Tuesday, September 16, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Rage Seven Tuesday, September 1 6, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven AUT Cancelled We also wr 482-9533 234 W. Michiqan Ave. Ypsilanti /< WELFARE ISSUE: Byrd asks special I i ) INSUBANCE Foreign students Lawsuit in Argus case seeks obscenity ruling FOR EVERYONE Rejected : . lb 1-4 1-4A-% fn e-4 1-14-Mru-1 0 Declined su ervisoi By JUDY KAHN ite motorcycle and motorscooter insurance "EASY BUDGET T INSURANCE CEN ARLAN'S DEPT. ST ERMS" County Supervisor David Byrd (R) said Sunday he will request a special meeting of the County 665-3789 Board of Supervisors to discuss 31 the allocation of additional funds 2465 W. Stadium Blvd. to welfare recipients to provide sufficient school clothing for their TER Ann Arbor children. ORE Byrd made the request in a let- ter dated Sept. 14. Copies of the letter were sent to representatives of the County Welfare Rights two groups. The Citizen's Coin- mittee for School Clothing, as well I.. ______________ -~________ STUDENT DIRE CTORBY ALL C H A N G E S or Additions in Telephone Numbers and Addresses Must Be Reported at Window A in LS&A Bldg. by THURSDAY, SEPT. 18 to Be Included in the Student Directory. Any student who registered by mail and did not know their local address is urged to complete an address form at Window A. as to area media. The board turned down a simi- lar request issued last week by the two groups. The Citien's Com- I mittee for School Clothing is a middle-class group organied tol support the welfare mothers' de-I mands. Byrd said he will seek the sig- natures of five supervisors on a petition asking for the special meeting, a necessary procedure. Earlier Sunday a dozent mem- bers of the Citizen's Committee for School Clothing picketed for two hours the home of Bent F. Nielsen chairman of the County s " (Continued frn, Page i Fleming said he adn't seen the ofSprios oca or c r ize questions from citizens involving lawsuit but said that it would be Board the state obscenity statute. "referred to our legal department." Professor John Erlich, said the A X NDEdwards last week questioned "Hathaway has really gone group -composer} almost exclus- By ALEXA CANADY Harris on the obscenity law's rel- wild, said Argus' Kelley. 'This ively of social work students-was The International Students As- evence to the Argus issue a week is going to be a blast. I hope to picketing "to show Mr. Nielsen sociation (ISA) was unable to after Kelley had been criminally pose with the Regents as my co- that we are dissatisfied with his accommodate all the people want- charged for printing the picture defendants in front of Burton refusal to grant the welfare people ing to attend its first meeting of of Stephenson. Tower tomorrow." a special meeting." the year last night. American "The mayor had five days to "There is nothing in the law- In discussing the w e 1 f a r e spectators jammed the doorways respond in writing, and he didn't," suit which gives a reason why I Indsusiktewe1fareand hallways of the International Hathaway said. should appear in court," Kelley mothers' situation with the pick- Center while the officers of ISA DelheY is involved in the suit added. eters, Nielsen said a request for explained its functions. under a legal technicality that re- Kelley's lawyer, Frank Munger, a special meeting had been turned uneG ea ehiaiyta e- Kle' ayr rn ugr down "and would continue to be George Vargnese, president, said quires the prosecuting attorney to said he had twenty days in which turned down. that ISA was founded last year be named as a defendant in cases to answer the summons, at which to foster international communi- questioning the obscenity of pub- time a hearing would be set. "I don't deny $16.50 a month cation and dialogue. He empha- lished material. "Our first motion will be to dis- may not be enough. It probably sized that better communication When asked why the University miss the case." Munger said. "The isn't. We're not unsympathetic is needed not only between the was the only distributor of the charge against Kelley is obviously but we have no money," Nielson foreign students and the Amen- Argus named in the suit, Hatha- political." added. can students, but also between way said, "We could have added as Although all three plaintiffs The County Welfare Rights the foreign students of different many defendants as we wanted, are Republicans, Hathaway scof- Committee and the Citizen's Com- nationalities, but the University is the one which fed at charges the suit was polit- mittee for School Clothing will The programs of ISA were de- has retained counsel and is well ically motivated. attend today's regularly scheduled scribed by Joe Winer, vice presi- prepared to defend itself in court." "I filed a similar suit in 1967 supervisors' meeting to reiterate dent. "Last year we tried to im- "We didn't want to sue Cun- against Mayor Wendell Hulcher their request for a special meeting prove communications between ningham's Drug Store, for in- after he backed away from an of the board. foreign students and U.S. stu- stance, if we knew it was going opinion on the "Flaming Crea- If a decision to hold a special dents by holding informative pro- to cost them a lot of money to tures" case," he said, adding that is made, "at least ten days grams," he said. One of the ex- retain counsel," he added. the suit never actually was brought for advertising" is required, Byrd amples he cited was the panel University President Robben to court. foradvrtiing isreqire, Brddiscussion ISA held last year on- __ said, before the supervisors can student dissent in other countries. meet. "This year the hope to organizeJ G e ts to reconsider - -- j _____ academic counseling, and a prob- to _ _ 111lem-solving committee," he said. Winer hopes that the problem-bk o soving committee willbe able to help foreign students with hous- 40 111ing and adjustment to this county (Continuedfrom"pageiide data on the quality of its op shopping at Kazem Iravani, a member of the problems are. A bookstore student managers. ISA, spoke briefly on the prob- would be just a lot of headaches." Caught in the middle of the re- lems of foreign students who Brown and Linemer both cited taldodumserothan lwerl come to the United States, and what they called the "deceptive- recuperating from problems of ef- also on what he feels are the ness" of the bookstore proposal, problems of ISA. arguing that discounts would be i'nnld nnt. h t zatil hh WwHY WAS Do your one t TIC 340 S. State St. on campus SPECIALIZING IN * Chilled Beer and Wines * Complete Liquor Stock * Groceries, Cheeses, and Snax * School Supplies * Patent Medicines * Popers'and Magazines Stop in and look us over! Iravani said that a "social-cul- tural ISA will not solve the prob- lems of the foreign students." He feels that ISA must also get in- volved in the major problems of foreign students which he listed as housing, academics, counseling and segregation. Michigan engineers and their computers will soon begin a study of the institutional interactions in the management of the Great Lakes resources. They expect to determine the most efficient way to spend the $335 million in bond- ing approved by Michigan voters to curb air and water pollution. limited to the exemption a uni- versity store receives from charg-' ing the four per cent state sales tax. In addition, Lindemer said hej feared that, for example, $60,0001 in voluntary contributions would1 be collected-far short of the ne- cessary starting capital-and that the Regents would then feel pres-, sured to provide the rest. Cudlip, though he was silent for1 much of the debate, also express-t ed the fear that discounts would be low or non-existent 'and that the store might prove to be a financially dangerous proposition.l Underlying the fears expressed by some of the Regents that the1 bookstore would become a liabil-- ity was a provision in the SGC proposal to place control of the store in the hands of a student- dinminate Pcommitteep store had been operating for some time, the Discount Store was, in July, showing a loss of about $1,500. The Regents themselves may be partly to blame for the size of this deficit, however. SGC Presi- dent Marty McLaughlin contends that a few hundred dollars were wasted because the store had to pay workers to take and re-take the inventories which the Regents demanded. On the question of feasibility, the Regents were especially tough on the administration's bookstore proposal, which would have de- pended on voluntary contribu- tions. But when it came down to votes, it was that proposal that was at least close to approval, while SGC's plan was not sup- ported by a single regent. It is the administration proposal that I. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily - 0 o~111 euC111L e. 1wl rbbygttemr eiu In fact, to test the feasibility of consideration again. allowing students to run the book- store, the Regents ordered SGC to TOMORROW: take a number of inventories of VOLUNTARY FUNDING, its infant Discount Store to pro- COMPROMISE OR COVERUP? The I Astamatic 44 Available for only '8.29 at Ihe Ouarry Just one of the complete Instamatic line available at the Quarry. State Street at North University, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Open Monday until 9:00, Tuesday through Saturday until 6:00. Phone 76 1-201 1 YOUR CHANCE TO HELP KIDS WHO NEED YOU: BE A TUTOR IN WILLOW RUN! Work on Remedial Skills or Use Your Own Special Talents to Start an Extracurricular Project ALL MAJORS WELCOME Call 763-3548 and Make an Appointment to Sharon Rosen or Come to 2547 SAB See resu U SDS Meeting Tues., Sept.16 7 P.M. 2nd Floor SAB I AT THE HOUSE (HILLEL) THIS WEEK MONDAY, SEPT. 15 8:00 P.M. RELIGIOUS COMMITTEE TUESDAY, SEPT. 16 8:00 P.M. JEWISH PEACE FELLOWSHIP. All Are Welcome. WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 17 7:30 P.M. PROGRAM COMMITTEE 7 n. ->n n I': AA f A rD 1-1 rr ac c IM rI D C - aeesher. Al you do is drop a film cartridge into a Kodak Instamatic camera a and take Penny. For keeps.