0 Page 10-Tuesday, September 25, ARE YOU LETTING CLASSES GET TO* YOu? RELAX Take a 1tLj break . you deserve it! 1979-The Michigan Daily Sovietscientists synthesize U.F.O. 's MOSCOW (Reuter)-Soviet scientists have created flying saucers of dust and water in a laboratory, Tass news agen- cy reported yesterday. Tass said researchers at the Soviet Academy of Scientists were working on a theory that unidentified flying objects were just disc-shaped accumulations of dust and water caused by turbulence in the air. They reproduced the right conditions in a laboratory "and saw a flying saucer forming before their eyes.", Tass added that Soviet geophysicists believed the growing frequency of sightings of UFO's was due to the in- crease in air pollution. State agency under fire (Continued from Page ) Resources listed at "major polluters." "IT'S TO THE point where we may find it cheaper to simply write off the groundwater supplies of large portions of southern Michigan," said Jack Bails, chief of the department's enforcement division. In reaction to criticism, mostly from state and local politicians, there has been a recent shakeup in the Depar- tment of Natural Resources and a declaration of a chemical emergency to force cleanup of potential cpncer- causing chemicals. Michigan has laws that regulate the manufacture, transport and disposal of toxic chemical wastes. They were enac- ted in the past-two years, primarily because of the state's disastrous ex- perience with PBB. PBB, A TOXIC fire retardant known chemically as polybrominated biphenyl, was accidentally mixed with livestock feed distributed across the state. Thousands of animals were destroyed and buried. Despite the new laws, state agencies have been criticized by local officials and some legislators. They say that William Turney. who was chief environmental protection of- ficer and a deputy director of the natural resources department, ignored their complaints about toxic chemical spills. Bubble bath. Daily Photo by CYRENA CHANG Says a fast-food fanatic named Fleegle, Who can spot a good deal like an eagle, "You can't feed your gullet While sparing.your wallet Like a meal at The Michigan League'll." M TheMit hira n M CAFETERIA HOURS; 11:30-1:15 5:00-7:15 SNACK BAR 7:15-4:00 "Deep Seas on Sunday Morning," between MLB and the Michigan League, was made a pool of soap suds yesterday for big-bellied Protius: Wordsworth's poem about the legendary horn-blower inspired the name of this Carl Milles fountain. SPEAKER AT BUS. SCHOOL: Next to Hill Auditorium Located in the heart of the campus. it is the heart of the campus .. . 2 Yc tic or end your League Limerick to: anager, Michigan League 27 South Ingalls ou will receive 2 free dinner ckets if your limerick is used in ne'of our ads. Women still dlenk PRE-LAWV INFORMATION MEETING Wednesday, September 26th 4 pm-Aud. C Angell Hall PRE-MED INFORMATION MEETING Thursday, September 27th 4 pm-Aud. C Angell Hall ALL INTERESTED STUDENTS INVITED! Sponsored by Pre-Professional Office By MARYEM RAFANI The exclusion of women from high positions in business is the result of men's continuing fear of female' domination in the working world, womans activist Caroline Mills told an all women crowd yesterday at the Business School's Hail Auditorium. "Men fear competition with women," Mills, a former professor at the Univer- sity's Dearborn campus, repeatedly asserted during the lengthy speech to more than 60 women. Mills pointed out that government and union practice is not favorable to women in business. There exists and occupational segregation by which salaries decrease in certain fields as more and more women enter them, she said. MILLS WENT on to cite the findings of a national study that looked at the public's view of women in a variety of professions. In every profession, the majority of the public, including women, ,said a woman could not do the job as well as a man. Mills added that men believe women are less creative, assertive and ambitious than they are. "Society has lower expectations of women than men," she said. "When a woman becomes successful, it is usually discounted as luck, yet when a man becomes successful it is attributed to his abilities." Women have had problems securing a place in the working world since the days of the cave men, Mills said. "Male bonding" developed with the movement of early man into the plains, she ex- odrihts: plained. Since men were in charge of hunting for food, they relied on each other for survival and excluded women from theirclosely-knit circle. OTHER participants in the conferen- ce expressed agreement with Mills. "Higher level management is telling lower level management to discourage their wives from working in their com- panies because they can't deal with them," one woman in the audience said. Another woman, however, stated that in spite of the satisfaction she gets from working, she is deeply concerned that she is neglecting her children. "I think it is a realistic concern. There is nobody at home anymore. They need to be raised. Somebody's got to take care of them," she said. The conference was organized by the Michigan Business Women, an organization of women in business school. The purpose of the conference was to direct women in selecting jobs and to inform them of what to expect from the business world, said Noel Unowsky, the organizer of the con- ference. 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