PageTen HE ICHIAN DILYFriday, February 21, 1975 2 p.SA VID'S BOOKS 521 GO EASYAS CHCERS Demonstration ,8 p.m. FR IDAY Racxham Amphitheatre U. ofM. By 2 Top Rankinq Japanese Professionals Who Will Then Pla An mer of Challen- T U RDAY at 9 E. Liberty 663-8441 TALKS TO CONTINUE DA U Ad. (Continued from P sulin to a patient ~ prior consent of ad Daily has learned ing school officials Lyons did not adm medication herself, pared it and that, in stitutes grounds for "IF A student is a medication, then that the student is ge to administer it" an students cannot giv tions without permi their instructor - t ten proceedural or official said. Shortly after the left the building to . Trotter House to ganize our efforts representatives of t presented an additio 11 demands to the Board of Regents. T] that there be a cent Asian -Ameri Bldg. 'age 1) per cent Nativ without the per cent Mexic loctor. The 16 per cent from nurs- student popula that, while versity; mnister the --that the G she pre- Assistants (G its elf, con- have the same dismissal. -t h a t t preparing tion have the it implies ages; tting ready -that the f~ d "nursing have the same te medica- -that there ssion from financial aid his is writ- minorities; ders," the -that there ing increase inr protesters -that there mleet at the services (healt "better or- cruitment, 0 "several gram and advc he Council ities; nal set of -that the be University cruiters; hey are: -that there four per study units f can, three 1groups; sit-in ends e-AmerIcan, eight -that there be cuttural and an-American and resource centers established.; Black-American and ' tion at the Uni- -that. there be more minori- ties on the University's Policy ~raduate Student Committee. SA's) population Fleming admits that many of percentages; the demands will "come down h e administra- to a question of money," but same percent- has promised to negotiate in "good faith.", aculty population KENNETH Jones, chairman percentages; of the Black United Front be a guaranteed (BUF), said, however, that he package to all was not satisfied with how the demonstrators have been treat- be a cost-of -liv- ed by University administra- financial aid; tors. . *be supportive "Although we are not satis- h, counseling, re- fied, President Fleming is will- pportunity Pro- ing to begin bargaining Mon- cates) for minor- day in good faith on the issues .raised concerning the racist an office for re- activities of this institution to- wards people of color," he said be individual in yesterday's reluctant state- 'or the various ment to the press. He also said that the group left voluntarily. (Continued from Page 1) finding be cancelled or at least postponed for a week in hopes that a settlement cani be reach- ed through negotiaions. Nor is the University bargain- ing team anxious to move into fact-finding. They agree the pro- cess will only slow negotiations at this crucial point when a set- WITH TRADE-IN OF YOUR OLD H IGH SCHOOL RING -P LUS- ACH IEVED p n. U', GEO trade charges of bad faith at Regent meeting tlement may be only a few days away. At one point, Regent Deane Baker interrupted Hoyman and pressed her for a fuller explan- ation of the agreed-'ipon clause for non-discrimination on the basis of sexual prefe 'enze. "WHAT EXACTLY does 'his eongressm~en-Colb __ I Is the Law Different for Womn?. Come and Find Out at Woshtenaw Community College (Continued fromn Page 1) He said the' CIA conducted telephone wiretaps against 27 people between 1947 and 1965, not 21 as he told the Senate committee; that four of the persons whose phones were tapped were non-CIA employes, not two as he had said earlier; ~that the agency had files on four congressmen, not one as he had told the Senate committee; and that the agency had conducted four break-i s the United eAsked if any of the congress- men was active in the antiwar movement, Colbyhsaid, "Ie.be- "SEVERAL congressmen did go to meetings abroad and in reports of those meetings the mebes nam would a- evr under CIA surveillance.as Colby presented the House subcommittee with a transcript o hitstatement to theaSenate of corrections. He said none of the informa- the CIA' files had bee gather- ed by the agency itself "except for one travel cable and two cables quoting press accounts of conferences." COLBY did not name the four congressmen on whom the agency has had files. "With the exception of one file still extant on a deceased congressman, these files are inactive," he said. "Two of them were destroyed in 1974." During questioning from sub- committee members, Colby said the agency continues to conduct paramilitary operations like those in Laos but said they are a very small percentage of its operations. THERE ARE s it u at i ons where a little help to our friends can stave off very serious dif- fiutes in future years," he Colby said he is concerned that the disclosures ofethe past intelligence operations in dan'- ger and said he hopes safe- guards can be instituted to pre- vent upcoming congressional in- vstigationsorsrom making the 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. 2,21, &24-l 1 a.m-4 p m ENROL L TODA Y IN WOMEN AND THE LAW An offering of the Women's Studies Program This 7-week course meets Thursdays, 7-10 p.m., starting February 27. Will cover inequities and implications of state and federal laws relating to wo- men; court interpretations; E.R.A.; maternity leave; credit, abortion; name change, and more. FEE: $12.50 (in-distrct tuition) + $1 application/records fe for al NEW students. ENROLL NOW-or first night of class For further information, call 971-6300, Ext. 221 or 209 mean?" Baker asked repaated- ly as Hoyman explained the background of the clause. 'What does this mean for the people of Michigan who are sendirng their children to this school?"' "It means that once they (any graduate employe) are hired by the University of Mizhigan and express a sexual preference they could not tbe fired," Hoy- man responded. Baker's queries subsided for the moment, but minutes later when Hubert Emrich of the United Auto Workers (UAW) mn~t of"the GEO Baker fired .Is it the UAW's position that tseualitysat the Unive 'si o Michigan?" "I DON'T think that deserves an answer," said Emrich, who received a round of applause from~ the spectators. gled through several more hours of largely unproductive negotia- tions yesterday in lie Union. ready to givehfnal apo: wa to was areed tin theory .aevral days ago. "Sometimes you Ii a v e an agreement in princiole but when you get down to languaige some problems arise," said Dave Gordon. The union plans a rally in front of the Administration Building before the Regents meet teod a y.Repres;enzaves group which support the GEG the Michigan Education Asso- ciation, the Michigan Federa- tion of Teachers, and te Wash- tena Couty Cmmision Shoichet (Continued from Page 1) HE NOTED, "I think the election I won was rigged and I don't feel that I'm the legiti- mate winner." tions that Seod Ward Demo- cratic party leader Greg Hebert was involved in a drive to help incumbent Democratic council candidate Carol Jones by get- ting out the primary vote against Shoichet, her most ser- ious opposition. Ankli changed his mind about bowing out, however, after some discussion. He said, "I would like to withdraw my with- drawal," and offered to run a~s a serious candidate if the party would vote to back him. He withdre once more, the deeated byneShoichet the only in the race. BIJii~ __ III - - - --- m m - - m m - - - - a -- - -- ------mmm ea m - -- - ---- - . mmm I I * I * I I I each 1 fis 15. 1Vn $130 educion on the hif system shw n here. [Or a comparable systemi.. I Come in early this week and you can get a system * ~that includes a Concord CR 200 am/fm stereo receiver I I with plenty of cican power, noise-free reception, and ampic control facilities. The Ohm E loudspeakers tea- tured are high-efficiency two-way systems with sophis- i ticated crossover networks for low phase distortion and *...............................................exceptional overall musical accuracy. And the Glenburn I 2110 A automatic, turntable has a cueing lever, anti- I 3 ~skate adjustment and a precision low-mass tonearm. It I 1 ... comes fully assembled with a handsome molded base, I ill ..dustcover, and a Shure magnetic cartridge. 11~I Even through this special offer, Tech Hifi's fourteen I I - portant customer satisfaction guarantees are included in I the sale price. I SList: $43O I I ______ Offer expires Feb.29th I ~~---~ 77CONCO RO 3 GLEB~raNI GA Y ACA DEMIC UNION OF The University of Michigan PRESENTS MIDWEST SPRING CONFERENCE Rackham School of Graduate Studies University of Michician Ann Arbor, Michician KEYNOTE SPEAKERS * ELA INE NOBLE-Massachusetts . ALLEN SPEAR-Mneota State Senator * Workshops-Social Activities GAY ACADEMIC UNION MAKE SUMMER '75 ONE TO REMEMBER STU DY/TRAVEL ABROAD Applications now being accepted for CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY Grads-Undergrads can Complete Language Requirements! Earn up to 8 hours credit! 1975 SUMMER PROGRAM OFFERINGS-APPLY NOW! SPAiN e FRANCE . ITALY GERMAN Language.e Salamanca Spanish Language, Civilization Dijon Nice + Art Frec Lnguag& Culture, Art History, Literature, Theater French Cuisine Perugia + Art Florene! Vienna Drawing, Painting, Sculpture, Ceramics, Art History Italian Language & Civilization German Language & Civilization NEW 1975 SUMMER PROGRAMS * Israel Archeological Teaching & Dig-Tel Aphek & Crete * African Civilization, Anthro, Ecology-Nairobi * Scandinavian Studies, Danish Art and Architecture-Copenhagen * International Studies, Political Science, Economics-Geneva * Russian Language & Culture-Leningrad, Moscow Al programs include special excursions, and U of M and other U.S. profs