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September 30, 1970 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1970-09-30

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wednesday, September 30, 1970

REGENTAL SECRECY:
Rep. asks ruling on meetings'

(Continued from Page 1)
involve a meeting of a majority of
the Regents in the same room?
The present regental bylaws'
state the Regents may take action
in a telephone vote, and they have
used this method to vote on deci-
sions such as the 1969 tuition in-
crease.
=What legal recourse is avail-
able to any "individual or indi-'
viduals who seek to be present at
times of such public meetings and
are currently not allowed the op-
portunity?"
--"What legal recourse is there
for discouraging governing boards
of institutions of higher educa-
tion in the state of Michigan from
continuing to exclude the public
from attendance at such meet-
ings?"
Faxon also referred to a provi-
sion in the state constitution
which states, ". . . formal sessions
of governing boards of such in-
stitutions shall be open to the
public.
"It is in view of the aforemen-
tioned that I am requesting you
to give me an opinion as to the
continuation of this practice with
regard to its legality and the. le-
gality of business transacted at
meetings held by the University of
Michigan Board of Regents, to
which the public has not been
admitted," Faxon concluded.
President R o b b e n Fleming,
speaking about closed Regents'
meetings, has said, "We've always
acted on certain things privately,
and to my knoweldge, no one's
ever complained."
S t u d e n t Government Council'
leaders have voiced objections to
regental secrecy several times in
recent years.
Even matters which are not
kept secret are usually agreed up-
on in private sessions, long before
they are announced to the public,
either at open meetings or through

Arabs mourn for Nasser;
Mideast future uncertain
(Continued from Page 1) For this he had summoned
for a party vote on Nasser's suc- Arab leaders to Cairo, and it was
cessor. Cairo radio said there was while seeing off the delegation
no statement after the 90-minute from Kuwait that his fatal heartr
session. attack struck.
Earlier, the government ordered One of the first to arrive for
a state of "utmost emergency" all the funeral was a member of that
along the Suez Canal cease-fire summit conference, President Jaa-
line to guard against any possible far el Numairi of Sudan. Premierf
attack. Israel also alerted its Bahi Ladgham of Tunisia, who!
troops pn the canal. was supervising the truce, accom-
One of Nasser's last official acts panied Hussein to Cairo.
was to help frame an agreement Cairo radio reported that Soviet
Sunday between King Hussein of Premier Alexei N. Kosygin arrived
Jordan and the Palestinian guer- in Cairo and sobbed as he em-
rillas to end the Jordanian civil braced Sadat and other officials'
war. greeting him.

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN for m to
Room 3528 L. S. A. Bldg., before
2 p.m., of the day preceding pub-
lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for
Saturday and Sunday. Items ap-
pear once only. Student organiza-
tion notices are not accepted for
publication. For more information,
phone 764-9270.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30
Day Calendar
Anatomy Seminar: M. Beck, "For-
ensic Serology," Sem. Rm., 5732, Med.
Sci. II, 1:10 p.m.

Physics Colloquium: G. Ford, "The!
Quantum Theory of Stochastic Pro-
cesses," P & A Collot. Rm., 4 p.m.
Journalism Lecture: G Fonzi, Phill-
adeiphia Magazine, "City Magazines: Up
from Puff"; Aud. C, Angell Hall, 4:00
p.m.
Organizatio
central Student Judiciary Hearing.
Engineering Placement Advisory Com-
mittee, et. al., v. Students for a Demo-
cratic Society, et. al., Wed., Sept. 30,
7:30 Union Assembly Room. Michigan
Union.
All are welcome to the Baratin Cof-
fee Hour, every Thursday beginning

DI

.,....s a.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .z
DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

Computer Lecture: Prof. Carnahan,
"Fortran IV Programming Language -
II," Na.t Sci. Aud., 7:30-9:30 p.m.
Baroque Trio: N. Hauenstein, flute;
F. Mueller, oboe; C. Fisher, harpsichord
and L. :Hurst, double bass, Rackham
Lee. Hall, 8 p.m.
nal Notices
Sept. 24, 3-5, Frieze Bldg.,Room 3050.
Next meeting Oct. 1. Open invitation
to people intetsreed in French language
and culture.
* * * *
ENACT - State -,Federal legislation
committee meeting 7:30 p.m., Sept. 30,
Room 1028, School of Natural Resources.
All interested are invited.

1

New car, anyone?
Finished new 1971 podel Pontiacs sit, on the idle assembly line
waiting for settlement of negotiations between the Uinited Auto
Workers and General Motors.
IGH COST:
Abortion unavailable
In spite of new laws

THOUSANDS OF FAMOUS LABEL STEREO
CLASSICS-FOLK-JAZZ-OPERA

AT THE UNHEARD OF

$

.77

BARGAIN

PRICE

SCHWANN
CAT. LIST
4.98 PER DISC

EACH

(Continued from Page 1)

pared to 91 from a pre-law year,

one in Oregon, $650. Poctors cite 1962. minutes. One example of that
skyrocketing malpractice insur- Dr. Irving Cushner, associate practice is a;olicy adopted last
Ance rates as one reason; reform- iProfessor of obstetrics-gynecology April which would deny readmis-
at Johns H o p k i n s University sion to students who had forfeited
Ists call It profiteering. Those School of Medicine said, "We don't bail in a court case. The action
who qualify do receive some cov- . ~,only became public when the min-
erage from Medicaid, Blue' Cross, read that as a significant drop. utes were finally released three
Blue Shield and other plans. Before liberalization illegal abor- months later.
-Backlogs. Hospital facilities, lion a year nationwide. Fleming has defended such
already strained, are unable to. n meetings and procedures for a
meet the demand, were unprepared -Frequent unavailability. Al- number of reasons. Early disclo-
for, the. new legislation and fre- though legal, abortions are simply sure of property purchase plans
quently must assign up to one- not performed in some -ospitals, could have the effect of "jack-
month delays in appointment or the procedure becomes hope- ing up the price," he said. Ap-
time. Result: a safe, early opera- lessly snarled in red tape when pointments and honorary degrees
tion may be turned into a more hospital boards, or state medical were kept secret "for obvious rea-
dangerous, later procedure Mean- groups, amend the law with their sons."
while, as New York City hospitals own qualifications. On the question of undisclosed
prepare for a maximum of 100,000 - As a result, small-town wormen exhibits referred to in the Regents
abortions a year, abortion activists may be forced to come tQ already minutes, Fleming said, "There is
claim the real need will, be up to overcrowded big city hospitals. always data in there we would
500,000. city dwellers to travel to other think of as confidential."
parts of their state. In Maryland, "It's the old, old battle that's
Continued illicit abortions. 6 out of 47 hospitals performed always gone on," Fleming said.
During the first year of Mary- " he press wants all meetings and
land' new law, John Hopkins 91 per cent of the state's abor-, in ormation to be public, but there
hospital reported 81 septic--or tions. Five of those six were in are very serious problems with
"'patch-up",-abortions as com-, Baltimore. that."
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