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September 18, 1974 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1974-09-18

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

Wednesday, September 18, 1974

.1 E MICHIGAN DAILY

PageS even

[I

I

~c needes

('vol ilad fom Pa e i
N~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~rc al1 aca h oeleo
'at c roiidir
*ie a od >~A r~dtoPier
ac i in in, "ed x cr
It A ~slm e he ,e
i. lca ' th or tt'

'dons on m~any key issues in-
cludting,, re-allocation of federal
money-, fromh defense spending
to soc ,ial services and stricter
campignfinance laws,
THEY ITFFE'RED on busing
'fr racial integration which
Piresup ported, but Reuther'
did no)t._ Pierce also favored
unPconditional amnesty for Viet-
nam Wvar draft evaders, while
Reuther backed an alternate
service program,
Final totals in the primary'
give Reuther 13,003 votes to
12,922 for Pierce. Three other
Democratic hopefuls trailed far
behind the leaders.
Pierce easily won Ann Arbor
and Washtenaw County but lost
badl;.y to Reuther in the heavily;
indstralMonroe and Livonia
In hi statement, Pierce
thanked those people who work-
ed inihis campaign and added,
"We lost a very close race but
i the long run we won because
xv puat forward a lot of ideals
that in the past were considered
too far out for the electorate."
Thousands of men and women
have brightened their lives and
the lives of others by becoming
Cirl Scout Leaders. Also wanted
are Assistant Leaders and
Helpers. For information,
without obligation, on how you
can become a Girl Scout Leader,
just mail the coupon below. For
quick information, telephone
your local Girl Scout Council.
I iI
Without obligation, please
i mefwreeanliterature tell-
owLeaerbecome a Girl
! oLeader Assistant or
Name___________
Address__________
City__________ '
State Zip_____ I
Telephone'.._______

H " ET R N T'KEEPING YOU1
BUSY ENOUGH,?
It's still not too l(ate to come down to the
Daily and help us out. The Business De-
partment NEEDS PEOPLE who want to:
" work preparing ads and learning the
operations of a daily paper
" meet other good, frustrated people
" party down once in a while
* drink 5c cokes
" after the first month, make a LITTLE bit
of money
You don't need any special skills, just show
up and we'llI train you ! P leeease.

WJhte sio i tLI les

This five-month-old lion cub named "'little Li on" is experiencing its first taste
and snowv in Villierdorp, South Africa. Given the choice of taking it or leaving it,
leave it.

he'l prbal

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

Wednesday, September 18
Day Calendar
WUOM: Thomas McConnell. Con-
sumers Power Co. rep, & Donald
Gray, Sierra Club rep. & prof., civil
eng., discuss energy crisis: Bill Too-
hey of NPR interviews Dr. Norman
Borlaug, winner, Noble Peace Prize,
1970, for developing high yield
strains of wheat & rice, 9:55 am.
Extension Serv.: Criminal Justice
Hearing, Rackham, 2 pm.
Career Planning & Placement
Meeting: Conf. Rms. 4 & 5, League,
noon, 1, 2, 3, 4 pm.
Physics Colloquium : B .W. Max-
field, Cornell U., "Electrodynamic
Means of Generating Acoustic
Waves in Metals," P-A Bldg., Colloq.
Rm., 4 pm.
Botany Seminar: Dr. Geo. Bak-
ken on "Heat Transfer in Animals:
Some Unifying Concepts," 1139 Nat.
Sci. Bldg., 4 pm.
Applied Mechanics, Eng. Sci.: Dl.
Hugh Michael, "Holes in Fluids,"
325 W. Eng., 4 pm.
Journalism: Robt. Pisor, Detroit
News, Jim Neubacher, Detroit Free,
Press, Bud Vestal, Booth Newspap-
ers, "Challenges and Frustrations
Aill'
&IQ $2.50

Sovering Politics and Government,"
E, Conf. REm.. Rackham, 4 pm.
Engineering Council Meeting: 3201
E. Ena., 7 pm.
Engineering, Computing Cii'.:
Brice Cairnahani, "The Fortran IZi
Prograimming Language - I," Nat.
Sci. And., Kraus Bldg., 7:30, 9:30
pin

Uf. . _ STYLI_ __.. xtee:
anytime Mon.-Sot.
8.0w s 5Io ~

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ti' a ;ll V1it

for
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w _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ._ _-'

AU( A PRbRC SW* d* N 1i' Wer &The MIWeuIft OM d

A New Musical

Comech''

SI 1' _ ii'

CALL 7631

Also Sign Up for Crews

Iner

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views

for Central

Corn ยข

Positions Still Open.

mittee ..jV
I

':1. n it Ircmn sal.rd
('('Ii Ircaim ',a lad
Ii i :r ii a gi'i't'ii p, ppers
V. r' r 'ek '.,t tiffi ii et;r plants
iS. '~ ii~r'd Iret I
Pr g:iOii >.r a
ib. trerri'
it a 'i'i rig itt Se Saitlimit'S
43 curl I isO r mx air nitrusse
N I tieR ii ',h rr ii ca vi~rr
4 lii lare
'I '~lr rtl tantlir ii
is, ' v ''ii i.uiil turkey
lb lrt~ lien sal iii
tr rtrs ran 1 ilm salrid
.~l t u tra I ,sl, sa lid

s

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resatlonship
1betwveen
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,_ _ .3A~ "" ~
f 4
4 t< '

People
is li" ited: e
They must '
fig d
anew way.
LARRY.KRAMER n MARTIN ROSEN pei E U LLSi no
FRJ COLOR by DeLuxe
Starrinq GLENDA JACKSON, who wan herr first A(:-!,' ,
A ward for her acting in this film , O LIVLR R EED , ALANAE , a d J N I IN E , - A D E C C O E
OF FILMMAKING TECHNIQUE.- "'Women in Love' a
extraordinary. In particular, the s-exual encounters.hv
both a power and a tastefulness that we rarely s4ee:int
day's sexually frenzied films,"-- LIFE MAG-AZIlNE.
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
September 1 8
7:00 and 9:30 p.m. - ADMISSION $1.2
THURSDAY--September 19-ONL-s!--7 &91 2

is. .sit,'r it Oar '~Ir Orrili in
, ni ',:rmee
.0 r L.g rui IS
ili sI imlied eggs bonitm'femme
,i~. cure si~W
Sri cirlil ',,ri 01)1)
Sb I rr~sIm I (in:, in su~ mm saur'e
r;it.
Iii hum,' ncr di Irread
1,5111' cii ttirtgiie
I~i. lie: se radish ',a mice
1,1 cii chin 54 irigs id panese
IrS Ii i1'1i ',r~ u iii
ot; mrira~eii larm h htrp',
ii pir';il Ir scind
i;~ irr ,ri'r 'r s;iia ml
t' ira r';m rr~ni '~rri'nd
II tell red trim it. salad
,I. 1 issr it , mr cmi ',alad
~ iri'I s rrlrcs'aimg
3. I'm r neit drcsing
'I. I litril islair it dressing
i.us~nem drr'ssing
0. tifItil amii't'
I rrI 'a rir','
is rIrculi r ramo irS
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Sri. ;ra r rrie',a a i'lr cese
51. ',imr'i'il uriimrn',
Ill. Ii rn's it ni uvies
ii; '~( tilt r'd ;'rijrt'leas es
Iii' at' 5 elmr'm",e
55 cheddar chce~e
Sb. ii, carl prr riding
911 rice 1uidili og
91. trenir 1 ,m ia mirr't
9 ' ira 'icit iilrirh'S
9,. lirrirse m ,rI~m'
50 ii . rmd'mr'iim urga irgm'r,

Probably not. All things considered you do
what you do pretty doggone well. After all, no one
has taken your job. And you're eating regularly.
But...
But have you ever considered what doing your
job just a little better might mean?
Money. Cold hard coin of the realm.
If each of us cared just a smidge more about
what we do for a living, we could actually turn that
inflationary spiral around. Better products, better
service and better management would mean savings
for all of us. Savings of much of the cash and frayed
nerves it's costing us now for repairs and inefficiency.
Point two.. By taking more pride in our work
we'll more than likely see America regaining its
strength in the competitive world trade arena. When
the balance of payments swings our way again we'll
all be better off economically.
So you see--the only person who can really
do what you do any better is you.

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