Friday, January 28, 1977 Page Seven THE MICHIGAN DAILY I Friday, January1128" 1977 1THE1MICHIGAN1D.I.Y P.g- Se-e- .tree states de ener emer en (Continued from Page 1) But state officials said cur- ple out of work. tailrnents to be ordered under Gov. Hugh Carey proclaimed the emergency could cause hun- an energy state of emergency dreds of thousands of layoffs. in New York, assuming sweep- Gov. Milton Shapp said he has ing powers that will allow the asked Carter- to declare an em- state to order school closings, ergency in Pennsylvania and p factory shutdowns and any oth- give it excess natural gas sup- er steps needed to conserve plies from other states. scarce supplies of natural gas. The governor also asked that all restaurants, theaters, sports HE PROMISED that the pow- arenas and other non-essential ers would be used over the next commercial firms close until several days to insure that "res- Monday to save natural gas idential and other essential hu- man needs are met and that THE GOVERNOR, in an ap 'obs are protected to the great- peal on statewide public tele est extent possible." vision, said the closings are Setting bail a hard'ir task, judge says (Continued from Page 1) example, the Bail Fund then ties within the community (like would have to pay the court the employment or family) as well remaining 90 .per ce. as propensity to commit another The theory behind this laW is crime are criteria that a judge that if people post 10 per cent must consider. directly with the court, then The reasons for bail, Alex- they will get their money back, ander said, must be above all providing more incentive to based on the principle that a show up in court. With a bonds- person is innocent until proven man. a person loses money; guilty. Bail relieves the defend- whether they show up or not. ant of the burden of imprison- ment while assuring attendance Alexander advocat- posting in court. It also relieves the of only 10 per cent of a bond in state of the cost of imprison- felony charges to eliminate the ment. ripoffs by bondsmen. BAIL CAN BE posted by three When a person cones up with different means. Some people $500 on a $5,000 bond, Alexander can afford their own bail, either u.ally lowers the bond imme- out of their own pockets or from diately to $500. He said he could family or friends. not worry about the defendant Others cannot afford bail and then paying only $50 because! turn to either an organization "honesty must be both ways." such as the-Bail Fund - or to "How do we change from bondsmen, to whom they must money?" Alexander asked. He pay an automatic 10 per cent is not satisfied with using fee whether they are found guil money as a standard for free- ty or innocent. dom. Alexander, who is opposed to bondsmen, called this system an "It's hard to say 'Okay, Mr. "archaic" leftover from the so and so, your freedom depends days when bondsmen hired men on X amount of dollars.' It! to go after defaulters. leaves me with a bad feeling, hut I'm sorry; I don't know of PRESENT LAW says that a any subhtitute." defendant may post 10 per cent ~~ of a bond if charged with a mis- Ben Franklin was quoted as demeanor. If the person charged saying ,"Genius without educa- does not show up in court, for tion is like silver in the mine." ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE presents CONTEMPORARY COMEDY January 26-30,1977 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Box Office Opens Daily 10 a.m. 763-1085 COLLEGE GRADUATE DON'T TAKE CHANCES WITH YOUR PARALEGAL CAREER-- NOT ALL LAWYER'S ASSISTANT PROGRAMS ARE THE SAME A Roosevelt University Lawyer's Assistant rep- resents the mark of quality and acceptance in today's legal community. If you are a college graduate and qualify, why not give yourself an advantage by attending Roosevelt Univer- sity's Lawyer's Assistant Program which is fully ac- credited by the American Bar Association. Since the Fall of 1974, 525 graduates representing over 160 colleges and universities have chosen Roose- velt's Lawyer's Assistant Program for their career training. Specialize in: Corporations - Estates, Trusts and Wills - Litigation - Real Estate and Mortgages - or be- come a Generalist*. Over 225 law firms, banks, corporations and govern- mental agencies throughout the United States have hired Roosevelt graduates. SESSIONS Q Summer Day/June 13-September 2, 1977 E Fall Day/September 26-December 16, 1977 O Fall Evening/September 13, 1977-March 4, 1978 * evening program only. ----- ------------- SEND TODAY ---------- Lawyer's Assistant Program fl~c~r 1 * I11 L*~ITA* 1151 n4 " E 1 OO Cdare Students applaud Nite Owl I I cies necessary to avoid "a truly catastrophic situation." Florida Gov. Reubin Askew asked Carter to declare the state a disaster area and thus trigger a variety of federal aid program to help cushion the economic losses of last week's killer freeze of fruits and vege- tables. Low temperatures last week drained natural gas reserves to critical levels in the East and South. The new Arctic blast just about finished them off in some states. Continued from Page 1) Passengers need not get off the bus at the designated stops. R agan lets the-passengers know this by calling out, "Anvwhere' vpu want to get out, II'll let you out, just tell me." "SOMETIMES there is a feeling of community on the bus, especially later." said one passenger. "One night when a bus got stuck in the snow all the passengers got out and pushed. But the drivers, who are on the bus for six hour shifts have varying points of view. s i f Volchoff enjoys time I drive this my boss, Larry said. it. "Every bus I thank (Lake)." he The University, however, has said the' bus service will con-' tinue until students stop usingt Sit.[ WANTED: Program Analyst 1 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN with PDP-9 and assembler language required. Knowledge of computer graphics and program- ming for psychological experiments desireable. 20 hrs./week. ON THE OTHER hand, lag- Riders also expressed an in- an, who usually doesn't drive terest in having the route ex- the Nite Owl, feels differently. panded to include North Cam- "It's a little boring," he said d yawning, "I'm getting mighty E pus and the apartment area on tired of sitting in this seat." E. University St. One rider fears the service will be suspended. "What both- ers me is that after they catch the rapist they'll discontinue the service," he said. She add- ed: 'There'll always be an- other rapist. ?ette(o war wr a Contact DARLENE HARGRAVES 1014 Mental Health Research Institute-763-1450 Non-discriminatory, affirmative action employer i , l AS STATES SOUGHT to cope with mounting problems, con- gressional leaders studied the emergency energy legislation proposed by President Carter. Carter said quick action isj needed because the gas short-I age already has forced the clos- ing of some 4,000 plants and the. layoff of an estimated 400,000 persons. The legislation, sent to Can- itol Hill on Wednesday, would give the President power to di- vert natural gas to cold-strick- en Darts of the country and would allow emergency sales at unregulated prices by intra- state pinelines in the oil-produc- ing Gulf Coast states. Winds gusting to 45 miles an hoir whipped the snow into drifts up to 11 feet high in hilly western Michigan terrain. Traffic was clogged in most north-south roads throughout so'thwestern Michigan. The near-blizzard conditions. led to a 20-car pileup on US- 131 near Belmont, a four-vehicle' crash on US-131 just south of'] Grand Rapids, a 25-car accident on M-37 near Caledonia, and an 18-car tangle on I-196 southwest of Grand Rapids. 60-Minute Cass PL I Buy one at regular price get the other at /2 price I I 0 Regular Price for 2 Sale Price for 2 You Save 1 __ 1 ___ . .missing out on some of the DAILIES because, of delivery mistakes? MEMOREX Recorijing Tape is t yeo is it Mrm?" I I i a I OR 49L ICER S 549 E. UNIVERSITY AVE. " 0 0 disagree with a bill we sent you for THE DAILY? WE'D LIKE TO TRY TO STRAIGHT- EN OUT THAT PROBLEM, BUT WE CAN'T IF YOU DON'T LET US KNOW ABOUT IT. Monday thru Friday, 10 I IA )A. M. to 3 P.M. CIRCULATION p k'I1Iitu i 43attI 764-0558 DEPARTMENT V hein 441 in the ulliledsates how to escape. YOU ARE INVITED TO: Learn Roller Skate WHEN: Sunday, January 30, 1977 1-4 P.M. (WEATHER PERMITTING) WHERE: Central Campus Recreation Building COST: $1.50-Skate Rental, Instruction, Open Skate $1.00-Skate Rental, Open Skate REQUIRED: Valid I.D. or User Pass ANYONE SHOWING THESEMAY SPONSOAR TW6,rq.1ESEMAY f r r , 01 r t - 10 i 00 .. ........ i