100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

April 15, 1973 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-04-15

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

Sunday, April 15, 1973

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

roge se"et,

Sunday, April 15, 1 9 7 3 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven

Call

ECt

-CAR

Nixon cuts in higher
education funds hurt

LIMITED INTEREST:
Future Worlds Conference
plagued by poor attendance

FOR END-OF-TERM SPECIAL-ONE WAY &
ROUND TRIP SERVICE TO ALL POINTS WEST

" WE RENT FORDS
AND OTHER FINE CARS
" AIR CONDITIONED CARS
AVAILABLE

MORE & MORE
IT MIKES SENSE TO
t

ECONO-CAR-438 W. Huron
663-2033 ARBOR

(Continued from Page 1)
such as rental health, pollution
and hiealth care planning programs
designed to cut the escalating costs
of health care, to a provincial 19th
Century concept of letting the oth-
er fellow do it,". said Myron Weg-
man, dean of the University's
school of public health.
Although student aid has receiv-
ed the highest federal budget prior-
ity, the association said, the de-
veloping conflict between the ad-
ministration and Congress could
delay approval of any student aid
appropriations for next fall.
"Students are in danger of be-
coming the unwilling victims of the
battle between the President and
Congress over federal support for
education," said Chancellor Albert
Bowker of the University of Cali-
ji r

tforni'a at Berkeley.
T h e University of California
system will lose some $100 million
in federal aid over the next t w o
years. Other institutes slated f o r
major cutbacks include the Uni-
versity of Wisconsin, the Univer-
sity of Missouri, and Iowa S t a t e
University.
""These are not frill funds.' Thex
go straight to the support of the
core functions of the university in
teaching, research, and extension.
charged Iowa State President Po-
bert Parks.
The college officials were pa:mi-
cularly critical of administratian
claims that revenue-sharing funds
world be available to replace dis-
continued federal funds. T h e y
said this would make them de-
pendent on the good will of local
officials, who allocate revenue
sharing monies.
"How can a university ... main-
tain its momentum, its staff. 'o
potential by having all its national
and international endeavors placed
in the village hall's consideration
of competing local concerns?"'ai
another educator.

By JOSEPHINE MARCOTTY
and DANIEL BLUGERMAN
The Future World's Conference Festival, replete
with Martians landing on the Diag and well-
tailored Ford executives, has had a disappointing
first two days,
Despite a plethora of workshops and discussions
on a number of topics, the session has been
plagued by a po.or tournout. The meetings that the
Daily attended drew little more than 15 persons
each.
A few sparks flew yesterday as Ford executive
Harold Bogart was leading a discussion on "pro-
duction, polhtion, and the environment."
Listeners criticized what they considered the
gant automotive maker's failure to plan affirma-
tiely for future problems.
Windmills, for centuries a source of power, were
the subject of a workshop led by Hans Meyer,
Meyer is working on the development of a power

system using windmill principles.
Meyer said that wind en-rries with it a great
energy potential in underdev eloped countries that
d not hq'e readik ,avil-ble-power sources.
The Festival is being sponsored by the Univer-
sity and the Ann Arbor community and will con-
tinue until tonight.
Included in today's events are a "sunrise gath-
ering" at 6:00 a.m. in the Arb, and a "sharing,
music, kite flying, and mellow flowing" in the
morning hours.
At 2:00 p.m. 29 workshops and learning sessions
are planned for the Arb's main meadow, ranging
from "astrology and spiritual forms of divination"
to "the philosophy of color and vibrations in heal-
ing" to "Careen Mania and Craziness".
"A candlelit march of peace and love" from
the Arb to the Union is the last planned activity
before "ar evening gathering of New World con-
sciousness in the Ballroom at 9:00 p.m. tonight.

WHY CART ALL THOSE CLOTHES HOME?

Greene's Box Storage
makes going home
JUST CALL GREENE'S for one of our fabulous
Handi-Hampers storage boxes. Pack all the clothes
you won't wear until fail Clothes you would
ordinarilyapack up, take home, have cleaned, pack
up again and bring back in'the fall
NOW, ALL YOU NEED TO DO is turn the Hamper
over to Greene's. They c I e a n the lot at regular
cleaning prices and store it in a refrigerated moth-
proof vault. When you ret u r n in the fall, call
Greene's again, your clothes will be taken out of the
vault, returned to you freshly pressed on hangers
and 'packed in neat polyethylene bags, ready for
your clothes closet.
PRICE? $4.95 plus regular cleaning and pressing
prices-includes $250.00 insurance. No payment
is due until your garments are returned,
Call NOrmandy 22543 or Stop at
any Greene's Plaifor Informalion
BOX DELIVERY & PICK UP * NO ADDED CHARGE

MORE FIGH TIN;
Cambodia developments

1.

LSA Lecture
by
Frank Newman *
Tuesday, April 17
1:30 p.m.
2553 LZA Bldg.

Ely FRute'r and UPI
PINOM PENf-About 40 encir-
cling communist battalions tight-
ened their grip on the besieged
Cambodian c a p i t a I of Phnom
Penh yesterday and set tip rocket
sites within range of the city.
As the coin munist forces closed
in and fighting continued on three
main battlefronts around the capi-
tal, another attempt by a supply-
laden shipping convoy to break
through the communist blockade
on the Meking River failed, mili-
tary sources reported.
D~espite increas'ing pressure on
P hi n omn P e n h, the communist
forces pulled back along a 17-mile
stretch of Cambodia's Highway 1,
following 38 consecutive days of
American bombing.
Field officers reported that the
communists had fled from en-
trenched positions along both sides
of the highwav east of Phnom Penh
while under attack from American
wrarp lan es. They crossed over to
the eastern bank of the Mekong
River with U.S. Air Force jets in
pursuit, the report said.
Cambodian government t r 0 o0p s
Couples Are Special
Tuedas 11 am-i12 mid.
BILLIARDS
At Reduced Rates

advanced quickly from their posi-
tions 15 miles from Phnom Penh
to occupy the highway and river-
bank positions given up by the
communists.
,The communist withdrawal re-
opened .the 32 miles of Highway 1
between Phnom Penh and the na-
val stronghold' at Neak Luong on

the river plues long stretches of the
river's western bank. It did .not,
however, open either the highway
or the river all the way to the
South Vietnamese border.
Communist units still control a
70-mile stretch of the highway
from Neak Luong to the border, as
well as most of the river.

indonesia may qut
peace keeping ody
JAKARTA (UPI)--Indonesia yesterday indicated that it may with-
draw from the four-power International Commission for Control and
Supervision (ICCS) in South Vietnam unless its members can be
guaranteed safety against attack.
Defense Minister Gen. Maraden Panggabean said the present situa-
tion in South Vietnam "does not enable our contingent to work
effectively" in the four-power ICCS, which was established to super-
vise the' cease-fire.
An Indonesian delegate to the ICCS was among the nine persons
killed when one of the commission's helicopters was downed last weep
in South Vietnam. Members of the Canadian and Hungarian delegations
also were killed.
The Viet Cong said the helicopter crashed by accident, but wit-.
nesses said it was shot down by the Communists.
Panggabean, who spoke at a news conference after meeting with
President Suharto, said Indonesia has demanded a thorough investiga-
tion of the downing of the helicopter. Canada, another ICCS member,
has made a similar demand.

Chairman, Task Force on

Higher Educa-

BUSINESS OFFICE CAMPUS
406 W. Liberty St. 1213 So. University
NO 23-23-1 NO 3-3016

WESTSIDE
940 W. Stadium
NO 2-2543

tion, HEW, & Author of e The Report on
Higher Education. He says, "We must en'
large our concepts of who can be a student,
and when, and what a college is. We need
many alternate paths to an education."
Come and hear Newman's proposals for
developing alternative paths.

IL

Subscribe, to The Michigan Daily

Michigan Union

theri~
thrui

I

Everyone W

(elcome!

GRAD
COFFEE
HOUR
WEDNESDAY
8-10 p.m.

SPECIAL! HOT CHOCOLATE

r

A

-* -West Conference
Room, 4th Floor
RACKHAM
HELP LOTS OF PEOPLE LOTS OF FOOD
mnediatrics ^ "'
MEDIATRICS, as part of UAC's.attempt to become more Petitions now being accepted
for Fall 1973 GILBERT AND
responsive to the students, is setting up an EXECUTIVE
SULLIVAN Production
BOARD.
B DRAMATICS DIRECTOR
* MUSICAL DIRECTOR
Take part in MEDIATRICS '73-'74 film * TECHNICAL DIRECTOR
scheduling and operation
PETITIONS ARE DUE TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1973
SUBMIT TO 2531 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING
For more info. CALL UAC, 763-1107
For further information call Cindy
Deadline Wednesday of 769-511 6 (5-7 p.m.
IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT!
SGARGOYLE STUDENT BAGGAGE
& GIFT SHIPPING
Services Available to You for Easy, Effortless, Fast,
Convenient Handling of Your Personal Effects &
Gifts That You Are Sending Home from the Uni-
(campus humor magazine) versity of Michigan.
We Offer Door to Door Pick Up & Delivery.
We Go to All Points of the Globe, as Well as
M rvin D rn s i D o m estic (U .S .A . .
5* A £ 5EEEF~U~ )We OTffer COLLECT Services on Domestic Ship'-

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan