for $100 Japanese Paintings ij Throughout the world. 8/x by a major shop. Pub, at $00. By Akiyamo Terukazu 15Only $29.95 81 full color hand-tipped 4 Only $9.95 JUAN GRIS: HIS LIFE AND plates. Sumptuous extra- Other Larousse Encyclopedias WORK. By Daniel-Henry Kahn- ordinary collection of the available: weiler. Over 100 black and greatest classics of Jap- white illus. and 24 full color anese art from pre-his- World Geography plates. Definitive and compre- toric wall paintings and 41 Prehistoric and Ancient Art hensive study of life and works Modern Art of one of the great art mas- pottery to the modern in Renaissance and Baroque Art ters of 20th century cubism. novations of the 17th & Animal Life oO8x14. Pub. at $25. 19th centuries. A Skira Modern History Only $15.95 publication. Pub. at $27.50. Now $15.95 4 I Mythology TOULOUSE-LAUTREC: His from -$6.95 complete lithographs and dry- C points by Jean Adllemar. 368 Ci nn MAX ERNST. By J. Russell. illus. Including 54 in color, by James Cahill 475 illus., 49 Hand-tipped A long unavailable classic Plates Pn ull Color, 360 poses, u Hl d 7/8. Immense defini- FLOW ERING OF ART NOUV- in the field of oriental art, tive volume on the Surrealistic EAU by Maurice Rheims. Art, both in te.xt and repro- S artist.Hundreds of eye-opening architecture, jewelry, painting, ductions. Published at b9 reproductions. Pub. at $25.00. fashior, Pub. at $22.50. $32.50. Now $15.95 Only $14.95 Now $12.95 0 668-7653 518 E. William 10 a.m.-6 p.m. q ~~40 NOAH DIETRICH, the former business associate of Howard Hughes, filed suit against the billionaire industrialist for slander. The suit asks for $51 million in damages. Dietrich, in the suit contends that Hughes slandered him in a telephone news interview held last January. During the conference, Hughes referred to another business associate as a "no-good dishonest son-of-a-bitch, and he stole me blind." Dietrich has charged that later in the interview Hughes likened him to that individual. Also named defendants were Hughes Tool Co., the public relations firm of Carl Byir and Associates, and Richard Hannah, a Byoir account executive. This was the same interview in which Hughes discounted the authenticity of the autobiography written about him by Clifford Irving. PROTESTANT PARAMILITARY COMMANDOS are being deployed throughout Northern Ireland, militant Protestant leader William Craig announced yesterday. The commando units are standing by to aid the Ulster Defense Association, another militant Protestant organization, in an an- ticipated increase of bloody conflict during the summer months. The units are composed of men "with military training," accord- ing to Craig, and reportedly include veterans of the British army. Craig also said he could forsee civil war in the north within a year if the British government does not remove its ban on the Protestant provisional Parliament. SAMUEL JACKSON, general assistant secretary of the De- partment of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) rebuked William Morris of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) for his criticism of President Nixon's federal housing programs. At the 63rd annual convention of the NAACP in Detroit Tues- day, Morris speculated that lack of low income housing may be part of a plan to abandon the nation's cities, allowing whites to reclaim them later. Morris is the national director of housing for the NAACP. Jackson claimed that the statement made by Morris was un- fair, unbalanced and biased. He indicated that HUD has been constructing more lower and moderate income housing in the inner cities than ever before. SEN. HUBERT HUMPHREY, in Waverly, Minn., said if he receives the Democratic nomination he believes Gov. George Wallace "could and would give me support." Humphrey said Wallace "could be an active spokesman" for some Democratic candidates, but not for a McGovern ticket. SECRETARY OF DEFENSE Melvin Laird lashed out yesterday against Sen. George McGovern's military spending budget. He said McGovern's proposed $30 billion slash in the budget would pose "a dangerous and calamitous risk" for U.S. security and world peace. He said the new budget would replace a philosophy of strength and willingness to negotiate with one of giving away now and begging later. In a report criticizing McGovern's plan Laird said, "His pro- posals would lead the United States to a weaker nuclear posture that could leave a future American president with no alternative but a spasmodic first-strike, 'launch-on-warning' attack on enemy civilians and cities." The Democratic Platform Committee rejected recently both hawkish and dovish defense planks. It said "the military budget can be reduced substantially with no weakening of our national security." Have Fun Bowling This Term MiXed Leagues Win a free game orming M-Pin bowling 40c/game S Up Now Air conditioned Michigan Union Lanes Open 12 noon Mon.-Sat.; 1 p.m. Sun. SHOE SALE! MEN'S AND WOMEN'S Summer Shoes Sandals Boots GREATLY REDUCED CAMpUs MAST'S SHOP 619 E. Liberty