Page Two i rit MICH16AN DAILY )oturdoy, October , 1973 PageTwo -IL ICHI~AN AIL Saturday, October 6. 1973 ORCHESTRA AUDITIONS for the U-M Gilbert & Sullivan Society's production of THE GRAND DUKE STRINGS, WOODWINDS, BRASS, PERCUSSION COMMUNITY WELCOME THURS. & FRI.-Oct. 11 & 12 7-11 p.m.--Hobby Shop, Mich. Union BRING SOMETHING TO PLAY QUESTIONS? CallEric, 761-8361 "A JOY! STUNNING! BEAUTIFUL!" -N Y TIMES -SATURDAY REVIEW -PLAYBOY PARAMOUNT PICTURES prenta A SHE FIL'M TFZRANCOEFFIREWL RoMEO - JULIET TECHNICOLOR BACK TO THRILL YOU AGAIN! Open Dailyat 12:45 Shows at 1 p.m.-3:30-6:10-8:45 COMING-James Coburn is "HARRY IN YOUR POCKET" Reporters subpoenaed (Continued from Page 1) page brief, said: "The department believes that this deference to the House of Representatives at the post - in- dictment stage, though not con- stitutionally required, is an ap- propriate accommodation of the respective interests involved." BUT IT REJECTED Agnew's contention that he stands equal with the President under the Con- stitution with the same rights, pro- tection and immunity. The government said no immun- ity exists for the Vice President "where none is mentioned." WOMEN'S BOWLING LEAGUE NOW FORMING SIGN UP ATTHE MICHIGAN UNION BOWLING LANES OR CALL 662-4431 and ask for bowling lanes ' party, says Screw SGC' Presto! London's Carnaby Street got a new look this week when motor traffic was banned so that the street could be turned into a pedestrian mall. .a-a LEGAL ABORTIONS $135 National Abortion Center 19009 W. 7 Mile Rd. Detroit 255-3985 clinics in Midwestern cities Licensed Qualified Physicians Women gather to show artwork, exchange ideas (Continued from Page 1) "We do try to reach out and GAWK presented a short skit help women, but it is impossible satirizing public attitudes towards for us to do that when they are lesbians in which a college student not aware of the services avail- aspiring to be a nuclearphysicist ablerto them," commented a who has no boyfriend and enjoys, staffer. the company of other women visits "THE TURNOUT has been fan- her analyst (Freud), who tells here tastic-just the kind of publicity she is rejecting her femininity be- these groups need to get women in cause she does not yearn to be a the community interested in them," wife and mother. said another exhibitor. All of the women staffing the A placard posted on one of thel exhibits seemed particularly pleas- walls summed up the prevailing ed with the turnout-which was attitude-"Run For Office, Not estimated 150 per hour. for Coffee." (Continued from Page 1) answer towards racism," accord- ing to Hoffman. He later added that most of the University "could care less about old 1970 demands." On crime, SSGC proposes to ini- tiate a student defense agency to handle campus crime such as dorm patrols. AS A DEPARTURE from t h e. norm in campus issues, SSGC also proposes an SGC-sponsored wide- area telephone service (WATS) where students can call anywhere and for any amount of time in the U.S. for $1 a semester. Currently large business firms use this system. But far and away the largest issue for SSGC is corruption on SGC, despite the apparent irony in the fact that Central Student Judiciary voided the Hoffman-r u n spring election for University Hous- ing Council due to "massive fraud." HOFFMAN AND HUDLER claim SGC has lost all credibility in the eyes of the administration and the Regents. "Without student support a n d trust, President Fleming is getting quite a giggle out of Council's hol- low rhetoric." "By being honest, we can screw up SGC because that organization is basically a racket," says Hudler. SSGC CANDIDATES include. Hoffman for an independent hoiis-: ing seat, Hudler for an LSA slot, Marry Sipple for engineering, Pat- rick Heller competing for business - - - ' t AND ".Buddy Guy and Jr. Wells saturday Oct. ia,s8pm ain a poa HILL AUTD. ~~~.e44$O,5 c4.5 *tm, 2g o t , a hu4 j~/ym /e'ol Il EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY and WWWW presents S A-NA-NA MAKES "TANGO" LOOK LIKE A "TWO STEP" a r.&H CINEM BOWEN FIELDHO $4 ADVANCE $5 A T THE DOOR GENERAL ADMISSIO 8 p.M. USE )N sic Mart, Is, Hud- administration, and Richard Spil- man for an undergraduate sat on SGC Fleming, students clash on fee hike (Continued from Page 1) sible "without convincing the state and federal governments to help us with this." THE NEWLY - ADOPTED resi- dency requirements also came un- der attack by forum participants. One audience m e m b e r asked, "Why did the University assume that a lot more people would be eligible for in-state status when as soon as I got the letter, I thought the new regulations were much stricter?" Fleming claimed the lost rev- enue projection was largely based on the University's view that 'large numbers of our graduate students have been in the state for at least a year and are self-sup- porting. We believed that substan- tial numbers of graduate students could qualify." Fleming said University officials are "willing to re-examine" the tuition structure and "willing to allow students to work on the com- mittees that make this re-examina- tion." HQWEVER, HE complained that "on committee after committee on which students are placed, the stu- dents never show up." SGC President Lee Gill retorted, "Administrators are payed $30,000 to $40,000 to attend very boring meetings for hours at a time. Stu- dents come here with the major priority of getting an education, and I don't think that two stu- dents on a committee of 15 or 20 people can get any decision-mak- ing leverage." "You do not allow us a mechan- ism by which we can check what you say," another student remark- ed. "You're sidestepping the ques- tions and refusing to give out in- formation." BIDDLE ALSO remarked on the problems students encounter in seeking information on University finances, charging that incomplete answers from University sources are responsible for the air of "Kafkaesque frenzy" surrounding the tuition issue. Biddle cited sev- eral inconsistencies in administra- tion figures. After a short pause, Fleming got up and left without replying. Vice President for S t u d e n t Services Henry Johnson announced adjourn- ment. AND NOW A WORD FROM OUR CREATOR: advertising contributed for the pubic good d 1~ VI A } McKenny Union, Ann Arbor Mus Huckleberry Party Store, Grinne sons r T ANORM'AN EWISNFilm "JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR" L 13i Centicore ]Bookshops'~ 336 MAYNARD STREET-663-1812 1229 SOUTH UNIVERSITY-665-264 Open 10 a m.-10 p.m. & Sunday p.m. Open 1 1 a.m.-1 1 p.m. & Sunday p.m. 4 ' ' 4 ;~J - 0 0 0 b Y b M'J 4 0 Y r Y a \ I SAVE UP TO 20% ON ALL BOOKS j PAPERBACK AND CLOTH Here's our crazy coupon again. Bring it to either store and save $1.00 on any cash purchase of $5.00 and over. VALID THROUGH OCT. 16 Loeb Classical Library excluded 9 9 9 9 U V a I