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December 03, 1976 - Image 3

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1976-12-03

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Friday, December 3, 1976 TEMCIA AL

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Three

New

Dems won't rattle

House

WASHINGTON & - One f-',to rook any boats unless we de- newcomers were instrurnen
ter another. newly-ele~ted H )Tse aide they have to be ro~ked." doing.
Democratic first-termers a: iv- said Represen ative-elect }lay- The 1974 freshpers')ns vil
inng on Capitol Hll yesterday mond Lederer of Pennsylvania. ly crippled the already %&e<
said they have no desire to be And as for joining torce.> with ed seniority power of E
the militant, chairperson-dump- e 78 returning members of the, chairpersons" by starting a
ing young tyrants that the 1974 1974 class, Lederer added su-! cessful drive to dumno thrE
newcomers were. piciously: "To give it to you them.
Many of them also said they ,bluntly, we're going to be look- "I DON'T THINK it s,
don't want to form a power bloc be us aanttemr
withthoe mmber elc e ining at what they ,vant ourt.of aans h.mr
wit thse embrs lec-edinit and what we can get out of members," said Charles
1974 because they fear that the it. lev of North Carolina. "If
senior members would dominate "IDNTTNKt kept adding junior mnembe
it sheep,"hesi,"dIdo' that kind of system, you'd
CONGRESS DOES not ..on- . h ad o' up with a seniority systemi
vene until Jan. 4, but all 47 think we're going to b., sheep verse."
Democratic first-term House either." Bob Stump, a new Dema
members were invited in for Democratic first-termers in- from Arizona, went even
orientation briefings and a ses-F terviewed as they arrived in ther: "IPm a great nelievc
sion on orginizing themselves as town reacted strongly againstj the seniority system and I
a class. !setting out to dump any commit- !no desire to go in and
"I don't think we're, going tee chairpersons, as the 1974 things around."

tal in! However, most of '}hem indi-a
I cated they might support dome
irtual- procedure for interviewing all
,ken- committee chairpersons at the :
House start of each Congress on their
asuc- philosophies and intention3.
,ee of
BUT ALLEN ERTEL, a new
iiwuldI Democrat from Pennsvlvanwa,'
senior said he sees no reason why the:
Wnit-, interview for chairpersons :-zhotildj
I ou be conducted only by juniorI
ers to nmembers.
wind Ertel said he thinks the chair-
ir re- persons should be called to spell
out their philosophies and leg is-
iocrat lative intentions to all 29 House
ifur- Democrats at the organizing!
rer inI aucus sessions.
have; Ertel and nearly all the other
turn! Democratic newcomers said
they want to form an influential
__bloc that will get fair committea~
assignments.

Available onl RecO rdsan#Tpe
mrsRttig StnesRe atheSam
faces Gr eate.t its arxE55eT
FUNK RO Le + Bread And RosesY- -;
The ooab 5 0 ae
Haod VC ~rry Cd T o n he 4#pn;tgosBeng S;,~~.ghts Are Forever
f t h a ft 4'- bard Bread andRoses Comer

DENTAL BREAKTHROUGH :

Spray that decay away.

BOSTON (R) - Doctors at
Tufts Dental School say they
have successfully tested a chem-
ical spray that removes decayed
tooth material with little drilling
and almost no pain.
The new method requires no
anesthesia for even the biggest
cavities, they say, and it virt-
ually eliminates the grinding
pain of traditional dental work.
THE DOCTORS have devel-
oped a chemical called GK-11
(N-Monochloroglycine) and a
hand-held needle that squirts the.
GK-101 onto the cavity. Within
minutes, decayed material
breaks up and flakes away.
,The method, under develop-
ment for five years. was tried on
49 patients who had 61 teeth
with cavities. The chemical re-
moved decayed material in 58
of the teeth. In two other teeth,
the decayed area was nearly all
removed, and in one it was par-
tially removed, the doctors re-
port.
The technique was developed
and tested by two Tufts dentists,
Melvin Goldman and Joseph
Kronman. A report' on t he i r
findings was published in the
current issue of the Journal of
the American Dental Assoia-
tion.
Daily Official Bulletin,
ou':,>iii:? :;}i:.2;^?":... ':':T ....."k"...y;.}vm
Friday, December !
WUOM: ,The Artist and the Sea"
1st of series of "3 documentaries,
"Oceans," 10 am.
Educational Media: Horse Lati-
tudes, Schoring Aud., SE, 12:10
pm.
Anatom: Pentt T. Jokelainen
'What's New About inetochore"
4643 Med Sd TII, 4 pm.
Internat'l Folk Dance club: In-
struction, 8-9 m; dancing, 9-11:30
pm. central campus Rec. Bldg.
Hockey: UJM vs Minnesota-Duluth,
Yost Ice Arena. 7:30 pm.
Yeats Ensemble/Museum of Art:
4 playlets by Yeats: At the Hawk's
Well; On Bale's Strand; The only
Jealousy of Ener; The Death of
Cuchulain, Museum of Art, 8 pm.
G & S Society: "The Sorcerer,"
League, 8 pm.
Artists & Craftsmen Guild:
Christmas Craft Tree, carol sing-
ing, Pendeton Rm., Union, 8 pm.
Musical Society: Handel's "Mes-
siah." Hill Aud., 8:30 pm.
CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT
4200 SAB - 764-7460
If you are from the Coluibus,
Ohio Area - make a note of the
following event: Columbus Careers
Conference Dec. 29-30. Must be re-
ceiving degree by Jan. 31. '78 -
Juniors & Seniors look into this
opportunity.
Institute of Paper Chemistry, Ap-
pleton, Wisc., invites your interest
in new programs leading to de-
grees in organic/physical chemistry,
physics, biology, economics, bus.
admin., math. Further details avail-
able. App, deadline, March '77. 1
SUMMER PLACEMENT
3200 SAB - 763-4117j
Opryand. Nashville, Tenn. Will
hold Live Show Auditions at Michi-
gan Union'=o Thurs., Dec. 2, noon-
5 p.m. If you sing, dance, play an
instrument, etc. now is your chance.
Everything from Rock to Divieland,
Country to Cohen.
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THE DOCTORS said drilling
isometimes necessary to ex-
pose the cavity' enough for the
chemical to work. After the de-
cay is flushed out, doctors have
tdrill a little more to shave
toe hole. Then it is filled theI
same way ordinary tooth repairs
are made.
Even though the method re-
quires some drilling, it has sev-'
eral advantages over current,
dental practices, the doctors say.
"The heat and pressure that
a drill produces would be min-
imized," Kronman said in an
interview. "It also removes cniy
the decay. Since a drill r emceves
everything it touches, this is a
more conservative approach."
FOR 77 per cent of the cavi-

ties treated, the patients felt
no pain, the doctors said. If
there was pain, patients always
described it as slight.
The method, will require more
testing and approval by the Food
and Drug Administration before
it is available to other dentists.
This will take "a mater cf
years," Kronman said.
Kronman cautioned that t h e
new method may not work on
all kinds of cavities and will not
take the place of traditional den-
tistry.
"It's a meaningful adjunct to
dental care," he said. "The
principles of good dental care
must still be followed."
Kronman said the researchers
do not completely understand
how the chemical works to break
up tooth decay.'

rBUT MANY of the new Denis-
crats expressed fear that the!
1974 class would dominate anyt
alliance with the 1976 class.
'"That would be a tail wag-
ging the dog situation for us,
said Whitley.
The 20 Republican first-termh-
ers were arriving also yesterday
for a dinner and a weekend
orientation.
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Volume LXXXVII, No. 74
Friday, December 3, 1976
is edited and managed by students
at the University of Michigan. News
phone 764-0562. Second class postage
paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109.
Published d a i l y Tuesday through
Sunday morning during the Univer-
sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann
Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription
rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes-
ters); $13 by mail outside Ann
Arbor.
Summer session published Tues-
day through Saturday morning.
Subscription rates: '$6.50 in Ann
Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann
Arbor. ' a
but Igltr

MWNZAP9A FOIeBEE Mtl
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pr. u ^+ nhn

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- WEST SIDE
BOOK SHOP
I sed & Rare Books Bought & Sold
"LIBRARIES PURCHASED
"_RE SEARCH SERVICE
113 West Liberty 0 995-1891
I.Open Mon-Sat 11 to 6pm
L. ~ ~ Thurs & Fri Evenings til 9pm

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236 Nickels Arcade
Ann Arbor
GUITAR CLASSES
By Dr. Nelson Amos,
Instructor of Guitar
Eastern Michigan
University
*A comnphrensive
approach to music
reading and right-
hand technique.
0 Twelve weeks of
instruction in basic
classical and folk
guitar.
*One-hour lessons
meeting weekly from
5:30-6:30 p.m.
*Reasonable rates.
For information call:
662-5888 (Daily 10-6)
or
485-0310 (evenings)

Ln Redbp(" 15 ig Ones - - - .
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Use Daily Classifieds

- - ,

Masterpieces don't have to be
hard to find.
PENGUIN CLASSICS-
The original paperback series of literary
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"The pleasure I taie in the Penguin volumes has a'
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A sampling from the more than 200 Penguin Classics
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-Announcing the 2nd Annual
MICHIGANENSlAN
PHOTO CONTEST
NO THEME!

f
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(r
,.
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l

Enter anything and everything. Winners to be published in 1977 MICHIGAN-
ENSIAN YEARBOOK. Grand Prize and 1st, 2nd and 3rd place prizes for both
B&W and Color categories. No entry fee a nd, no themes! If you like it, we'll
like it! DEADLINE THIS FRIDAY!
RULES:'
1) 2 categories-B&W and Color (prints or transparencies-8x] 0 maximum,

Abelard & Heloise
Alexander (tr.)
al- Udhari &
'Wightman (tr.)
Ariosto

Aristophanes
Balzac
Balzac
Bocacci~o
Boethius-
Dawood (tr.)
Dawood (t,)
Erasmus~
Jackson (tr.)
Josephus
M\'achiavellii
More
Nietzsche
0' Flaherty (tr.)
Sej Shonaizon
Senecai
Ste ndhal
SuetoniIS~

LETTERS
BEOWULF
BIRDSTHROUGH A
CEILING OF ALABASTER:
THREE ABBASI D POETS
ORLANDO FURIOSO, Vol. I
LYSISTRATA AND OTHER PLAYS
THE BLACK SHEEP
LOST ILLUSIONS
THE DECAMERON
THE CONSOLATION
OF PHI LOSOPH Y
THE KORAN
I'ALES FROM THE
THOUSAND AN D ONE N IGHTS
P'RAISE OF FOLLY
A CELTIC MISCELLANY
THE JEWISH WAR
THE PRINCE
UT OPIA
BEYOND GOOD AND EVIL.
HINDU MYTHS
PI LLOW BOOK
OF SF1 SHONAGON
LETTERS FROM A STOIC
LO. VEF
THE TWFVI VFI AF SA RS

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2) Entry Deadline-Dec. 3rd. Bring or mail entries to 2nd floor business office,
Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard. Enclose SASE for return of prints.
3) Winners to be announced Dec. 6.

GRAND PRIZE
$100 gift certificate
FROM
Big George's
Homne Appliance Mart

mm mmmwir mmmininW mmw minmmman mmimmmi m iim i.mm, sismmitm i"mwwmiW lm amm a"= at~
R ,
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1 am submitting... .photographs. CHECK ONE: B&W ... COLOR ,..,
r I
I
* NOTE: Identify EVERY print or slide with Name, Address and Telephone No. ;
* R
N A M E ..... . ; . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ADDRESS '
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