Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, January 30, 1975 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, January 30, 1975 I U U. of M. ISMRRD CAREER INFORMATION PROGRAM WHAT: 20 Allied Health, Education, and Social Welfare Careers FOR: College Students WHEN: Tuesday, February 4, 8:30 a.m.- 4:00 p.m. Continuous Presentations WHERE:. ISMRRD, 130S. First St., Ann Arbor Pre-registration Requested TO REGISTER AND FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: 763-4481 ADMISSION FREE .*J....... ... NA:t0 'hJVM"Jt :A,' 'A,4"t ~;h"::" ."M ' . .....,"lt y"""r.........,... .. . rr..1",... ...... ... .... : .:i. . ......,.l . *. .:.: Y.*.I. ...t, DYF AUTJudge orders Wilson White to ungrade condition of hose Thursday, January 30 You'll Get Yours When You're 65, New Inst. for Social Research, 2402 Day Calendar 229 W. Eng., noon. Mason, 7-9 pm; films: No Lies; It WUOM: Live coverage, House Ju-- William W. Bishop Lecture: John Happens to Us Nobody's Victim, By DAN BLUGERMAN diciary Subcommittee hearings on R. Stevenson, "Law-Making for the Lec. Rm. 1, MLB, 8 pm. U A circuit court judge yester- Civil & Constitutional Rights, on Oceans," Lawyers' Club Lounge,; Music School: Philharmnonia, Uri Improper use of FBI files on Con- 12:45 pm. Mayer, conductor, Hill Aud, 8 pm. day ordered Wilson White and gress members, 10 am. Physical Education: Sam Fox III, Associates to bring one of their ISMRRD: Learning Disabilities Geo Washington U., "Cardiac Re- Summer Placement rented homes up to code after Vdeo-Tape Series, B. J Cratty, habilitation and Coronory Preven- 3 B- two students suffered strep "Concepts of Motor Training," 130 tion," Rackham Amph., 3:30 pm. Register in person or by phone. throat and another caught a S. 1st St., 9:30-noon.,HI Ptii CreteCr Lakeside Farm Camp, MI. Coed,.eut flc oiet Resources Ecology Prgm.: A. B.IMHR Patricia Carpenter, Car- virus as a result of lack of heat- Kirsciunas, Argonne Nat'l Lab, "En-negie TellU., t ye Fix- 9 to 5. Openings include general ming in their bedrooms. eI gy and tht Environment, 1528 CC I s 1057MHRI 4counselors, specialists in waterfront The ruling by Judge Patrick Little, noon. cess"15 HI, 3:45 pm. coI Riding, western, and english, arts! Conlin, who ordered proper Ctr. for Japanese Studies: Panel, Chemical Seminar: John R. Fer- ggcrafts Robt. H. Brower, moderator, "The ron, U. of Rochester, "Dynamics h e a t i n g equipment installed, Inter-University Center for Japa- of Soft Spherocylinders and the Camp Sequoia, New York Coed, was based on a 43-paragraph nese Language Studies In Tokyo," Transport Properties of some Poly- Will interviewaWed. Feb. 5 from 9 complaint filed last November Commons Rm., Lane Hall, noon. atomic Gases," 3513 E. Eng., 4 pm.= to 5. Age 20 and up. Openings in Indmstrl Opeaons: FilmtEomis:Es ey EDomar, MIT, lude waterfront, drama, arts/ 20 by six University students. - - ----"The Blind Man and the Elephant: crafts, photography, ham radio, and Another Look at Socialism," 200 others. THE TENANTS, who were DR. PAUL USLAN Lane Hall, 4 pm.Spa Irish Hills Girl Scout Council, Int'i Night: Food fo pi Michigan. Will interview Thurs. Optometrist { Portugal, League Cafeteria, 5-7:15 Feb. 6 from 10 to 5. Openings in pm elude waterfront, unit leaders, Full Contact Lens Service Biotechnic Recentralization Lec- nurse, assistants. Visual Examinations tures: Peter Van Dresser, Rackham Camp Tamarack, MI Coed. Wil Amph., 8:30-10 pm. interview Fri. Feb. 7 from 9 to 5. 548 Church 663-2476 Women's Studies: Mini-course on Openings include waterfront, gen. Virginia Woolf, Dr. Sally Ruddick, counselors and specialists. D t 19 L f3 JILJL,4-WJL I&JL X-F JlLJL N-X-R- i ' represented in court by StudentI Legal Aid attorney Jonathan! Rose, argued that a cash settle-! ment by itself would not elimi- nate the hazards present in theI house at 605 E. Hoover. Their' complaint asked that the build- ing be brought up to the mini- mal standards required by law. aIe lack of heating in three bedrooms forced the six femalej tenants to share the two other bedrooms from November 15' until last week, when they were; finally able to locate another place to rent. ic signals THE TENANTS could not be reached yesterday, but Bill Ab- bott, a law student who assisted in the case, said Robert Volk of Wilson White promised to rem- edy all the listed complaints when the tenants inspected the premises last August. Wilson White, however, failed to make any improvements until the s'it was filed, according to Abbott. Other complaints listed in- clided failure to move a refrig- erator out of one of the bed- rooms, windows not opening and closing properly, unsafe stairs, and an illegal light fixture in the kitchen. THE TENANTS also asked the court to void, the lease and have Wilson White pay restitu- tion on the rent they paid during September and October in ex- cess of the real value of the rental unit. When they came to Legal Aid in October they were advised to begin a rent strike pending the completion of improve- ments, a right guaranteed un- der state law, according to Rose. Rose commented: "Rent with- holding gets results, because it is in the nature of most land- lords to, be fond of money." J. Michael Forsythe, the at- torney for Wilson White, refused to discuss the case last night, and Randy White, president of Wilson White, was unavailable for comment. f EN E CET "The car sterec can put SQU ) specialists" JID on your, BIDER $50 Lear-Jet A-46 . . $49.95 (Continued from Page 1) Ford's economic adviser Alan Greenspan is still of the opin- ion that the nation should see a turnaround in the economic sit- uation by midsummer. Ford met with his Cabinet during the morning, and most of the time was taken up with a report by Budget Director Roy Ash on the budget and eco- nomic messtges which will be sent to Congress next week At the Capitol, Chairman Al Ull- man (D-Ore.) of the House Ways and Means Committee said he would be talking to Ford soon and "we somehow must find a way to avoid a con- frontation" over Ford's plan to increase oil import tariffs. FORD PLANS to increase the tariffs $3 a barrel by April 1, beginning with a $1 increase Feb. 1. Ullman's committee has recommended a 90-day delay. Ullman said Ford agrees with him "that we should find some kind of an accommoda- tion." The Labor Department report- ed that another 851,700 Ameri- cans filed new claims for un- employment insurance bene- fits last week. The total was 118,500 fewer than the record 970,000 new claims filed in the: previous week, but still nearly double the 464,300 new claims filed during the same week of last veer. NEW CLAIMS for unemploy- ment benefits were up by 18 REFORM SHABBAT SERVICE singing-discussion FRIDAY, Jan. 31 7:30 p.m. at HILLEL-1429 Hill I oing drop per cent to an average of 530,- 000 a week last month. Consumers cut back on bor- rowing by $9.6 billion in Decem- ber. New orders for durable goods such as cars and refrig- erators were down, along with stock prices and industrial ma- terials prices. In other developments: * In the Senate, Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield and Republican leader Hugh Scott made speeches decrying reports of confrontation between the White House and Congress over energy and economic policy. Mansfield said no confrontation exists. * Industry sources said the Soviet Union has canceled the purchase of 100,000 tons of wheat purchased from two American firms last October and is negotiating to cancel an- other 100,000 tons. The firms would not confirm or deny the reports. * United Auto Workers Presi- dent Leonard Woodcock, in a Washington speech, called for a mass workers' protest in the national capital if the govern- ment does not act quickly to turn the economy around. *Bethlehem Steel Corp., the nation's second largest steel- maker, reported its profits in-' creased 65 per cent last year, compared to 1973. This still be- low the 92 per cent increase re- ported Tuesday by U. S. Steel Corp. "WE MAKE YOU FEEL GOOD." U-M STYLISTS at the Union 1 I { s E i E Students wheels for U' Bowman 2000 .. $33.00 UNDER-DASH 8-TRACK UNDER-DASH 8 TRACK Pioneer TP 828 . $85.00 Audiovox C-578 $110.00 Lear-Jet A-72 . . $169.95 IN-DASH STEREO CASSETTE With AM-FM Stereo Radio Adjustable Shaft.* Fast Forward, Fast Rewind " Local, Distant Control Trim " Plate In- cluded. Basic Mini Size " Stereo Tape Player . Solid State Circuitry " Automatic Program Change * Volume, Tape, and Balance Control . Anti-Theft Slide " Mounting Included Lear-Jet A-80. is $149.95 IN--DASH PUSH-BUTTON 8-TRACK ir+ . . :. ..w...3 organize ROTC protest (Continued from Page 1) The committee further voted to put pressure on liberal mem- bers of the University faculty to attend Monday's meeting. Most\ faculty meetings are at- tended by only about 100 pro- fessors, most of whom are con- servative. It was also agreed that the group members would attend tonight's Student Government Council meeting, in an effort to sway Council members to vote to rescind an earlier endorse- ment of credit for ROTC courses. "THEMONDAY rally will take place at 3:30 p.m. on the Diag, or, if the weather is bad, in- side the Fishbowl: The faculty meeting will begin at 4:00 p.m., in Angell Aud. A. A point of contention among the CSROTC members was whe- ther the demonstration should demand only that ROTC courses not be granted LSA or if it should call for the complete re- moval of the program from campus. Speaking from the rear of the starkly-lit, carpeted East Quad classroom, former University student Con McCoy argued: "I was at a rally four or five years ago where there were 500 or 1000 people, and they could- n't get ROTC off campus, so we certainly can't get it off cam- pus with about as many people as we have here." "THE FACULTY doesn't have the power to throw it out completely," ob- served Steve Cohen, '75. "We should hit them with a demand that they have the power to do something about. "We could present them with the moral questions," he added, "and we could tell them what our goals are, but we shouldn't' make demands they ,can't act on" __._. I MINICOURSE 310 Women and Language Linguistics and Women's Studies TUESDAYS and THURSDAYS, Jan. 28 and 30 February 4, 6, 11, 13, 18, 20 1439 MH-4-5:30 p.m. TOPICS TO BE CONSIDERED: Women as a dialect group, gender marking and sex-role identification, metaphors of the feminine, politeness in women's longuage, sex-marked gestures, women's communication networks. STEREO PLAYER AM-FM Stereo: AFC Indicator. 9 Eject " Stereo EXPERT INS TALLATION SPECIAL PACKAGE DEALS ON PURCHASE COMING ATTRACTIONS Ars Musica Die Fledermaus Tartuffe Richard 111 Take advantage of the above performances- A welcome part of the Ann Arbor Cultural Scene. AND THEN, ENJOY PERFORMANCES ON RECORDS, ALL AVAILABLE AT THE MUSIC SHOP / OF UNITS & SPEAKERS WITH I I INSTALLATION TO GET U.S. POSTAL SERVICE FACTS WATCH "THE TODAY SHOW" CHANNELS 4-10-13 WIDE SELECTION OF TAPES THE MIDWESTS MOST COMPREHENSIVE RECORD SHOP 417 E. 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