Page Ejgh# THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, December 8, 1976 Page Ejght THE MiCHiGAN DAILY Wednesday, December 8, 1 9J~ S. Africa I DON'T WASTE (Continued fromPage1) STEWA borders of South Africa, is, in newspape YOUR BREA TH their opinion, a "mystification." ious news don Time SOMEPLACE ELSE . . . "Transkei will never be in- leaders in dependent," said Mutombo- violencee Mpanya because the labor force only way Say I First in tere depends on South African "If the industry for its economic well- "Ifpyhe } being.simply in the Classifieds "wouldlk thes fidbHE LIKENED the situation to associate that of the migrant workers in then neg CALL TODAY California. There, as in Tran- way,tsy skei, the workers are in a coun-but if yi 764-0557 try that allows them to work, problems 7but you cannot be a citizen. rich . . Naturally, you cannot vote." It the way. is like being a citizen of South Africa, without the privileges But th and rights that accompany citi- met, h zenship, he said. people on JACOBSON'S OPEN EVENINGS NOW TO CHRISTMAS Stewart added that a string of draw the SHOP MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 'TIL 9:00 P.M. such states between South Af- derdog" v rica and the remainder of the the mean Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. continent will act like a buffer been usi zone from political pressures. "You cannot buy big problems- p with little solutions like that," Sir Hu t said Mutombo-Mpanya., ed with miner's s ---FREE FEATURE 4:15 WEDNESDAY ANG "ANTONIO DAS N Religious-Political- i Set in Northeast Brazil itpl tional Millenarianist story 1964 context of landowne ants and a "hired gun." Office of Ethics &1 3204 UNION \ - . - HEAJ~v -(t 1[ evi's Movin' Onfjeans. . .a special way for jeans to look. Each style has lean European fit, moderate flare and unique Take a load off your mind touches. . .like these with button-down and chew the fat with us. tfront pockets and angled corner back' pockets..'" Navy cotton denim. 28 to 36 waist. $19 THAT'S RIGH FROM OUR MR. SHOP We want your corpulent ac portly portrayals and your ments. -.macobD ;Solis$4 Questions on weight contr( tion. . 3 2 South Stake 2o tWrite to: FAT FIGHTER Please park in the adjoining enclosed Maynard Street DAILY BOX 9 auto ramp. Jacobson's will gladly validate your parking ticke ANN ARBOR, experts decry racism Calif. death law axed RT, himself a former "WHEN YOU USE revolt, you r editor, quoted var- lose their respect," he said. articles from the Lon- "I don't see anythin eace s, and said that student Idntseaythig peae African countries feel ful in the shooting of children in and revolt may be the Soweto. I don't see anything out. peaceful in South Africa," he said, referring to outbreaks of e problem is defined violence reportedly spurred by iracial terms, and you atoiis e to see some blacks authorities._ d with the whites there, otiations inight be the " aid Mutombo-Mpanya, DS of the poor versus the e p , t, ,. F i Both men said they would pre- fer a peaceful solution to a' violent one. "What transforms the world is challenge," said Stewart. That, challenge, in both men's eyes, is to change the structures of power in southern Africa, so that liberation might be possible. (Continued from Page 1) penalty rulings in 1972. "THIS COURT has no choice but to invalidate tpe California law. To save the statute he would have had to rewrite it in the guise of interpretation, construing it contrary to the plain intentions of the legisla- tors," he wrote in his opinion. Philip Guthrie, spokesman forI the California Department of Corrections, said there were now 65 men and two women on deoth ,row, all sentenced since the first law was struck down. tWe won't decide anything on these people until the decision is final and is the law of the land," he said. "We don't know if there will be plans to appeal this decision to the U.S. Su- preme Court." haunts many during holidays a radical solution is e fallacy of this argu- e continued, is that the outside often with- ir support for the "un- when that side is "using s the rich people have ng all along. mphrey Davy is credit- having developed the safety lampp in 1815. FILM- ELL AUD.7"A" AORTES -MythicI aces a tradi- I in a post- rs and peas- Religion 764-7442 (continued from Page 1) Year's Day. Calls from persons suffering from depression increase dur- ing thishtime, somekfrom per- sons who have taken drugs, Feiner said. "You don't have to be fucked up to call a crisis center. We help people sort out their thoughts and make them aware of their feelings." compared to 30 per cent in No- vember and 28 per cent in Oc- tober. The total number of' walk-ins decreased from 259 in October to 155 in December. ical examiner of the Washte- naw County Health Dept., said "Traditionally, he peak for suicides is the week between Christmas and New Year's." such as downers, or have drunk DR. THOMAS Segall, chief of heavily to relieve their depres- the emergency psychiatry clinic sion. at University Hospital, said the hospital handles the more seri- "PEOPLE WHO only want to ous cases of depression, some get away for awhile may end referred to them by crisis cen- up getting away permanently," ters. Feiner said of those who take "Some people become more drugs. depressed because of the holi- "Suicide is a self-destructive days," Segall explained. "It behavior," Feiner continued. may not be that they're isolat- "Suicidal persons feel hopeless ed, but instead do not have any and helpless about their life fun with the ones they love." situations and unable to do any- Statistics based on, available' thing about it." information supplied by Segall But not all people who call show the approximate percent- have suicidal tendencies. age of total "walk-ins" suffer- "Ann Arbor can be a really ing from depression last year lonely place around holidays," was 33 per cent in December, "THERE ACTUALLY may be HE SPECULATED THE more serious cases, but we amount might be even higher don't see them," Dr. Segall because some doctors change said. "We haven't been a tre- the cause of death from suicide mendous increase in calls to some other cause less embar- around holidays." rassing to the victim's family. Dr. Segall explained that the Several churches and other holiday season sometimes only concerned groups are sponsor- begins, a period of depression, ing Christmas dinners for those and the number of patients in- who are alone on Christmas creases in the early spring Day. when people find that the spring "Christmas is a special time did not cure their problems. He for everyone," said Capt. Paul added that most people do not Wilson of the Ann A'rbor chap- relish all the preparation that ter of tho, Salvation Army. "For the holidays involves and are : people who don't have families, quite relieved when the yuletide we like to see that they get a is finally, over. Christmas dinner with all the Dr. John Atwater, chief med- trimmings." POSSIBLE TAX REBATE CONSIDERED: Cabinet searchcontinues (Continued from Page 1) uled to meet the President-elect today, Joseph Califano, a Wash- ington lawyer and aide to'Presi- dent Lyndon Johnson, who has not turned up on any specula- tive lists of Carter appoint-k ments. Several sources close to the Carter team have been quotedf as saying that the favorite for! the defense post is Dr. Harold Brown, rpresident of the Cali- fornia Institute of Technology, who was on his way here from Los Angeles to see Carter to- day. Each of the candidates was meeting Carter together with Vice President-elect Walter Mondale and senior advisers ris, gave a foretaste of the Charles Kirbo and Hamilton bleak outlook for information. Jordan for about 45 minutes ,If I'd known you were here," and then meeting Carter pri- she told a cluster of journalists= vately for another 15 minutes. who surrounded her car as it rolled up to the mansion, "I CARTER'S DEPUTY press wouldn't have stopped." ' spokesman Rex Granum told' reporters standing outside the N E A N W H I L E, ONE gates of the Governor's man- sion that no announcement of Carter's economic advisers soonthatno anounemen ofsaid in an interview yesterday major appointments was antici-that an economic boost built pated here or in Washington at a emis oing t where Carter flies tomorrow for around a tax rebate is going to a two-day visit.b needed unless the fatin ) Reporters maintained a vigil in hopes of catching the cabinet candidates for comment, but the first encounter, with Har- I I 1, Campus A Jeep SERYVC. & SALES HEADQUARTERS FOR: a~4 AMUS\ Gremlin Pacer Hornet Matador JEEP WASHTENAW COUNTY 2448 WASHTENAW (Ypsi) 434-2424 comeback in the next few weeks. Jerry Jasinowski, head of the economic policy group in the1 Carter transition office, said that if current conditions con- tinue, there is a "high .proba- bility" that a stimulus will be! necessary. A tax rebate, Carter's advis- ers said, would have the quick- est impact on the economy. BUT THE CARTER economic team insisted that a tax rebate would be only part of any po- tential package to boost the economy. Also included would be a limited program to create3 jobs and safeguard against in- flation. And while they carefully re- flected Carter's own public as- sertions that no decision has been made on an, economic boost, they said the signs point that way unless an economic miracle occurs in December. Even though an official de- cision to ask Congress for a tax rebate)isn't likely until near the start of Carter's term Jan. 20, they say work has begun to have it ready to go if conditions warrant. THE CARTEJ' TEAM is look- ing particularly toward reports on consumer spending during the Christmas season and new figures in January on capital equipment investment by indus- try. Until these and other fresh data are in and studied, no final decision can be made, they say. Stuart Eizenstat, director of policy development for the Car- ter transition staff, noted "a tax rebate probably has the quickest impact" on the econo- my. But he said if the decision to prime the pump is made, "it is more likely to be a combined package." Other things which might be done, Eizenstat said, include awarding federal funds to state and local governments to boost hiring in areas with high un- employment, giving aid to the housing industry to provide con- struction jobs, encouraging pub- lic works programs and other "specifically - targeted employ- ment programs." ROBERT GINSBURG, an at- torney - economist, noted that any economic program to boost the economy would be designed "to influence calendar '77, try to get better results quickly. "Spending options are avail- able," he said. But he noted that "tax options quite clearly can be put on stream more quickly and in bigger number" than other measures. IHAD CANCER I LIVED. IT ANuDI LIVED . . . -counts, your stout state- of and nutri- ZS' FORUM )09 MI 48109 HP WOOD Freshman Essay WEDNESDAY, a" - a ma.aL a ma 0 A ' a Robert Coles LITERARY CRITIC SOCIAL PSYCHIATRIST PULITZER PRIZEWINNER, 1973 /: II I Author of WILLIAM CARLOS WI LLIAMS: THE KNACK OF SURVIVAL IN AMERICA and C'IFm rppo l )n CR IC IC Marvella Bayh I have had breast cancer and a, mastectomy to cure it. But it didn't change my life-or my femininity. Of course, right after *urgery, I was discour- aged. But then I received a visit from an American Can- cei Society volunteer. She gave me a ball and a rope. when she gave me faith. I knew then, if other women could do it, so could I. I did. If you know a cancer pa- tient who needs help, call your Unit of the American Cancer Society. We can give people information and counseling on all kinds of cancer. We can also give them hope. I know. Because I had Gerry Peirce have a PAPtest. It can save your life. American Cancer Society DD SP~ACE CtRBUEO V f fPUB&i~tER II