, Pag' Eight .- THEWICN1GAN DAILY Saturday, April 7, 1973 ~Page EIgH THE~MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, April 7, 1973 FAILS BAM DEMANDS: 'U' misses black enrollment objective (Continued from Page 1) now has to compete with such schools as Wayne State Univer- sity, Michigan State University, and Eastern Michigan University for minority students. A major factor governing the success of the program is finan- cial aid, and at this point there are a number of unanswered questions about the program's funding for the next year. Many of these questions will be answered in Washington where Congress has yet to act on Presi- dent Nixon's budget cuts includ- ing a $4 million slash in student aid remarked for the University. On the state level, Gov. William Milliken has recommended an increase of only $500,000 over last year's allotment. This figure may not be enough to cover the 'oss in federal funds which outgoing Opportunity Program Director John Romani estimates at about $1.1 million. "As soon as we know the mag- nitude of the gaps created by the, federal cuts, we will begin look- ing for additional funds from within the University," Romani adds. Presently $3.4 million in aid is budgeted for the program, plus an additional $1.6 million in gift aid promised by the Regents at their February meeting. "This takes us a good way down the road as far as the Op- portunity Program goes, but does not help students meet other fi- nancial needs brought about by the higher cost of living," ex- plains Romani. Local boycott effect moderate continued from Page 1) to nothing," a Sgt. Pepper's spokes- sfpply for next week." to have crippled boycott effective- man said. Most of these stores University Business Administra- ness outside the campus, however. sell little fresh meat, however, of- tion Prof. Pail McCracken, a for- Representatives of chain stores in- fering mainly packaged luncheon mer Nixon economic advisor, inter. cluding A&P, Wrigley's Food Mart meats and bacon. preted the boycott as more sym- and Meijer's Thrifty Acres said East Quad's Halfway Inn, the bolic than efficacious. McCracken yesterday their meat sales were only local restaurant that has ac- said a week-long boycott offers "no not substantially affected by the tively supported the meat boy- reason to think that market pat- boycott in the city, although state- cott, reports meat sales in their terns will have been displaced." wide sales fell sharply Monday snackbar operation are down "99 "But there's a lesson here," he through Wednesday. per cent." commented. "If people eat less A management source at A&P's The restaurant posted signs ask- meat that is one way to lower Store 35 on Huron Ave. said meat ing customers not to buy meat, prices." boycotters "didn't have the power citing, a rise in their meat costs McCracken blamed high meat of their convictions." "The first of 17 per cent between November prices on general economic trends. three days it was easy to go with- and March and an additional 23 "Farm output last year was rough- out meat, then they got hungry," per cent increase in March. ly unchanged, whereas employment he claimed. Meanwhile two local health food and incomes increased very sharp- A spokesman at A&P's state of- stores, Eden Organic Foods and ly," he said, explaining that in fice in Detroit reported, "The early Soybean Cellars restaurant,' said creased demand for meat "express- part of the week we were affected their sales have increased, but ed itself in higher prices." Mc- strongly, but word has gotten they hesitated to link the new Cracken claimed President Nixon's around that there might be a meat business to the meat boycott. removal of meat import quotas shortage. There's no sign of a boy- Sources disagreed as to what will will have little effect because "the cott now." happen next week when the official domestic market is just so huge." "We had already noted last week boycott is lifted. Demand for meat He said over time meat supply that our customers were leaning in the city is expected to rise to might increase, however, as farm- toward fish, eggs and poultry normal or above normal levels, but ers adjust breeding levels to meet rather than red meat," a Wrigley's some stores claimed the sudden higher demand. spokesman said. "The boycott has demand coupled with effects of A 4 A 41 1. Council OKs tenant book. (Continued from Page 1) landlords will be required to dis- tenant s recourse if evicted il- tribute the booklet to all tenants legally. when they sign a lease. As yet no Council passed the resolution vir- booklets have been printed by the tually without debate. The Demo- city. The revenue sharing budget cratic and Human Rights Party passed last week however includes councilmembers plus Bruce Benner a $5,000 appropriation to defray (R-Fourth Ward) cast the affirma- printing and distribution costs. tive votes. "This booklet is vitally impor- Benner indicated he voted in ztan since tenants cannot exercise favor of the measure only because:th ts i te a re na wre sf he believes the Republican dom- their rights if they are unaware of inated council, which assumes con- them," Rose said. But he admitted troe next Monday, will reconsider the booklet was a compromise- in tro nset Modseveral respects. the issue. After the meeting, Jerry De- A number of points have not been Grieck (HRP-Second Ward) said made particularly clear in the if the Republican controlled coun- booklet's actual text," he explain- cil reconsiders the tenant's rights ed. Whenever tenants have ques- booklet, they will probably repeal tions about their legal rights they it. should consult a lawyer, especially Under the terms of the resolution before signing a lease, Rose added. Meat boycott hods on Daily Photo by TOM GOTTLIEB Former Unive'rsity student Doug Miller breaks into a big, cold grin yesterday as he devours the fruits of spring: The ice cream man is here. POSSIBLE BREAKTHROUGH: 'U1 doctor investigates cancer. had some effect,, especially at the beginning of the week, but not of a substantial nature. The customers are coming back to the meat coun- ters and we expect sales to be normal over the weekend," he claimed. i i $!l national sale reductons tis weeI could mean a shortage. "Prices will be pretty much the. same but I don't know if there'll be any meat to sell," an A&P repre- sentative said yesterday. "We may be putting potato chips in the meatG counter." But a Wrigley's spokesman coun- tered, "At this point we don't have any problems with available meat GRADUATING? Make your job search more pro- ductive. Trained consultant will write your resume. 50 one-page copies for $20.00. BEST RESUME SERVICE PHONE: 1-356-2332 (mail orders invited) 17220 W. 8 Mile Rd. Southfield, Mich. 48075 (Continued from Page 1) the Mouse House itself. is. In the same period of time, j Foster has worked primarily with Foster's treated mice show lumps one strain of mice and one kind of barely larger than a pinhead. Many tumor. Several of his students are show no sign at all, except for a working on different strains and harmless black deposit of melanin, tumors, in the hope that the sys- visible beneath the white fur of the tem can eventually be applied in mouse. Foster refers to this as a more general way, possibly even "garbage" left behind by the re- to other species. treating tumor. Foster often calls his mice "little black boxes" because, he says, "We don't know exactly what's going on inside. You push a button, and out comes a message, but you, never know what it's going to be beforehand." At least in this case, he can be fairly sure. In his original study, 95 per cent of the treated' mice were completely cured, and the re- maining five per cent showed sig- nificantly slower tumor growth than' the untreated controls. "This is a very high frequency of anti-tumor protection,"' Foster (Continued from Page 1) up and down erratically, confus- ing farmers who aren't sure what prices their livestock will bring. Because Friday is a light trad- ing day on livestock markets, there were not enough cattle shipments to establishna price trend for beef- on-the-hoof. The boycott took an increasing toll of meat industry layoffs and packingplant shutdowns. More than 20,000 packing plant workers had been laid off. 'Five-hundred employes were thrown out of work when the Na- tional Beef Packing Co. plant at Liberal, Kan., closed. Farmland Co-op at Garden City, Kan., laid off 73 workers "because of the price situation." Supermarkets across the nation may face a meat shortage next week because so many packing houses have shut down. "Pork looks good," one packing industry spokesman said, "but we just don't know about beef." Meat counters have been notice- ably empty this week. Foreseeing . .j the possibility of a shortage, owners are keeping what store meat they nave in freezers. says, "including animals who, Consumer activists said they once treated, can reject a second were pleased with the results of and even a third potentially lethal the boycott. dose." Sharon Harris, chairman of the Even untreated mice normally Albany, N.Y., branch of FIT- have an immune response to a tu- Fight Inflation Together-said she mor challenge, Foster says, but it jfavors extending the boycott ust isn't strong enough. He pic- througsteendngfthAprtunlesst tures the response as a "race" phrces arhcut by 20 or2priler ess.between dividing tumor cells and "We would be satisfied f the , dividing cells of the host immune " system. roll back to the level prior to "What we think we're doing is January. That's when prices really stimulating the host to provide started rising," Harris said. stmlin th hatoprvd more cell 'recruits' that can be Following the lead of several mobilized for antitumor attack," other restaurants around the na- Foster explains. tion, a chain of pancake houses in In other words, the treatment St. Louis announced a ban on gives the mouse a head start in meat from 6 a.m. to midnight the race against cancer. Friday. The manager of one outlet Director of the Mammalian Gene- said he normally serves 1,600 tics Center ("Mouse House" to pounds of meat on Friday. "But those in the know), Foster main- we won't serve meat at all," he tains between eight and ten trou- . " h esand mice. The Mouse House oc- soaid"ithe hopsewvescansoe-rcasionally provides mice for gene- how aid the housewives in their tics classes, Foster says, but most fight against meat prices." of them are used for research in "Dr. Foster got me so excited about his work that I just had to do some work here to see if what he said was really true," com- ments Barbara Michalak, a grad- uate student working at the Mouse G House. "You get to the point where you really believe in this, you really believe something important can be done with it. It's practical science." The real motivation behind Fos- ter's project, like all cancer re- search, is the hope that someday it can be applied to humans. But Foster stresses that there is a great difference between mice and men, and that a- tremendous amount of work needs to be done to determine if this approach is valid for humans. "The real question," he says, "involves the use of humans in experimentation. There are very serious constraints on research on humans." One of Foster's students is pres- entlyeattempting to isolate a frac- tion of the liver cell which is re- sponsible for the success of the treatment.,. "We want to work in the direction of a more chemically defined stim- ulus of the immune response di- rected toward anti-tumor activity," Foster concludes. "There would be minimal danger in using such a I stimulant." Meijer's sales took the most dras-' Ideally, Foster pictures a system tic dive, falling 25 per cent state- where a patient could be immuno- wide according to a Grand Rapids logically challenged immediately spokesman.' after cancer surgery. The patient's Campus stores like the S. Uni- immune system, instead of risky versity- Food Mart, Sgt. Pepper's radiation therapy, could be the General Store, the Village Corner "watchdog," he adds, specifically and Campus Corners have experi- tracking down wandering cancer enced sharp drops in meat sales, cells invisible to the surgeon. representatives said. "We're down FBI relocation pooe (Continued from Page 1) to Senate approval-for seven-year Ronald Ziegler said Nixon "is now terms which could be extended if in the process of finding a man the Senate votes re-confirmation. to nominate to head up the FBI. Meanwhile Gray, widely regard- I don't 'know when he will make ed as a victim of the Watergtte that decision." affair because of his admission The President accepted Gray's ! that he furnished raw FBI files on request Thursday night that his the bugging incident to White name be withdrawn. Nixon said it House counsel John Dean III, went was obvious Gray didn't have the : into hidding yesterday. votes for confirmation. The FBI said he was out of Key senators said - yesterday no Washington. overtures have been made to them about an acceptable choice for FBI director now that Gray's nom- ination has been wjthdrawn. Among the names mentioned in speculation as the next nominee were Henry Petersen, head of the Justice Department's criminal di- vision who handled the govern- ment's Watergate investigation; Myles Ambrose, the administra- tion's drug law enforcement chief, and U.S. District Judge William Byrne Jr., who is presiding at the Pentagon Papers trial in Los An- geles. Byrd's bill would make the FBI an independent agency, wit) the director and assistant director chosen by the President-subject MONDAY, APRIL 9 Dr. Charles -L. S tevenson Professor, Department of Philosophy SPEAKS ON "Man and His a us WHAT VALUE JUDGMENTS ARE AND HOW WE CAN USE SCIENCE TO SUPPORT THEM 6th Lecture of a Series entitled AMAN AND HIS WAYS 7:30-9:00 P.M. International Center Recreation Room 603 E. MADISON Informal discussion follows lecture. REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED ,, The University of Michigan MI!DInternational Center .4 -TONIGH T- a frontier of psychiatry R. D. Laing's ASYLUM unique color documentary of Laing's therapeutic commune in London. "This is the only film that shows how we work to help people who feel that society is trying to destroy them." 7:15 & 9:30 $1.25 cont. Friends of Newsreel MLB 3 FLAMENCO FREAKS Internationally known Flamenco guitarist Juan Serrano will be taking' appointments for private instruction this week. Call: Ann Arbor Music Mart d ISRAEL NOW CC/tw'c/ 14Jhft en'ice4 and 25th Anniversary Celebration 9:30-9:00 MON.-SAT. 769-4980 336 S. State St. UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 Washtenaw 'FIRST UNITED METHODIST 1001 E. Huron Servic 9:30 a.m.-Discussion Classes. 6:00 p.r 10:30 a.m. - Children's Sunday; Pastor: "Moms, Dads, and Kids." Calvin 10:00 Malefyt, preacher. 11:00 5:30 p.m.-Student Supper, 75c. Acquain 6:30 p.m.-"The Citizen and Big 6:00 p Brother," Dr. Paul Kauper, U of Every M Law School, speaker. BETHL LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN OF C CHURCH (ALC, LCA) (formerly 423 S. F Lutheran Student Chapel) Minister 801 S. Forest (Corner of Hill St.) Simon Donald G. Zill, Pastor Associat Sunday Folk Mass-10:30 a.m. Broph Sunday School-9:15 a.m. 9 a.m Sunday Supper-6:15 p.m. 10 a.n Program-7:00 p.m. Church Wednesday Eucharist-5:15 p.m. SAMARIA LUTHERAN, LCA ST. AN 272 Hewitt Rd., Ypsilanti CHUR Rev. Dean Tyson, -Pastor 8:00 a Family Worship and Nursery at 10:00 11:00 a.m. Faculty and Students Sermon, welcome, * * IRST UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN On the CHAPEL (LCMS) State an 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Rev. Te Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Rev. Ro Sunday at 9:15 and 10:30 a.m- Worship Services PACKAI Sunday at,.9:15 a.m.-Bible Study. 2580 Pa Wednesday at 10 p.m.-Midweek Tom Bli Sunda HURON HILLS BAPTIST Worsh CHURCH: 3150 Glacier Way Traini Pastor: Charles Johnson For information, transportation, 'f<"". personalized help, etc., phone 769- 6299 or 761-6749.s ces-Sunday, 10:00 a.m. and M. Rev. Donald Postema a.m.-Morning Worship. a.m. - Coffee and Get- rted Time. o.m.-Evening Worship. one Welcome. * * * EHEM UNITED CHURCH HRIST Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149 rs: T. L. Trost, Jr.; R. E. son. te Ministers: Dennis R. y and Howard F. Gebhart. .: Morning Prayer. m.: Worship Service and1 School. * * DREWS EPISCOPAL CH, 306 N. Division. a.m.: Holy Eucharist. a.m.: Holy Eucharist and * * * CONGREGATIONAL Campus at the corner of nd William Sts. rry N. Smith, Sr. Minister nald C. Phillips, Assistant 4 * * RD ROAD BAPTIST ckard Road, 971-0773 oxam, Pastor, 971-3152 y School, 9:45 a.m. ip: 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. ng Hour: 6 pmm. CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDA TION - State at Huron and Wash. 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. -Worship Services-Sermon by Dr. Donald B. Strobe: "Is the Golden Rule Enough?" Series: Sermon on the Mount. Broadcast on WNRS 1290 AM, WNRZ 103 FM, 11:00 a.m.-noon. Next Sunday: Palm Sunday, Spe- cial Choir Program both Ser-ices. WESLEY FOUNDATION Sunday, April 8: 5:30 p.m. - Celebration, Wesley Lounge. 6:15 p.m.-Supper, Pine room. 7:00 p.m. - Program, Wesley Lounge. Slides and film on China with Charles Cell. Thursday, April 12: 6:00 p.m. - Grad Community. Dinner and program. Friday, April 13: 6:15 p.m.-Young Marrieds. Din- ner and program, Wesley Lounge. FIRST- PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Avenue Services of Worship at 9:00 and 10:30 a.m.-Sermon: "God, the Ap- proachable." Preaching: Robert E. Sanders. COLLEGE PROGRAM Bible Study-Tuesdays 12:00 to 1:00. Holy Communion - Wednesdays 5:15 to 5:45. Supper Program - Wednesdays' 6:00. M. E. C. H. A. presents EL TEATRO CAMPESINO de AZTLAN "THE CHICANO FARMWORKER THEATER" The Chicano Struggle UTFWUnion and Boycott Efforts MUSIC-PLAYS--SATIRE-SPIRIT Sat., April 14-Hill Auditorium U of M Campus-8 P.M. NO ADMISSION SOPH SHOW .NEEDS FRESHMEN FOR CENTRAL COMMITTEE-includes students. . j THURSDAY, APRIL 12-free ad mission MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM BEGINNING at 7:30-Information on programs in Israel for American -university programs, sherut la'am, kibbutz ulpan, aliyah, archaeological digs, tours, art and dance BEGINNING at 8:30--The Parvarium Israeli folksingers t Director Assistant Director Assistant Producer Choreographer Musical Director Stage Manager Tickets and Ushers Secretary Technical Director Scene Designer Costume Designer Public Relations (Publicity) Business Manager Make-Up Chairperson Program Head Artists Prop Head 4, WEST BANK BEEF AND BARREL PR'ESENTS A J SundayBrunch A BOUNT IFUL BOARD OF EXCITING DISHES A I4 D 'lrwi!f/Y0-&M T. t, Ith//A 1i' A- . ft lM"! :} :;.,"; ::..;:{rvrr{Y:°:;'I: .;;v:r'?v' 1o.i ?.:r. .;;;..:%"":}a:r":~g""r.3? ......,. :% ?'rit !E,..iy': ..E .$F . UnTrv.::. F}:i.".,"K:.X:r.":a4%"}:ii'3"i:i"i;w ...... I I I mI E I