Tuesday, October 21, 1975
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
rage Seven
Tuesday, October 21, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven
Beame seeks more money;
Carey, board ponder cuts
(Continued from Page 1)
in Washington. Some members
of Congress told the mayor he
was not making a good case;
Sen. James Allen, (D-Ala.),
threatened to filibuster against
any aid legislation, and a
spokesperson said President
Ford "sees no legislation in
Congress which would be worth-
while signing."
mittee hearing in Washington
that default by New York, whichj
he said was inevitable without;
some form of federal help,
would leave hundreds of mil-f
lions of dollars worth of bills
unpaid across the country.
As part of a campaign by
state and city officials, as wellj
as by its top bankers, to con-
vince America that the city's
'School of Education
faces budget cuts {
(Continued from Page 1) at ths point any further cuts
ANOTHER IRONY caused by will hurt the school's quality.
ther predicament, says Warden, Already, he says, there has
is that the Educaton School has been a "pervasive slippage" in
had to depend on faculty mem- the diversity of experiencesI
bers' either dying or retiring in available to both the faculty and
order to avoid releasng other students of the School of Educa-
professors. "Fortunately," he tion.
says sarcastically, "there have FOR EXAMPLE, faculty
been two deaths and four re- Fmr thaPLe, forelty
tirements in the last two years able s that were formerly
abeto attend a large number
Warden theorizes that schools of national conferences in their
of education have been especial field now have less opportunity
ly hard hit by money problems for such trips.
for one reason: "We're kinddof Asked what he would do if
a target for economy-minded further reductions were neces-
legislators because of the glut furthespedcionsieringcts-
in the job market for teachers. ' especlly considerin
"Btin he orpoped vr state legislature might cut the'
well - last year we placed overy University's budget another one
oe t reper cent, Cohen replied "The
90 per cent of our graduates." first thing I'd do would be to
Dean Wilbur Cohen talked at cut our spring and summer,
length last week about his term offerings. That would least
school's troubles. hurt our regular students."
Paste this inside
your medicine cabinet.
1 Cancer's t
1seven warning'1
* signals1
I 1. Change inbowel or 1
1 bladder habits.
I 2. A sore thatdoes not I
1 heal.1
-3. Unusual bleeding or I
1 discharge.
I 4. Thickening or lump I
1 in breast orelsewhere. 1
I5. Indigestion or difficulty I
1 in swallowing. 1
I 6. Obvious change in I
I wart or mole. I
HENRI-GEORGES CLOUROT'S 1943
THE RAVEN
An incredible . French mystery-thriller about
how poison-pen letters drive a small town into
hysteria. A brilliant brooding study of evil that
ingeniously convinces the audience that first
one person, then another, is the guilty writer.
WED.: John Ford's STEAMBOAT ROUND THE BEND
(at 7:00)
THE PHOENIX CITY STORY
tat 9:05)
CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT at OLD ARCH. AUD.
7:00 and 9:05 Admission $1.25
- TOMORROW-NIGHT
T OMOR R TW IGH T
STATE Senate Majority Lead- peril is a nationwide danger, the
er Warren Anderson, long an mayor has made two congres-
opponent of aid to the city, said sional and a network television
the federal government must appearance during the past
share "a major portion of the three days.
blame" for New York's plight. James Buckley, the state's.
Anderson took offense at Treas- Conservative - Republican sena-
ury Secretary William Simon tor, said he would introduce
who had said that any meas- legislation providinng for a fed-
ures taken to helo New York eral subsidy to restore cuts in
should be "punitive." police and fire protection forced
"I suppose another solution by-the city's cash crisis.
wild bP to nk evervh b d in
Beame
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7. Nagging cough or
hoarseness.
If you have a warning signal,
see your doctor.
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wouu Ve a spam evc yvvy11 ..
VVUUU LU~LJC~L' ~ ~'~ ""UP UNTIL NOW, what wve've
the city and send them to bed UP NTLOWwawev
thotyn supe" he to abd- uil done has been necessary to NEW RESORTS
inLegu Club luncheon atii iUy on 1 W al S;tighten our belts," he observed, P A RI S (UPI) - The Club
ince, Laueubluhedonad-lyofciting such measures as in- Mediterranee, which has built
ence, made up predomiately of creased class sizes, reductions tourist camps around the globe,
.rv eTbi sin clerical and research person-' announced the opening of fives
Effects of the austerity pro- n1 IIn nel and stricter surveillance of new club"villages."
gram showed up around town. postage, copy center and travel- Club officials said they will
mng expenses. open the Cancun village in Pun-
A DEMONSTRATION to pro- (Continued from Page 1) Wheeler acknowledged t h i s "We've tried to tighten up on ta Nizuc, on the Yucatan penin-
test the shut-down of day care uation and the remaining $160,- shortcoming in his proposal, sug- small courses," he says, "and sula of Mexico, and another va-
centers tied up traffic outside 000 to contingency. . gesting that council members we've reduced our offerings in cation camp at Bucuranao, near
City Hall. Seven persons were "take any steps to try and clar- the spring semester, but I Havana, in Cuba, on Feb. 1.
arrested. THE ACTUAL breakdown of ify any problem we have with wouldn't say we've damaged' Also opening this winter will
A group of Senior Citizens an- these funds to individual agen- this," before next week's vote. our program in any serious , be Alpine ski resorts at Ses-
nounced plans for a march to- cies in Wheeler's proposal will If the CDRS proposal is ap- way." trierres, Italy, Tignes Val-Clar-
day to prevent closing of their probably be revamped by coun- proved by council, the city ad- However, Cohen believes thatIet, France, and Luzum, Austria.
special facilities. cil members this Friday through ministrator will begin drawing
specific amendments. up contracts wi ththe various
The Board of Education com- Councilwoman K a t h y Koza- city agencies which are to re-
plained that a new $39 milion chenko (HRP - Second Ward) ceive the federal funds.
cut added to a previous $231 maligned the Democrats and..........-.....
million slash to its $3.1 billion Wheeler's proposal because it CRICKET CRISIS UNIVERSITY SHOWCASE PRODUCTION
budget, "m ay well be the death does not significantly alter the U
knell for public- school educa- c i t i z e n s committee proposal' (UPI)-The British colony in
tion in this city." The control which was voted down earler!Argentina is concerned about a
by Democrats, nor does it differ;sotg ofciktbsan
Board, however, continued with sbstantially from a Republican- shortage of cricket bats and
its cuts. HRP plan which.Wheeler vetoed balls.
nearly a month ago. Import restrictions due to the'
STATE Controller Arthur Le- "A few weeks ago when the country's staggering foreign;
vitt said it was up to Beame, HRP entered into negotiations debt have made it difficult tol
not the board, to determine the with the Renublicans (on the bring in new cricket equipment.-
exact number of jobs to be issue of CDRS), we were ac- IEnthusiasts of the sport who
cused by the Democrats and the travel to Britain or Australial
eliminated. media of being sell-outs and the: are bringing back small num-3
"The Control Board's duty is lowest slime on the earth," said bers of bats and balls i their
The ozachenko.BWellsI feel theluggage to relieve the shortage.
to see that the city arrives at a medaho"ll Ithe keuth
balance that eliminates the or shut u eThis r wak up SHIPMENTS UP
cit'sdeict i athee oe r su p.Tisproposal isby
city's deficit in a three-year and large similar to the citizens AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) - Other
period," he said. proposal and the HRP-Republi- states shipped 180,278 cattle and
"A great deal more needs to can plan." calves into Texas duting Aug-
Kozachenko specifically at- ust, state agriculture depart-
be done and Beame must sub tacked a $600,000 provision for!ment officials report.I
mit more details," Levitt said. "neighborhood f a cilities" in This compares with 137,71 'Aip,
*Wheeler's proposal, saying she -cattle and calves shipped into I
BEAME ALSO told a House was "in no way willing to vote the state in the same month of . a o/ Z
economic stabilization subcom- on something so unspecific." 1974. N.R Davidso's
A Play About MALCOLM X
aculty entertans at concert OCTOBER 22-25 8P.M. TRUEBLOOD THEATRE
ADVANCE TICKET SALES THROUTH PTP TICKET OFFICE
(Continued from Page 5) The second half of the concert third, "Wir eilen ...," fared Located in Mendelssohn Theatre Lobby - Mon. thru Fri. 10 a.m. - 1 p.m., 2 . 5 p.m.
randomly the stage, beating, began with the vocal duets of the best. Yet one wonders if TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR - For information call 764-0450
randomly on drums set up for J.S. Bach, each du't taken from the duets would not have been THISPRODUCTION SPONSORID BY MICHIGAN COUNCIL FOR THE ARS
the percussionist (C h a r 1 e s one of Bach's cantatas. They better performed on a program
Owen). were performed by Elizabeth of a different nature.
The recording then provides Mosher and Rosemary Russell, The concert concluded with
several "real life" cliches con- w i t h accompaniment f r o m "An Introduction to Jelly Roll
i d i W t Nancv Hod e on harsichord -
1
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J
American
Cancer Society
L= -- rn - m -
m
S51Z
and monday
and tuesday
an~d wednesday -
ad thur sday
WE'RE HAVING A
STEAK PARTY
AT WEST BANK
You celebrate because
it costs only $3.93. It in-
cludes piping hot loaves
of bread, baked or ranch
fried potato, and all the
salad you can eat from
our popular salad bar.
Wear whatever's com-
fortable. It's an informal
party for everyone to
enjoy.
ENTERTAINMENT
and
DANCING
Monday thru Saturday
2900 JACKSON ROAD
Phone 665-4444
UAC Concert Co-op Presents
AND
Wed., Oct. 22, Crisder Arena, 8 p.m.
RESERVED SEATS: $7.00, $6.00
Tickets voilable at UAC box office in lobby of Mich-
oan Union, 10:30-5:30 daily (763-2071). Sorry, no
personal checks.
i
6h.
SPECIAL
-WHILE THEY LAST--
Hewlett-Packard's
HP-35
Scientific Pocket Calculator
Was $ S
$19500
WITH FULL YEAR WARRANTY
A Proven Machine-Originally Sold for $395.00
ULRICH'S Bookstore
549 East University Ave. Ann Arbor
Phone 662-3201
cerning eucaLon e, VtrgaLe,, ""'Y '"g p Morton, Part I" At thepiano,
and the state of the Viennese and three string players. was JamesDPapAonywho has
waltz. "Give me a good old These pieces presented with just recorded 12 of Morton's
waltz any day,"drones the tape, the audience several problems. I pieces for issue by the Smith-
and the musicians do just tat. Aside from being the only "ser- sonian Institution. His perform-
But the waltz quickly turns into:.I efom
a Frank Zappa-ish parody of ious" music on the program, ance was too short. The music
itself, replete with grotesque they also received the weakest was entrancing, and one wanted
sounds emitting from the speak- ; performance of the afternoon. to hear more. Morton's music
ers. In this none too serious The accompanying s t r i n g s contains lovely melodies, and
piece, Ellis aligns himself with sounded very thin and dry at his use of silences within " a
Telemann in pausing for a ma--
ment to look at himself and his times, and there were balance phrase is superb. Part II is
music, and poke some fun at problems between the vocalsts. scheduled for November 16, the
both. Of the works performed, the next faculty chamber concert.
I
A
SENIORS and GRAD STUDENTS
WHAT ARE YOU DOING AFTER GRADUATION?
GRAD
SCHOOL
®
JOB
HUNTING
HERE IS HOW WE CAN HELP
GRAD
SCHOOL?
JOB
HUNTING?
Grad School Directories Testing Information
Catalogue Information Counseling
Grad and Professional School Recruiters
On Campus Interviewing with
Recruiters Sept. 30th thru March 25th
Job Hunter's Resource Library
Career Counseling
Jimmy
Cliff
is
coming
Nov. 7
geo
MEMBERSHIP MEETING
-Highlights-
AFFILIATION
" REPORTS
" RECOMMENDATIONS
" DISCUSSIONS
DUES INCREASE
U TREASURER'S REPORT
* DISCUSSION
RACKHAM AMPHITHEATRE
Tuesday, October 21--8 p.m.
START NOW!- Come To
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