Page Two I HE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 1, 1975 Page Two IHE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 1, 1975 .. 'U, Health Service pays for semen (Continued from Page 1) Although statistics show the chance of 2 people-both j offspring of the same donor - meeting and marrying "are probably one in 4,000,000," Anderson explains that the semen from the same male is used to inseminate no more than two women in a geographical area the size of Ann Arbor. He cites the $15 as one motivating factor in the desire to contribute semen, but stresses some others. GRADUATE students in social work and psychology are prime donators because they "recognize the plight" of child- less couples and their unhappy situation, he comments. Others ,such as married men and fathers contribute because they feel it is "a real service rendered," he says. Whatever the reason, if you're a healthy male, 19-35 years of age and carry "good quality sperm," Anderson welcomes you as a perspective donor. LSA SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATIONS FOR WINTER, 1976 WILL BE AVAILABLE IN 1220 ANGELL HALL BEGINNING OCTOBER 1 The awards are based upon financial need and academic I merit (3.2 GPA br above). Students must be enrolled in the Colleoe for at least one term before they are eligible to oply for an LSA Scholarship. COMPLETED APPLICATIONS MUST BE RECEIVED BY OCTOBER 31 1975 IUOeli Chassidic festival Israel's most popula stage production Is coming to POWER CENTER FOR PERFORMING ARTS MONDAY, OCT. 20, 1975 8:00 P.M. sponsored by B'NAI BRITH HILLEL FOUNDATION at U-M TICKETS Students-$3.00 Non-students-$5.00 'tEunfl1i 1l l,2DJ FBI probes near death at VA hospital (Continued from Page 1) Another source said that the have inadvertantly pulled out relatives may have tampered the b r e a t h i n g equipment. with the respiratory machine in Though the patient is extremely order to accuse the hospital of ill, "he is shifting about," Cal-. medical negligence, and file a houn said. lawsuit against them. "I'M SURE it had something One person familiar with ICU to do with it," the source said. suggested Brower may have in- "From the first day they've had tentionally removed the appara- that sort of orientation (against tus. "It is not a rare occurrence the VA)." for patients to pull out their own The source said that the rela- tubing," the source stated. "It fives may have also pulled the happens all the time." tubing to save Brower further However, the person indicated from suffering. "They (investi- that someone else must have gators) are taking into consider- turned off theealarm, or the ation the mental state of the alarm had been turned off{ family," the s ou r ce added. 'through negligence" before the "We've had to do more and incident occurred. more for the patient. He has suf- "BROWER was definitely too fered quite a bit." sick to turn off his own alarm," Investigators refused to elebo- the source said. rate on the investigation. Bailey But the source added that, "It merly said, "We have seen some does take a little observation to peonle briefly for interviews." turn off the alarm. You do have ICU STAFF and Brower's to know how to do it," indicat- step - son and daughter - in - law ing that the relatives may not have been the focus of the FBI have been familiar enough with probe. the machine to disconnect it. The FBI has been conducting ---a search for the person respon- sible for a series of poisonings in the VA, and has had agents p r e s e n t continuously since August 15. Afte thetherapist hurriedly sea rchreconnected Brower's breathing sea rch tubes Sunday, the two family members attempted to Deave the unit, sources said. Hospital staff stopped them just outside ICU. The FBI was called in to question them. PONTIAC (UPI) - While U.S. HOWEVER, Calhoun reports Senate investigators sat in a ho- that as of yet no charges have tel room awaiting information been filed. "They are still in- from an underworld informant, vesti-ating," he said. scores of amateurs yesterday Calhb'un stated that atlhough dug for the grave of James Hof- the FBI wiestioned ICU staff, fa with as little success as State no hospital employe is suspect. Police found last weekend. H also snid that this latest in- Poic isi nevr.nP+dt AP Photo Foggy meeting Two horses seem more interested in each other than in the eerie but beautiful fog rence earlier this week. Within hours, the cloud layer had lifted, leaving a bright that shrouded Kansas and cheerful fall day pastureland near Law- in its place. FIRST OF SERIES: Feminist speaks at Hill Aud. (continued from Page 1) violence in the society to pro- psychological bonds between cause they were the only ones voke not an overflow, but a men and women. with the time to revolt," but transformation of political pow- "And men are here to stay," added the movement's signifi- er." Friedanhsaid. she added. cance to all persons had spir- However she refused to side aled and would continue to ris6 with some of her more radical* "THERE'S A mistaken no- continue is an evolution of the{ family . . . and it may not win the Good Housekeeping seal of approval." } Lured by a $200,000 reward in the future. "I SEE THE women's move- ment as only a way station on the road to total human libera- tion . . . depolarizing sex roles, and so defusing the reservoir of - - - - - - sisters in their definition of tion that Communism or the feminism as an anti-capitalist abolition of capitalism will lib- + or class struggle, saying "The erate women. However I hap-1 unique thing about this revolu- pen to believe that when wo-i tion is that there is no class men develop their potential,I enemy because of sexual or they then can transform the - - entire system. Major changes in familyI structure will play a significantI Bowl na role in the feminist's future, d said Friedan. 1 Friedan also hit hard against offered by the family of the Third World response to her missing former Teamsters pres- and other American feminists i ident, people of varying age and during the International Wo- occupation have been scouring men's Year (IWY) convention a 29-acre site northwest of De- in Mexico last July. troit identified by an underworld "The Third World is primar- informant as containing Hoffa's ily despotisms and primarily grave. male despotisms. And the move- ment that is spreading world- wide is threatening to every system. It's threatening to tie reactionary Communist forces who tried to keep me and oth- ers from infecting women of the Third World with our ideas." tl'o'- q--eq of noisonhvn s Wh.'ch ,mht fn-Ieral investigators to "hev are completely sepa- rate cn ses.' 'he said. "There irĀ® two different groups of FBI ,1 workinc on them." Bailey also confirmed that there is "absolutely no connec- .ion" to the Pavulon poisonings. I I Tickets are available at the office of the Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St., Ann Arbor. Mixed E Leagues Forming "I DON'T foresee the end of the family but what I see as ex-j periments such as communesI This group and performance nection with or resemblance formance that appeared last Arbor. has no con- ABSOLUTELY LAST CALL SIGN UP NOW to any year in per- Ann Union Lanes I EIE ONE ONLY Co j[Hl P L RLS CLIP 'EM $AVE /free' I I 50 sheet 5R X 8f' white scratch pad' limit: /COUpOf while they last ... GOOD THRU OCT 7 '75 ONLY and: 50 7ou w/coupon -I- - $jOO0 off w/CoupOn A ~- I CURRENTL STOCK. GOOD THRU OCT 7'75 ONLY* while they last.. POCKET PENS list 25Ceach- 1- iI t 1 1 I i I! Teac her offic ials in Boston hit with fines BOSTON (UPI) - Officials of to purge themselves of the con- the Boston Teachers Union were tempt charges by paying only handed moderate fines for lead- $1,000 each. ing the illegal six-day strike Two striking teachers belong- that ended yesterday with teach- ing to the union's executive ers and students returning to board were fined $300-$500 a day classrooms. -for participating in the strike. Suffolk Superior Judge Samuel'.Casses resumed without ma- Adams fined BTU President Jor incident. The school depart- Henry Robinson and Executive dmet said 50 white students staged a non-violent midmorn- Vice President Joan Buckley ing walkout at Charlestown High $2,000 each but permitted them School. Because of the effects of the new CRISP registration svs- tem, the PIRGIM fee is now collected in the manner ori- ainallv petitioned for by 16.000 UM students. You have been assessed a $1.50 fee for PIRGIM on your tuition bill. For those students who do not wish to support the group, PIRGIM announces: PIRGIM FEE REFUND Daily Photo by E. SUSAN SHEINER T akin' it easy LSA freshwoman Karen Tripp relaxes on the diag Monday afternoon. She soaked up the warm sunshine and presumably some knowledge from the textbook she was reading. Such is life for students in September. But wait 'til mid-terms. A. AVAILABLE Mon., Sept. 29-Fri., Oct. 3 Student Accounts Office 2nd Floor, SAB 8:30-12:00, 1:00-4:30 B. SIMPLY 1. Take your I.D. to SAB. 2. Fill out form brief at SAB. 3. Receive a $1.50 credit on next tuition bill. I I A SYMPOSIUM Public Interest Research Group in Michigan I- 1 Biological Determinism: A Critical Appraisal Sponsored by Ann Arbor Science For The People 1% ANY SLIDERULE THAT IS CURRENTLY IN STOCK. I 1 H I on 7 '75 ONLY ... .... ... ........ EAC w/coup t y~ . Mutt}~i Required reading look boring ? Check out the fourth Avenue Adult News IIL WEDNESDAY, OCT. Ist SEX ROLES 3 P.M.-MLB 3 ROBIN JACOBY, History, U. of Michigan "HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON SEXISM" 7:30 P.M.-RACKHAM AMPHITHEATRE PAULINE BART, Sociology, U. of Illinois "BIOLOGICALDETERMINISM AND ITS IMPACT ON SEXISM" sponsored by IWY-UM i I I GOOD THRU OCT 7'75 ONLY " .... . ........... .......... . .r.. GOOD THRU OCT MEDICAL SCHOOL ASPIRANTS Over 40,000 men and women will apply to American medical schools this year, but only about 14,000 will be accepted. Qualified candidates have a valid alternative: medical education in Europe. For information and application . 6 6 rk mm We are a non-profit, student-run store. You can always rvnn u m -nt ii ict fnr csnpair1iza hrnnc 1Ii kthpeca h' it