Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, February 17, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, February 1 7, 1972 N.Y. pot bill Inmates file suit against L introduced Washtenaw County Jail on~g Sprng Dresses ' For the third year in a row, a (Continued from Page 1) requests a temporary injunction bill that would make marijuana as so that the facilities may be stu- be brought against the "defend- justlegal as liquor w announced died in detail and exact measure- ants and their employes." lea sliurws none ments taken of the capacity and at Tuesday in the New York State conditions the The Human Rights Party of Ann Assembly. According to the suit, there is Arbor has issued a statement fully The bill, introduced by Demo- no procedure for dealing with thein a short time, will file an Ami- greane of inmate ande "manyl a Ai 5jaiVI~1 r~y C7T "ib b le ~j cratic Assemblyman Franz Leit- of the rules areasn arbitrary, capri us - friend of the plaintiffs" - Cher, was "hissed off the floor as cious and unreasonable. For ex- irctr a public menace" at its first read- ample, an inmate may be punished ANN ARBOR ing three years ago. for lying or sitting on his bed Among the other organizations during the day:" backing the action are the Wash- 1121 S. Universit Leitcher claims, however, that a The suit also alleges that "all tenaw County Board of the Ameri- "slow but inevitable bandwagon" incoming and outgoing mail, even can Civil Liberties Union, the was forming behind the bill. from attorneys and printed matter Model Ctes Leal tServices o- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _is subject to reading by the staff. gram, the Washtenaw County This year the bill has six As- That is, all mail is examined for Legal Aid Society and the Jack- II Isembly co-sponsors and two Sen- contraband, often delayed on its son Welfare Fund. I' +oen1 Ai4ha dnfitd course to its desinatination or not de- --__ -L---- 3 A 'V LAW SCHOOL MIXER THURSDAY, EBG H1 9-MIDNIGHT LAW CLUB LOUNGE Music by: JOUST UNLIMITED I admission 50c I ate sponsors. Leltcner pre cte a yearly rise in sponsors of the bill, until it is eventually passed. DAILY ADS BRING RESULTS Ann Arbor Dance Theatrev Concert Feb.18 & 19-8:30 Feb. 20-2:30 RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE AUDITORIUM Adults $2, Students $1 Tickets Available at: Stangers, Jacobsons c and at the door The Interesting Place to meet people! Bach Club Carolyn Honke-Oboe Ellen Sudio-Oboe Sue Mallare-Piano Playing selections by VIVALDI, ARNOLD, TELEMAN, and PISTON Feb. 11th, Thursday 8:00 p.m. South Quad, West Lounge No Musical Knowledge Needed. Absolutely Everyone Invited. For Further Info: 763-6256 livered at all." When contacted on the suit Harvey denied all the charges made in the suit "as definitely not true," except for the lack of an exercise area. While he admitted that all mail is checked, he maintains that jail officials have no way of telling: whether or not an address belongs to a lawyer. According to Harvey plans for an exercise area are being com- pleted now and plans are being formed with a local hospital for a medical clinic.I The suit demands that a, clinic1 be constructed in the building.E Bush pointed out that untrained matrons are now expected to iden- tify illness complaints from in- mates. Until a full court hearing on the allegations and a final decision onr the future of the facility, the suitf Free Instructions< Pocket Billiards I TONIGHT 7-9 P.M. Michigan Union E Regents hold open meeting (Continued from Page 1) ate Assembly resolution to bar most classified research from the University. Additionally, the Faculty Re- form Coalition, a group of liberal faculty members, will discuss their response to the Assembly resolu- tion and members of Student Gov- ernment Council will be questioned about an SGC research proposal. The Regents will not, however. act on the Assembly proposal to- day. PIRGIM is currently collecting, signatures for a petition which asks that students be assessed an optional $3 yearly to finance re-; search against sex and race dis- crimination and corporate and legislative abuse of consumers. The PIRGIM proposal is fashioned after a plan devised by consumer Yip pie! Jerry Rubin (right), wearing a RE-ELECT NIX ON button, expresses himself to a TV newsman about the upcoming Democratic convention on the lawn of Convention Hall in Miami Beach. With Rubin is Stew Albert. Both are members of the Youth International Party. They said they were sent to survey the convention site. Rubin predicted that 10,000 nudes would march down Wash- ington Ave. in front of the hall where the Demo crats will convene in July. FOLLOWIN G MEETING i m ay cut women's, minorities units POSTER SALE NOW thru Sunday SAMPLE PRICES: JIM 4 IN advocate Ralph Nader. HAIRSTYLING AS YOU LIKE IT! NEW TRENDS FOR 1972 TRIMS--SHAGS and RAZOR CUTS Dascola Barbers "@611 E. University * near Michigan Theatre +i s I ' j 1 1 (Continued from Page 1) The impact of such a termina- tion on the University's affirma- tive action plan would be "disas- trous," she added. "It would un- do everything. There's no other agency doing anything for wo- men on campus. The affirmative action plan would fall apart." Hodgdon described the revised order as applying only to private federal contractors - excluding public institutions such as the University. Failure to comply with the order could result in the withdrawal of federal contracts. Although not required to have List $1.00 1.50 2.00 Reg. Low Price .85 1.25 1.69 SALE PRICE .69 1.00 1.39 *ALSO: studio one W W 2.47 terra magico gallery graphics or 2 for $4.00 *COVER THOSE BARE, STERILE WALLS ... university cellar-in the union DID YOU KNOW THAT WE'RE OPEN: MONDAY-THURSDAY--9 A.M.-I11 P.M. FRIDAY-SATURDAY-9 A.M.-5 P.M. SUNDAY--12-5 P.M. I For the Student Body: SALE " Jeans " Bells " Flares.- '/2 off CEKMAT e State Street at Liberty the order's prescribed affirmative of Labor as well as other repre- action plan on file, public con-.: sentatives of federal agencies tractors may be required to form- which monitor discrimination. ulate such plans once a complaint The University's contingent has been lodged against them. the largest from a college - in- The Chicago conference was or- cluded Lemmer, Hayes, Nordin, ganized by the Urban Research Zena Zumeta, University wo- Corporation -- publishers of men's representative, Charles All- "Spokeswoman," a feminist news- mand, assistant to the vice presi- letter. dent for academic affairs and two Yesterday's session was the other personnel office representa- first in two days of discussions tives. aimed at familiarizing government The conference cost the Uni- contractors with the new proce- versity $65 for each participant- dures for dealing with discrimina- plus air fare, and room and board tion. at the Sheraton Blackstone Hotel in downtown Chicago. Over six hundred delegates rep- prior tothe conference, several resenting Universities, govern- women picketed and leafleted out- ment agencies, corporations, labor ' side the hotel-calling the confer- unions, and women's groups lis- ence a "Who's Who on discrimi- tened to speeches by Aileen Her- nation." nandez, president of the National They specifically protested such Organization of Women and femi- delegates as Bell Telephone and nist Gloria Steie. IBM. In addition, the delegates heard Last night, a large group of pic- a panel which included William keters demonstrated outside the Brown, chairman of the Equal hotel against abortion reform, Opportunities Commission, and carrying signs saying, "We were Catherine East, of the Department i all once fetuses." II I STUDENT SERVICES POLICY BOARD open discussion on Health Service '72 Budget i I OF FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1:00 p.m. 18 PESC MEETING FRIDAY Third Floor-Michigan Union Rm. 126 EAST QUAD 12-2 FOURTH WARD VOTERS* If you strongly feel that the candidate's views and approach to issues are more important than party labels, vote for: i U TONIGHT! at Public Health Auditorium DOUBLE FEA TURE SPECIAL I SARAH STEINGOLD To discuss the philosophy and ideas behind open enrollment EVERYONE WELCOME' Check out: Closed Corporations by JAMES RIDGEWAY D. HOROWITZ: "University and Ruling Class- How Weolth Put Knowledge in Its Pocket" RAMPARTS: April-June '69 on reserve in UGLI and Ed Library Try Daily Classifieds If you seek an honest, flexible approach to city problems, vote for: Up Mvaison Ave "/TheM year' es l come y. -SATURDAY REVIEW SARAH STEINGOLD 1 I,..L.mIVr.L,J,-,&LF If you want a councilwoman who welcomes and encourages student participation in government, vote for: SARAH STEINGOLD If you dislike the political stranglehold which a small group of conservatives has on the Fourth Ward, vote for: SARAH STEINGOLD A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION Fna rni *thIIA DRFI ACr r-. ic I.LCAKAiVt.c JEt c MAKE YOUR VOTE COUNT HARNESS BOOTS Rich burnished brown with brass trim, leather soles and rubber heels. Several models to select from. $21.80 Values up to $32.00 -------------- - -------- VOTE FOR ..PUTNEY SWOPE The Truth and Soul Movie SARAH R. STEINGOLD R '>' 101 I _ _ - 1