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February 07, 1975 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1975-02-07

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Page Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Friday, February 7, 1975

Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February 7, 1975

-MEDIATRICS Day
PRESENTS
JACKLEMMON R1 1

BIG BUSINESS

care
sure

Insurance gyps up

SAVE THE TIGER Pg
(Continued from Page 1)
FRIDAY SAT U R DAY Public Health Library - bothI
traditional voter registration
Feb. 7 Feb. 8 sites - to be used for that pur-
pose.
7:30 9:30 GOP mayor, James Stephen-
. son, claimed the Fish Bowl was
N u Sci e Auu "too chaotic" for registration
cienceAoium purposes.
STILL ONLY $1 Moloney, who drafted the
door-to-door proposal, explain-
__ed his motivation for backing
door-to-door, "I was upset by
the fact that the city withdrew
TDthe Fish Bowl and Public
Health library as registration
T e R s sites."
City Council is expected this
Fin BlsMonday to approve an applica-
Finest in Blegrass tion for a $2.5 million federal
grant which would allocate
at the $123,750 to child care.
This would not raise city fund-E
'B eing of day care however, since
during fiscal year '73-'74 over
E F 1M$200,000 was budgeted for day!
care.
ever Thurs., Fri. & Sat.
COMING: REFORM SERVICE
WED., FEB. 12: Charlie Moore & The Fi e
Dixie Partners . -
SMON., E B. 17: Jimmy Gaudreau & the 7:30 P.M.
Country Store:
THU. RS., FEB. 27: alphStanley at H I LLEL
& the Clinch Mountain Boys 1429 HILL ST.
CALL 761-1470 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION 663-3336
Authen tic
-o S

I (Continued from Page 1)
enormous enough, the more co-
ordinated efforts of organized
crime have made insurance
fraud more painful still to the
insurance industry, which has,
begun to fight back with such
Sale dram

organizations as ICPI.
Based in Westport, Con
70 agents around the U
States - most of them fo
police - have investi
nearly 5,000 claims, result
nearly 500 arrests.
s crowds

(Continued from Page 1) Kiwanis luncheon area."
THE organization hopes to top ALL OF the food serv
last year's $30,000 haul, all of the makeshift cafeteria
which went into community pro- prepared and donated by
jects including the county 4-H ly twenty restaurants i
council and scholastic and camp, around the town.
scholarships.
Kiwanis men volunteered aFor the less aggressive
their talents as salesmen for i acters, the frantic mobs
the event. Some of the wives of vided an onlooker's d
members have been working Many viewed sale-hoppir
for the past three weeks sort- a hobby, much to the disn
ing through mountains of artic- squirming five year olds
les donated year-round by citi- Hymie whose mother blt
zens of the community. Women "It's my favorite pastim
cannot be Kiwanis members. I drag him around with m
Through all the confusion of j hates it."
the stampeding masses, the at- Other browsers take
mosphere remained bright and business seriously. Outfitt
congenial. Salesmen advertis- fur, one University stude
ed their wares with such slo- vealed, "I can come her
gan as, "We got mattresses you buy real antiques becaus
can't go wrong on here." don't even know how
The loudspeaker blurted an- they're really worth."
nouncements, the likes of JUNK accumulators sa
"Treat your tum-tum to some sale as an opportunity tot
goodies today! Eat huch at the their unwanted posse:
"They do a fabulous jobI
exclaimed one man. "I;
have called 'em up to hau
I avsome of my own stuff.

rThe institute may also expand
n., its its area of investigation from
United casualty claims to cover prop-
ormer erty frauds such as arson and
igated phony burglary rings.
ing in AHERN is also a well-known
figure in law enforcement cir-
cles. As police chief of New
Haven, Conn., he won praise for
the calm way he handled May-
day demonstrations in 1970
against the war in Indochina,
averting what might have been
ed at a bloody confrontation.
was He shares the feelings of
near- most investigators who say that
n and companies should take more
small-claims cases against
them to court for the deterrent
char- 'effect.
lipro "They (the companies) should
ag be willing to invest $5 thousand
ng as now to save $50,000 down the
nay of road."
s like
ushed, BUT THE companies have
e and not quite come to that conclu-
ne. He sion yet, zeroing in on the more
flagrant cases 'by using ICPI
their and other investigative arms,
ted in but letting the smaller fish go
nt re- by.
e and -
e they
much U' rea
rew th
aw the

SGC votes support
for GEO position
By KATE SPELMAN
Student Government Council voted overwhelmingly last night
to endorse the nearly certain Graduate Employes Organization
(GEO) strike expected next week, and to condemn the University
administration for actions Council sees as having forced the
walkout.
In other action Council allocated $2,700 for its upcoming April
election, voted to discontinue rebates for campaign expenses and
accepted a motion calling for an investigation of last October's
election.
THE MOTION endorsing GEO actions was brought to Council
by the union's members It was met with sympathy, as well as
concern by some Council members.
"It is a question of maximum pressure," said Mark Ferrenz.
"Should the dormitories be closed because of stopped deliveries,
we suggest you file with the University for refunds for the days
missed. We are asking people to examine their consciences and
give us the support they can."
In election budgeting action, Council voted to accept a pro-
posal by Steve Kelley, SGC elections director, which set the vot-
ing dates for April 21-25. Kelley's plan provides for more polling
areas than in the past, particularly benefiting people who live
in North Campus. It also includes a publicity drive designed
to better inform constituents about the candidates.
Council accepted a motion directing SGC to form a commit-
tee td investigate possible violations of the SGC election code in
last October's election.
sfor GEO, strike

unload
ssions.
here,"
should
i away
They

Cold Buffet
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Served after 5 p.m.
t/t liter of wine
and
ALL COCKTAILS
AT LOW PRICES
featuring
JOIN YOUR
FRIENDS rat-
$1.00 Cover
Sunday only
769-4060

Feb. 9th
b-1 p.m.
STARRING
LOUIS SMITH
PLUS 5

FROM 239
MARCH 2-9
Golden Bird Flights
TRIP INCLUDES
0 7 Niahts at the SHERATON
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0 Round trip iet from
Windsor to Nassau
" All tips and hotel taxes
included
" Free transfers and baaaane
handlinq between hotel and
airport in Nassau
" Complimentary areen fees
and tennis
* Complimentary in-f light
meal and bar plus many
other extras
TRAVEL
WORLD
994=0244

make good use of it here." '
Smiles gleamed the faces of'
shoppers who had found what
they came for. Others, like Uni-
versity Junior Steve Thiry who,
cretoo late to grab his need-i
ed housewares, went away with
alternate items which had lured
their attention.
Certainly no shopper will go
away with more than the Ar-,
kansas man who only one hour
after the warehouse doors open-l
ed had already purchased six j
t.v. sets. The man's wifeI
claims that he'll be there buy-
ing televisions until Saturday.
"I imagine we'll go off with a
dozen or so," she remarked.

(Continued from Page 1)
depend on how long this thing
goes."
Some department heads, while
planning to teach their own
classes, will not make a con-
certed effort to cover all sec-
tions.
"We still hope there won't be
a strike," declared History
Department Chairman David
Bien. "But we don't intend to
try to get TFs (Teaching fel-
lows) who are working to cover
classes," he added.
PSYCHOLOGYChair-
man Keith Smith echoed Bien's
position, saying, "I have no
plans to force people to teach if
they don't want to. The effect
of us will be mostly in the pri-
mary courses, and I think it's
clear that most of them will
shut down."

Rhodes' letter declared that
all members of the faculty will
be expected to cross union pic-
ket lines, and that any member
of the faculty or staff who does:
not report for work during the
strike or report his or her ab-
sence will not be paid. However,
many professors have told the
GSAs in their departments that
their names will not be report-
ed in the event of a strike.
The GEO collected over two
hundred ballots after their mass
meeting last night, and voting
was estimatedat over twenty
ballots per hour at the polling
places in the Fish Bowl, the
Frieze Building, and the School
of Education.

TWO UNION representatives,
Jeanne Zang and Marty Hal-
pern, presented the GEO posi-
tion to the students and asked
their support for the strike.
Halpern encouraged the un-
dergraduates to join the picket
lines Tuesday, if the workers
approve the strike. "The mini-
mum thing is not to cross the
picket lines," he told the stu-
dents. "That means not hold-
ing classes either on or off the
campus."
The Residential College stu-
dents will also hold a referen-
dum on whether to close down
that school's operations entirely
and supply office space to the
GEO as a strike headquarters.

PHASE 11

u JI

-- I

4K*

,i

During a meeting at the Resi-. Voting on the referendum
dential College last night, sev- will begin tomorrow and will
eral hundred undergraduate continue through Monday night.
students expressed overwhelm- If the measure passes, classes
ing support for the GEO and in the Residential College will
its walkout. cease Tuesday morning.
Youth healti center
license in question

Al'

2200
Fuller Rd.
under the Red
Canopy in the
Huron Towers
across from
VA Hospital

RESTAURANT

-.
it '' .

-__.

2200 .lw Rod, Aim Arbor

I

F

I

t

I

- i

I i I

i
r/

Iw

OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK

,i

I

E

G

(Continued from Page 1)
bly has not been convicted and
we try to judge strictly by the
facts at hand, but these allega-
tions are of such a serious na-
ture that it appears we will not
renew the license," said one!
source.
The treatment center, which
has no connection with the Uni-
versity, was granted a six-
month provisional license l'st
t September r a t h e r than the,
standard two-year accreditation:
because of "four areas of non-!
compliance."
Investigators from the State!
Department of Social Ser'rices,
who spent four weeks insoecring
the local facility, found defi-
ciences in both the physical
plant and the psychiatric treat-
ment program.
IN ADDITION, state officials
were concerned with the cen-
ter's alleged "financial ista-
bility" which resulted mainly
from an abrupt cut-off it) fed-t
eral funding.
Because the adolescents t.eat-
ed at the center are mainly de-,
pendants of military personnel,
the center had received a sub-
stantial share of its budgetj
through a Defense Department1
World Airways
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health insurance program.
However, last August, all fed-
eral funding to the center was
soisnended pending accredita-
tion by the Joint Committee on
the Accreditation of Hospitals
(JCAH).
ALTHOUGH Karubly claimed
during a July news conference
that a JCAH insnection was
forthzoming, an official from
the hospital committee denied
any knowledge of the University
Cester.
"We hove no record of the
facility, and according to the
master file thev ave rever
sent t's a letter," a JCAH
snokesnerson said.
According to a source in the
state's social services depart-
-ent. "this fact alone is suf-
Ficient grounds to deny licens-
"WF ARE aware that he
(Kamblx) never cont'i:'ad the
JCAH and are concerned about
the cut-off in federal funding,"
the so"rce added.
State officials are no v investi-
gating the c e n t e r' s current
source of income which report-
edly is Kambly's personal bank
account.

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HERBIE
HANCOCK
Sat., Feb. 22
Hill Aud, 8 p.m.

II

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