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November 30, 1973 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-11-30

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

" Friday, November 30, 1973

TI-3E, MICHIGAN DAILY

Page-Three

'Ftiday, November 30, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PQ~e-Thr~e

_ :

Former Nixon aide

'

proposes tuition cut'

indicted f
(Continued from Page 1)
Ziegler, in a briefing at the1
White House, said Jaworski's idea1
"is just nonsense." He said, except
for a mysterious 18-minute gap ont
one of the tapes, all other conver-
sations under subpoena "are in-
tact." And Ziegler lashed out att
Jaworski's staff lawyers, sayingt
they have shown "ingrained suspi-
cion and visceral dislike for this1
President and this administration."
*-Miami's chief prosecutor con-

rcontinued from Page 1) find "no evidence" of quotas be-
mand for 10 per cent black en- ing used in present University
rollment is a quota for the Uni- policy, or of "unqualified" black'
0 The federal court hearing into versity and not a goal." students being admitted to fulfill,
the 18-minute gap in a crucial Hoffman's lengthy verbal defense the promised goal of 10 per cent
Watergate tape continued and of the resolution followed argu- enrollment.
White House lawyer Fred Buzhardt ments against the move from some But Hoffman said SGC's censure
testified that he was able to suc- of nearly 40 students, most of them was aimed at "blocking the likely
ceed in duplicating a humming black, who packed the rear of: possibility of the 10 per cent 'goal'
sound obliterating conversation on, SGC's chambers last night and re- becoming a quota."
the tape. But Buzhardt testified acted with loud disapproval when: SGC President Lee Gill express-
that experts summoned to the the resolution passed. io'
White House to conduct similar Hfmn nofrigtersl-ed dismay at the resolution's pass-
Whit Houe t conuctsimiarjHoffman, in offering the resolu- age. "One of my goals has been to
tests have reported they cannot tion, stated, "It should never be
duplicate the sound. Uniersitv w'licv tha~t neonn ~e make SGC responsive to the de-

that happened tonight."
"This resolution," he added,
"will move us back into the days
of darkness, before the civil rights
movement, before students in this
country had any great concern for.
the rights of minority groups."
Education school Dean Wilbur
Cohen, reached by phone during3
the meeting, issued a statement
to SGC blasting the "quota" cen-
sure move.
"Mr. Hoffman suggests that we
support quotas here. We have no
quotas, in fact, only goals, and
we simply try our best to meet
those goals."

UNIVERSITY DANCERS
AT
POWER CENTER
TODAY-4 p.m. and 8 p.m.
FRI., NOV. 30--4 P.M. & 8 P.M.

WORKS BY:

GAY DE LA NGH E
VERA EMBREE
LUCAS HOVING

.
4'

firmed that he has evidence Nixon CHAPIN is the fifth former ad-
kept a $100,000 certificate of de- ministration official to be charged
posit in the same bank where the with perjury or making false state-
President's friend, C. G. "Bebe" ments to grand juries.
Rebozo, kept a secret $100,000 cash The others were former Atty.
gift from billionaire Howard R. Gen. John Mitchell and former
Hughes. State Atty. Richard Ger- Commerce Secretary M a u r i c e
stein said a Miami Herald news Stans, who have pleaded innocent!
story, which said a bank official to six perjury counts each in the
had told him about the certificate, Vesco case; John Ehrlichman, who
is not inaccurate. Gerstein said he has pleaded innocent to perjury
has issued subpoenas for any rec- charges in the 1971 Ellsberg bur-
ords the bank may have on Nixon's glary; and Egil Korgh, who has
personal finances and a previously pleaded innocent to two counts of
unreported $10,000 campaign do- making false statements about the
nation once deposited there. White House plumbers unit.
Economist predicts
recession for '74
(Continued from Page 1) off, assumes that Nixon's energy-
made either way but sources said saving programs would work, said
that the energy group is leaning Stein.
heavily toward recommending ra- THIS MEANS that the burden of
tioning to Nixon. The President, the shortages must be borne main-
however, views rationing as a last ly by consumers, who must cut
resort. dy by cones, who mu d
ASKED ABOUT the possibility down onnonessential driving and
of rationing, presidential Press on thermostat setting in their
Secretary Ronald Ziegler said, homes, he said.
"This is something we don't con- Stein said the economy's growth!
template at this time." next year, as measured by Gross;
He said contingency plans are National Product, market value of
being drafted for rationing but the nation's goods and services,
added that Nixon hopes the steps could be only 1 per cent. The nor-
he has already taken will elimi- mal growth rate is 4 per cent.
nate the need or that move. He said the worst impact would
The economic assessment, be- come in the first six months of
sides accounting for the Arab cut- next year

given preference for jobs, admis-
sions, etc. on the basis of race, sex,
religion, or national origin, and it
should never be University policy
to select people on the basis of any
quota for anything."
He later admitted that he could
AND NOW
A WORD
F* ***
a sE
U,0psniagmiu~ed " ah V
Wit sl~goad

-t

sires and needs of the student1
body," Gill said. "I don't think1

TICKETS ON SALE AT:
$2.00 and $3.50
FOR INFO CALL 763-3333

POWER CENTER OPENS AT 12
sponsored by Dept. of P.E.

Bottle ordinance no

-
. .

help, says
(Continued from Page 1)
able bottle ordinance is to -educe
the area needed to bury waste,
said Glysson.
ACCORDING to Glysson, 50 per
cent of solid waste is paper. He
said that of the total solid waste,
soft drink and beer containers
comprise only one-half of one per
cent.
Other testimony centered around
the question of marking bottles.
Store owners fear that they may,
have to redeem more bottles than
~they received deposits for. Mark- I
ing a bottle would identify at which
store it was purchased.
Bringing in cases and six, eight
and 12-packs of beer into the court-
room as evidence, Hugh Wanty, a
local beer distributor, said the
main problem in marking the
bottles would be the "prohibitive"
labor cost.
WANTY ALSO testified that it
would be extremely difficult for
him to deliver returnable bottles
to the city while most stores want

I'prof O
non-returnable containers.
He said trucks make deliveries
both inside and outside the city.
The bottle ordinance would cause
the trucker special sorting and de-
livery problems to accommodate
the city's particular bottle require- 3 4
ments.
These special problems, Wanty
testified, would boost his costs.
Since the city would be the source I FAST, FREE DELIVERY
of the hike, he said he might have
to stop delivery here in order to SUBS-CHICKEN-SHRIMP-SALADS-BURGERS-FRIES-COKE
keep his prices competitive. - "mmm mm .m'"" m wwwww" w m'"""""'"'i"" - "m -w m "mn -- - ---'--------"--mm
CHRIS GAGALIS, owner of Van's A medium or large A medium or large
Market, said 95 per cent of his 5 0 c . 1 item or more 1 item or more
beverage sales were in non-return- ,
able containers. Off OMEGA PIZZA o fOMEGA PIZZA
He said he simply did not have COUPON HONORED ANYTIME COUPON HONORED ANYTIM
the time to mark bottles and store
empties while at the same time Name __Name
taking care of his other chores.
"I would have to close down if I Address I Address
had to sell drinks in returnable FOR DELIVERY ONLY U FOR DELIVERY ONLY
bottles," Gagalis said.:1
He also said that dirty bottles
posed a sanitary problem, smelling
and attracting insects. NEW WORLD MEDIA INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES
- - - - -

I

__ _

F

N -TA Arts and Crafts Fair
AT
NORTH CAMPUS COMMONS
ON
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2nd
FROM
10 A.M.-6 P.M.
SPONSORED BY NORTHWOODS-TERRACE ASSQCIATION

This Weekend -

-PRESENTS-
MEXICO:

III

L

{c

mp

#

I

.:

FRI.-SAT.

FOLK LEGACY
RECORD'S
HELEN
SCH N EYER
accompanied by
BARRY O'NEILL
SUN.-
Jane Voss
country music
$2.00
1411 Hill STREET
7'i4sIq

THE FROZEN
REVOLUTION
Mexico/Argentina, 1 971. Written and directed
by Rovmundo Gleyzer; photographed by Hum-
berto Rios; sound by Juana Sapire. 60 minutes,
color and black and white. Spanish with English
subtitles and narration.
A graphic delineation of the political reality of
Mexican history, including never-before-seen
footage of the uprisings of 1910-1914. The
dominant lives, ideologies and social forces that
have shaped modern Mexico-Madero, Zapata,
Villa, Huerta, Caranza -are all here: Car-
denas' attempts at reform; the-latter-day bank-
ruptcy of Diaz Ordaz; the 1970 Presidential
campaign of Luis Echeverria Alvarez; the in-
herited rhetoric of the PRI (Institutional Revo-
lutionary Party) contrasted with the repressive
reality of the Indian peones, Mexican farm
laborers, aging veterans of Zapata's legions,
and the Summer '68 massacre of hundreds of
students at the Plaza de Tlatelolco in Mexico
City.
"Our proposal to make a film in Mexico was
secret. We entered the country legally as tour-
ists. We made the film underground and no
one except our friends in Mexico knew that we
were making a film of this kind. Some people

thought that we were making a tourist film or
filming for television. This is the way to make
a film in Mexico because of the repression. If
you tell them you are going to make a film
they immediately assign you a censor who goes
with you all over the country to control, what
you are going to film."--Raymundo Gleyzer

TONIGHT ONLY 8 P.M.

FREE

Undergraduate Library

Speaker/Music/Literature/Discussion Multi-purpose Room (3rd floor)

The most spectacular c
book ever published c
about pro football l
Prepared by David Boss under the
auspices of the National Football
League, THE PRO FOOTBALL EX-
PERIENCE captures the excitement ,
and impact of football with some of
c the most remarkably beautiful sports4
photography ever assembled. All the I
drama, tension, atcion, pain, and ex- {
hilaration of the game. are illustrated
,r ifin unmatched depth and detail with Q
Snearly 300 full-color photographs-
several in double fold-out spreads
opening to 31/ feet. Roger Kahn's
k e e n, evocative introduction, illu-
strated by first - rate examples of
306 illustrations, 290 in American sports art, ranges from his
full color. 280 pages. reminiscences of boyhood sand lot4
10%"x x13 ", $25.00 games to his thoughts on the great
S p e c i a I introductory players of our generation. This mag-
price through Dec. 31, nificent book will offer endless hours
1973, $22.50. of fascination to football fans of every
age.sy
The ro ootallDesigned &s edited by RAPID BOSS
The Pro oo..bol Introdution byROGER KAHN 4

Thursday- Friday -Saturday
NOVEMBER 29-30, DECEMBER 1
EDDI

10 OZ. FILL (heaviest made)
N3B
AIR FORCE PARKA
eLYING JACKET, Type N3B
SHELL-- 100% Nylon Hod inie
LINING - 100% Nylon
INTERLINING - 100% bond-
ed Polyesterwt
Genuine Wolf, fur
HOOD TRIM - Canada or on Hood
Alaska Wolf Fur
HOOD LINING - 100% Orion
Heavy Duty
Acrylic Face, 100% Cotton Concealed Zipper
Back r
KNIT-- 100% Wool
COLOR-Sage or Navy Reinforced
Double Elbows
SIZES: XS, S, M, L, XL
N3 Parka is designed for servicemen
in Arctic areas. It is the warmest
jacket designed for heavy duty use.
Front zipper has double protectionW:
f ; 4 nner Wristlets
button-over flap.
IIBJIIAC

HARRIS

COMING
Dec. 6-7-8

Jimmy Reed

I

0!27' C CTrII hA 01%l n

I I

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