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September 16, 1972 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-09-16

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Saturday, September 16; 1972

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Three

Saudy Spebr 6 92TH IHGA AL Pg he

INTERVIEWS
for membership to the board of the
ANN ARBOR FILM COOPERATIVE
will be held Sunday, September 17, of
164 East Quad at 8:30 p.m.
We're looking for OFFICE SPACE-Call 769-7787

The cost of getting drunk

By DAVID STOLL
Fall, football games, beer and cheap wine
go together on Saturday afternoons. But
when buying your booze for the game, shop
around. Prices vary around town, depending

on the type of store and its proximity" to
campus. Some stores with cheaper prices,
however, don't refrigerate their stock and have
a limited variety. Here's a sampling of Ann
Arbor prices:

I

Stroh's Bud-
(6-pack) weiser
(6-pack)

Miche-
lob
(6-pack)

Ripple Boone's
(fifth) Apple
(fifth)

Balai
Hai
(fifth)

Almaden
Red Burg.
(fifth)

Mateus
(fifth)

Aud. A Angell Hall

CINEMA 11

7 and 9 o'clock
one dollar

A&P
413 E. Huron

1.38

1.45

.89 .99 1.19

SAT. 16 Sept.: TESTAMENT OF ORPH EUS
Cocteau, 1959. By the maker of Beauty and the Beast. With
Jean-Pierre Leaud, Yul Brynner, Picasso, Aznavour.
SUN. 17 Sept. 7:00 EYES OF HELL "3-D Horror"
SPECIAL! BOTH SUNDAY SHOWS FOR $1.50
9:00 TESTAMENT OF ORPHEUS
PHONE 462-6264

Village Apothecary
1112 S. University
Village Corner
601 S. Forest
Campus Corner
818 S. State
Stephan's
1101 S. University
Ralph's Market
709 Packard
Food Mart
1123 S. University
Tice's Liquor Store
S. State St.
Food Mart
103 N. Forest
Beer Vault
303 N. Fifth
Beer Depot
114 E. William
Capitol Market
1211 S. Fourth
Main Party Store
201 N. Main
Big Ten Party Store
1928 Packard

1.59

1.50

1.50
1.45
1.55
1.55
1.55
1.55
1.60

1.60
1.60
1.60

1.90
1.90
1.85
1.86

.89 .98
.89 .99

1.64
.1.59

.99 .99 1.15
.89 .99 1.29
.89 .99 1.15
.89 .95 1.19

1.65
1.61
1.65
1.61
1.70
1.70
1.70
1.70
1.70

1.97
1.95
1.97
2.05
2.05
2.05
2.05
2.05

1.05

1.09

1.19

.99 .95 1.39

1.59
1.89
1.85
1.89
1:89
1.93
1.87
1.92
1.99
1.89
1.90

2.29
2.89
2.89
2.89
2.99
3.10
2.89
2.89
3.01
3.17
3.19
3.19
3.25

Shop talk
Senator Edward Kennedy (D.-Mass.) talks to a United Rubber Workers official yesterday in Miami
Beach. Kennedy is there on behalf of the McGovern-Shriver ticket
MCGovern says he would end
Nixon wage-price control plan

.95 1.07

1.60
1.60
1.60
1.57

1.06

1.06

.95 1.10

1.30
1.39
1.29
1.40

1.09
1.10

1.05

I I

SHOWS AT
1:30-3:20-5:10
7:05 - 9 P.M.

tciLJ e ohenI',aMn

DIAL 665-6290
613 E. Liberty

NIXON REQUESTS APPROVAL
Anti-terrorist treaty sent to Senate

PORTLAND, Maine P) - S e n .
George McGovern proposed yester-
day that President Nixon's wage-
price controls be replaced by vol-
untary gtidelines backed up by
presidential pressure.
"We must put price stability
ahead of special privilege and ex-
cess profit," McGovern said in an
address to labor leaders and cam-
paign s'ipporters. The speech was
his most detailed statement to date
of how he hopes to hold down in-
flition if he wins in November.
In the speech, McGovern con-
tended that it is the Nixon ad-
ministration's economic policies,
rather than his own proposals,
that areradical, unfair and un-
sound.
Noting that Nixon had declared
in 1968 that control of inflation was
his No. 1 domestic priority, t h e
Democratic nominee said "he has
struck out completely" in dealing
with it. He said wholesale prices
have increased in the past t h r e e
months faster than as any such
period since 1951.

He said the Justice Department
should enforce antitrust laws "with
firmness and impartiality" to re-
store competition that he termed
"the best defense against higher'
' rn

it would have legal muscle lacking
in the voluntary guideposts em-
ployed by Democratic Presidents
John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B
Johnson.

prices.-- McGovern was greeted in Port-
Under McGOvern's proposed new land by Senator Edmund Muskie
system of semi-voluntary wage and (D.-Maine), a former contender
price controls, food prices, inter- for the Democratic presidential
est rates, retailers, and s m a 11 nomination. Muskie paid tribute to
manufacturers would be free of his ex-rival by saying that Mc-
controls. Govern had "the guts to stick with
The system would be looser and his own candidacy in days when
cover less ground than the present it must have been regarded as very
Nixon administration controls. Yet discouraging."
Trustees defeat MSU
lettuce boycott resolution

THE FUN STARTS HERE!

"A VERY
FUNNY FILM!"
-N.Y. Times

"FULL OF
LAUGHS !"
-N.Y. Daily News

WASHINGTON (P) - President
Nixon asked the Senate yester-
day to promptly ratify a 1971 in-
ternational treaty aimed at curb-
ing sabotage and terrorist at-
tacks against aircraft and air
travelers.
He said these criminal a c t s
pose "an increasingly grave
, threat to civil aviation around
the world."
"Events have shown that no
country or area is exempt from
human tragedy and immense
costs which result from such
criminal acts," Nixon said in his
letter to the Senate.
The 1971 treaty, known formally
as the "Convention for the Sup-

pression of Unlawful A c t s
against the Safety of Civil Avia-
tion," was signed at Montreal
about a year after an interna-
tional conference at The Hague
adopted a treaty to insure that
hijackers would be subject to
severe punishment.
The treaty he sent to the Sen-
ate for ratification yesterday, like
the hijacking accord, requires
extradition and prosecution of of-
fenders when they are found.
Meanwhile, a 15-nation. group
headed into its final session here
on another proposed treaty, to
provide for enforcement of the
treaty Nixon discussed, and oth-
ers as well. It would require ac-

Pwimo,,nt PNctr"s Pr#NW
An Authur P.Jecobs Production in .nsoclsiis
wkhRonaJoffe Productoew
"VUAY &ITA CAI N,SAM"
A Herbert Ross Film
W (LYA J IACN[ I T-cN TONY OEi E S
NEXT: "THE CANDIDATE"
Subscribe to The-Daily
Phone 764-0558

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
Tonight: DETROIT$
9:30-1:30
Sunday: ECLIPSE
MONDAY: BEER AND WINE NIGHT
U 4 208 W. Huron
LUNCHES DAILY

ck
t
4
}} WORSHIP
f

tions against nations not living up
to agreements against air piracy.
In a related development, West
Germany is urging the creation
of a new international police sys-
tem to foil Arab commando and
other terrorist gangs, European
diplomats reported yesterday.
They said 10 European nations
now have the plan under study.
Just as Interpol now has an
anticrime mission, the proposal
by German Foreign Minister Wal-
ter Scheel was that present and
prospective members of the Euro-
pean Common Market should
combine anti-terrorist security
operations within this new secur-
ity setup.
- -
A
Guess the number* of Swingline
Tot staples in the jar.
The jar is approximately square
-3" x 3" x 43". Look for the
clue about "Tot" capacity.
The "Tot 50," is uncondition-
ally guaranteed. It staples, tacks,
mends and costs only 98# sug-
gested retail price at Stationery,
Variety and College Bookstores
with 1,000 staples and vinyl
pouch. Swingline Cub Desk and
Hand Staplers for $1.98 each.
Fill in'coupon or send postcard. No
p bcase required. Entries must be
postmarked by Nov. 30, 1972 and re-
ceived by Dec. 8, 1972. Final djabiion
by an independent judging organization.
In case of tie, a drawing determines a
winner. Offer subject to all laws and
void in Fla., Mo., Wash., Minn. & Idaho.
IMPORTANT: Write your guess outside
the envelope, lower lefthand corner.
40
I 1
I I
I
1
1
*Clue- J.
( ou could fill '.- *, I
between 200 and ~
300 Tots with the
Staples in the jar.) .$s
Swingline Honda H
P.V. Box 11
New York,N.Y. 10016
THERE ARE S...sTAPLES IN THE JAR

The Michigan Daily, edited and man-
aged by students at, the University -of
Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second.
class postage paid at, Ann Arbor, Mich-
igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor,
Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues-
day through Sunday morning Univer-
sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by
carrier (campus area); $11 local mail
tin Mich. or Ohio); $13 npn-local mail
(other states and foreign).
Summer Session published Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-
tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus
area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or
Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other
states and foreign).

EAST LANSING, Mich. (m) -
The Michigan State University
Board of Trustees deadlocked
yesterday on a resolution which
called for a boycott on lettuce
in support of a strike against
growers by Cesar Chavez's Unit-
ed Farm Workers Union.
The vote was 4-4, and the boy-
cott request failed because it
did not get a majority.
The resolution presented to the
trustees yesterday was greatly
revamped from an earlier one
that had been introduced by three
board members. The initial re-
solution created a major s t i r
throughout Michigan. S o me
'farmers claimed it would cause a
boycott of Michigan lettuce.

Horse Back Riding
HICKORY RIDGE
RIDING RANCH
Brighton State
Recreation Area
2 hour from Ann Arbor
10 W. of U.S. 23 (M 36 Exit)
$2.50/hour weekdays
$3.00/hour weekends
SPECIAL RATES FOR GROUPS
6600 Chilson Rd. at Bishop Lake
1-227-5256

If
~~'2 }

However, Trustee Don Stevens
of Okemos later presented clari-
fied resolution and he said it
would not include Michigan-grown
lettuce and lettuce produced by
certain growers in Arizona and
California that have contracts
with the Teamsters Union.
About six representatives of
farm organizations gathered out-
side the MSU Administration
Building and passed out Michi-
gan-grown vegetables.
DavidnMorris, chairman of the
Michigan Agricultural Confer-'
ence, said, "We're concerned
agriculture can lose its markets
through a boycott." He contin-
ued, "To take the action some
trustees said might be consider.d
would be in essence to discrim-
inate against Michigan agricul-
ture."
Morris said if MSU would go
along with a lettuce boycott to-
day, it might be a boycott
against Michigan apples tomor-
row.
ATTENTION
Republicans
Volunteers needed
for canvassing
CALL GL 3-4974

U

numqb-

Make a Killing

FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
On the Campus-
Corner State and William Sts.
Rev. Terrv N. Smith, Senior Minister
Rev. Ronald C. Phillips, Assistant
FIRST UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH AND WESLEY
FOUNDATION
State at Huron and Washington
9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Sermon by Dr. Donald
B. Strobe - "Worship: What's It All
About?"
Broadcast WNRS 1290 AM, WNRZ 103 FM,
11:00-12:00 o'clock.
WESLEY FOUNDATION NEWS ITEMS:
Sunday, Sept. 17:
5:30 p.m.-Celebration (Worship), Wesley
Lounge.
6:15 p.m.-Supper (50c), Pine Room.
7:00 p.m.-'Living as a Christian at the Big
U" with Dean Frank Rhodes of LS&A,
Wesley Lounge.
PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH
2580 Packard Road-971-0773
Tom Bloxam, Pastor-971-3152
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Worship-1 1 :00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.
Training Hour-6:00 p.m.
SAMARIA LUTHERAN, LCA
272 Hewitt Rd.-1 block S. of Packard
n-Re Da Tvs nPn+t

LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN .
CHURCH, formerly the Lutheran
Student Chapel and Center
801 South Forest at Hill
Donald G. Zill, Pastor
Sunday, 10:15 a.m.-Service Book II.
Wednesday, 5:15 p.m.-Eucharist.
THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
502 East Huron St.
Phone 663-9376
Jerome Butera will present an Organ Recital
at the First BaptisttChurch of AnnArbor
Sunday, Sept. 24, at 4:00 p.m. The pro-
gram will consist of a varied selection of
works including the "Fantasie and Fugue
in C minor" of J.S. Bach, the "Fantasie
in A" of Cesar Franck, and the "Incan-
tation for a Holy Day" of Jean Langlais.
Mr. Butera is Organist at the First Baptist
Church and is a masters candidate in the
U-M School of Music. He holds a B.Mus.
from DePaul University in Chicago, where
he was also Organist and Choirmaster at
St. Richard's Episcopal Church. The Organ
at First Baptist is a recent installation by
Robert Noehren of 57 ranks on three man-
uals and pedal.
Admission to the program is without ticket or
charge.
HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH
3150 Glacier Way
Pastor: Charles Johnson
For information, transportation, personalized

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
1833 Washtenaw Ave.
SUNDAY
10:30 a.m.-Worship Services. Sunday School
(2-20 years).
Infants roam available Sunday and Wednesday.
Public Reading Room, 306 E. Liberty St. -
Mon., 10-9; Tues.-Sat., 10-5. ClosedSun-
days and Holidays.
For transportation call 668-6427.
ST. ANDREW'S EPSICOPAL CHURCH
306 N. Division
8:00 a.m.-Holy Eucharist.
10:00 a.m.-Holy Eucharist and Sermon.
BETHLEHEM UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST
423 S. Fourth Ave.
Telephone 665-6149
Ministers: T. L. Trost, Jr., R. E. Simonson
9:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer.
10:00 a.m. -Worship Service and Church
School.
CAMPUS CHAPEL
1236 Washtenaw
Minister: Rev. Donald Postema
10:00 a.m.-Morning Celebration., Sacrament
of baptism.
11:00 a.m.--Coffee and conversation in the
chapel lounge.

in Butte4
Yes, buttons. selling them
on and around campus...
You just tell us what youy
wanton the buttons. We'll do
all the artwork, make the
buttons, and ship them
directly to you You only pay a
our costs--which you'll find
incredibly low-and charge
whatever you'd like when
you sell. You'll have no p >
overhead, and all yourcalls
to us will be toll free.
People buy buttons for
sporting events, for
meetings, tor elections, for
causes, for slogans...the
applications are limitless.-

n s.

i

So get a few friends
together, start your own
company, and watch it
grow. The only limitation is
how open you can keep your
Ieyes, your ears..your mind.
You've got some spare time.
Why not have a little fun
making yourself and others
some traveling money?
Just clip this attached
coupon and mail it to us, and
*we'll send you everything
you need to get started.-

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All-Night Horror Extravaganza
5 Edgar Allan Poe Classics featuring
Vincent Price, Peter Lorre, Boris Karloff .
FRIDAY and SATURDAY, Sept. 15 and 16
Doors open 11:15 p.m.-Shows start 11:30-Box office
closed midnight-ALL SEATS $2.00-FREE COFFEE
I. "Tomb of Ligeia"--with Vincent Price
2. "The Raven"-Vincent Price, Peter
Lorre, Boris Karloff

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