Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Prlr4n4, AA^%, ")0 1 O'?f1 ricayU, ma~y G I j 1Iu 1 IYEED) $142,000: LSA study faces delay over I l 1' dI d~-~c Ig~i-u- .~m f- du- Allen steps down as DAILY OFFICIAL DIAL 668-6416 4m TONIGHT AT 6:50 and 9;05 dean of law school BULLETIN Friday, May '9 r;a ', :;.r :, c I Uo e1 a eU la te IC .ontinued from Page ) academic development. Hays will years, he would want the option be concerned with researching new Day Calendar of leaving that administrative re- programs and curriculum develop- (Continued from Page L) He points to the example of be the most likely place for such sponsibility for full-time teaching. ment.M ,n many others agree that such a the language requirement, saying research into the educational iro. "He has agreed to stay on for "We work from moment to mo- special meetin enate Assembly: study, of some sort, is a must. that if that were removed, similar cess," Hays says. the coming academic year which ment and few people at the Uni- Agenda: discussion of possible Univ. "Liberal arts colleges are just arguments might be advanced for "But we work from moment to will give us an opportunity to versity are concerned with an on- strike policies, Rackham Amph.. 3:15 too big, Hays says. There are other, or even all, course require- moment and few people at the search for a successor," Smith going study of the educational some very serious organizational ments in the literary college. University are concerned with an added. process," Hays said yesterday. ditd problems and when you get into . Hy Allen has taught at Northwest- "It seems that a university a'e i c itgan tai, ee and man- IWhile not expressing an opin- ongoing process," he adds. Hays I em htauiest e by students at the University of the area of curriculum, it's enorm- ion on the language i sees the possibility of the study ern University, Harvard, and the would be the most logical place Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second ous. For instance, we have very i s hn m University of Chicago, and is a for such research and study, but Class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Mich lltlet oncptinoonwhtltetiosn itelf SuhaatpontsoutthaeshontnuigsieafimSedsasmeynspeialsttnscimial athitts nt,"Hayiaded.He xprss-a limi4t0MayardSt.yAnbAror l ecnetoo httefeh uhpeeelcags affcnd its original assignment to leading specalis n criminal law it is not," Hays added. He express- ihgn 420 M8anr St., Ann Arboy man year should be." such piecemeal changes affect onIt rgnl sinett He was chairman of the cornm dhp hth ol i c- day through SulhdamrngUne- I other parts of the curriculum and tackle specific problems. In fact ed hope that he could begmn aca- y rogsnaymrignve And Sussman adds, We in the that to look only at a part of the just such a process will be part of mittee which formulated the Illi- demic development in this area. ty year. subscription rates: $10 by dean's office were very worried thatre tos a it a Hs' jus s h n a p roe rl b earo nois Criminal Code of 1961, and Until next year, however, Hays carrier. $to by mail. that If you take one thread out picture is a mistake.Hays job when he returns a year chairman of the Committee on is looking forward to his year in summer session published ,Tuesda of a curriculum at a time and "When you think of tIe re- Poverty and the Administration of Santa Barbara as a chance to through Saturday morning. subsrip- alter it without relating it to the search and development depart- Both men also pointed out the Federal Criminal Justice. The lat- "relax, do some studying and may- tion rates: $5. by carrier. $5 by mail. context of the entire curriculum, ments in most industries, it seems possible importance of the study ter group's study led to the en- be write a little." distortion occurs." logical that the universities would beyond the literary college. "We actment of the federal Criminal "I might even learn something," - -- --can't do this in a vacuum. The Justice Act of 1964. he added. T ry Daily Classifieds moves we make will have to be ac- Meanwhile, retiring Dean Hays ----- companied by looks at everyone has expressed enthusiasm for his- else," Hays says. "Universities are new job. As vice president for increasingly interrelated organ- -----------I ANN ARBOR isms." f h "'WOMEN IN LOVE' is EXTRAORDINARY. In par- ticular, the sexual encounters have both a power and a tastefulness that we rarely see in today's sexually frenzied films V-Life Magazine between . sensual peoplet is limited: They must find a new Way LARRY KRAMER and MARTIN ROSEN present KEN RUSSELL'S 1dm of D. H. LAWRENCES WOMEN IN LOVE" [ COLOR by DeLuxe Unied Aryl's SHOWS TODAY AT 1:00-3:40-6:25-9:05 FEATURE 15 MINUTES LATER Prices of 2nd Week Listed Below "You will enjoy AIRPORT' immensely, and you will find yourself talking about it enthusiastically to your friends."- DenvrPost THE *1NOVEL OF THE YEAR -", - HOW A MOTO' PITC' T om ii. owe, aean or Te Sussman goes further than Hays pharmacy college, has been elected! sn a res D ra ise and asserts, "This would be really to the office of vice president of the first time in this generation the Michigan State Pharmaceut- that a college of our structure, aj ical Association by a mail ballot WASHINGTON W) - A punch Chandler later apologized for public university, had undertaken of the Association's 2,831 members. "right in the schnozzola" of a the fisticuffs, saying, "I'm sorry such a study and it might serve He has served on the Association's long-haired student during a Uni- that I did that. If I had had time as a paradigm for other col- Executive Committee for the past! versity of Kentucky demonstration to think, I don't know what I leges." three years. has brought a letter of commen- would have done . . . this young dation to former Kentucky Gay. man grabbed me by the tie. I A. B. "Happy" Chandler from didn't even think . .I just swung FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. and hit him right in the nose." Chandler, a long-time friend of The punch was delivered on the Hoover, refused to release the con- 18th: floor of UK's office tower as tents of the note,.- Chandler was making his way to- Persons who have heard the ward an elevator through a crowdP 71-year-old former governor and of some 200 students who had PRESENTS U.S. Senator describe its contents gathered to protest the Kent State say Hoover remarked that if such shootings and U.S. involvement in prompt action was taken by others Cambodia. the country would not be bothered by similar campus disruptions. FRIDAY & SATURDAY-doors open at 8 reChandlers one-rounertoc ;cuUr- nd S ND Y red shortly after the Kent State_________________ shootings that prompted demon- strations on the UK campus.V He said the - student, Mike 1 :30-2:50-4:10 Greenwell of Louisville, grabbed Adults only $1.50 his tie while he was talking with , a coed after a university Board not continuous with of Trustees meeting. "THE MINX" CI DR1U LD NETWORK NEEDS HELP Network is a community service switchboard which operates from 5 P.M.-2 A.M. DAILY If you have 3 hours or more free, CALL 769-6540 AND MAKE YOURSELF KNOWN ,IN i NGC THEATRE CORPORATION A NATIONAL GENERAL COMPANY ENDS TUESDAY FoX VILLaGE 375 No. MAPLE RD. "76941300 TIMES: MON .-FRI. 7:20-9:30 " A* H'is what the new freedom of the screen is all about." -Richard Schickel, Life An Ingo Preminger Production Color by DE LUXES Panavision* * STARTS WEDNESDAY * BURT LANCASTER DEAN MART A Ross HUNTEa cuR A 1 F F- FF BURT LANCASTER - DEAN MARTIN JEAN SEBERG JACQUELINE BISSET GEORGE KENNEDY HELEN HAYES VAN HEFLIN MAUREEN STAPLETON BARRY NELSON LLOYD NOLAN ' Son may face dad in mayoral race DEARBORN, Mich. (P) - Con- troversial Mayor Orville Hubbard,l .who's been mayor of this Detroit suburb for 29 years, may have to run against his own son this fall.! His son, John Jay Hubbard, 35,' has taken out petitions for the $25,000-a-year job. "Maybe we need some new blood in the office," Hubbard said short- ly after visiting his father Wed- nesday. John, one of the mayor's five children, was appointed DearbornI city clerk in March, two years after winning election to the City Council in this community of about 112,000. He is a Marine Corps veteran and the father of three. "Let's get one thing straight," said the potential candidate. "I think Orville Hubbarrd is the great- est politician to hit the American scene. I'm convinced that no one in the country could beat him for mayor," he said. Then, Hubbard was asked, why would he want to enter the race. He replied that his father might: stil decide not to run, and if so, 'We're likely to wind up withI somebody who would make a lousy mayor." "I think I would make a good candidate and put up some good opposition to him-but I'm not dumb enough to think I could beat him," John Hubbard said. "I am the first to admit that I wouldn't be in politics today if it weren't for my name." 'II TONIGHT and SAT. ANDY COHEN Ragtime, Blues and Country Music Piano & Guta Jlin Iri Inquar berqmia NGMAR BERGMAN'S BIBI ANDERSSON LIV ULLMANN DISTRIBUTEDS O E T PICTURCS CO6PpR1TtON "INGMAR B E R G MA N proves that a fully clothed woman telling of a sexual experience can make al the nudities and perver- sions that have been splattering the s c r e e n lately, seem like nursery school sensualities." ---World Journal Tribune SPiPTH FOrUm ffjFIR'TH AVENUE AY LINNATY DOWNTOWN ANN ARDOR INFORMIATION 761-9700 MAY 29-30--FRI. & SAT. THE NAVIGATOR dir BUSTER KEATON One of Keaton's best films; includes hilarious scenes of his escape into a deserted liner with cannibals; and a fantastic underwater scene in a Keatonish diving suit. 7 & 9:05 Architecture 75c 662-8871 Auditorium "IMAGINATIVE SEXSATION" -Variety "FRANKLY EROTIC" -Film Bulletin I JEAN SBRG JACQUELINE BISSET GEORGEKENNEDY HELEN HAYES ::?it:':".>k .i3" Vi 1 : c. r." MUSI'C COMPOSED t CONOICTED By IPCM IA HNOV1 Sy WkIt"(N 100 THE SCRIIK R OIPICT(0 IV PIOQUCCO Sy AL FRED NEWMAN'" ARTHUR HALLEY -GEORGE SEATON "'ROSS HUNTER A UNIVE RSAL PICTURE "'T1 :!N'('01 OR' Produced in TODD AO' A~L AGES AOMITISO FSounrd TraCl, Atbum 'cl'svely on DECCA RIC01os,0 C,,,,IAStne , also available on S.Tiack ad Cassanoe Tape! I - a wacleigh-maUrice, ltd. production technicolor@ from warner bros. MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY EVENINGS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY EVENINGS ALL DAY SUNDAY MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY MATINEE ......... Pass List Suspended This Attraction No Ladies Day Prices In Effect $2.25 $2.50 $2.25 $1.75 C I I AY, BOTH STORES U MEMORIAL WEEKEND -v "REMARKABLE 0 " 0 EXPLICIT" -N.Y. Times I h-k ~TATiE Now Showing SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9:05 Cable Hogue says... I I : ' w ? >: ,. \ I *budget labels & import not included I A A k! ' IM.. "cz a~hC.3l -~ v-~-' ... IU I ,® 5