100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

October 01, 1974 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1974-10-01

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

Page Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tuesday, October 1, 1974

I

PaeToTEMIHGNDIY usaOtoe ,17

I,

1
Solve your math problems
as easyasT.
- i
1 2 3
Engineering, as nobody has to tell you, involves a lot of hard work.
Including long hours of calculation and complex figurework where tedium
can play hob with accuracy. So for you, Casio provides ir -not in the sky,
but here and now. With two reliable calculators that can save you many an
hour and many an error.r
The MINI-MEMORY features 50 operating hours (two years' normalf
use) on four ordinary penlite batteries. A 16-digit answer (8-digit readout).
Floating decimal. Memory. Percent key. Constant. Big clear green
numerals. AC, with optional adaptor. And all this at a suggested retail
price of less than $50.
Our new FX-10 scientific calculator is the ultimate portable calculator
for student as well as practicing engineers. Imagine-the 10 most-used
scientific math functions at one touch of a key-plus 7r. Constant. Automatic
floating decimal. True, credit balance and overflow check. A great investment
in your present and future. Suggested retail price under $100.
You can check out the MINI-MEMORY and FX-10 at your school
bookstore or Casio Dealer's. Or the coupon will bring you more details plus
the Casio quality story. Proof that when you buy Casio, you buy the best.
----------------------- -
Casio Electronic Calculators, Consumer Products Division
Attn: National Sales Manager, Suite 4011,
One World Trade Center, New York, N.Y. 10048
You have my attention.Now tell more about the Q MINI-MEMORY 0 FX-10.
{ Name
School
Street I
yState Zip
--,---.. ...............- ..--------- ------------

"S
Doctors optimistic on Ford to give
., t c irn ( oAEĀ£''U

(Continued from Page 1)
ing statistics that Ms. Ford's
doctors apparently will attempt
to beat by using some of the
new t r e a t m e n t approaches
emerging from the task force's
work.
The three scientists who met
with Navy doctors were Dr.
Bernard Fisher of the Univer-
sity of Pittsburgh and Drs. Paul
Carbone and Douglas Tormey of
the cancer institute.
Fisher reported on a two-year
study of 1,700 breast cancer
patients which showed no dif-
ference between radical surgery
methods and simpler procedui es
in which less tissue is removed.
Ms. Ford had the radical oper-
ation in which her right breast,E

chest muscles beneath it and I
the lympth tissue ivere re-
moved.
(Co
CARBONE AND Tormey re- whether
ported on new progress using Atty. Ge
drugs following surgery to com- cial Wat
bat remaining cancer. Jaworski
They also described biologic nate Ne
markers that can detect breast sors bat
cancer cells still in te body ed
which in the past couldn't be the pard
found until they had greatly authority
multiplied and were seriously Her re
threatening the patient. Ford or
Other investigations h a v e to give
shown promising results in ment o
identifying women for whom whether
hormone therapy following sur- ad m
I gery is effective. withdo
with For

testimony
pardon

House on,

ntinued from Page 1)
Ford consulted with
en. William Saxbe, Spe-
ergate Prosecutor Leon
d, Vice President-desig-
.son Rockefeller or any
torneys or law profes-
fore deciding to grant
on, and if so, what legal
y they cited.
esolution asks whether
his aides asked Nixon
a confession or state-
f criminal guilt and
the statement Nixon
e when he received the
was cleared in advance
rd's White House.
LLY IT asks, "Did you
any report from a psy-
or any other physician
hat Richard Nixon was
other than good health?

If so, then please provide such destruction of his White House
reports." tapes by 1984.
Conyers' resolution asks what Chairman John Brademas (D-
representations, if any, were Ind.) of the House printing sub-
made on behalf of Nixon and committee denounced the agree-
any information presented to ment, worked out when Presi-
Ford "with respect to the men- dent Ford pardoned Nixon, as
tal or physical health of Richard "an offense against history."
ZN i ^n 1

(Nixon."
It also asks for any informa-
tion in Ford's possession at the
time he granted the pardon on
whether offenses had been al-
leged.
AND IT ASKS for any repre-
sentation made by Nixon or on
his behalf to Ford "in connec-
tion with a pardon for alleged
offenses against the United
States.",
Earlier yesterday, the head of
another House subcommittee
urged congressional action to
overturn Nixon's agreement for

BRADEMAS said it brought to
mind the book burning in Nazi
Germany. U.S. Archivist James
Rhoads, chairman of a commis-
sion that said it "views with
alarm" the tape-destruction
agreement, indicated he would
favor legislation if the Ford
administration cannot renegoti-
ate the agreement.
Brademas said he hopes Con-
gress will reverse the agree-
ment but said he is not sure
such legislation can be put out
by his printing subcommittee.

Cover-up trial begins

i
li

FINAL
receive
chiatrist
stating t
in any c

(Continued from Page 1)
mer domestic affairs adviser!
John Ehrlichman, former At-i
torney General John Mitchell,I
his ex-assistant Robert Mardian
and Nixon campaign committee,
lawyer Kenneth Parkinson -
must appear in court today.
Judge Sirica, using a cere-;
monial courtroom, will open the
trial tomorrow morning and the
selection of a 12-member jury:
will begin.!
The trial, expected to last
about three months, has now;
focusedtonwhethersorhnot the
former President will testify,
under oath, following subpoenas
issued by both the prosecutor,
and the defense.
JUDGE SIRICA is expected to
Estate Auction
SATURDAY MORNING,
OCT. 5
at 10:00 a.m.
Located 3 miles west of Hell,
Michigan on Hiqhwav D-32
to Graves Road and % mile
north.
An interesting sale of antique
articles including round oak
table, oak icebox, milk safe,
other antique furniture, clocks,
piano w/bench, some wicker
furniture, pot belly heating
stove, and many more old and
interesting items.
PEARLE KIRTLAND ESTATE
William J. Stanton and
Stephen E. Stanton,
Auctioneers
Ph.7Vermontville
(517) 726-0181

move quickly to determine
whether Nixon is healthy enough
to make the cross-country trip:
to appear as a witness.
Nixon is resting in a Long
Beach, Calif., hospital, where he'
is being treated for a blood
clot near his lung, the result of
a long bout with phlebitis, an
inflamation of the veins.
There is some speculation that
Jaworski, who wantsthe former
President to verfy the authen-
ticity of the taped evidence, may
ask for written statements to
that effect if the former Presi-
dent is too ill to appear.
ATTENTION

FACES REGENTS
CSSG report draws fire

(Continued from Page 1)
choosing and giving a mandate
to their student body president."
He cautioned: "I fear this pro-
posal may erect buffer zones
between students and their of-
ficials."
Ile also 'argued that the pro-
posal "may militate against the
election of a woman president
. Given the choice, how many
women would rather campaign
for the office within a probably
male-dominated assembly, as
opposed to appealing for elec-
tion to a more sexually-
balanced student body?"
"We don't want a president,"
said CSSG chairwoman Kolar,
"we're actively lobbying for a
chairperson and a parliamen-
tary type of system." Under
the CSSG plan, the chairperson
would be liable to a parliament-
style vote of confidence at any
time.
KOLAR admitted the commis-

sion opted for the parliamen-
tary system partly because of
past abuses by SGC officials-
a comment clearly directed at
recent allegations of massive
fund misuse against former
Council officers.
Sandberg also attacked the
report because it did not include
a recommendation for a fully-
empowered student regent. The
CSSG report instead asks for
a non-voting participant ii re-
gental sessions.
Commission member Bob Ste-
phens said the CSSG would at-
tempt to iron out any differ-
ences with the SGC before the
December Regents meeting, and
added thata series of open
forum debates on the r-etort
were a possibility.
ALTHOUGH Council is a cor-
poration chartered by the state,
the Regents still hold ultimate
power over SGC finances, and

From the world's leading manufacturer of electronic calculators.

i'
i

could threaten to discontinue
the SGC student fee assess-
ment if the Council doesn't co-
operate with a regental deci-
sion.
Sandberg, Kolar and Stephens
all agreed such action was ex-
tremely unlikely, however.
Commission members strong-
ly denied any charges that the
Regents had exerted any pies-.
sure on them to "axe" SGC.
"OUR ONLY position is that
of strengthening student govern-
ment on campus," argued Ste-
phens. "At present, the only
thing the Council has to offer
is money for several student
groups - and that's just rot
enough."
The report also asks that the
proposed MSA open financial
records and have an independ-
ent audit at least once each
year, to E"inhibit financial im-
propriety." Sandberg s t a t e d
Council will likely institute the
open financial records setup
within a few months.
KOLAR SAID she was "some-
what pessimistic" about chances
for regental approval of seat-
ing students on school and col-
lege boards. However, she con-
tended the Regents might not
be opposed to endorsing the
concept of increased student de-
cision-making powers, thus leav-
ing enforcement up to the
schools and colleges.
Carl Cohen, president of the
Senate Advisory Committee on
University A f f a i r s, declined
comment on whether he would
soecifically oppose the CSSG
report, but said, "It's generally
been my view that matters of
curricula are affairs of the
faculty," rather than students.

1II[

y "

%.

generation *

IS BACK!

SENIOR

selling the latest edition in the fishbowl

I',

PICTURES
SIGN UP ON THE DIAG
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
starting Wed., October 2
or
Call 764-05677--8 p.m. Mon.--Thurs.
This is your ONLY chance to be
included in 1975 MICHIGANENSIAN

*We are U of M's inter-arts magazine. We're looking for poetry,
fiction, essays, drama, photography, musical scores, artwork,
translations, and crossword puzzles. We're accepting submis-
sions from U of M faculty and students now.

i

Abortion Alternative
OFFERED BY
Problem Pregnancy
Help
24 hr. phone: 769-7283
Office: 400 S. Division
Main floor, Street entrance
(corner of William)
FREE PREGNANCY TESTING

v

Give Yourself An Edge!
New ?reTestsO forGrad School Exams
tell you precisely where you stand and
what you still can do about it.
If you are preparing for:
Medical College Admission Test
Admission Test for Graduate Study
in Business.
Law School Admission Test
Graduate Record Exama
Here's what PreTest will do for you:
You "rehearse" for the test by taking one just like it - each of questions yo
PreTest is comparable in length, time allowed, format and cate of the tim
degree of difficulty to the actual exam. will face, thes
You can compare your score against others taking the same you take yourl
test - get your percentile rank from the computer print-out, ing - and onl
for your eyes alone. . - The minute y
because answ
You learn your strengths and weaknesses while there's still answers) are i
time to do something about it - an optional, completely your own prog
confidential computer print-out pinpoints every wrong answer in which your'
for you and gives you a percentile ranking in each of the your answer s
component areas of the exam. There is no e
Proven Effective By Students Nationwide. added advant
PreTest is the finest "dress rehearsal" for these important exams, others taking t
so critical to your future, that you can possibly find. Money back gi
Each PreTest in its field is authoritative, prepared by a distin- your complete
iffrany reaso
guished board of educators noted in and specializing in the it unused fora
particular discipline. now - the soo
Each PreTest is structured just like the real test for which you're can start to pu
preparing, to give you easy familiarity with the format and type Dixwell Avenu

A typical
S PreTest
- exam kit
Scontains:
Exam book-
letCorrect
~t'Answers and
" p:Explanations,
Computer Answer
SSheets, Pre-addressed
t nvyelope to rtun*
sheets for scoring and
an envelope you address
to yourself in order to
receive the confidential
computer print-out.

ou will encounter. PreTest is a "real world" dupli-
e you will be allotted, the range of questions you
scoring system by which you will be judged. But
PreTest, in private, at a time of your own choos-
y you see your score.. . know your ranking.
ou start to use PreTest you benefit from it -
ers to all questions (and explanations of the
ncluded in every PreTest package. You can check
ress and immediately-start to work on those areas
weaknesses are revealed. Whether you also return
heet for computer scoring is completely up to you.
xtra charge for this service, which gives you the
age of being able to compare your results with
the same test.
guarantee - Mail coupon now. After you receive
ePreTest kit, you may inspect it 10 days - theft
n you don't wish to follow through, simply return
a full refund of the purchase price. Mail coupon
oner your PreTest is in your hands, the sooner you
t it to work for you! PreTest Service, Inc., 1881
ue, Hamden, Connecticut 06514.

11;

Mail No Risk Coupon Now

PreTest Service, Inc.
Dept. L; 1 2 3
1881 Dixwell Avenue
Hamden, Connecticut 06514

Pill]

it

" " '

I

}

I

I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan