Page 'Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, February, 19, 1975 Pc~ge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, February 19, 1915 DR. PAUL USLAN Optometrist Full Contact Lens Service Visual Examinations 548 Church 663-2476 'U plans to destroy files Students applaud Pilot's survival Ford to veto legislative move postponing hike of oil tariff PAUL GERNI POCKET BILLIARDS Exhibition-FREE Thurs., 4 & 8 p.m. Union Ballroom (Continued from Page1) intent-- namely admissions-t subject. Morris contended that the files should be made available for that because of this clause; in fact, he had sent a letter last month to Zimmerman ex- plaining that he intended to make the files completely open "unless we receive a contrary directive from the University." That directive came from Rhodes last week in the letter that asked Morris to keep the files secret. ACCORDING toMor- ris, "Where the LSA adminis- trative"board and the Univer- sity administration disagree clearly is in regards to their definition of that clause." "The University position was that making the files available would be a violation of the high school counselors' rights," Mor- ris stated. Morris said that the LSA board was then faced with a1 dilemma when Rhodes instruct- ed that the letters remain sec- ret - and the board was left with no choice but destruction of the files. Morris said that a consensus decision of the board was reached earlier this week. MORRIS ALSO explained that removal of the records would take some six months, and could UP TO 60% OFF WITH TRADE-IN OF YOUR OLD HIGH SCHOOL RING -PLUS--- (Continued from Page 1) cuts last month, students em- deal of uncertainty. The first barked on a massive letter WASHINGTON ( P) - Presi- real word really came today." writing and petition campaign. dent Ford was quoted as tell-; Frye insisted Monday that a Three hundred letters were ing Republican congressional vigorous student letter writing sent to Frye along with a pe- leaders yesterday he will vetol campaign "had no influence" tition signed by 470 of Pilot's expected legislation to delay his+ in the decision, citing LSA's 550 students. Vice-president for oil tariff hikes. Senate Repub-3 budget relief as the key fac- Academic Affairs Frank Rhodes licans said they have an even! tor. received 200 letters, and conies chance of sustaining the veto. R E S I D E N T Director were sent to State Senator Gil "We told the President that' Bill Milczarski was skeptical, Bursley (R-Ann Arbor) and we're rather close to the num- "I'm not sure I can believe Regent Sarah Power (D-Ann ber of votes that is needed: that. We had students in per- Arbor). without canvassing the Demo-!' sonal contact with Senator Although student advisor Judy cratic side at all," Senate Re- Bursley and Regent Power. I Gelman said yesterday that publican leader Hugh Scott of would hope it had some im- Frye's statement to Pilot staff- Pennsylvania told reporters pact." ers last week "was really not "We're rather hopeful." Linda Lieberman agreed, "I widespread," other Pilot staff-' can't believe the letters had no ers downplayed the amount of SENATE Democratic leaderI influence. That's a bunch of publicity the statement merited. Mike Mansfield of Montana baloney." Ton Flynn, a resident Pilot said the override vote would be WHEN PILOT was named as fellow, asserted, "There was close. But like Scott, he de- a possible victim of budget no reason to put signs all over clined to discuss specific vote the dorm saying Pilot would counts. not be cut. That would have Press Secretary Ron Nessen been ridiculous." declined to predict a veto, but Munson explained the lack of he quoted the President as tell- publicity, "What I think start- ing the Republican leaders at, ed happening was that the a breakfast meeting: "The first! sources of the rumors saying thing we have to do is sustain that Pilot wouldn't get cut the veto." were becoming more and more The legislation, passed by the reliable all the time. And when House, would suspend Ford's MNFrye said it, it wasn't out of -a-barrel oil import tariff MIC 'UNION tebu. the bue."for 90 days. The Senate is ex- F pected to approve the suspen- -L -," - (\ sion by a large margin. A Sen- Ford for more than an hour and than the $16 billion proposed a half and, contrary to their us- = by the President. ual practice, did not hold a T R E A S U R Y Secretary White House briefing for report- William Simon was quoted as ers afterward. Instead Nessen telling the Republican leaders gave a report on the breakfast. thut petroleum allocation, men- The press secretary said tioned by some Democrats as Ford told the leaders the first an alternative to Ford's energy order of business will be to sus- program, would cost 400,000 tain a veto of the tariff delay, jobs. then get Congress to act on an Nessen was unable to say energy program. exactly how Simon arrived at this figure but reported that IF THAT is done, Nessen none of the Republican leaders quoted Ford as saying, "we challenged it. might be able to make accom- The President dined Monday odations on details." night with 12 senators from the Nessen also said Ford ex- ;Republican Steering Commit- pressed the view that "Con- I tee, a conservative group, and gress is dragging its feet on tax asked their support for his oil cuts" to fight the burgeoning imports tariff plan., recession. Sen. James A. McClure, R- He said Ford agrees with Idaho, one of the 12, later said AFL-CIO President George he told Ford the Senate would Meany that there is a critical ' sustain the President's expect- need to deal with unemploy- ed veto of the legislation sus- ment through tax cuts and oth- pending the tariff. "It will be er measures. But Nessen de- close, with one or two votes clined to say Ford agreed with making the difference," Mc- Meany's call for a larger cut I Clure said. be considerably expensive. I J S ff(', 1 f 1 BECAUSE YOU'VE ACHIEVED, Denms ... _.....a... ... t". +, 1w : ' .. " : ". GAY ACADE 0 The University accused of I f ;. r or micnigan - ~. The experiences that have "carved" your real achievements are the personal ones. Wear a class ring and remember. Order on Ring Day and save 5%. -on all sales regardless of trade-in In the MICHIGAN UNION LOBBY FEB. 20,21, &24-11 a.m.-4 p.m. PRESENTS MIDWEST SPRING CONFERENCE A CALL TO ACTION MARCH 7-8-9, 1975 Rackhom School of Graduate Studies University of Michiaon Ann Arbor, Michiqan KEYNOTE SPEAKERS 0 ELAINE NOBLE-Massachusetts State Representative " ALLEN SPEAR-Minnesota State Senator 0 Workshops-Social Activities GAY ACADEMIC UNION 325 Michian Union Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 (313) 763-4186 Have a flair for If you are inrt- ed in reviewing ry,and usic or writing feature drama, ancji arts: Contact Arts E t o r, c he { Mchgan y ate vote is scheduled for 5 p.m. EST today. AT A WHITE House brief- ing, Nessen told reporters Ford' will act by executive order to decontrol the price of so-called "old oil" effective April 1. "Old oil" is each month's designa- tion of petroleum brought into; production by the correspond- ing month of 1972. The GOP leaders met with 1' THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN STUDENT LABORATORY THEATRE PRESENTS A Free Afternoon of Theatre Contribution by TED SHINE (Continued from Page1) word crossover or explicitly ask me to vote for Ankli," said the Democrat, who refused to be identified. "But he definitely implied that that was the pur- pose of his call. He said some- thing like, 'Wouldn't it be in- teresting if a large number of people voted for him .' Hebert stated last night that. he had called people on election night asking them to vote in the primary, but that he hadn't: asked anyone totvotefor Ankli. "T h a t person misconstrued what I said," Hebert asserted.1 "I deny it emphatically. "I SAW," he said, "that there was a light turnout in the ward, and that could have hurt Caral's chances. So I called people up asking them to vote. "As for asking them to vote. for Ankli," he added, "that's. totally false. There was no con- spiracy to get out the vote for Ankli."i Jones asserted, "If anyone working with me called peopleI asking them to vote for Ankli, it's a surprise to me. "FRANK ONLY got 44 votes,"' she added. "He didn't work to get people out to the polls. That's why he lost. He didn't even get his roommate Kathy Kozachenko (an HRP counzil- woman) to vote." hurting Shoichet would be willing to run a write- in campaign. Ankli has decided to wait un- til tomorrow's HRP meeting to decide whether he wants to con- tinue as a council candidaze. Postal walkout predieted E (Continued from Pagel1) and, in some cases, transferred letter carriers away from neigh- borhoods they had 'been working in for years. As a result, scores jof disgruntled local residents have signed petitions requesting that their letter carriers not be switched from their old routes. IAlthough the purpose of the route overhaul was increased efficiency, 'union members con- tend it will only slow down service. Ann Arbor Postmaster Ri'chard Schneeberger refused to comment on the situation. CURRENTLY, tjhe case is in court and arbitration is expoect- ed to take 60 days. Ypsilanti ARENA THEATRE FRIEZE BUILDING 4:10 p.m. FEB. 19 & 20, 1975 0 MICHIGAN'S MOST COMPLETE HI-Fl & ELECTRONICS (ENTERS SALE PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22! i I i j4 t Z I I, a i i l A Black Theatre Workshop Production LAFAYETTE QUAD STEREO MUSIC SYSTEM REG. $1004.55 9699 At, an HRP mass meeting' Attorney R'on Egnor, who is rep- tomorrow night it will be deter- resenting the NALC, asserted mined whether the party will that the route changes had back Ankli, or if it will oursue caused widesperad resentment some alternate course, such as and only served to fuel local supporting Shoichet as a write- strike sentiment. in candidate. "The letter carriers are fur- Shoichet has indicated that he ious," he said. ' Never before has there been a more efficient 4-channel FM receiver! Handles SQ 4 channel, CD-4 with module. 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