K Wednesday, February 7, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rage Seven L - -.---~ ---- ----- ~-- ~ ~ SPECIAL! HOT CHOCOLATE Everyone Welcome! GRAD COFFEE WEDNESDAY 8-10pm. Wet Conference Room, 4th Floor RACKHAM LOTS OF FOOD Waste (Continuedfrom Page 1) said. "I think they should have ri ranped the old system withoi gai-3g through all that." "All that" included setting u a complex proportional represei tation system, and a bulky con puter program that delayed eleg wll Lion results for se e- SGC's all-camp cause SGC deficit, critics say veral days. us election various school and college govern- last ments (LS&A, Rackham, etc) is fall wound up costing nearly $2.00- per-vote. According to City Clerk Harold Saunders, the November national election, one of the most expensive in city history, cost only $1.50-per-vote. Jacobs claims the money had to' be spent "to establish credibility" of SGC elections after widespread charges of fraud surrounded the Spring, 1972 elections. This year's spring elections are budgeted. for over $3,600. Schaper says it will cost $9,705 to stage, but revenue from advertising and from supposed to total $6,060. This as- sumes, of course, that all the schools wish to participate in the election. Already the Engineering School has declared it will hold its own election. Another "clear waste of money," according to Glazer, was the $4000 budgeted for the Michigan Student News. Schaper says the paper may have spent more than this, but all the receivables (advertising and money pledges from various col- lege governments) haven't been collected yet. The newsletter pub- lished three issues last term and has not been seen since. Mary Connelly, the brief but only editor of, the newsletter, says she knew little about the financial as- pect, but comments the entire or- ganization was "slipshod." The shortcomings of the legal advocate program were detailed by the Daily last December. The ad- vocate, Tom Bentley, was selected from a field of three after a two week advertising campaign con- ducted solely in the Daily. Bentley, whose term expires this spring, re- ceived a salary of $13,500. This is well above the median income ($11,000-12,000) for a lawyer with similar background, according to the University's Legal Placement Service. Another SGC fiscal headache has been the Grocery Co-op-funded to the tune of $17,500 after being ap- proved in a student referendum last spring. In the first place, SGC has, as yet, been unable to locate a store- front from which to run the co-op. In the ten months since the spring election a variety of prob- lems have left the co-op unrealized and the money unspent. According to Council officers, the Regents have placed a hold upon the $1',500, citing as a reason for this the Co-op's effect upon private business. At, last week's SGC meet- ing, Vice President for the Grocery Co-op Cliff Sloane reported that the project was "at a complete stand- still." Even in this seeming debacle, however, there is a positive note. SGC's inability to establish a Gro- cery Co-op has left the $17,500 ap- propriated for that purpose.in what is termed a "sinking fund." Should SGC start to sink, Glazer says, this sinking fund may be used to keep it afloat. LOTS OF PEOPLE Future Worlds Lecture Series Catch the Lectures You Missed or Would Like to Hear or Tape on: WCW BNFM-89.5 Thursday Nights from 7 p.m. SPECIAL THIS WEEK R. BUCKMINSTER FULLER* HEAR HIM in a Two-Part Rebroadcast on WCBN TONIGHT at 7 p.m. and TOMORROW at 7 p.m. REBROADCASTING WILL BE UNINTERRUPTtD-SUITABLE FOR TAPING outhor of "DESIGNING A FUTURE WORLD" Change sought in SGC Fierce tribe found in Brazilian forest (Continued from Page 1) live in residence halls, "an op- pressed majority," would not be jproperly represented. SGC vice president for minority affairs Lee Gill expressed fears that minority students would be ignored under such a plan. He said minority groups would become so diffuse their voices would not be heard. SGC member Dave Smith called for a referendum to decide whe- ther or not a constitutional con- vention should be held. Only five of the sixteen schools invited attended: engineering, pharmacy, nursing, Rackham, and business. Via a"': rn . .,.i 'r -. .. ,,{ i" '1 p (Continued from Page 1) experts, have waited more than a year near the Krenakores villages to make contact with one of the last, lost Braziliarf tribes. By radio, Claudio told what hap- pened on Sunday when some 30, warriors walked into the white men's camp. The warriors heads were shaved and black paint was daubed on their naked bodies. The anthropologist walked out of the camp and embraced the giant tribesmen one by one. Then came the exchange of gifts. After jabbering excitedly in an unknown language, the warriors slipped back into the jungle, but reappeared Monday for a few minutes and exchanged gifts again. Known for decades as the mys- terious. giants of the 'Amazon, the Krenakore women, who are the same size as their men ,are also famous for their prowess in battle. One legendary Krenakore woman is credited with smashing the skulls of four enemy warriors be- fore another 15, overpowered and killed her. Until now the Indians have shied away from all contact and even migrated to other parts of the jungle after the Villasboas Broth- ers first camped in their area with an expedition. i For all U of M Students Faculty, Staff and their immediate families. VACATION SPECIALS FREEPORT $159* MARCH 4-11 Round Trip, Jet Air, Hotel and Happy Hour Europe '73--$2O9* 2 to 8 wk, flights available Routed Trip Jet Party Flights with open bar and meal service enroute. 10 ",.for all taxes, tips & service. Limited space, so reserve today hSTUENT URS TRAVEL The Charter People 769-2400 DON'T MISS THE ANNUAL KIWANIS SALE THURS., FRI.. SAT., FE. 8, 9, 10 KIWANIS ACTIVITY CENTER CORNER OF W. WASH. & 1st ST. FURNITURE, CLOTHING, SHOES, BOOKS, HARDWARE, TOYS, WHITE GOODS ETC.. OPEN: THURS. & FRI. 10 A.M.-8 P.M. SAT. 10 A.M.-3 P.M. Subscribe to The Daily Phone 764-0558 i i FEB. 7--9 I I WEDNESDAY . 0 . Your God Is Too White Jesus Christ vs. a white Man's God TRUE CHRISTIANITY VS. A REPRESSIVE COUNTERFEIT Michigan League Ballroom-7:30 p.m. -111 1 THURSDAY... i I Christian Copout Social Withdrawal Is there a common root cause to poverty, racism, war, sexism? I "P f6 . I More than a million customers of Consumers Power Company expect their lights to go on when they flip the switch. And except for storms and other natural difficulties, their lights do go on. But the generating capacity that insures lights today won't be nearly enough for tomorrow. So Consumers Power is building for the future. An example is the construction shown here. These are Karn Units Three and Four. They're oil- fired electric generating units, scheduled to only part of the construction going on through- out the state. In the power business, a utility must plan 10 years ahead in order to have power ready when it's needed. It's no small order. It takes planning. And building. And the constantinvestment of enor- mous amounts of money. Consumers Power wishes there were a cheaper and easier way of doing it. But there isn't. Not if you, the customer, are going to have the power What separates symptoms from cause? Does Christianity effectively meet this root cause? Michigan League Ballroom-7:30 p.m. FRIDAY *.*.. How can God be encountered personally? I I 111F'