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February 14, 1975 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1975-02-14

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

M 'AAUrA I I

'Friday, t-ebruory t, m

THE M1CHIGI N DAILY

Page Two

Ii IL IY1144 f11~di' t\ vi .er"

BRANDEIS UNIVERSITY
HIATT INSTITUTE-ISRAEL
Year Program or Fall Term only/
Also open to qualified students for
the Spring Term only.
Juniors and Seniors eligible.
Earn 16 credits per semester.
Financial aid available.
Application Deadlines: MARCH 15 for Fall & Year
NOVEMBER 1st for Spring

The Pointed Mountain gas
field in the Northwest Terri-
tories is the sole producing gas
well in the Canadian North.
THE MICHIGAN DAILY I
Volume LXXXV, No. 113
Friday, February 14, 1975
Is edited and managed by students
at the University of Michigan. Newsj
phone 764-0562. Second class postage
paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106,
Published d a i Isy Tuesday through
Sunday morning during the Univer-
sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann
Arbor. Michigan 48104. Subscription

U' stalls GEO talks'
on payraise issue

i

SGC sets registration site

By KATE SPELMAN needed to
Students Government Council Executive
announced last night that as of cated last
twt Alln

win the position of was qualified for the executive
Vice President va- I vice presidency because, unlike
week by Reddix Al- Faye, he has had no connec-
umedthe SGs(C tions with University affairs

ii

FOR INFORMATION
WRITE:

The Jacob Hiatt Institute
Brandeis University
Waltham, Mass. 02154

rates: $10 by carrier (campus area):
$11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio):
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Summer session published Tues-
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Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier
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(Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non-
local mail (other states and foreign).

L V Nom .... . A ( i~~~~en. Alen assun c I .T.£LliU Y18 a v ..
today students may register for f £ th £ -s--G "----
(continued friagPaobbe) the ApriltCityewidenelectons at presidency following the resig- outside of SGC. "I have no ties,
Iotne rrrg1 h Da oPeietRbe the April City wide elections at p i nain oyCarl Sandberg. i and no enemies," he said.
of the Black United Front, a Fleming s house on South Urn- the SGC offices in the Union. f
coalition of almost all black or- versity, then on to the Admn~ Deputy C nati He expressed the conviction
ganizations noclud- istration Building. They willthe SGC offices from 10-12, and FAYE HAD campaigned on that he would be able to mo-
ing BAM II (Black Action then disperse to the picket 2-4 p.m. weekdays to handle the his participation and achieve- bilize studentes to act on cur-
Movement),I lines before the start of the registration. ments in University affairs over rent issues, and to make Council
11:00 p.m. classes. the past three years. He cited a generally more effective body.
The new registration place in the fact that he has introduced
A RALLY open to all stu- Originally planned by the Un- the SGC offices is the only on- "107 motions before Council, a Further Council a c t 1o n in-
dents is planned today at 12:00 dergraduate Student Brigade campus registration site. It's ap- new record, I believe." He also j cluded first readings from a mo-
* on the Diag. The demonstration several days ago, the meeting proval was followed by the pointed to his involvement in {tion by the Michigan Gargoyle
is being held to protest the gained the support of under- passage of another motion to the exposure of questionable ac- requesting financial subsidy to
University's position at the bar- graduate committees and final- send out letters to each Uni- tions by former President LeeI distribute their magazine free
gaining table and its allegedly ly the GEO late yesterday. versity student encouraging reg- Gill. of charge, and one from the
unfair treatment of graduate From 400 to 500 students, istration for the April election. He claimed that his leader- Indochina Peace Campaign re-
employes. mostly undergraduates, gath- In other action, neither David ship in the Gill affair saved questing $500 "to help force the
Gordon expects "well over ered in the South Cafeteria of Faye nor Calvin Lucker could Council thousands of dollars. United States to honor the 1973
1,000" students to attend the East Quad last night for a muster the two thirds majority Lucker had asserted that he Paris Peace Agreement.
protest, where various leaders s t r i k e information meeting.-_
from the union and undergradu- Geo and undergraduate leaders
ate support groups will speak. attanswerdthqueadinstrationintu d en t s "mer"®i-Po
The groupreplansstoomove#from
The group plans to miovefrom The group elected four under-
graduates, including two mem- (Continued from Page 1) However, leaving Ann Arbor "My parents can't do it.
bers of the Residential College reer - related summer work. to job hunt probably improves They've got four other depen-
to act as a liaison committee Sometimes non - academic a person's chances of success. dents besides me," he explais.
R f to the GEO leadership for coor- skills will get you farther how- "I HOPE I can get my job "But I think I can get a job-
dination of strike activities. ever. A very limited demand back," worries one sophomore. some Kid of a JOD.
ces - - - - - - - exists for railroad workers "I was a machinist and it was And the woman behind the
1 and talented clowns. I d ob. I finished two nov- 1
elswee atwr, esas eka
caerpann n

~ ~ ~ ~ ~- m~m~-~- - - m - - - -

I

-COUPON- VALENTINE SPECIAL -COUPON-
2 for 1
GOOD ONLY 2/14

I Buy 1 SWEETHEART PARFAIT-
1 natural ice cream
yogurt, bananas
GOURMET NATURAL FOOD RESTAURANT
1 r ie o E s ® ®a

Get ONE FREE
, strawberries,
and coconut
Longevity Cookery
314 E. Liberty
Ann Arbor, Mich.
(313) 662-2019

WI
IA
k
Ie

x

I
I

7.30 p.m.
Fri., Feb. 14
at HILLEL
1429 H I LL ST.

Queen Victoria's reign, from tu aciu ,-A
1837 to 1901, was longer than One person, with a few thous-
and dollars to spare, took pilot
that of any other English ruler. lessons and is planning to teach
In addition to being Queen of flying this summer - for ten
England, she was Queen of Ire- bucks an hour.

I

A A
I,

WHILE CAREER planning
and placement deals only with
jobs outside Ann Arbor, private
local agencies specialize in
placing office workers.
University Temporary Em-
ployment hires summer-office,
janitorial and grounds workers,
in addition to posting openings
for jobs outside the school.

els a week twrk he says desk at
How did he get it? placeme
"Connections," he answers. students
While having marketable
skills helps, finding work this
summer will probably depend!
more than ever on "who" you
know.
Jeff, like many others, doesn't
know too many of the right
people. But the feeling of,
'something - will - turn - up -
if - I - look - hard - enough,"
is prevalent.
"If nothing else I think I
could get a job at the court-
house," comments one small
town woman.
"IT'S JUST going around in a
circle." says Jeff, who couldn't
get financial aid because his
family's income is $480 overr
the limit.
"So I tried to make it
through the year as an indepen-
dent, but couldn't make it," he
says.

of
you
see
news
happen
call

t career planning and
ent sighs, "If only more
knew how to type."

Fr

i

I

76-DAILY

I

Katy Mellen. Graduated in '71 with a
B.S. in Textiles and clothing. Doing
well - and moving forward - in Car-
gill's commodity Marketing Division.
GROWTH
Graduating Seniors and M.B.A.'s:
Accounting * Agriculture -Business*
Engineering " Liberal Arts
Cargill-at the leading edge. Active in agricul-
tural, industrial, and consumer commodities
and products, and in a variety of other related
businesses. You could be there! We need top
people for a wide range of positions, careers
that lead to management. Our policy is to
stimulate leadership potential. To encourage
personal creativity. To recognize and reward
individual achievement. And to promote from
within
A Caroill representative will be interviewinq on
campus February 26. Check with the placement
office now for the dates and location. Look
into leadership!
An Equal Opportunity Employer MIF

classroom instruction in
electronic music
the music
studiol
Partial list of subjects covered during
our 12-week course:
" Sound properties and acoustical phenomena
" Electronic generation and modification of sound
s Theory and use of voltage-controlled equipment
" Tape recorder characteristics and operation
" Studio recording, splicing and mixing techniques
555 e. william 994-5404
LAST SERIES OF CLASSES THIS
TERM BEGINS THURS., FEB. 20

Jint the
third biggest
family in the
world.

0

Imagine an order of
22,000 priests and brothers in
73 countries around the world.
(That's a pretty big family.)
But that's what the
Salesians of St. John Bosco
are all about - a large family
of community-minded men
dedicated to the service of rx
youth. (And no one gets lost.)
In Italy in the 1800's a chance meeting between a poor
priest and a street urchin served to create a movement of such
success that it is still growing today. Don Bosco became the
priest who brought youth back from, the streets - and
back to God.
He reasoned that a program of play, learn and pray would
make useful citizens of the world. He crowded out evil with
reason, religion and kindness in a (what was then unheard of)
atmosphere of family.
The ideals of St. John Bosco are still with us today. His
work goes on in boys clubs, technical and academic schools,
guidance centers, summer camps and missions. And his very
human approach is very evident in the family spirit of the
Salesians. This is the way he wanted it. This is the way itlis.
The Salesian experience isn't learned - it's lived.
For more information about Salesian Priests and
Father Joseph Maffei, S.D.B. Room A-219
OF ST. JOHN BOSCO
Box 639, New Rochelle, N.Y. 10802
I am interested in the Priesthood Q Brotherhood Q2

SHARE THE RIDE
WITH US TH1S
KNAND GET ON,
TO A GOOD T
Us means Greyhound, and a lot of your fellow students
who are already on to a good thing. You leave when you
like. Travel comfortably. Arrive refreshed and on time.
You'll save money, too, over the increased air
fares. Share the ride with us on weekends. Holidays.
Anytime. Go Greyhound.
IGREYHOUND SERVICE
WEEKEND SPECIAL TO CHICAGO

FRI. ONLY

SUN. ONLY

1

Lv.
Lv.
Ar
Ar.

Mich. Union
Ann Arbor
95th St.
Chicanoo

5:00 p.m. Lv. Chicaao
5:05 p.m. Lv. 95th St.
9:00 p.m. Ar. Ann Arbor
9:15 p.m. Ar. Mich. Union

4:00 p.m.
4 :25 p.m.
11:45 p.m.
1 1:50 p.m.

FAREFei-One way $12.95

R.T.---$25.90

For reservations call
GREY HOUND BUS LINES

I a ------u elHU

I

- -ft- S 9--- 1

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