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February 08, 1977 - Image 8

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1977-02-08

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Page Eight

rHE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tuesday, Februarv 8. 1 197'7

fHE ICHGAN AIL Tusdbv Ferii"v"P197

-J ~ - -

I

Cp
PL NANT5
GALORE
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A COUPON'
10% OFF ALL PLANTS-
PLUS EXTRA BONUS
MOISTURE METER-Reg. $9.99 *
SWITH COUPON--$5.50'
- Good thru Feb. 14 Limit 3 "
y -- rrr-rrr --.mmmm---mmmmmmmmm -n.
MANY OTHER ITEMS UP TO 50% OFF
"You Can Pay More, But You Can't Buy Better"
ANN ARBOR YPSILANTI
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(at Wells) (next to Wherehouse Records)4
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s~ l.~i~ 5 L~e&-lz 5a e.AAN a'uiaa ~:.A,4o.

LSA ponders aid issue

Council defeats motion
to oppose death penalty

(Continued from Page 1)
generous financial aid to highly-
qualified students.
According to a report pre-
pared by A. A. Gordus, chair-
man of the LSA Steering.Com-
mittee on Admissions, the Uni-
versity .boasts the second high-
est non-resident tuition in the
country among all public, state-
supported r institutions. The re-
port said this factor has prob-
ably discouraged applicants no
matter what their .qualifications.
BUTTS noted that only about
one-third of admitted out-of-
state students actually enroll at

the University. He added that 87 Funds for Basic Educational
per cent of all Honors students Opportunity Grants - awarded
who qualify for financial aid ac- solely on the basis of need -
tually enroll. Onlv 25 n~~~er etnw Sa . i~n mnr

lualy .IIV1 . .-.ly J ICP-s 1
of the Honors students* whose fi-
nancial aid requests are turned
down enroll.
The University, Butts said, is
becoming "increasingly depend-
ent on external, governmental
funding for students." General
state funds available to under-
graduates in 1973-74 totaled $4
million; this year they increased+
by $527,000. Federal funds avail-
able to undergraduates in-
creased 107 per cent over 73-74
to $11,169,000.

1111vil1almzlio, Lcomparea~ (Continued from Page 1) ('o'incil voted to delete that por-3 maiholes. It also approved a
to just $47000 four years ago. COUNCIL also voted last nighton of the amendment after dis- first reading of an ordinance
to approve a resolution which covering a section in the City revising the procedure for cre-
LAST OCTOBER the Michigan will place an amendment to the Charter which allows Council to ating fire lanes.
legislature passed a bill aimed City Charter on the April .ballot. decide wheth4r to pay city C Approval of the Capital Im-
at in-state and out-of-state stu- d t wold 11 boards and commissions indi- provements Budget, the site for
dents. The bill raised the ad- This amendment wouldallow vidu'
dete. famil ioed the apersons who are not officers nor vidually. the proposed fire station, and
juasted family income for the employed by city bodies which In other doings last night, the master plan for the Ann Ar-
Guaranteed Student Loan Pro- levy taxes-to serve on the Board Council passed an ordinance re- bor Municipal Airport were post-
gram from 1a,000 tol2o,000.Un- of Review. The Board makes de- garding safety precautions for poned until next Monday's spe-
dergraduates can get a long- cisions concerning city pro erty persons working in the city's cial session.
term loan of up to $2,500 per urrently, these persons-
year with seven per cent inter- taxes.nCugrbety, hseve on th
est paid by the government, are ineligible to serve on the
wihtnyast ea.board.'
with ten years to repay. Earlier, Council debated the A u th or te Hs o
Butts said the requirements Board of Review amendment for
"Demonstrated financial need the amendment which ques-
does not exclude middle income tioned whether those who serveou rn al s stru
students. In fact, middle income on the board should receive pay
edro andoud dqaliy" hn evoked heavy discussion from (Continued from Page 1) authors' approval" said Max-
eo e said. council members. imn "
imv,"ut there is a .catch. If

LUNCH DISCUSSION
TUESDAY, FEB. 8 -- 12 NOON
THE HUMAN RIGHTS PARTY
Speaker: BILL WILCOX
H HRP Candidate, Ann Arbor City Council
Ecumenical Campus Center
921 CHURCH STREET
75c - Food prepared and served byr
Church Women United in Ann Arbor

'
i

This bill became effec
January.
Join The
Daily

tive in
COUNCIL member Earl
Greene (D-2nd Ward), who sup-
ported payment for Board of Re-
view members, said, "If we're
paying folks, we can expect
higher competency and involve-
ment."
Following further discussion,
-_ _-- - I

FIELDING questions from a
receptive audience, Maximov
spoke of the Communist publica-
tions' attitudes toward Kontin-
ent.
"The policy of the Commun-
ists abroad is not to pay atten-
tion to the enemy if at all pos-
sible, 'Maximov said through
an inerpreter. He added that
the editor of a Communist paper
in Italy said it was policy not
to publish any material objec-
tionable to Communist thought.
The somber-faced writer also
commented on the personal
risks that contributing authors1
face when they publish in the'
Kontinent.
"WE PUBLISH only on the I

you want to publish, you ,mut
pay for it. A person may have
all the freedom to publish that
they want, providing they are
willing to risk their life."
In a subsequent interview,
Maximov complained that the
U.S. government is not listen-
ing to the pleas of the Russian
liberal element. He cited former
President Ford's refusal to meet
with exiled Russian author Alex-
ander Solzhenitsyn as evidence
of U.S. non-involvement.
Maximov added wryly, "Para-
doxical as it may seem, the
people in Russia are beginning
to know the Declaration of In-
dependence better than the
Americans."

1

1-STOP SHOPPING SAVES MONEY, TIME, ENERGY

A1&'AI

I

T

IkLv

Fuel crisis eases;
cold plants re-open

tnrixt c~*

PRICES GOOD, THRU SATURDAY FEBRUARY 12
MEIJER RESERVES THE RIGHT TO LIMIT SALES ACC
TO SPECIFIED LIMITS. NO SALES TO DEALERS, INSTIT
OR DISTRIBUTORS.

, 1977.
ORDING
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hoe Dept. -
MEUER LADIES' COUPOM
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Sizes 51-10 - Our Reg. $8.94 to $14.94
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GOOD 2/7 THRU 2/12/77

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CAM 2/7 TNRU 9/12/77DPT 4

By The Associated Press
Bundled up against the cold,
workers returned to chilly fac-
tories yesterday as natural gas
started flowing to some eastern
and midwestern industries clos-
ed when frigid weather strainedI
energy supplies to the breaking1
point.
Authorities in many areas
warned that plants could be shut
down again if the weather takes
a turn for the worse. Below-
freezing temperatures gripped
much of the eastern half of the
country yesterday, but there
were predictions of improve-
ment later in the week.
BUSINESSES that were open
perated at lower-than-usual
temperatures. In Virginia, for
example, schools and business-
es were required to keep ther-
mostats at 65 or less during
operating hours. Nearly all
workers wore sweaters or other

*heavy clothing.
And in North Carolina, most
of the state's 10,000 employes
took the day off in compliance
with Gov. Jim Hart's four-day
work week order to conserve
energy. State workers will put
in four 10-hour days each week
for the nxt 30 days.
Consumers, meanwhile, con-
tinued to find that the cold had
put a crimp in supplies of fresh
fruits and vegetables, driving up
prices. Citrus fruits and other
crops from Florida were de-
stroyed by the cold weather;
food shipments from other parts
of the country piled up in mid-
western depots when delivery
trucks were stalled by snow.
Although yesterday brought
back-to-work orders for hun-
dreds of thousands of laid-off
employes, many factories faced
longer shutdowns because of
still-short natural g s supplies.

REG. $1.27

$1 00

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A. C.S nD

PhuTU DepT. - MMtV .UppyII ept. U
SMALL LAOCKIESS
. E ICIS (WATRADDBYMAUFACTRR

Feb. 14
Feb. 21
Feb. 28
Mar. 7
Mar. 13
Mar. 21
Mar. 28
Apr. 4
Apr. 11
Apr. 18.

PRESIDENT FLEMING
JAMES AND GRACE BOGGS
SAMUEL LOVE
SPRINGBREAK
E. F. SCHUMACHER
RALPH STAVINS AND
GAR ALPEROVITZ
ENERGY CONFERENCE
GREGORY BATESON
GAY LUCE
TO BE ANNOUNCED

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SOFT DRINK Cola, Roo Beer, Cherry, Oronge or
SUN-GLd 12,. oz. cns 10
MEUER WHITE SAVE 321 ON 4
BREAD
CAMPBELL
PORK &8 BEAMS .24

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