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 25, 1974 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1974-10-25

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


Rage'Ten

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Friday, October 25, 1974

Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Friday, October 25, 1974

t

104

WASHERS & DRYERS
NO WAITING!

RENT, CHILD CARE
HRP petition drive begins

' hosts tourney
for Scrabble fans

r::>'+." :::?:}:;:y'''":::n :.:. ".:{itsir:;:
';}::tip:%?: {, '? 4ii::%;f{: :":: .:J;.;: _

OPEN 24 HOURS
ATTENDANT ALWAYS
ON DUTY
MR. STADIUM
COIN LAUNDRY &
DRY CLEANING
1958 S. INDUSTRIAL
South of E. Stadium Blvd.
668.7928

Allen

_..._..

h'

Jacobson's Open

Thursday and Friday Evenings Until 9:00 P.M
Saturday Until 5:30 P.M.

(Continued from Page 1)
admitted "the real problem is
getting it passed in Apil."
Basic features of the new
HRP rent control proposal in-
clude:
-a five member board elect-
ed with representatives elected
from each ward for two-year
teams who would be paid $5 per
hour.
The board would be empow-
ered to freeze, roll back or set
maximum rents and assess a
monthly feerof $1afor landlords
failing to register with them;
-base rent figures set to.
equal the highest '73 rent or
present rent-whichever is low-
er;
-maximum five per cent
yearly rent increase or Con-
sumer Price index increase -
whichever is lower. Increases
would be allowed only when
total expenses rise such as:
property tax, operating and
maintenance e x p e n s e s,
utilities or reasonable capital
improvements;
-an anti - discrimination
clause; and

-a prohibition of rent in-
creases for two years if land-
lords are delinquent on property
tax, violate housing or other
codes, discriminate or engagedt
in retaliatory evictions.1
HRP officials charged that
w e a 1 t h y landlord-backed
groups, particularly Citizens for
Good Housing brought about the
defeat of last year's proposal
by mounting a highly-biased and
heavily - funded anti - rent con-'
trol campaign.'
"There is no way we can stop'
landlords from getting together
and spending $50 to $60,000 like
last year," Wegbreit argued.
HRP spokesman Jesse Hallj
further charged "there were;
bogus arguments in rent control,
ads" last April pointing out that
"HRP had no money for re-,
buttal ads."
WEGBREIT added "we will1
campaign the same as last year
although hopefully we will have
more money to combat the
landlord. He contended that
Democratic proposal for a coun-,
cil vote on the issue are "woe-I
fully inadequate . . . anything

they are proposing is not going
to improve anything." o By SUANNE TIBERIO entire tournament promotion is
"We have seen city ordi- being handled by the Selchow
nances come and go and coun- Scrabble anyone? and Righter Company of New
cil come and go . . . rent con- While not yet a common re- York. "This firm bought out
trol has got to stay in for a long 'quest, this once familiar sub-! the original makers of Scrab-
time, and the only way to in- stitute for rainy day fun is rap - ble and now own all copy rights
sure this is with a referendum." idly becoming an intellectual to it." she said. "All we do
Speaking for the child care fad on campus. is sit here while the company
referendum, HRP spokeswoman The University will be hold- finances everything, including
Marsha Pumroy said, "We must ing the first Annual Scrabble all promotional ads, flyers,
insure consistent monies for Players Tournament on Sun- game equipment and prizes."
child care . . . good child care day, October 27, at 6 pm in the With such bureaucratic gen-
costs more than parents can Union Ballroom. Although not erosity there must be a catch,
ever afford to pay for it." as well-known as a golf or ten- but as Steger speculates, the
Pointing out that 1.7 per cent his match, Scrabble's popularity company is probably trying to
of city revenues "is only a be- is inraig ul ptegm'srputato
ginning" Pumroy said day care increasing. build up the games reputation
provides for "not simply cus- to increase sales and create
todial but intellectual, social ACCORDING to Jane Steger, new markets. The goal is to
a sical needs of the chill a University Activities Center develop inter-collegiate scrab-
and phi(UAC) secretary, this is only the ble teams that would compete
dren."
Councilwoman K a t h y Koza- second college scrabble tourna- with other colleges.
chenko (HRP - Second Ward) ment held in the nation. "The
supported the child care peti- first one was held at Columbia,
tion saying "people should di- wheretthey had 120 people reg-
rectly determine where city ister to play," she said. As of-
money is being spent as much yesterdad, sige pfrsityhtue
as possible."I dents had signed up for thesm g l g
as pssibe."tournament and have a chance
Pumroy expressed confidence of winning the grand prize, a
that the referendum will pass deluxe scrabble game.
since "it meets young people'sd'0 e ation
needs." Steger explained t ha t the

5
J
t
T
7
a
1
.

Jacb on S

-0
r:,
Miss J shoulders a saddlebag of soft
supple leather, that's a roomy 10"x8 inside,
with easy-organizer pockets on the outside. .
the perfect casual wardrobe sidekick by
Karavan. In camel or brown, -$18
4Z4T4O

With such low prices,
how can TechH
afford t Ufrnteir
stron guarnte9s

I - I.

L".

,1
4

. .... ........ ...........
. . .......................
. . ....................
... .......................
. . .......................
.... ...............
.....................
... .. ...........
.. ............
.... ....................
...............
. .... ...........
..................
..................
............
...........
..... .................
..................
....... ..................
...........
..........
.......... ...........
................
..........................
...........................
...............
.....................
..................
...........
.................
..................
...... ............
................
.....................
... .....................
.... ......................
...........................
..................
........... ....

KEN WOOD
iii K
Sale Price $360
List Price $472

mp".4--l

!...' r

II

r---

I

J Ll
;..M

0

Ig

0' 1

rl

.r,

_4

Al
kb

Ill

s II

~I1

/I

"What's the gimmick?" people are always
asking us. But there aren't any gimmicks. It's
just a matter of simple economics.
The combined purchasing power of Tech
Hifi's forty - six stores allows us to buy
equipment from our manufacturers in large
enough quantities to substantially reduce our
cost. And we have the resources to take
advantage of those special "deals" that other
hifi dealers often have to pass up.
We pass these savings on to you along with
fourteen strong customer satisfaction guaran-
tees.
The system featured in this ad is one
example of how you benefit from the buying
clout of our forty - six stores. It includes some
of the finest names in high fidelity,' and you
still save $112 off the manufacturers list
prices. But most impressive is the way this
music system will sound in your home.
Ohm E loudspeakers are some of the finest
small bookshelf speakers you'll hear-regardless
of price. The Kenwood 2400 stereo receiver

provides them with enough power (32 watts
rms) to produce fantastic bass response and
window - rattling volume. The Kenwood's FM
performance and appearance rival many re-
ceivers costing nearly twice as much. You'll
like the BSR.310AXE automatic turntable. It
features silicone - damped cueing, an anti -
skate adjustment, and a factory - installed
ADC induced magnetic cartridge. Included are
a base and a dustcover.
If you're in the market for a good hifi,
from $159 up to several thousand dollars, you-
should put Tech Hifi's purchasing power to
work for you.
To boost your own purchasing power,
Tech Hifi honors both MasterCharge and
BankAmericard.
BANKAMERICARD nr
Quality components at the Right Price

exposed
(Continued from Page 1)
five pounds of the grass short-*
ly after the bulk of the mari-
juana was shipped to Ann Ar-
bor, was instrumental in break-
ing the case.
Both federal and local police
said that two of the Ann Arbor
men had no prior reputations or
records to point to their involve-
ment in the massive smuggling.
Hyman was the only local sus-
pect to have a prior conviction,
concerning a marijuana'posses-
sion charge several years ago.
He was given probation.
One of the other suspects,
Roosevelt Gandaria, was ar-
rested a few days ago in Mex-
ico, and charged with posses-
sion of twenty-two pounds of
marijana, an agent said.
Investigators arecontinuing
their probe into the affair to
see if other large scale ship-
ments took Place, but city po-
lice chief Welter Krasny said
that the April 1973 run was
"probably the biggie."
Daily Official Bulletin
Day Calendar
Friday, October 25
wUOM: Actress, Jane Fonda, &
folk singer, Holly Near, at Indo-
china Peace Cmpaign in AA, 10:05
am. -
women in Natural Resources:
"Women's Academic Survival Work-
shop," 1556 Dana, 11:30-i:30 pm.
Natural Resources: Terry Sharik,
Rice Div., "Sampling and Analysis
of Terrestrial Ecosystems for En-
viron. Impact Statements," Job
Opportunities, 1040 Dana, noon.
Hospital Commission for women
Meeting: Wi0410 Hosp., noon.
Educational Media Ctr.: Journey
into Self, Schorling Aud., SEB, noon,
Ctr. Russian, E. European Studies:
Ben. Zook, U.S. State Dept., "Cur-
rent Developments and the Future
of Detente," Reading Rm., CREES
Lane Hall, 2 pm.
Anatomy: Burton L. Baker, "The
Ontogenesis of sell Types in the
Hypophysis of Human Fetus," 4804
Med. Sci. I, 3:30 pm.
Computer, Communications Sci-
ences: Joseph Goguen, UCLA, "On
Fuzzy Robot Planning," 2050 Frieze,
4 pm.
Hockey U-M vs. Ohio State, Yost
Ice Arena, 7:30 pm.
Association Pro-Colombia: Ken-
neth Langon, "Who Gets what in
Chile: Before, During, and After
Alende," Recreation Rm., Int'l. Ctr.,
8 pm.,
City Center Acting Company:
Shakespeare's Loves Labours Lost,
Mendelssohn, 8 pm.
Music School: Fred Weldy, piano
Honors recital, Recitial Hall, 8 pm.
UAC: David Bromberg, Souther-
Hilman-Furay Band, Hill Aud., 8:30
pm.
Folk Dance Club: Barbour Gym,
8-li pm.
Career Planning & Placement
3200 SAB, 764-7456
Interviewing on campus: Mon.,
Nov. 4: Northwestern U./Grad. Sch.
of Mgt., U. of Washington/Grad.
Sch., vanderbilt U./Law; Tues., Nov.
5: Blue Cross of Mich., Continental
Oil Co., Mich. Bell (Special Sched.
for Minorities & Women), Southern
Methodist U./Law; Wed., Nov. 6:
NYU/Grad Sch. of Arts & Sci.;
Thurs., Nov. 7: Dun & Bradstreet,
Inc., wayne Statde U,/Personnel
Dept., Columbia U./Grad. Sch. of
Bus., Washington U./Law & Bank-
ers Life & Cacualty Co.; Fri, Nov. 8:
Upjohn & villanova U./Law. Boston
U./Sch. of Law scsheduled late for
visit, Wed.. Oct. 30.
Students interested in Foreign
Service: John Mellor, U. S. State
Dept., at CP&P, Oct. 25; phone 764-
7456 for apt. (group meetings at 2
pm & 3 pm).
Order

Your I

a trio in
tweed-look knit
for Miss J. . .
rich earth tones

of rust and camel in
a polyester/acrylic/silk
blend that lends
itself beautifully to
campus, career or city
dressing. . .V-neck
cardigan, sleeveless
fi .; . ""% y. :
collared. sweater and %-,' "" .
A-line skirt, all with
unlimited potential
for pairing with your
own wardrobe separates.
In 5-13 sizes. $42
4hu!f

-

>

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan