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.

March 21, 1972 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1972-03-21

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

Tuesday; March 21, 1972

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Seven

Tuesday, March 21, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven

Passover Is Coming!
First Seder: WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29
SEDERS, LUNCHES, DINNERS:
available at HILLEL, 1429 HILL
Reservations Deadline: MONDAY, MARCH 27
Information; 663-4129
NO PHONE RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED

SEX BIAS SETTLEMENT
Prof. to get -back pay
(Continued from Page 1) vides for a hearing 'of cases bT
ed by National Science Founda- the department's executive con-
tion grants. , mittee.
At the time of her original re-
quest for back pay in 1970, Allencm After a December hearing, the
refused, attributing the lower sal- Davis' complaint in January of
ary to the lack of grant funds, not this year. Several weeks later.
sex discrimination, according to !Vice President Smith approved the
D i~

U.S. war planes hit
Laotian countryside

p
I U

Davis feels her case raised
doubts about therfaculty griev-
ance procedure itself, a process
she terms "a real mistake."
Although she won her case, Da-
vis says, "A complaint is not given
proper safeguards. There is no
right to cross-examine. The hear-
ing board had data I had no ac-
cess to and did not find out about
until the decision."
She recommends a procedure
similar to that used for non-aca-
demic complaints where the re-
view body has some knowledge of

action.
Allowing limited grant funds to
preclude higher salary is incon-
sistent with University policy, and
according to Smith, it is on this
basis that the back pay grant was
approved.
Although the University dis-
avows a connection between the
action and its back pay commit-
ment, the 1968 retroactive daie
stipulated for Davis' back pay,
coincides with that included in the
University's commitment.

SAIGON OR - S. F4 fighter-
bombers increas . their attacks
yesterday in support of beleaguer-
ed Thai and Laotian, troops de-
fending an important government'
outpost near the Plain of Jars in
northern Laos.
An official ,source in Vientiane,
the Laotian capital, described the
right for Long Cheng base as crit-
ical. Other sources said the former
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency
center was "all but lost."
The base, 78 railes northeast of
Vientiane, has been under attack
by two North Vietnamese divisions
since Saturday, including an in-
tense artillery and mortar barrage.
Sources in Vientiane said nearly
40 North Vietnamese are believed

to have been killed in the fight-
ing, while four others have been
captured. No casualty figures were
available for the Thai and Laotian
troops.
Gen. Vang Pao, commander of
the government forces, has main-
tained his headquartershat Long
Cheng despite the intense fight-
ing. the sources said.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman said
the F4 Phantoms have increaseld
their attacks considerably to aid
Vang Pao's defenders. But he did
not specify the number of raids.
U.S. planes also were in action
over North Vietnam during the
weekend, flying their 100th strike
this year over Hanoi's territory.
The U.S. Command said a Navy
- A6 fighter-bomber made the 100th

FOR RESERVATIONS AND INFORMATION CALL:
BOB STEWARD-Hen erson Ford Sales
3080 JACKSON ROAD-ANN ARBOR
769-7900

NEW COURSE
NOT IN TIME SCHEDULE
FALL 1972
THE ART OF FILM
ENGLISH 499-2
(to become English 436)
3 CREDITS
M.W.F.-1 2:00
FILMS USUALLY TUESDAY EVENING

RENT*ACAR

For students and faculty
21 and over.

saww

law. attack Sunday night against .a ra-
W cord irtoComi D: Candidates subm itted for dar site about 35 miles north of
Women chairwoman Virginia Da- tedmltrzdzn separating
vis Nordin, "Women who believe North and South Vietnam.
their salaries are inequitable can:, p Meanwhile in Cambodia, Corn-
contact us until April 15, 1972. to op student servnces post munist-led troops early today
'dequestaconfidentialriewandpoured scores of rockets into
adjustment of their status."Pho Pehadisutkrsn
The Commission has been con- (continued from Pae is ant vice-president for OSS. will Phnom enh and its outskirts
ducting personnel reviews to lo- ca oc oiia at.H s ev satn iepeiet Officials said there were dead.
Cate salary inequity and support- now a research associate at the Knauss has been serving as vice and wounded Cambodians, but
,ed Davis throughout her complaint' Institute for Social Research andprsdnenthuh e fiteyidotkwhwmay
g plintpresident, even though he of fi- they did not know how many.
procedure. a lecturer at Flint. cially became Dean of the Law A spokesman at the U.S. Em-
She filed a formal complaint in He says he feels that it is prob- School at Vanderbilt University bassy said that as far as he knew
March, 1971, under the academic ably true that the OSS vice pres- Feb. 1. there were no American casualties.
complaint procedure which pro- ident has less influence than oth- -
- - --- er administrators and that chang-
D ing this status under the present ',Dvitaminsw rk?
U se a !y structure would be difficult. , tvm O "
He describes himself as a "so-
Rueass if iens cials". (continued from Page ) Dctors dcn't know anything about
Reuben, an assistant professor vitamins just as harmful as chem- nutrition. The AMA and the Food
of English at the University of ical foods. and Drug Administration are just
Wisconsin, received her B.A. at Soybean Cellars, a local health isterested in making money.'
Brandeis University and her M.A. food store, sells plenty of vitamins,
and PhD. at Stanford. She is con- with C at the top of the list. Man- Do you believe this .f your
cerned with women's groups at ager Richard Hewlett "believes" family doctor? That's my best an-
Wisconsin, and has helped to de-in vitamin pills. but doesn't take swer. says Health Service phy-
velop courses on feminist topics. them himself because he says his sician Max Durfee, in response to
"I guess by other people's terms themchie l e shm isa4 Hewlett's charges. "The AMA is
I'm a' radical," she said. organic diet supplies him with all just an organization of doctors. It
Until the new vice president is hesnre uteopean reasly makes a handy scapegoat."
chosen. Dr'. Charles Kidd, assist- sreDuuherretblimsb
taking too many," he adds. Durfee doesn't believe in the ef-
Disputing the claims of doctors fectiveness of vitamin ,pple-
and scientists that vitamin pills ments. There is no way of know-
are generally unnecessary and use- ing, he says, if Vitamin C prevents
less, he said. "The American Med- or helps relieve the symptoms of
ical Association (AMA) is full of colds merely because of the va-
crap. All they want to do is give . riety of viruses that cause colds
you drugs to cover up your prob- and flu, and the difference be-
lem instead of really helping you. twe9n individual persons. He tells
-- _- _ --- --- students that vitamins probably
won't harm them except in their
pocketbooks. "Fortunes are wasted
ZERO POPULATION GROWTH Ann Arbor Chapter in the buying of unnecesary vita-
mins."
ALL ABOUT VASECTOMY" Durfee labels the warnings of
Adelle Davis, health food eaters,
Speaker and Staff Member of Planned Parenthood and vitamin manufacturers propg-
Vasectomy Clinic ganda-"gimmicks" to fool a lay
QUESTION PERIOD AFTERWARD public. "It's hard for me to argue
with a food fadist who has rela-
Wed., March 22, 7:30 p.m. tively little education," he com-
ments.
ANN ARBOR PUBLIC LIBRARY Vitamins are unnecessary, he
S. Fifth Ave. & E. William says, unless a person hasa vita-
I min deficiency; symptoms cannot
be cured by a vitamin unless they

E
t.
)'
1
t.
r

9I sel
u this

ANNOUNCES
Creative Arts Festival
Photography C ontest
Prizes offered in:
Black and Whitet
Color'
Darkroom Experimental
Entry Blanks and Information available at UAC offices,
2nd fl. Union, 12:30-4:30 weekdays
orj
CALL 763-1107
ENTRIES DUE BY MARCH 31
Contest Is Free

are caused by a_ lack of it. "And
I have never seen a vitamin de-
ficiency in a student."
Health Service dietician, Irene
Hieber, supports Durfee's views.
"People who take excess vitamins
are throwing away their money
because for every vitamin except
rA the body just excretes what it
doesn't need," she says.
Hieber says the average Ameri-
can diet-eating from the Basic
Four - supplies all the minute
quantities of vitamins that are
needed. "It's the cooking, not the
processing of the food that can
remove vitamins," she added. The
only food in doubt, she says, is
"enriched" white bread.
One thing everyone interviewed
agreed upon is that many of the
benefits derived from taking vita-
mins are probably psychological.
Dietician Hieber, with a smile
and raised eyebrows, concurred
with that and said, "I've had peo-
ple who are taking' vitamins come
in here and tell me they feel More
energetic. Well, that's ridiculous-
a vitamin couldn't possibly do
that."

fore

Or, if you stump us with one of these questions,
we' llgive you the T-shirt for nothing.

¢ .

1. What is sensitivity?
2. What does a muting control do?
3. What is a Hertz?
I. A car bearing a corpse
2. The number of back and forth
vibrations of an AC signal in
I second.
3. A national car renting company.
4. What does/the term "selectivity" mean?
5. The control that makes it possible to
listen to the full range of sound when
music is played at a low volume is called:
1. Range control.
2. Loudness contour control.
3. Volume control.
6. What purpose does a high filter
control perform?
7. What are Baxandall controls?

8. What is a watt?
1. A unit of light.
2. A unit of power.
3. A unit of efficiency.
9. What is distortion?
10. How do the various power
measurements, such as Peak-to-Peak,
IHF, EIA and RMS relate to actual
output power?
11. The ability of a speaker to follow
low-frequency signals of large
amplitude is called:
1. Transient response.
2. Compliance.
3. Efficiency.
12. What is the function of a
crossover network?
13. What is meant by an acoustic-
suspension speaker system?

14. What are the advantages of a
heavy turntable platter?
15. Wow and flutter are:
1. Changes in power output
of an amplifier.
2. Distortion caused by variations
in turntable or tape deck motor speed.
3. Irregularities in the human voice.
16. What are the main benefits of
electronics tuning?
1. More accurate than manual tuning.
2. Lower cost than manual tuning.
3. Provides convenient remote
control tuning.
17. What does the term "capture
ratio" mean'?
18. What is an IC?
19. What do tape monitor circuits do?
20. What is the TS-100?

SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 5:30 P.M.
WEDNESDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M.
Canadian two-tone denim
jacket. . .rough, tough and
ready to tackle anything.
Full front zipper, snaps
and tabs, elastic back band.
Navy with grey yoke, bottom
tab and pocket flaps.
38 to 42 sizes. $16

U ~'f I~i\ 51.

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan