Wednesday, September 24, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Hurricane Eloise rips through South, uproots thousands. In 1972, 16,000 UM students created a unique student organization. Funded by $1.50 per term contributions, a staff of lobbyists, researchers and lawyers would work full time on the problems students thought were important. The new organization was called Public Interest Research Group in Michigan: PIRGIM So far PIRGIM has attacked government secrecy, the high cost of electricity, the unsafe transportation of nuclear wastes, excessive and unproductive military spending, the high price and ban of adverisinof prescription dru s and much, much more. IT WORKS ! In just 3 years PIRGIM staff and student volunteers have influenced legislation, remade regulations, affected the prices of basic com- modities and the conduct of governmental and private institutions. WORK WITH IT . . As a volunteer, for credit, or as a low-paid summer intern. Be a re- searcher, organizer, investigator, or help run the office. 4106 MICHIGAN UNION -662-6597 FORT WALTON BEACH, Fla. () - Hurricane Eloise slam- med into Florida's panhandle with raging surf and lashing' rains yesterday, then rushed in- land, spawning tornadoes and carrying with it the threat of flooding. With punishing winds up to 130 miles an hour, Eloise thun- dered ashore between Fort Wal- ton Beach and Panama City be- fore sunrise, causing havoc in both cities and in a 40-mile stretch between. IN FORT Walton Beach, shat- tered plate glass littered the few streets left unflooded. Doz- ens of blocks were damaged and many mobile homes up- rooted. The roof of a beach-front mo- tel was ripped open and 30 rooms were demolished. Civil Defense worker Bill S hnlt7 said numerous F o r t three panhandle counties to pre- vent looting. At noon, Eloise was reclassi- fied as a tropical storm with strongest winds of 70 m.p.h. The storm's center was located over s'outheastern Alabama near la- titude 32.0 north and longitude 85.5 west. "The major threat now is tornadoes, heavy thunderstorms and the flooding they can cause," said Neil Frank, direc- tor of the National Hurricane Center in Miami. I bcnii sw z uub Walton Beach homes and busi- nesses had been destroyed and 90 per cent of the city's elec- tricity was cut off. "IT'S impossible to put a dollar figure on this trail of destruction," he said. In Pana- ma City, Mayor Dan Russell estimated damages at $50 mil-; lion. The only reported death was that of Carlton Yackel, $7, who police reported suffered a heart attack while huddled in a hur- ricane shelter here. Tens of thousands of persons took re- fuge from the storm's fury in such shelters. Takin' care of busing AP Photo THREE early morning torna- does tore through Fort Walton Beach, teaming with the hur- ricane's force. Trees, power lines and bill- boards toppled before the on- slaught, and the area was plunged into darkness in the gray dawn as power trans- formers exploded in brilliant showers of blue-green sparks. Thousands of people along a 100-mile stretch of shoreline had fled in a last-minute rush to escape the oncoming fury of the storm in the darkness of early morning. APulcSevic d t saya mTh e a e no c« . dntu Aet tsig our wr Now would you like to sign the work you do It's a shame that most of us don't get to sign our work. Because we'd probably do it better. Just out of pride. jAnd that could mean better products and services for everybody. So, even if you don't have to sign your work, do the kind of work you'd be proud to put your name on. America. It only works as well as we do. . LEAVE BLANK ONE SEME Yes, I would like to subscribe to THE MICH- IGAN DAILY. I agree to be billed later (pre- payment necessary for subs. outside of Ann Arbor, Mich.). LEAVE ESTER Put THE DAILY on your doorstep. for fall term SUBSCRIBE NOW Order your subscription now by simply filling out the form below and mailing it to: "The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104. Or call 764- 0558 between 10 and4. TWO SEMESTERS PERMANENT (automatically renewed 3 each term) k 'BLANK A Boston motorcycle policeman whistles away the hours as he waits Monday to escort school buses from South Boston High School. Students were bused to school under the desegregation program, only to be sent back home when striking teachers didn't show up for class. Gov. Reubin Askew sent ,200 National Guard troops into I FUEL WASTE: House approves busin Clause WASHINGTON (AP) - The House yesterday approved an amendment that would prohibit busing of school children be- yond the nearest school on the grounds that busing to achieve racial balance is a waste of fuel. The amendment sponsored by Rep. James Collins (R-Tex.), was tacked on to an energy bill on a voice vote with no recorded roll call taken. THE HOUSE is putting the final touches on an energy bill that would roll back oil prices and phase out price controls over a five-year period. The measure, as written, is almost guaranteed to run afoul of the Ford administration, which has opposed the measure's pro- visions for control of oil prices. The House could reach a. final vote on the entire energy packagetoday, but controversial amendments attached to the bill could delay action until later in the week. COLLINS' amendment was not debated on the House floor. The Texas congressman stood up briefly to explain his measure. The floor manager of the whole energy bill, Rep. John Dingell, (D-Mich.), chairman of the energy and power subcommittee, voted in favor of the Collins antibusing amendment. Collins' amendment stipulated that: "In order to achieve more energy conservation, no vehicle using gasoline or diesel fuel may be used to transport any public school student to a school farther than the public school which is closest to his home offering educational courses for the grade level and course of study of the student and which is within the boundaries of the school attendance district wherein the student resides." The provision carries a civil penalty of not more than $5,000 for each violation. The prohibition does not apply to any person who is a parent using gasoline or diesel fuel to transport his child to a public school. It also does not apply to a person who is using fuel for the transportation of any public school student for the purposes of athletic, educational, social or other extracurricular activities. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription Volume LXXXVI, No. 18 rates: $10 by carrier (campus area) Wednesday, September 24, 1975 *11n-al mail (Michigan and Ohio): $12.non-lcal mail (other states and; is edited .and managed by students foreign) at the University of Michigan. News Summer session published Tues- phone 764-0562. Second class posta< day through Saturday morning. paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier Published d aI11y Tuesday through (campus area); $6.50 local mall Sunday morning during the Univer- (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann local mail (other states and foreign). PUBLIC LECTURE A Comparison of Egyptian and Syrian Attitudes Toward Israel Since the Yom Kippur War Speaker: PROF. MOSHE MAO. Director, Truman Research Jnstitute Hebrew University, Jerusalem THURSDAY, Sept. 25th-8 p.m. at HILLEL I 1429 HILL ST. 663-3336 SGC Needs Students Elections director; Responsible, enthusiastic and honest individual to organize all aspects at the fall SGC elections. ALSO NEEDED JUDAIC STUDIES PROGRAM invites All interested Students and Faculty to a COFFEE HOUR in 3050 FRIEZE BUILDING Wednesday, Sept. 24, 3-5 p.m. There will be a discussion of the program, its offerings and future development. SCHEDULE OF PRICES: $12 SEPT. thru APRIL (2 Semeste $13 by Mail outside Ann Arbor $6.50 per Semester $7.00 by Mail outside Ann Arbor (Please Print) Last Name First M +- For Circulation Dept. Use Only rs) 0 Stencil Typed Number of papers-1 IAmount Due $ Aiddle Initial Date Started Code 3 (circle one) IN4: J-Ap. 1: $-D Apt. No. 5 -A : A 75: J-Au. 2: S-Ap. I 6: J-D 3: S'Au. Zi 7: Perm E.D. No. Phone No. Number Street Name . I i j + t I I j t i 3 j I City State liii Madti or m ionoallow ivilY ashif~wm. This atd is the work of Orrie Ftutkin and Gavino Sanna.. I. ATTENTION ALL STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS! NEW SGC ALLOCATIONS POLICY SGC should use its resources (finances and offices) to provide services for students and student organizations rather than giving away cash allocations. In the past, SGC has allo- nated resources to snecific groups; this policy benefits only a very small segment )f the student population. Furthermore. through this policy. SGC monies have been dispersed and more widespread benefits are possible. The original'purpose of SGC allocatons was to aid newly formed organizations. Allocations rarely exceeded $30, but gave groupsa chance to hecome self-sufficient. This policy should be reconsidered. SGC should realize that it cannot and should not be expected to find all student organizations and events. SGC's office facilities should be more available for use by student groups. The SGC workroom could, in the course of a year, benefit many groups working on large short-term pro- jects. Use of one of SGC's mimeograph machines could pro- vide student groups with a low-cost method of campus publi- city. The potential is there; all that is needed is creativity in utilizing it. The funding of a Student Organizations and Event In- formation Center on the fourth floor of the Michigan Union, providing a central location and telephone service for informa- trn on student groups and student events is more essential for students in the long run than any ten allocations the Council could give this year. That center could be of aid to hundredsof organizations and thousands of students in an average year. ALLOCATIONS POLICY - when allocations are granted, it is essential that SGC have a set policy controlling the wind and amount of alloca- tions it can grant in any given period of time. Allocations should be spread throughout the year to givetequal chance to programs, organizations, and events arising later in the year. The word "allocations" in this policy refers to allocations and grants to student organizations and other external groups. SGC's allocation policy shall include: 1. For this policy to go into effect, a simple majority vote of Council is required: for this policy to be altered before Sep- tember, 1976. two-thirds vote of the whole number of votes on Council is required. During the first three weeks of Sep- tember, 1976, this policy may be altered by simple maority vote of Council. After the first three weeks of September, 1976, two-thirds votes of the whole number of votes on Council is required. 2. Allocations may by made at any meeting of SGC; for any external allocation to be'granted, a two-thirds-roilcall vote, upon second reading, is required. Allocations may be made only to recognized student organizations. All allocations are considered by SGC, in the order received, as a block in the SGC agenda. 3. Total allocations for the year are limited as provided for in the SGC budget pssed in September. 4. All allocation requests should be submitted by Tuesday at 5 p.m, to receive a first reading. Requests should be sub- mitted on a form repared by the Treasurer for that pur- pose. All reqiuests should be reviewed by an allocations re-. view committee which shall consist of three Council mem- bers and the Treasurer. The purpose"of the committee will be to review and make recommendations to SGC on all re- quests. Any request coming from the Third World Coordi- nating Council shall be exempt from committee review. The organization requesting an allocation shall provide sufficient copies of their completed form for the Council. 5. There shall be no discussion between organizations seeking allocations and SGC- during first reading. Rather, first read- ing shall consist of recommendations for the Allocation Com- mittee. I " -t r/ .,J{ ° '. ' 11 7F ottoo? THE ART DEPARTMENT OF THE UNIVERSITY PH CELLAR, AND THE Too U. CELLAR NORTH CAM- PUS, BOTH STOCK A FULL LINE OF PHOTO- GRAPHIC SUPPLIES, INCLUDING- DARKROOM EQUIPMENT CHEMICALS FOR DEVELOPING AND PRIN1TING. CAMERA ACCESSORIES AGFA and KODAK PAPERS SHEET AND ROLL FILM - AGFA, ILFORD,, KODAK. AND ..MUCH MORE ! ALL AT DISCOUNTS OFF RETAIL LIST PRICES. WE ALSO ACCEPT FILM FOR PROCESSING. AT MAIN CAMPUS, WE OFFER EITHER KODAK OR HITE PROCESSING. AT NORTH CAMPUS, WE SEND FILM TO FOX PHOTO. IN GENERAL, THE QUALITY OF THE SERVICE VARIES WITH THE COST; WE GIVE YOU THE CHOICE. SOME COMPARATIVE PRICES ARE AS FOLLOWS: 35mm 2Oexp roll of slides 36 1 35mm 20exp roll of prints 36 mt. M 8x1O enlargements KODAK $ 25 4.32 735 3A 7 H ITE $1.79 315 6.29 2.29 FOX 3.49 5.19 7.59 3:19. I WE ARE CURRENTLY OFFERING A SPECIAL ON PRINTS FROM COLOR SLIDES, FROM KODAK ONLY, DURING SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER. I' , A r , >'. < r!" ': 'F } KODAK color prints from slides hree...Gtonemore F BRING COUPON IN WITH SLIDESGOOD THRU 27OCT. '75 6. Any organization receiving an allocation which later produces money above expenses shall return to SGC 50% of the dif- ference between ircome and expenses up to the amount of allocation within two months after the income above ex- penses has been incurred. I 7.tZSGC lshall hasve 9?e,'t11aVproce'dure. for mnintoringr alloca- I x.:. I