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October 06, 1983 - Image 3

Resource type:
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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1983-10-06

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The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 6, 1983- Page 3
MSA hopes.coordinator

idp

will help
By CHRISTY RIEDEL
The Michigan Student Assembly is
trying to keep more of the students who
walk into their office looking for ways
to get involved.
Julia Gittleman, an LSA, senior and
former assembly member, was hired
last month as MSA's volunteer coor-
dinator in a move assembly members
hope will help retain students who want
to join various student groups and
committees.
"IT'S A COMMON problem for any
volunteer organization," said MSA
President Mary Rowland. "It's not
hard to get the volunteers - it's hard to
keep them. If they don't feel comfor-
table or have something to do, we'll lose
them."
Gittleman will be paid $80 per week,
or a maximum of $960 this term to work
for a solution to MSA's problem until next.
December.
Gittleman's attempts to bring in
more MSA volunteers began last week,
when she spoke at classes and mass
meetings around campus to tell studen-
ts what MSA has to offer.
"I TRY TO show the relevance of the
students' classes to the issues to get
them interested," Gittleman said.

retain v
At these lectures, she distributed
questionnaires to students that will help
her match students with 12 MSA's in-
ternal committees. the questionnaires
list the issues MSA committees deal
with, and asks students what skills they
would like to use when working with
MSA.
Gittleman will feed the information
on the surveys to the assembly's com-
puter system, which will help to match
the student to a particular committee.
The committee head will then receive
the name of the interested volunteer,
and will be responsible for contacting
the student.
THE COMPUTER also has infor-
mation on the more than 400 MSA-
recognized student organizations at the
University, and Gittleman will be able
to tell the potential volunteer which
campus organizations will fit their in-
terests.
Another of Gittleman's respon-
sibilities will be to act as a liason bet-
ween assembly members and other
major campus organizations so that
MSA can "strengthen its ties with cam-
,pus groups." For example, MSA could
help groups schedule activities so that
they don't conflict, Gittleman said.

olunteers

Gittleman
...boosts MSA recruiting

AP Photo

Cheers for Reagan

As of last week, r ittleman said she
had received 150 questionnaires,)
which she must run through the com-
puter.
See MSA, Page 5

Members of Laban, the Filipino opposition party of slain leader Benigno Aquino1
cancel his November visit, and call for President Ferdinand Marcos' resignation.

hail President Reagan's decision to

p..

i

HAPPN I-
Highlight
Dr. Richard Arens, brother of Israeli defense minister Moshe Arens, will
speak about "Human Rights in the Middle East: The Danger of a World
Nuclear Conflict" at 4 p.m. today at the Wesley Foundation, 602 E. Huron
Films
Jewish Law Students' Union; Program in Judaic Studies - Great Trials in
Jewish History series, The Life of Emile Zola, 8 p.m., 100 Hutchins Hall.
Cinema Guild - Viva Zapata!, 7 & 9:05 p.m., Lorch.
Int'l Center; Peace Corps - The Toughest Job You'll Ever Love, 7 p.m.,
International Center. Discussion follows.
Women's Studies - Chisholm: Persuing the Dream, noon, MLB Lec. Rm.
2.
Classic Film Theatre - Wizards, 7 & 9:50 p.m., Animal Farm, 8:30 p.m.,
Michigan Theater.
Performances
Eclipse - Jam session, 9:30 p.m., u-Club.
Mich. Union Cultural Program - Music at Mid Day Series, harpist Clair
Ross, 12:10 p.m., Pendleton.
Professional Theater Program - "Rivals," 8 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn
Theater.
Second Chance - York Road, 9:30 p.m., 516 E. Liberty.
Speakers
esidential College - Ron Suny, "Soviet Foreign Policy Aims," 7 Ip.m.,
126 E. Quad.
Marxist Group - The Political Economy of World Peace SERIES, "The
Peace Movement," 7:30 p.m., 2443 Mason.
English - Ross Chambers, "Narrative in Opposition," 7:30 p.m., Conf.
Rm., 4th fl., Rackham.
Computing Center - chalk talk, CC consulting staff, "File Editing Com-
mands," 12:10 p.m., 1011 NUBS; Forrest Hartman, "Intro to MTS Editor II:
More Commands & Syntax," 3:30 p.m., 165 BSAD.
Chemistry - G.D.J. Phillies, "Diffusion in Interacting & Complex
Solutions," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem.
Program for the Study of Reproduction and Differentiation - James
Schereiber, "Lipoprotein Interaction with the Rat Ovary & Granulosa
Cells," 12:10 p.m., 11th floor, N. Ingalls Bldg.
Museum of Art - Martha McClintock, "Chinese Scroll Painting," 12:10
p.m., S. Gallery.
CRLT Faculty & TA Workshop - "Learning Strategies," 3 p.m.
Guild House Campus Ministry - Lana Pollack, 8 p.m., 802 Monroe.
Friends of the Filipino People, PSN, Ctr. for So. and Soeast Asian Studies,
MSA-J. Virgilio Bautists, "A People in Rebellion: The Philippines After
Aquino," 8 p.m., Pond Rm., Union.
Ann Arbor Libertarian League - Bette Erwin, "Test Without Trauma,"
7:30 p.m., 439 Mason.
Center for Japanese Studies - Betsy Horton, "The Chinese Sage and
Taiga" or "Exotic Wisdom Farther East," noon, Lane Hall Commons Rm.
Museum of Anthropology - Clare McHale and John O'Shea, "Michigan Ar-
chaeology is Still Alive and Well," noon, 2009 Museums Bldg.
UAC - Hugh Kaufman, "The Great Hazardous Waste Scandal," 7:30
p.m., Pendleton Rm., Union.
Meetings
Sailing Club - 7:45 p.m., 311 W. Eng.
Med. Cntr. Bible Study -12:30 p.m., Rm. F2239 Mott Children's Hospital.
Ann Arbor Libertarian League - 7 -.m., basement of Dominick's, 812
Monroe.
Fencing Club - 8 p.m., Coliseum, Hill and Fifth.
Lutheran Campus Ministry - discussion group meeting on Christian per-
spectives concerning vocational choices, 7:30 p.m., S. Forest at Hill.
Women in Communications - 4:30 p.m., 2035 Frieze.
Engineering - all faculty assembly, 8 p.m., Carroll Aud., Chrysler Cen-
ter.
American Cancer Society - education and self-help group to stop
smoking, 7 p.m., 4105 Jackson Rd.
Miscellaneous
Scottish Country Dancers - beginning class, 7 p.m., intermediate class, 8
p.m., Forest Hills Cmmty Cntr, 2351 Shadowood St.
Students Wood & Crafts Shop - Advanced Power Tools Safety, 6 p.m., 537
SAB.
League - International night, Italy, 5 p.m., Cafeteria.
Mime Troupe - auditions, 2518 Frieze, sign-up sheet posted outside Arena
Theatre.
Canterbury Loft (Free University) - "Spirituality & Social Action," 4
p.m., 332 S. State (above Bivouac); "The Draft & Militarism," 7:30 p.m.,
Quaker House, 1416 Hill; "Issues & Perspectives in City Government," 7:30
p.m., City Hall, First F.; "The Politics of Nuclear Disarmament," 7:30 p.m.,
220 Tyler House, E. Quad.
Reader's Theatre Guild - auditions for E. L. Master's Spoon River An-
thology, 8 p.m., Welker Rm., Union.
First Baptist Church - rummage sale, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., 502 E. Huron.
Union - exhibition and sale of original Oriental art, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Pond Rm., Union.
Planned Parenthood - Parent-Child Connections, workshop to help

Fight against King h
WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican BAKER AND Robert Dole (R.-Kan.)
Jesse Helms of North Carolina aban- floor manager of the King holiday bill,
doned his one-man filibuster yesterday have said it will pass by a wide margin
against a bill honoring Martin Luther and President Reagan's spokesmen
King with a national holiday, virtually have declared he will sign it.
ensuring it will be passed by the Senate The measure sailed through the
and signed by President Reagan later House two months ago by a 338-90 vote.
this month. It sets the third Monday in January,
In return for not fighting a scheduled starting in 1986, as a day to honor the
Oct 19 vote on the King measure, Helms slain civil rights leader. His actual bir-
got his way on a bill important to his thday is Jan. 15.
tobacco-producing state. HELMS, WHO said his mail was
IMMEDIATELY after the Senate "overwhelmingly in favor of my
agreed to the King voting schedule, position" against the holiday, conten-
Majority Leader Howard Baker, by ded in the interview his only purpose in
prior arrangement with Helms, stalling was to push the vote back past
brought to the floor a bill that would set the week-long recess that starts Mon-
price supports for dairy products and day.
tobacco. It was a measure Helms wan- "I'm following exactly the strategy I
ted considered before next week's started out with," Helms said. "I wan-
Columbus Day recess. ted to take this beyond the Columbus
"Sure, I had the arrangement with Day recess so senators can have time to
the majority leader that the farm bill think and their comstitutents can get to
would be called up if we got unanimous them. If people don't contact their
consent" on the King voting schedule, senators, so be it."
Helms said in an interview. "It happens Under the agreement, Helms will be
all the time around this place. I don't permitted to attempt to send the
see anything insidious about that." measure to the Judiciary Committee
The Helms-Baker agreement preven- for further consideration. If that fails as
ted the need for at least two cloture expected, he can offer amendments and
votes, the first scheduled yesterday, to said he would do so.
limit debate. HELMS WOULD not specify the

)liday ends
language of his amendments but said
he wanted to "delete shutting down
this country for anybody, including my
own personal hero, Thomas Jefferson.
If they want to set aside the holiday on
Sunday, that is fine."
Helms said he knew that his op-
position to the bill and his comments
that King espoused "action-oriented
Marxism" would keep him from getting
any black votes if he runs for re-
election next year. But he added, "I
face reality. The Blacks have a history
of voting Democratic down the line."
Helms also challenged critics to
prove him wrong about his assertion
that King had a Marxist philosophy.

Stanley H. Kaplan
The Smart
MOVE!
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