Dellums urges left to re-emerge (Continued from Page 1) "Jimmy Carter pimped America and a lot of blacks," Dellums said. "In his campaign, he promised to cut -the defense budget and increase fun:s for human services. He has done just the opposite. When cutting the budget, he has reduced the monies for these programs while bloating the defense budget." HE ADDED that military power will not ease the problems of inflation, poverty, or suffering. "Instead of chan- neling that money into building monuments to our military madness like the B-1, we should concentrate on rebuilding our cities, to provide oppor- tunities for people to pursue, their education or to get proper health care," Dellums said. "When society places its priorities on helping humans and their problems in- stead of creating ways of destroying it- self, then jobs and opportunities for all will become reality," according to the congressman. Dellums said the oppressed people must "form a coalition that will work together to change that system that op- presses them. We are not fighting as blacks, women, Chicanos, or any other separate group, but as human beings fighting for our human rights." "ACROSS THE political spectrum, there are no political leaders, no political analyses, except those from the right. Many of the liberals and those from the left are busy diving for cover under the right wing rhetoric. It's time for the left to assume again its aban- doned political leadership to defend those programs they created in their early struggles.' 4A STUDENTS STUDENTS STUDENTS H N- Discount sports apparel 4 2 blocks off State Street u+ z Cold weather c gear for your H head, feet, and z N everything between! eN -1 c 406 E. Liberty- 663-6771 a z ' 4 S 6UE. SUET TUDEN771 4 'ASTUDENTS STUDENTS STUDENTS The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 16, 1978-Page9 Ire Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY DISGRUNTLED HILL AREA dormitory residents gather to protest the proposed consolidation of cafeteria services. The Regents will review a report at their monthly meeting today recommending construction of a single, centrally-located dining facility for residents of Alice Lloyd, Couzens, Mosher-Jordan and Stockwell Halls. Hill ood service mergereyed I, v (Continued from Paged ) also used in the savings figures, was computed with no allowance for rate increases. The later savings figures probably seem a bit higher than they actually would be, however, since room and board rates would probably also rise considerably during the period. SURVEYS TAKEN by a University task force set up to research the, Local. firml et to sefll to China (Continued fromPage 1) THE COMMERCE Department source said the principle objectors could not be revealed. The exportation of a list of certain items requires committee approval in. order for the trarsaction to take place. Dadealus fildcan application for the ex- port license last December, and it was initially denied in April by the export administration of the Commerce Department. In July an interagency group reversed the decision and gran- ted the export license. Parker said the delay cost his com- pany about $200,000 in legal and storage fees. The company also had to borrow money, which will mean paying in- terest on the loan instead of accruing interest on the $2.8 million which might now be in the bank. PARKER ALSO had to file to extend his deadline for submitting Daedelus' annual audit to the Securities Exchange ommission because the company's financial status was in limbo. The Commerce Department source said the department "is sensitive to the delays and appreciates the financial burden" placed upon companies because of delays. The source said the department is attempting to streamline the consideration process by removing some of the controls. The source would not specify the steps that are being taken to alleviate the delays. The equipment is now in Tokyo, and will soon be shipped to Peking. Eight Chinese technologists came and lived in Ann Arbor early last summer to learn how to use the equipment and left in 'uly. Parker said he has not yet 1eceived payment for the equipment, put he expects the final documents within the next few days. feasibility of food service consolidation showed strong student opposition to the plan. Parents were also surveyed. One of the questions asked whether parents would favor consolidating the service of adjoining dorms (the four Hill area dorms that would be affected by the plan are located within a small area) as a cost-saving measure. More than 52 per cent of the parents that responded to the survey indicated they liked the plan, while 41.9 per cent disapproved of the plan and 5.8 per cent registered no opinion. Of the parents that said they disliked the plan, several said they would support the proposed system if a particular cost savings were obtained while 59.4 per cent said the level of cost savings would not change their minds. Another question dealing with a situation where a new facility would be constructed to serve the students of several dorms elicited substantially more negative parent response. "WE REALIZED the student reac- tion was really negative," said Housing Director Robert Hughes, "but weighing the two together (cost avoidance of the proposed facility and negative student response) the scale still tipped toward the project." But at least one housing official op- poses the plan. "Personally I don't want to see things changed," said Hill Area Food Service Manager Carl Christoph. "Typical of the University would be to hire an outside consultant," Christoph said. "I'll be the one that has towork the bugs out of the system but I'll probably have very little to do with the planning," he added. "I sure don'tr ever find a student in favor of it," he continued. "They're the customers, they're the ones paying the bills," he added. The doctor doesn't cut out anything. You cut out cigarettes. This simple surgery is the surest way to save you from lung cancer. And the American Cancer Society -will help you perform it. We have free clinics to help you quit smoking. So, before you smoke another cigarette, call the A.C.S. office nearest you. And don't put it off. The longer you keep smoking, the sooner it can kill you. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY E U E THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER AS A PUBL[C SERVICE. I Margaret(rMeCad dies (Continued from Page 1) and that was worse than any hirm it, did. She also thought adults had to heed the opinions of their children. One reason for this, she said, was television, which produced a generation that saw "history being made before it is cen- sored by their elders.," DURING HER half-century in an- thropology, Mead also refined the technique of using pictures by the tens of thousands as part of her basic data. A writer once dubbed her "gran- dmother of us all," and that description was endorsed by Edward Lehman, executive director of the American An- thropological Association, which was meeting in Los Angeles when she died.. "Margaret's death is a loss not only to anthropology, but to science in general; not only to U.S. society, but to the world. She's irreplaceable," said Lehman. POPULARIZING anthropology was among her major achievemen- ts-"mass education of the very best kind," said Robert Murphy, a Columbia University anthropologist and former department chairman. "She pioneered two important fields, being the first to take a cross-cultural look at childhood and the role of culture in shaping personality," he said. "In 1949, she wrote 'Male and Female,' 20 years before the rest of the world tur- ned its eyes on the female role." Mead, who was born Dec. 16, 1901, in a suburb of Philadelphia, preached that a large, cohesive family was the best environment for a child to grow in. She regretted the passing of multigenerational households-chil- dren, parents and grandparents-like the one in which she grew up. The Goetheanum Forms of the Twenties at Dornach, Switzerland Impressions with Slides Professor DAVID C. HUNTINGTON Department of Historv of/Art Universitv of Michigan Saturday, Nov. 18, 1978--8 p.m Rudolf Steiner House 1 923 Geddes Ave., Ann Arbor The public is invited Sponsored by the Rudolf Steiner lnstitute of the Great Lakes Area Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan r - - - -m - - ---- WRITE YOUR AD HERE! -- ---.-----. It I I -- ------- CLIP AND MAIL TODAY!------""----- USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST Words 1 2 3 4 5 add. 0-14 1.70 3.40 4.60 5.80 7.00 1.00 Please indicate 15-21 2.55 5.10 6.90 8.70 10.50 1.50 wherethisad -i to run:I 22-28 3.40 6.80 9.20 11.60 14.00 2.00 forrent 29-35 4.25 8.50 11.50 14.50 17.50 2.50 helpwanted 36-42 5.10 10.20 13.80 17.40 21.00 3.00 roomma I 43-49 6.80 11.90 16.10 20.30 24.50 3.50, etc. Seven words per line. Each group of characters counts as one word. Hyphenated words over 5 characters count as two words-This includes telephone numbers. Mail with Check to: Classifieds; The Michigan Daily ;1 C14 THE 5TU SHOP has changed their name to The Tux Shop, Ltd. (SAME OWNER, WITH THE SAME FRIENDLY, PROFESSIONAL SERVICE) To Celebrate This Event, We Want To Give You A x WEDDING PRESENT... A *50* U.S. SAVINGS BOND No gimmicks. No catches. 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