Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November 13, 1970 Page Ten THEII IIIII MICHIG-AN- - --DAIL--Y- --r---ay-,- NovemberI III 1 3,IIII1970II _ Candidates file for 7 SGC seats. 18 students have filed state- ments of candidacy for the seven at-large seats to be filled in next week's Student Government Coun- cil (SGC) election. Among the 18 are these incum- bents, all of whom were appointed to fill vacancies on SGC: Alan Ackerman, '72L, Henry Clay, '72, Andre Hunt, '74, and Paul Teich, '71, who is administrative vice- president. The other candidates are: Russ Garland, '72, Jay Hack, '73, Marn- ie Heyn, '71, David Jones, '73, Jim Kent, '72, Jeff Lewin, '73, Jeanne Lenzer,. '74, Lawson Nagel, '71, ark Ruessmann, '71, Brad chram, '72, Brian Spears, '71, Ed- ward Stieg, '74, Paul Travis, '73 and Bahr Weiss, '72. Also to be voted on at the elec- tion is this referendum: "Should' two stndents and two faculty be seated with the Board of Regents, said students and faculty to have all regental privileges except the right of vote?" Members of the literary college will also be electing eight mem- bers-at-large to the LSA student government executive council. Only one incumbent, B o b Schwartz, will be running. j The other candidates are Sue{ Steigerwalt, Rick Ratner, F r a n Stier, Paula Fried, Russ Bikoff, Fran Hymen, Pete Prahar, Barb Rackers, Ed Roberts, James Bridges, Charles Young, Andrew Rogers, and James E. Dillon. t Elections will be next Tues., Wed, and Thurs., Nov. 17-19. Govt. mav UAW unit Tighter drug I U accepts pact laws asked " L L C Al(Continued from Page 1) E jUULUIL "Iri. -Associated Press Deficit to rise Treasury Secretary David M. Kennedy, speaking at a New Eng- land Council Conference, said that the federal deficit would be higher than the $1.3 billion that had been estiniated by Admin- istration officials. MILLIKEN PROPOSAL: State House panel refuses budget sashl (Continued from Page 1> between the projected $62 million tures, to submit proposed budget deficit and the proposed $58.5 mil- cuts to the appropriate commit- lion budget cut. tees in both houses of the state In his proposed cuts, Milliken legislature. had asked that the Legislature Zollar said that Michigan State cut $2.7 imillion in capital outlay University, Wayne State Univer- appropriations to five state uni- sity and Michigan have antici- versities, including Michigan State (Continued from Pag e 1) A Union official estimated it would take at least a week for lo- cal unions to complete their rati- fication vote. And he said it might take considerably longer in locals, currently without at-the-plant settlements. Contract provisions, withheld until yesterday's GM council meet- ing, included: -An average first-year wage increase of 51 cents an hour, im- proved by three percent in each of the last two years of the pact. The current average hourly wage E of a GM worker is $4.02; -Restoration of unlimited cost- of-living allowances under which wages are raised up or down in accordance with changes in the Consumer Price Index; and -Retirement at $500 a month after 30 years service for persons age 58 in the second year of the contract and at age 56 in the third year. GM said it had to have a con- tract by next Wednesday in or- der to resume full production by Dec. 1. In other areas, the union was successful in resisting GM's de- mand that workers start paying a share of their hospital and medi- cal insurance premiums. Retirees, eligible surviving wid- ows and eligible dependents will now be covered by the prescrip- tion drug program, under which the worker pays only the first $2 of each prescription. The company also agreed to in- crease its maximum payment to the Supplemental Unemployment Benefit (SUB) fund from seven to ten cents an hour per worker. The SUB fund is the source of pay- ments to workers who are laid off. The local contracts, which sup- plement the national agreement,' remain unsettled at 68 of GM's 155 bargaining units in the Uni- ted States. That figure includes 18 of 24 assembly plants and 12 of 54 so-called key plants. Bargainnig is continuing on a contract covering 22,100 striking GM workers in Canada. Five of the firm's seven Canadian bar- gaining units have settled local contracts. long term campaigns" which would include: -The elimination of drug plan- tations; the institution of strict controls on pharmecutical pro- ducts; and -The reintegration of drug- taking youths back into a society "which can offer them some idtal." B. J. George, Jr., a law profes- sor at New York University, crit- icized current drug laws in the United States. "The strong emphasis in t h e United States on heavy penalties to prevent and control drug addic- tion and abuse may be unwise and essentially ineffective,' 'he said. Criminal law enforcement should be directed at the n o n - addict trafficker and not at ad- dicts themselves, George s a i d , adding that medical treatment, in- cluding maintenance therapy, should be approved and underwrit- ten. CANTERBURY HOUSE 7:30 Friday evening Ai Sponsored by the Office of Religious Affairs COMMU N ES-COLLECTIVES FAMILIES AND FRIENDS RETHINKING THE FAMILY? come talk together with STEPHEN AND FAMILY- A GROUP MARRIAGE 01 I pated a hiring "freeze" and al- ready implemented one. en sLbsidieS Vice President for State Rela- tions and Planning Fedele Fauri (Continued from Page 1) denied this and said that the Uni- The students who would be af- versity did not anticipate such a fected by an end. to interest sub- "freeze." sidies are not wealthy. In a time "Almost any amount cut would of sharply rising college costs, op- be difficult because we've been op- ponents of the Nixon proposals erating on a very restricted budget argue, students in the $10-15,000 all year," said Fauri. adjusted income range w o u 1 d Budget officials had explained have to borrow at interest rates that the administration expected of at least nine or ten percent- an upturn in the economy to and pay them cumulated even for erase the $3.5 million difference the time they are in school. It would substantially increase the cost of college for over half a mil- lion middle-income students. For the student Currently, the proposals, 'which Fo th sudnt body: could take effect in 1971-72, are on the docket of the House- sub- Genuine committee on higher education. According to an aide to Rep. Mar- Authentic vin Esch (R-Ann Arbor), no ac- tion will be taken on the propos- 1 Navy als until the new Congress con- venes in January. Then, hearings will probably, begin. AT Brown speculates that the ad- ministration proposals may be considerably changed from their original form by the time the sub- ' $2 5 committee begins work on them. So far, it remains unclear what Sizes 34 to 46 Congressional reaction will be tol the proposals. I Zoology Prof. George W. Saund- ers Jr. has been named secretary of the American Society of Lim- nology and Oceanography. Prof. Saunders was elected to the three-year term during the State Street at Liberty society's annual meeting in Kings- ton, R.I., Aug. 25-29. University, but passed over Wayne State University and Michigan. Capital outlay refers to con-r struction, repair and remodelling of campus buildings. The University had not been considered for such a cut, said As- sistant State Budget Director Paul Wilden, because it "has no pro- jects in a stage of construction other than already in progress ork just beginning." INTERESTED IN AN OVERSEAS CAREER? MR. BERTRAND PINARD will be on the campus TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17 to discuss qualifications for advanced study at THUNDERBIRD GRADUATE SCHOOL and job opportunities in the field of INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Interviews may be scheduled at The Placement Office THUNDERBIRD GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT (Formerly: The American Institute for Foreign Trade) P. 0. Box 191 Phoenix, Ariona 85001 Affiliated with The American Management Association LIVE IT UP! A . . - . Dine with Us and Dance to the Music of MY FRIENDS THIS WEEKEND 4n 3i MAST SHOES, Ann Arbor BENJAMIN & MAST, Ann Arbor CAMPUS BOOTERY, Ann Arbor. FILECCIA BROS., Ann Arbor WALK OVER SHOES, Ann Arbor JACKS MEN'S WEAR, Ann Arbor Open rl Mon. thru Fri. 319 S. 4th Ave. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Sat. & Sun, 5 p.m.-2 a.m. M Mon. thruc Thurs., no minimum charge WWA AUTISTS WANTED to contribute illustrative material to the MICH- .. IGANENSIAN, U. of M.'s Yearbook. No limit on subject matter. (Black and white preferable. 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