ursday, October 3, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Sevei' i Talks c( hospital ontinue with interns, 'U' (Continued from Page 1) would eliminate many benefits One of the major areas under the doctors receive at Wiyne discussion last night concerned County General Hospital, where an administrative plan to clas- they are considered county em- sify all interns and residents as ployes. University employes. Interns and residents rotate THE HOA contends that this during their work year among Senate rejects forehign aid bill WASHINGTON (,P)-The Sen- to Turkey to the foreign aid bill ate yesterday rejected a $2.5- in the same form as idtpted billion foreign aid authorization earlier in the week, over Presi- bill containing restrictions op- dent Ford's objections, to a posed by the Ford administra- continuing money resolutian. University hospital, the Vuyne facility, and the local Veteran's Administration hospital. Another major area of nego- tiation involved HOA insistance that provisions for implement- ing improved p a t i e n t care should be spelled out in -he new contract. BEGINNING EARLY veser- day, a number of union mem- bers picketed outside the hos- pital's main entrance - giving visitors the unusual view of white coated, stethescope-carry- ing physicians toting placcaris. Inside the facility, it was near- ly "business as usual"-b'it not quite. According to a number of interns and staff persons, there was little harassment or teasion which usually occurs in labor disnutes. University hospital s e r' v e s nearly 1,000 in-patients and has a medical staff of 300, not in- cluding interns and resilent phvsicans. THE HOA AND the hospital administration have been tr ring to negotiate a new contract for the doctors since last July. But the talks became deadlocked two weeks ago. Last night's session m-irked; the first face-to-face meningf between the negotiating teams since then. The old contract expired on Sept. 1 and the physicians have been working on a day-to-day' extension of that pact until last Monday, when they cancelled the contract to begin the ssow- down. tion. By a 41-39 vote, on motion by Sen. John Pastore (D-R.I.), the bill was returned to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for further study. Sent back with it to commit-1 tee was an amendment passed earlier in the day to require a report to Congress before the CIA undertakes a covert opera- tion. A move to abolish such operations lost. SEN. H U B E R T Humphrey (D-Minn.), floor manager of the bill, accused the administration Sen. James Abourezk (D-S D).) who sponsored the foreign aid amendment, refused to say itF applied only to Turkey. He said it applied to "any country" get-' ting U.S. military equipment and using it for aggressive pur- poses in violation of U.S. for- eign aid laws. Sens. H'vmphrey and .John Tower (R-Tex.) said it might be applied to Israel and Greece, although Humphrey said he considered Israel's military ac-' tivity defensive. THE SENATE acted after re- Campus Inteiview minds, matter MITRE is a place which daily faces the challenge of minds over matter, ard where, even more importantly, minds matter a lot. Since we're a nonprofit system engineering company operating wholly in the public interest and dealing with tough problems assigned to us by more than a score of governmental agencies, we know that our greatest resource is the human mind. And we know that the kind of mind we need also needs to know that it will be working on important problems with other professionals. What's more, we'll be quite specific in spelling out your assignment to you. All of this because you matter. .. and because at MITRE, minds matter. We are currently seeking new graduates to work in command and control systems information processing systems, electronic surveillance systems, communication systems, and environmental, health and other social systems. If you're an EE, Computer Science, Math, Operations Research, or Physics major, you could be working on problems in telecommunications, voice communications, micro- wave and digital signal processing, educational information systems, radar dsign , propagation studies or advanced modulation, coding, error control and data compression techniques. Or, you might want to get involved with water quality management, digital Imformrio,' systems, data handling and reduction, microprogramming techniques, data bss structure, time sharing, text processing, management information systems for Courts and police, computer program design and development or evaluation of present day software for phase-over to next generation machines. These are just a few of the areas in which you might get involved at MITRE. All of these positions require a minimum of a BS degree. If you have more them a bachelor's, that's even better. Almost 2A of our 700 technical staff members hae advanced degrees. All these openings are at our corporate headquarters at Bedford, Massachusetts (suburban Boston). If you are interested and think you can meet our standards, send us your resume. Better yet, we'd like to talk to you on campus. Sign up at your Placemert Office. We'll be there on February 7. Mr. Kenneth B. Keeler The MITRE Corporation Box 208 Bedford, Massachusetts 01730 THE A __________A _____E ___y_ An Affirmative Action Employer 7 3 C of not wanting the bill because of legislative restrictions built, in for what he said was "a sorry lack of planning on the whole policy of foreign assist- ance." Unpopular as it has become, foreign aid "is necessary," Humphrey said, "it is part of, the national security of this co'lntrv." BY A 48-34 vote, the Senate added a cutoff of military aid' fusing to abolish CIA coert onerations but voting to require that they be undertaken only in the interest of national defense and after a report to Congress. Under an amendment adorned by voice, money for covert 'c- ti"'i by the CIA or any other U.S. government agency wold be hanned unless the President finds the operation "vital to the defense of the United States." 1 t t AP Photo Missing~ olding a fossilized pelvis of, harles Oxnard professor of he University of Chicago Schc three dimensional model tha hysical structures in animals ther scientists are finding it volutionary history of man. RP, Derns (Continued from Page 1) ance. The undrafted HRP m calls for a five-person rent, trol panel elected from the y's wards. I'he Democrats generally ap-. ared more favorable to the, P plan. Fourth Ward Coun- man Jamie Kenworthy said, 11 my objections to the last RP rent control ballot pro- al) have at least been ver- ly corrected." FIRST WARD Councilman' ARTISTS and C Spaces are stille 2nd Annual Con Crafts link'? an ancient man-like ape, Dr. anatomy and anthropology at ool of Medicine stands behind t shows relationships between{ , including man. Oxnard and a useful tool in tracing the * talk111rents)f~ Norris Thomas chided HRP for pushing a charter amendment that he claimed would almost certainly be voided by the courts. But he agreed with Shoichet that "we can't even hope for getting anything through this (GOP-controlled) council." Most of the meeting was spent discussing the HRP plan, which that party plans to put on the April ballot through a pe- tition drive that will begin in two weeks. RAFTS PEOPLE available for the nmunity Arts & Fair VALUABLE COUPON WORTH $1.59 Buy one BIG MR. TONY SUB and LARGE DRINK 1.59 .. . Get another Mr. Tony Sub and Large Drink FREE! and this coupon SUBMARINES & PIZZA 1327 S. University I 1 I I' I Estate Auction SATURDAY MORNING, OCT. 5 at 10:00 a.m. Located 3 miles west of Hell, Michigan on Hiahwav 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. Vermontville (517) 726-0181 - - . ._ . _ _ - T ....- -t r-I T _ i ''--___ _.___________ ______ _._._____. _____ ___ SPONSORED BY U of M Arts & Crafts Guild Sunday, Oct. 6-1-7 p.m. Ann Arbor Farmer's Market REGISTER 2nd floor Michigan Union or call 668-7884 FREE, y A I I FAST DELIVERY!! UU"U II Coupon expires Oct. 9, 1974 DINE-IN and PICK-UP ONLY Coupon good at BOTH STORES (State St. and S. University) IS FOR TRAVELING SENIOR PICTURES! i; I III I' =II HILLEL-1429 Hill St. FRIDAY NIGHT SHABBATH CIRCLE-6:00 P.M. MINYAN-6:30 P.M. SHABBAT DINNER-7:30 P.M. (reservations by 1 p.m. Friday, 663-4129) SATURDAY MI NYAN-9 :00 A.M. " - - SIGN UP ON THE DIAG 10 a.m.-4 p.m. starting Wed., October 2 or Call 764-05617--8 p.m. Mon.--Thurs. This is your ONLY chance to be included in 1975 MICHIGANENSIAN t qqh Y Branded to Prevent Rustling THE CHAPATI a unique whole wheat flatbread filled with your choice of some- thina natural-99c All kinds of traveling - up mountains or dreaming in the hammock. They are very, very comfortable and very, very tough. The design gives barefoot freedom; the wedge ii fi i k t' li' ! I; .. f L A w r . r.ri. . . r A L . . w r .-L- w - - w w r.r . - I .ter JL. . . i