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October 06, 1972 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-10-06

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

Poge Ten

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Friday, October 6, 1972

Poge Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Judge strikes down
state abortion laws

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ups

NEW HOURS:
12-2 p.m.-5 p. .-midnight
daily
Hot Town's First Gourmet
VEGETARIAN
RESTAURANT
C. I UU MON6rrum r.

(Continued from Page 1)
but said. since it would wipe all
present abortion laws off the
books, it creates a need for new
ones which thereferendum would
provide.
Kaufman, besieged yesterday
with calls from exhuberant sup-
porters and angry right-to-lifers,
said, "I was impartial on the is-
sue when I went into it but the

testimony and
ine.

exhibits convinced

"I must say I can't close my
eyes to existing mores now," he
said.
"Things have changed since the
laws were made back in the 1800's
... the proper thing to do now is
to permit women to have abor-
tions," he added.

314 EAST LIBERTY-761-2231 For
LATE NIGHT TEA H
Featuring: SPECIAL STUDENT
LIVE ENTERTAINM
OPEN AS OF WED., SEPT. 20

r T OU Nat'urai rolK

-OUSE
PRICES
ENT

a

U' prof says time,
methods slant polls

1!

(Continued from Page 1)
matter.
Assuming the same methods
were used by both companies on
all their polls they should reflect
a trend in the same general direc-
tion, he stated.
"Unless there was a peak in
Nixon's lead between the time the
two polls were taken, I can't ex-
plain it," Miller said.
Even though voters are bom-
barded by an almost constant bar-
rage of polls as the election draws

near, they have surprisingly little
effect on their voting choices, ac-
cording to Miller.
The area where polls do have a
great effect on the outcome of a
political race ist"in creating ex-
pectations on the elite level"
among the campaign workers and
money-givers essential to any can-
didate, Miller explained.
"No one, said Miller, "wants to
give money or work for a candi-
date if they think he hasn't got
a chance."

STUDENT GOVERNMENT
Is Now Accepting Petitions of Candidacy for the
FALL ELECTIONS
OCTOBER 31st-NOVEMBER 2nd
THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS ARE TO BE FILLED:

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Cinema Weekend

(Continued from Page 3)
Pork suggests the "emptiness of
our existence" Warhol's 1967
statement, "It's hard to care"-
is it parody or the real thing?
-LARRY LEMPERT
Soul to Soul
Modern Languages Building
Fri.
A musical documentary about
a Black American musicians'
tour of Africa. The acts included:
Wilson Pickett, Ike and Tina,

the Voices of East Harlem, San-
tana, and Robedt Flack, among
others. Illustrious Daily reviewer
Peter Munsing had this to say
about Soul to Soul when it played
here commercially last year;
"The mixed reactions of Ameri-
eans going back to their home-
land, just like a synagogue from
Southfield going to-Israel . . . in
the best George Pierrot style ...
It's like National Geographic at-
tempting to do a story on James
Brown, and failing miserably."
-STAFF

Detroit River dodgems
The congested waters of the murky Detroit River claimed two more victims yesterday. The
Arthur B. Homer and the Navishipper were both taking water last night after running into each
other at 11:45 a.m. Pictured here is the Homer, with a tugboat protectively guarding her dam-
aged stern.

" Six full term at-large seats on Student
Government Council

t

Rm

YOU

A

i

SGC meeting folds due
to lack of support

" Eight at-large seats on LS&A Student Government
" Eight seats on Rackham Student Government
" Five seats on the Board of Directors of Pirgim
" One Undergraduate Seat on the Board in
Control of Student Publications
* Nine seats on the University Housing Council
PERSONS INTERESTED IN PETITIONING FOR THESE SEATS SHOULD
PICK UP PETITIONS AT THE FOLLOWING OFFICES:
" For the Six Student Government Council seats, the Undergraduate Seat
on the Board in Control of Student Publications, and the Nine Seat
on the University Housing Council, go to the Student Government
Council Office, Room 3X, Michigan Union.
" For the Eight LS&A Student Government Seats, Go to Room 3M, Mich-
igan Union
" For the PRIGIM Seats, Go to Room 1511 SAB
" For the Rackham Seats, Coll Bobby Bowman at 764-4436 or 662-4297
All Petitions Must Be Returned to Their Respective
Offices by 5:00 P.M. Friday, October 13
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS PLEASE CALL 763-3241

Last night's scheduled Student
Government Council meeting was
adjourned after an hour when the
Council was unable to meet the
new lowered quorum require-
ments.
The four voting members pres-
ent at the meeting were Presi-
dent Bill Jacobs, Lou Glazer,

Matt Dunaskiss and Curt Stein-
hauer.
Council members were unable
to contact most of the remaining
members.
Among the agenda items sched-
uled for discussion were a $105
handicapped student allocation
and maternity benefits.

Senate passes welfare bill

(Oontinued from Page 1)
form measure to deal with the
problems of families with depen-
dent children. The numbers draw-
ing benefits under this program
have been skyrocketing, with the
total now about 11 million.
However, the Senate was sharp-
ly divided about what to do about
these problems.
In the end, it decided not to try
for a solution at this time. Sena-
tors voted to shelve the three prin-
cipal plans and instead provide
$400 million a year for a test of all
three.
The testing process could take
up to eight years. Meanwhile, the
present program of Aid to Fami-
lies with Dependent Children will
continue.

The Senate stayed in session
more than 16 hours to complete
action on the legislation. The bill
was under debate eight days.
Earlier yesterday, the Senate
adopted an amendment to protect
recipients of a previously approved
20-per-cent Social Security increase
from boosts in public housing rents
or loss of food stamps or commodi-
ties. The amendment was spon-
sored by Sen. Walter Mondale (D-
Minn.).

Drunk ?

Debauckerer ? Degenerate ?

IF SO, TRY THE

DAILY SPIRTS STAFF

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Doodinn with

tho hand

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In the first grade, when you were taught
to read "Run Spot Run," you had to read it
out loud. Word-by-word. Later, in the second
grade, you were asked to read silently. But
you couldn't do it.
You stopped reading out loud, but you
continued to say every word to yourself.
Chances are, you're doing it right now.
This means that you read only as fast
as you talk. About 250 to 300 words per
minute. (Guiness' Book of World Records
lists John-F Kennedy as delivering the fast-
est speech on record: 327 words per
minute.)
The Evelyn Wood Course teaches you
to read without mentally saying each word
to yourself. Instead of reading one word at
a time, you'll learn to read groups of words.
To see how natural this is, look at the
dot over the line in bold type.
grass is green
You immediately see all three words.
Now look at the dot between the next two
lines of type.
and it grows
when it rains
With training, you'll learn to use your
innate ability to see groups of words.
As an Evelyn Wood graduate, you'll be
able to read between 1,000 and 3,000
words per minute . . . depending on the
difficulty of the material.
At 1,000 words per minute, you'll be
able to read a text book like Hofstadtler's
American Political Tradition and finish
each chapter in 11 minutes.
At 2,000 words per minute, you'll be
.able to read a magazine like Time or News-

week and finish each page in 31 seconds.
At 3,000 words per minute, you'll be
able to read the 447 page novel The God-
father in 1 hour and 4 minutes.
These are documented statistics based
on the results of the 450,000 people who
have enrolled in the Evelyn Wood course
since its inception in 1959.
The course isn't complicated. There
are no machines. There are no notes to
take. And you don't have to memorize any-
thing.
95% of our graduates have improved
their reading ability by an average of 4.7
times. On rare occasions, a graduate's read-
ing ability isn't improved by at least 3 times.
In these instances, the tuition is completely
refunded.
Take a tree
Mini-Lesson
on Evelyn Wood.
Do you want to see how the course
works?
Then take a free Mini-Lesson.r The
Mini-Lesson is an hour long peek at what
the Evelyn Wood course offers.
We'll show you how it's possible to
accelerate your speed without skipping a
single word. You'll have a chance to try your
hand at it, and before it's over, you'll actually
increase your reading speed. (You'll only
increase it a little, but it's a start.)
We'll show you how we can extend your
memory. And we'll show you how we make
chapter outlining obsolete.
Take a Mini-Lesson this week. It's a
wild hour. And it's free.

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