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November 08, 1970 - Image 10

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1970-11-08

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Page Ten

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Sunday, November 8, 1 7
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i _ _ 'f - - - -- -1 .: I :

Regents'
meetings
defended

UAW, GM intensify
talks to end strike

(Continued from Page 1)
"When we find out what the
truth is, we'll see about doing
something about it," Scott ex-
plains. "If the Regents are meet-
ing legally we'll do nothing, but if
they re meeting illegally there are
other ways."
Sources indicate that a group of
student leaders are considering
legal action to bar the Regents
from closed sessions. In a class
suit, they would reportedly ask
for an injunction to enforce Kel-
ley's ruling.
"We don't have any plans for a
law suit until we find out what the ...
facts are," Scott comments. "We4.1
don't want to go into anything?
like that unless we're sure the Re-,
gents are wrong.
On Sept. 29 state Rep. Jack S
Faxon (D-Detroit) sent a letter to
Kelley requesting a ruling on the
legality of the Regents' proce-
dures.
The attorney general is legally :
required to make a ruling in re-
sponse to a state legislator and
such rulings have force of law un-
less overruled by the courts.
Kelley has not yet answered
Faxon's, letter and requests by'
legislators for rulings on other Pt C~l~d
matters have sometimes taken OSL (ImpI
years before they are answered. Radio Station KCKC announcer
Faxon asked Kelley for a ruling
on whether: posters dumped at his stationb
-The Regents can exercise; 'Calif., in response to his offero
their legal powers at meetings mental cleanup program after la
closed to the public;
-Business conducted in closed 7 SEATS VACANT:
sessions is legal;
-The Regents have a responsi-
bility to keep complete minutesI Fihng for S
of all actions and make those min-
-The Regents can legally con- to erm Inate
duct business by telephone, .as
provided under present Regental
bylaws; By ROSE SUE BERSTEIN '
-Legal recourse is available to How many times in the past few
individuals who wish to attend weeks have you said, "I wish
meetings and are not allowed the 'they' would do something about
opportunity; and --hoousing, student rights, minor-I
-Legal recourse is available to ity admissions, sexism, or a n y
discourage governing boards of student issue?"
colleges and universities from ex- You can become a they' if you
cluding the public from their run for Student Government
meetings. Council (SGC). Tomorrow is the

(Continued from Page 1)
strike Sept. 15 to support its
wide-ranging demands for in-
creases in wages and fringe
benefit:s
The strike has idled more than
400,000 in GM plants in t h e
United States and Canada and
has caused the layoff of thous-
ands more in auto-related indus-
tries.
It now is threatening to idle
some 3,000 at the Jeep plant of
American Motors Corp. (AMC) at
Toledo, Ohio. AMC depends upon
a GM-struck Hydra-Matic plant
for its transmissions. Efforts to
obtain UAW permission for suffi-
cient workers to supply AMC
have proved futile thus far.,
GM estimates the strike is cost-
ing it $90 million a day in sales
and that strikers are losing $14
million a day in pay. Automobile
stocks of GM dealers across the
country have been depleted or are

strike, and faces some possibility
of rejection of its settlement.
Earlier in the strike, - several
rank and file members had run
newspaper advertisements criti-
cizing the union leadership for not
stressing automatic retirement
with 500-dollar-a-month pension
for workers with 30 years experi-
ence.
Students organizing to aid the
auto workers also stressed the
necessity to separate the cause of
the workers from that of the
union leadership. The leadership,
they claimed, had become so con-
servative that it no longer repre-
sented genuine labor interests.
Secret censor
post disclosed
(Continued from Page 1)

PREGNANT ?
Need Help?
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CALL 24 HOURS
1-215-878-5800
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E Liberty

For Your Tape Players!
We have o good selection of
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" .. .. ...::.'.......................... ..................>.

Ii______

For the student body:
'A Genuine
N Authentic
A Navy
PEA COATS
$25
Sizes 34 to 46
CHECKMATE
State Street at liberty

MONDAY NIGHT
SPECIAL
THE SERAPHIM GUIDE
to the CLASSICS
500 YEARS OF MUSICAL HISTORY
10 RECORD SET
LIST PRICE $49.95
MONDAY NIGHT ONLY
19.95
SO: to protect your new record set-
RECORD CARE KIT
REGULARLY $3.95
MONDAY NIGHT $2.75
HI-Fl BUYS
Ann Arbor-East Lansing
618 S. Main Phone 769-4700

1

running low. freedom of information in Wash-
The union's original $120-mil- ington "is better, though not by
lion strike fund will be exhaust- much," under Nixon than it was
ed and in debt before the end of under Johnson, says that the de-
the month, and strikers no long- cision reflects "walll-to-wall bur-
er will receive weekly4benefits eaucracy" more than the attitude
ranging from $30 to $40. oof any particular administration.
Under old three-year contracts "The bureaucracy was here be-
which expired at midnight Sept. fore Nixon and it will be here
14, the average hourly wage was after he's gone," Archibald said in
$4.02 and the automakers esti- an interview. "But he is the Pres-
mated fringe benefits such as ident and he has the responsibility
pensions, insurance and vacations to remove' the secrecy and identify
added another $1.75 hourly for the stand-by director.
each employe.

I

AL

-Associated Press
ign polluters
r Dick Alan cleans up the 3200
by residents of San Bernardino,
of 10 cents each as an environ-
ast Tuesday's elections.

GC candidates
tomorrow

t
C

Probe claims 'U' distorts
news on HE W bias report'
(Continued from Page 1) In other events related to the
the Record said there was not HEW investigation, the Ann Ar-
enough space thentto print the bor Women's Coalition yesterday
additions. refused to offer, as requested by
The Record claimed yesterday President Fleming, a plan to deal
the omission did not "significantly with University sex bias.
change" the figures on the graph. HEW has requested the schools
The footnotes acknowledge that it considers guilty of sex discrimi-3
in 1968 and 1969, non-student nation to submit programs of,
temporary personnel were includ- "affirmative action" to correct'
ed in the count. the situation. Fleming sought the
Also, the second amendment Coalition's view of what action the
reads, in '63, '64 and '65, only University should take.
blacks were counted as minorities. However, the Coalition said that
This difference, the Record stat- because they "had no access to
ed, represents a change of 3 per the HEW report to which the
cent from the original increase. University is trying to respond, it
While the Record has agreed to is inconsistent for the University
publish the footnotes in tomor- to suggest that the women of this
row's issue. Probe members claim University write their own pro-
the University tried to "mislead" gram."
the public. They said although they de-
"It was simuly a case of them manded to be involved in the
trying Ito manipuate the newsh
said Probe member Claire Rume-planning of the program, "the
hart yesterday. Rumelhart is the burden of responsibility is on the
women's advocate in the office University; not the women subject
of student organizations. to that discrimination."
Subscribe To
THE MICHIGAN DAILY

deadline for filing statements ofj
candidacy for the fall elections.
Any regularly enrolled studentI
on the Ann Arbor campus m a y
run to fill one of the seven posi-
tions now open. The six candidates
with the most votes will fill full-
year terms; the seventh will serve
for one semester.
Although only a statement of
candidacy needs be filed by to-
morrow, candidates must event-j
ually submit a platform, two
photographs, and a $5 returnableI
filing fee. Statements are available
at the SGC office, 1546 SAB and
at most school and college offices
and many dormitories.:
In addition, all candidates must
attend a meeting tomorroow night
at the SGC office at 7:30.
The elections will take placej
November 17, 18, and 19. Besides,
filling vacant council seats, stu-;
dents will vote on a referendum
concerning possible student mem-

There were unconfirmed reportsE
Friday that GM had upped i t s
original offer of 38 cents hourly
in the first year of a three-year
contract to 48 cents and has in-
dicated it would restore an un-
limited cost-of-living wage escal-
ator on which an eight cent an-
nual limit was placed in the 1967
contracts.
The union has been asking 61.5
cents an hour in the first year,
plus the unlimited escalator.
The union, however, has not met
with complete support from the
rank and file throughout the
Daily Official Bulletin
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8
Day Calendar
Tau Beta Sigma and Kappa Kappa
Psi Musicale: School of Music Recital
Hall, 2:30 p.m.
Museum of Art Lecture: Prof. Thomas
McClure, "The Contemporary Sculp-
ture Exhibition," Museum of Art, 3
p.m.
Degree Recital: Russell Mallear, saxo-
phone, School of Music Recital Hall,
8 p.m.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9
Postgraduate Medicine: International
Symposium on Drug Abuse, Registra-
tion, Rackham Lobby, 8 a.m.
Public Health Lecture: Mr. Leonard
S. Wegman, Consulting Engineer, N.Y.C.
"The Disposal and Control of Solid
Waste," School of Public Health Aud.,
4 p.m.
Illustrated Lecture: Lowell Riley,

The spokesman in Klein's of-
fice raised a larger complaint.
"One wonders if there arena' a
lot more classifications like this
that we don't even know about,"
he said. "There's so much work
in unclassifying something like
this, and it's so easy to put con-
fidential on a piece of paper."
COME TO
TOWN and COUNTRY
RESTAURANT
Fine Food
Chops, Steaks, & Shrimp
Soul Food Home Cooked
Open Pit Barbeque
-Open-
6 a.m. till 9 p.m.-Mon.-Thurs.
6 a.m. till 3 a.ni.-Fri.-Sat.
8 a.m. till 7:30 p.m.-Sunday
730 NORTH MAIN
Delivery and Catering
769-2330
The Daily is anxious to cor-
rect errors or distortions in
news stories; features, reviews
or editorials. If yourhave a com-
plaint, please call Editor Mar-
tin Hirschman at 764-0562.

Try Daily Classifieds

"THE CONTINUING RVLTO"
---a talk sponsored by the---
Christian Science Organization
CANTERBURY HOUSE
TUESDAY, NOV. 10
8:00,P.M.
@.*O" S@ OO 0 *@@ *""# @
The talk will be given by Harold Rogers and will be
followed by a question and answer period
-EVERYONE WELCOME-

11

jI

J.

4

"Quality Sound Through Quality Equipment"

'A

i

hers of the Board of Regents. The Cathedrals and Organs of France,"
The referendum reads: "Should School of Music Recital Hall, 8 p.m.
two students and two faculty be! ORGANIZATION
seated with the Board of Regents, O N IZ TO
said students and faculty to have NOTICES
all Regental privileges except the UM Fellowship, Huron Hills Baptist
Church, 3150 Glacier Way, Nov. 8, 7:00
right to vote?" p.m. Film special: "Urbana '70".

ThenC

A

PORNOGRAPHY
every month courtesy of the Federal govt.:
the 10% tax on your phone bill
Protestithe Obscenity of War!
At the Telephone Company Office
324 E. Huron St.
Tuesday, Nov. 10
12:00 noon
War Tax Resistance---663-1 870

I

TIRED OF EATING PIZZA?
YpUl COLD
)rder a-
rMini'ss Submarine e
Just Call 761-1800
FOR
FREE DELIVERY
(MINIMUM ORDER $3.00)
"WE'RE OUT TO STAMP OUT
YOUR COLD PIZZA BLUES"
rrmwrmrrrrrw * C UT OUT A ND HANG ON WVA L L rnminimininmnmmminmninmu-nininmminmin
State MR. MINI'S MENU 761-1800 !
Mr. Mini's Famous for the Gigantic 6' Party Submarine

f

WANT TO HELP
DIRECT AN ENACT
OR ECOLOGY
CENTER PROJECT?
COME TO:
An Enact Project Leadership Meeting
Tuesday, Nov. 10-7:30 P.M.
U. of M.-Union Assembly Room
ENACT 764-4410
Drugs
and
Ethics

OW

DINE IN or CARRY OUT

m- m m m umm m m m
342 S.

4

MR. MINI

I

FISH & CHIPS LUNCHEON.....
one piece of fish & chips
FISH & CHIPS DINNER .........
two pieces of fish & chips
ROYAL FISH BANQUET ........

CHICKEN
CHICKEN
SQUIRE'S

ten pieces of fish, serves 5-7
LUNCHEON.........
two pieces of chicken & chips
DINNER .............
three pieces, chips, slow, role
SPREAD .............
nine pieces chicken, serves 3-4

..89
.1.10
.3.95
79
.1.39
.2.39

I

M R. M INI "Mite" The delightful sub with the same succulent ingredients as the "MR. MINI." Served in079
a smaller bun for the weight watcher .......... . ...................

The submarine that's a fabulous taste treat. Succulent ingredients topped with a
"squish" of Mr. Mini's special dressing, all in a super 10" Sesame Seed Bun .......
Spicy Capicollo Ham, Delectable Salami, Provolone Cheese, crisp Lettuce, thinly chopped
Bermuda Onion and sunshine Ripe Tomatoes. (For that extra zesty flavor,
ask for chopped bananna pepper.)

099

HOAGY

HOAGY "Mite"

The roast beef sub-juicy cuts of "prime beef" and other tasty ingredients, topped
with that "squish" of Mr. Mini's famous dressing, stacked on a 10" Sesame Seed Bun
Provolone Cheese, thinly chopped Bermuda Onion,
crisp Lettuce, and sunshine ripe Tomatoes.
All the same delicious ingredients as the "HOAGY." Served in a smaller bun ... .
The corned beef sub-thinly sliced and packed with choice ingredients, topped with
that great Mr. Mini's dressing, all in a 10" Sesame Seed Bun.
Provolone Cheese, Bermuda Onion, ripe Tomatoes, and crisp Lettuce

1.39

.89

DUKE'S DELIGHT................
fifteen pieces chicken, serves 5-7
KING'S FEAST
twenty-one pieces dhicken,,serves 7-9
IT flnRNErn REE ANI'nWlr..4U

3.99
5.29
7

BOMBER

1.39

i I

I

0

i

0

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