100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

February 25, 1972 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1972-02-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Paae Six

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Friday, February 25, 1972

___--

LOCAL FIRM:
Workers may face
injunction for strikel

House OKs

i

)AILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

BeSuperBig

i1

The Commission on Professional
and Hospital Activities (CPH A)
may file an injunction against 170
of its employes, who walked off
their jobs Wednesday in a contract
dispute.
No meetings have been held yet
between company officials and
Local 157 of the United Auto Work-
ers, which represents the k e y
punch operators, mailroom a n d
clerical workers employed by the
CPHA.
Negotiations have stalemated
over whether the company should
have a union shop. Under the pro-

visions supported by the union, all
employes eligible for membership
would have to join the union.
The company's position is that
no one should have to join the
union.
Workers have cited poor treat-
ment by managers, low wages, in-
adequate sick leave and poor fa-
cilities as reasons for the strike.
Workers have also expressed
their disapproval of CPHA's in-
centive system of wages -which
they claim discriminates against
older employes who can no long-
er perform the extra duties.

gas tax
increase
LANSING (A') - The State
House of Representatives yester-
day approved atwo-cent-a-gallon
increase in the gasoline tax to
fund Gov. William Milliken's con-
troversial transportation pack-
age.
The 57-42 vote in favor of the
measure offset an earlier defeat
for the program.'
Earlier in the day, the House
approved 59-43 Milliken's program
for mass transit construction in
urban areas and highway con-
struction out-state.
Both measures must still go
through the Senate.
In addition, the House will hold
a reconsiderationvote on the tax
increase this afternoon.
When first presented, the mea-
sure was clogged with a long list
of priorities for highway rebuild-
ing, extension or improvement.
Many legislators thought the
priority list didn't belong in the
package. Some said in debate that
the list was added "just to buy
votes for the package."

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25
Day Calendar
Astronomy Colloquium: C. Cowley.
"Nucleosynthesis on the Surfaces of
Stars," P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 pm.
Mathematics Lecture: F. Beutler, "As-
pects of Randomly Timed Sampling of
Signals, 4208 Angell Hall, 4 pm.
Residential College Creative Arts
Fair: Free Foon Fair, three original
plays, E. Quad Aud., 7 pm.
Ctr. for Chinese Studies: "A Look
at China." 3 short films; slides of
scholars' recent visit to China; panel
discussion, Ann Arbor Public Library,
7:30 pm.
International Folk Dance: Barbour
Gym, 8 pm.
Musical Society: East Asian Series, P'
Ansori, Rackham Aud., 8:30 pm.
Rive Gauche: International Variety
Show, 1024 Hill St., 8 pm.
School of Music: E. Derr, "Keyboard
Continuo Practice in the Maroque
and Classical Periods," Sch. of Mus. Re-
cital Hall, 8 pm.
Slavic Lang. & Lit., and Univ. Polish
Club: J. Skorupka, "Polish Poetry,"
Rackham Assembly Hall, 8 pm.
General Notices

Vaughan, "Skin Homeostasis and Pos-
sible Relation to Cancer Etiology,"
Mon., Feb. 28, Sch. of Pub. Hlth. Aud.,
1 pm.
Attention All Faculty of Computer-
oriented Courses: Please schedule due-
dates for course problems so as to
avoid end-of-term "crunch;" to assist
instructors, we have public file, DUE-
DATES, which lists all due-dates we
are aware of; please call Mrs. K. Dy-
mond, 764-2121 immediately, and give
her your tentative list of due-dates.
Gay Liberation Coffee House, Feb.
25, 7:00 PM, Canterbury.
Dept. of Slavic Language & Litera-
ture and University Polish Student
Club-"Polish Poetry", Jozef Skorupka,
Feb. 25, 8:00 PM, Rackham Assembly
Hall.
Baha'i Student Group, Feb. 25, 8:00
PM, Law Club Lounge. "Slides of Vene-
zuela and the Mah'i World Center,
with. South American Music".

ON CAMPUI
Turn 'em on with a
smoking Super Poster.
Ideal for student cam-
paigns, rallies, room
decorations, gifts or
gags. Send ANY b&w,
color, polaroid or mag-
azine print, slide, neg-
ative, cartoon or draw-
ing to be SUPER-IZED.
Better originals make
better posters. Super
sized bw poster mail-
ed in protective tube.
Original returned un-
damaged.

I Exploe Yu esnality

FOLK FESTIVAL for BANGLADESH
FEATURING
SUE GERGER and STEVE NEWHOUSE
on Friday, Feb. 25th at 8 p.m.
at 331 Thompson
DONATION: $1.25
Sponsored by NEWMAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION

2 ft x 3 ft $350
12 ft x 2 ft $2.50 3 ft x 4 ft $6.50
ADD $.50 for postage & handling for EACH poster ordered.
24 hr. rush service-add $2 for EACH poster ordered. In
N.Y. add sales tax. No C.D.D. Send cash, check or MO.
to: DEPT. C.
S: SEPT. in..18-36 PARSONS BLVD.
Super Poster If n. FLUSHING, N.Y.11366

PRO-

HILLEL PRESENTS A DEBATE ON
"Internationalizing the Latke
and the Hamentash"
Dr. Marvin Felheim
Prof. of English
and
Prof. Gerda Seligson
Classical Studies
Dr. Harriet Mills

Angela Davis calls bail,
decision 'people's victory'

r

I

i

Environmental Health Seminar:

F.

(Continued from Page 1)
tional would not have been pos-
sible without the struggles sur-
rounding the prison movement, the
"massacre at Attica and the mur-
der of George Jackson."
"We have to intensify the effort
to free all political prisoners,"
she said, and singled out the Sole-
dad Brothers among others. Two
Soledad Brothers, accused of help-
ing Jackson kill a prison guard,
are on trial in San Francisco.
Davis answered only two ques-
tions from newsmen. To one about
her health, she responded: "I feel
fine. I feel better than I have in
16 months. The real reason I feel
better now is that I can give more
of myself to help my brothers and
sisters."
She applauded as attorneys
Doris Brin Walker and Margaret
Burnham were introduced. When
her chief counsel, Howard Moore
. Jr., was introduced she leaned over
and kissed him on the cheek.
Moore said it was significant
that Davis was freed on Feb. 23
because that was the birthday of
Dr. W.E.B. DuBois, whom he call-

ed a great fighter for freedom of
black people.
Davis' sister, Fania Davis Jor-
dan, who flew here from Iowa to
celebrate her sister's release, told
the crowd: "I'm really overjoyed.
All of the members of my familyj
are very happy."
Davis said she regretted net be-
ing able to thank all her support-
ers personally because of a court
order banning her participation in
public gathei'ings.
She is also prohibited from
traveling outside the six counties
of San Francisco Bay area with-
out permission and from traveling
by airplane.

j
i
J
1
S
r
_1

e

I

I

Rent your
Roommate with
a Classified Ad

I

I

ALL WORK,
ALL PLAY.
The TC-60, S o n y' s lowest-
priced Cassette-Corder, is per-
fect for budget-minded students
and housewives, for personal
correspondence, or just for fun.
FEATURES:
0 AC/DC Operation
9 Push-Button Operation
0 Locking Fast-Forward and
Rewind Buttons
0 Sonymatic Recording Control
* Microphone and Auxiliary
Inputs
Toneand Volume Controls
* Built-In Speaker
* Record Interlock
Operates in Any Carrying
Position
Remote Stop/Start Microphone
$49.95
SSUPERSCOPE
You never heard it so good

I

314 Detroit St.

DeLong's Pit Barbecue
FEATURES THESE DINNERS:
Bar-B-Q Ribs Shrimp
Bar-BQ Chicken Scallops
Bar-B-Q Beef Fried Chicken
Bar-B-Q Pork Fried Fish
Fried Oysters
AllDinners Include Fries, Slaw, and Bread
CARRY OUT FREE DELI VERY
OPEN: Mon., Wed., Thurs., Sun.-1 1 a.m. to 2 a.m.
Fri., Sat.-1 1 a.m. to 3 a.m.

11

11

I

r

-1

I

CREATIVE
SHABBAT
SERVICE
Every Friday-6:15 p.m.
HILLEL-1429 Hill

For the Student Body:
SALE
" Jeans

it's ANOTHER

9 Bel

is

HUGE PARTY!
Music by The Guardian Angel
Beer by the keg
make it to ATO Friday, Feb. 25 at 9:00!
guys-brnga"buck
girls-bring yourselves
ALPHA TArdOMEGA
1415 Cambrid e

BENEFIT CONCERT FOR
IRISH RELIEF FUND
TOM MacINTYRE, Irish Poet
TREASA O'DRISCOLL, Irish Singer
BARRY O'NEILL, Irish-American Ballad Singer j
THE ARK COFFEE HOUSE
SUNDAY, FEB. 27-8 P.M.-Donation $1.00
Donations may be mailed to: Irish Relief Fund, 2729 Hampshire,
Ann Arbor, c/o Desmond Ryan

" Flares
1/2 off

CHECKMATE
state Street at Liberty

HI-Fl BUYS
Ann Arbor-East Lansing
618 S. Main 769-4700
Comprehensive'Repair
Service Available

>:: :; ;: ;r:
,;; ;r:s;:;;

!a :}i

I

I

BOTH
ON
SALE
AT

89
each

RITA COOLIDGE-

"Nice Feelin"'

C

4

OVER 25,000 LP'S, OVER 300 LABELS IN STOCK s
WATCH FOR SPECIAL SALE
ITEMS CHANGING WEEKLY
iscount records
1235 S. UNIVERSITY " 300 S. STATE 0 ANN ARBOR,
668-9866 665-3679 MICH.
HOURS- S. UNIV.-MON.-FRI., 10 - 10 Both Stores- SAT. 9:30-6
S. STATE-MON.-FRI., 9:30-9 SUN.-12-5

I

Ii~,F#4%* ~ * ~ ~... .........~

i

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan