r t NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 iff4c t ztn iy page three U of M PHOTO SERVICES 0 PHOTOGRAPHY-PRINTS 0 Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, April. 18, 1972 * OZALI DS-PHOTOSTAT H * PHOTO SUPPLIES -S . 764-9216 Rm. 540 L.S.A. Bldg. I!1 NEED RESEARCH AND REFERENCE WORK DONE? CHECK OUR LIBRARY TERMPAPERS UNLIMITED 5744 Woodward Ave., Detroit CALL-(313) 874-0770 n ews b,,rie fs by The Associated Press THE URUGUAYAN "INTERNAL WAR" against the leftist Tupamaro guerrillas continued yesterday as nine persons, includ- ing an army captain, were reported killed in a predawn gun battle around a district office of the Communist party. The victims, other than the army officer, apparently were sus- pected Tupamaros who sought refuge in the Communist party build- ing and from party militants standing vigil in the headquarters to defend it from right-wing extremists. Newspapers and radio stations in Uruguay were barred from dis- tributing accounts of the fight because of censorship imposed in the declaration of a 30-day anti-guerrilla war approved Saturday by Congress. The measure was voted after Tupamaros killed a former gov- ernment official and three security mn in daylight ambushes Friday. Are You Interested In Consumer Problems? We need volunteer help this summer at the Consumer ACTION Center LSA CREDIT AVAILABLE Call Harry for information at 769-0236 Apollo 16 moon trip Continues Space Center, Houston (M - Apollo 16 continued on its way to the moon yesterday, with only a minor problem marring the mission. Engineers said the problem, a substance peeling off the Apollo 16 lunar lander, appeared to be bad paint. However, they said it was, unneeded for Thursday's moon landing. Astronauts John Young and Charles Duke Jr. were directed to make general inspection of their moon machine, Orion, last night to make certain it remained fit and Thomas Mattingly II was or- dered by the flight plan to stay aboard the command ship, Cas- per. A spokesman for Grumman Corp. which built Orion, said the .001-inch thick coating of white Ssiliconepaint was designed to pro- tect the moon machine from the heat of the sun during its three days on the moon. The paint was needed, he said, only if the launch of Apollo 16 had been delayed a day, causing the sun to be higher and hotter at the mountain plateau landing site when Orion touched down. But, the launching Sunday was right on schedule. Young said there were "a lot of these little square rectangular strips up to two inches long" flak- ing away. * * * BERNADETTE DEVLIN, a member of British Parliament, was ordered to jail yesterday for taking part in an illegal parade held in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland, two months ago. -Associated Press Hoffa testifies Jimmy Hoffa, former head of the tea tentiarv at Lewisberg Pa .gives testin amsters' union and recently paroled from the federal peni- mony yesterday at a House Judiciary Committee hearing in cedures under consideration. 4G143Qj'd4 G~S UL , 1., Y 6 41 Devlin and Frank McManus, another British legislator, were Washington. The group has parole pros sentenced to six months in jail each for joining a February march - -- - --------- to protest the killing of 13 civilians by British troops il London- E E NT CLASSES: derry on Jan. 30. REIEN LASS NOW I The Last Grad Coffee Hour of the semester Meanwhile, hundreds of 'teen-agers fought British forces in a battle that raged most of the day in the Catholic Divis Street dis-. trict of Belfast. Two guerrilla snipers were killed and a nine-year- old boy playing near the scene was wounded in the stomach. DR. ADELE SIMMONS, was appointed Sunday as dean of student affairs at Princeton University. It is the highest post ever held by a woman at Princeton. Sim- mons, who takes her new office Sept. 1, emphasized that she viewed herself "as someone dealing with all students, not just women stu- dents." She describes herself as "very active in woman's liberation." She is.presently dean of Jackson College at Tufts University and an assistant professor in the Tufts history department.; * * .* THE SUPREME COURT yesterday agreed to decide whether the states may go beyond federal authorities in guarding their water against pollution. Next term the Justices will hear an appeal by Florida designed to save a state law that imposed full liability on shippers for oil spills. The federal law on the same subject is not that tough. The Florida law requires shippers to pay clean up costs regard- less of whether the oil spill was their fault. Under the federal Water Quality Improvements Act of the same year a shipper must pay only in cases of willful negligence or willful misconduct. By agreeing Monday to hear the Florida case the court indicated it may decide states are not compelled to defer to federal authorities in all pollution matters. ARAB N OU Could Be A Beginning For You Come On WED., APRIL 19 8-10 P.M. 4th Floor Rackham Dorms experiment with new ideas in education, counseling I By PAUL RUSKIN Following the lead of the Res- idential College and the Pilot Program, residents of two other University dorms, Couzens and Mosher-Jordan, have recently attempted to institute similar innovative counseling and edu- cational programs. Couzens offers students a chance to take any of eight slightly non-conventional cours- es for academic credit. Taught by University teaching fellows, the Couzens' courses were se- lected by dorm residents from a larger group of courses suggested by interested grad-students. Four of the Couzens courses -Images of Women, The Amer- ican System of Criminal Jus- tice, Alternatives to the Welfare System, and a course designed to allow students to work in a half- way house for retarded people and then to discuss their ex- periences - have been especial- ly popular with participants. The welfare system course is studying the inadequacies of the present welfare system, which is, according to course organizer Gary Ulrich, "a demeaning sys- tem that prevents many poor people from receiving benefits.' During the second half of the course, students examine various income maintenance proposals, then develop their own plan for an effective welfare system. In the Images of Women course, students study the role of women in contemporary fic- tion. Participants in the course are also tracing the development of that role from classical to modern literature. Mosher-Jordan is trying to get literary college support for a three-pronged program which proposes to bring teaching fel- lows into the dorm to carry out various functions. According to the proposal, one group of teaching fellows would serve as resource people for stu- Banker's testimony -0tF C £21fEA dents who wish to develop an in- dependent study program. They would be responsible for ascer-, taining which University profes- sors and TF's are willing to work with independent study and how interested teachers See DORMS, Page 8 LEMONADE AND COOKIES FOR ALL i I g Uien OriJf WASHINGTON UP) - A New York investment banker testified yesterday he started his study of billion-dollar divestitures of In- ternational Telephone & Tele- graph Corp. (ITT) subsidiaries by reading an ITT director's analysis supplied by the White House. The study written by Richard Ramsden has been named by Jus- tice Department officials as a principal reason for the out-of- court settlement of three antitrust suits pending against the firm. Ramsden told the Senate Judi- ciary Committee, however, his study was a very narrow one, al- most exclusively limited to show- - - - - - -- - - DoesiftG realize the da' corporatep There was a time, fifty or sixty years ago, when a major corporation in America might expect profits of twenty or even twenty-five cents on the sales dollar. Those days are over. But not everybody realizes it. What would you call enornous? In 1970, Fortune's Top 500 indus- trial corporations realized an average profit of about 4 cents on the dollar. General Electricfared slightly better than average. Last year, our profits amount- ed to about 5 cents on the dollar. We are occasion- ally attacked, along with business in general, as being "too profit-oriented." People argue that if social progress is to be made, business must make it. And that profits stand in the way of social progress. Wewould argue quite the opposite. The business of business is not just business. The purpose of a busi- .ne its ral Electric }. i enormous are over? "A MASTERPIECE!" -PAUL [. ZIMMERMAN, Newsweek WINNER OF 2 ACADEMY AWARDS! Plus Oscar-Winning Cartoon "The Crunch Bird" FEATURE2 AT r' Dial I S. State St. iI 662-6264 1 1 1 IS A ing how ITT stockholders would lose if the conglomerate were forced to drop the giant Hartford Fire Insurance Corp. of New Ha- ven. Ramsden said he was asked by White House aide Peter Flanigan last May to study the Hartford di- vestiture proposed yfen in court suits filed by then Asst. Atty. Gen. Richard McLaren. Ramsden said he dealt only with Flanigan, never speaking with either McLaren or Deputy Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst, Presi- dent Nixon's nominee to be attor- ney general. The Senate committee is inves- tigating supposed links between ITT and Kleindienst. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Sessionpublished Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mall (in Mich. of hdo); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). IL ___ i But if society profits and the busi- ness does not, the business will fold in the short run. It will have no operat- ing funds. How much h profit is enough to . keep a .business operating? How- much is too much? t,. It's hard to say. However, the companies mak- " ing only marginal profit are not the companies provid- ing new employment, creating new products or adding to man's scientific and technical knowledge. Marginal companies are not the ones making the important social con- tributions today. For a simple reason. They can't afford to. No responsible company wants a return to the days of the robber bar- ons. No responsible company wants "enormous" profits. But no company, can survive without the profit system. Why are we running this ad? General Electric is a big, techno- logical company, with the capabilities to do a great deal of problem solving in this country. We think profits have a direct effect on our ability to solve problems. But we realize the is- sue of profits is one with two sides. By telling you our side, we hope we've moved you to think about your side. Perhaps even write us about it. 0 We'd like to hear what you have to say. Please write to General Electric, Dept. 901 570 Lexington Avenue, New ... York, N.Y. 10021. - - - - -, r:"-,; ' - - *t*.+ %. a A-J - m - Celebrate the" Coming of Spring.1 (and the end of the semester) LSA COFFEE HOUR TODAY 3:30-4:30 TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY THE MARX BROS* IN LOVE HAPPY Dir. David Miller, 1949 THE BROTHERS CUT LOOSE! Plus a short by HARRY LANGDON ARCH ITECTU RE AUDITORIUM 7 and 9 P.M. 75c 2549 LSA Bldg. APPLE CIDER AND COOKIES! I . - I OPEN 12:45 SHOWS AT 1 p.m., 4:30, 8 p.m. Mon.-Sat. $1.50 until 4:30 Mon. -Thurs. eve. $2.00 Fri. and Sat. eve. $2.50 All Day Sunday $2.50 603 E. Liberty DIAL 665-6290 ness, as we see it is to pro- duce and distribute necessary goods and serv- ices to theprofit of society ... and the business itself. A business must re- flect society's needs. Eco- nomic, political, legal and moral, as well as social. It must change as society changes and, to some extent, influence those changes. i quo SOCIOLOGY COLLOQUIUM On Oganizational Bhaio REX BROWN (Assoc. Professor, Business Ad.) BETTYE EIDSON (Asst. Professor, Dept. of Sociology) ROBERT L. KAHN III I 11 rwx iii*~ I A 11 11 it1 11161 I ; 1 . i, I- - - -- -