A 1 correction In yesterday's paper, we carried a United Press International story which reported that the Eastern Michigan Unversity faculty strike began on September 13 - the first day of classes. Actually, the first day of classes at EMU was September 6. The faculty worked until September 13 without a contract and walked off the job on that date. Take Ten In late September, 1968, a report put together by a group of seven University law students entitled, "The Administration of Justice in the Wake of the Detroit Riot of July, 1967" was released, indicting practices in Detroit Recorder's Court during and after the riot. The panel charged that the rights of defenddnts were violated in case after case. The 86-page report, which was published in the Michigan Law Review, listed "assembly line" procedures, high bail and de facto suspension of the writ of habeus corpus among its complaints about the courts. Happenings.. . .start bright and early today with a dayplong seminar on "Confidentiality Issues and the Substance Abuse Law" at 8 at Howard Johnson Motor Lodge. . . quickly followed by a rummage sale at the Fist Baptist Church at 502 E. Huron starting at 9 ... at noon, the Action for Soviet Jewry and Human Rights (AKTSIA) is holding an open meeting in the multi-purpose room of the Undergraduate Library. . . Army ROTC is giving a demonstration in Rappelling (a form of mountain-climbing) at the south side of the Dental Building from 1:30 to 3 ... at 2, the Music School is hosting a workshop with Mary Lou Williams titled"The Compositons of Duke Ellington," .. . Bonnie Mills -will speak on "Ten Months at the Institute of Laser a Engineering, Osaka University" at 3:45 in White Auditorium of the Cooley Building . . the Yugoslav film Festival presents Beasts at 4 in Auditorium A of Angell Hall.. .at 5:30 the ROTC is sponsoring an open house and back-to-school party on the 2nd floor of North Hall ... Hillel will be holding Orthodox services at, 7, Reformed services at 8 ... at 7:30 the Astronomical Film Festival kicks off its year with Voyager: Mission to the Outer Planets, to be followed by a lecture by Jim Louden entitled "Beyond Jupiter," in Auditorium 3 of the Modern LAnguages Building. .. and at 8 the University Reformed Church/Campus Chapel presents a panel, "Christians and Institutional Power" in the Pendleton Room of the Union. *i On the outside.. . ... Prepare for another day of October weather as we have partly cloudy skies and temperatures in the low to mid 60s. Vets adjust to "U" li By MARION HALBERG - Ron Loveless is 23, attends the University of Michigan, and feels separated from the other students in his classes. "Most of the people are only two years younger than me, but it seems like a different culture," he said. Loveless is one of approximately 750 veterans who attend the University each year through benefits provided by the GI Bill. "YOU GO TO the Army," Loveless said. "You come back, and then you go off to school. You go away and grow up. You're taught to survive. You get culturized. Then you're sitting in a class and you feel much more worldly than the other students. Then there's that feeling - oh, oh, I'm outside again. I'm not relating." Dennis Coiling, who works for the University's Veterans Affairs office in the LSA Building, says many vets share Loveless' problem. "Some try coming back to college on- ce and get discouraged. A lot of people don't feel welcome," said Colling. WHY DO VETERANS bother to try college after the years they have missed? The GI Bill is available to any veteran with a better than dishonorable discharge who has served at least 181 days of continuous duty between January 31, 1955 and January 1, 1977. The bill entitles veterans to 45 months of full-time benefits, or an equivalent amount for part-time study. But as Colling points out: "I think a lot of people overestimate the amount of money actually received by the bill." The veterans receive only a stipend for study. The amount is based on the number of dependents they have. A vet with no dependents gets $311a month, while one with two dependents receives $422 a month. (These figures. are for a full-time study basis.) FOR MANY attending this Univer- sity, the money barely pays for tuition. "I felt misled," Loveless said. "The GI Bill was the reason for me going to the army. I really went into the trip of education. "But when they recruit," he added, they tell you everything that you want to hear, not what you want to know." Tim Artist, a 28-year-old Vietnam veteran, shares this feeling. "They shouldn't hide it under the pretense of, 'Here's money to go to school'. I think we deserve mor take away what w sider the cost ofl books." ARTIST SAID h to adapt to studen "I've always b an adaptable pe different because I've got 10 years There's no real make you 'worldl The Michigan Daly-Friday, September 22, 1978-Page fe on GI Bil e, but I'm not saying "I wouldn't come to a dorm now," ve've got. But just con- added. "But, yes, I would have liked living and the cost of have had the college life, all t craziness. But now I see it as a bad he didn't find it as hard my life. I wouldn't like that. I'd d t life as other vets do. out." een able to adapt. I'm Veterans eligible for the benef rson. But I guess it is provided by the GI Bill must take e of the time involved. vantage of them before the expirati on most people here. date, which is 10 years after substitute for time to discharge or December 31, 19 ly'," said Artist. whichever occurs first. New diet food rules set WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Food and Drug Administration today issued new rules under which foods which promote themselves as "low calorie" must contain no more than 40 calories per serving. In addition, foods which are billed as "reduced calories" can use that phrase only if they have at least one-third fewer calories than the food to which nthey are being compared. "The purpose of this new regulation is to assure that foods labeled 'low calorie' or 'reduced calorie' genuinely represent a caloric savings," FDA Commissioner Donald Kennedy said. "Consumers who buy foods intended for weight control will have a better understanding of what they are buying and labels will be more uniform so consumers can more easily compariso shop." All foods introduced into interstate commerce after July 1 of next year will have to comply with the rules which were originally proposed in 1977. Under the rules, foods which claim low or reduced calories must carry a complete nutrition label describing the calories-per-serving as well as the vitamin, fat and other content. AN WL m: PROVEN OPPORTUNITY - BE YOUR OWN BOSS -WORK YOUR OWN HOURS WE ARE SEEKING AN EAGER SELF STARTER TO BECOME OUR REPRESENTATIVE IN THE CAMPUS AREA. CALL TOLL FREE FOR DETAILS 1-800-327-3665, (USTM 'PRINTED ? HI T '+ACTGRY a, , SPE BORSON-Soph. 500 E. Liberty (just off State) 761-6212 I . M: - . 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