.Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY $aturday, November 8, * 1975 1 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Soturday, November 8,1975 Big time TV comes to city via channel 31 State, federal unemployment, figures up .3 per cent in Oct. AFFIRMATIVE ACTION HEW okays 'U' hiring plan (Continued from Page 1) Morningstar said Channel 31 plans to obtain its new program- ming "wherever it's available," indicating England, Canada and the United States as the most viable sources. HOWEVER, he said Channel 31 will only "buy the best." The station also hopes to pro- duce 40 per cent of its own programming, according to Morningstar, and to syndicate to other stations. Morningstar said the station will emphasize public affairs and sports programming, the two types most preferred by viewers in this area. Children's and ethnic programming will also be offered. THE BROADCASTING firm is recruiting a professional man- agement staff from all parts of the country to assist in the or- ganization of the new station. Channel 31's signal, aided by two million watts of power, will cover an east-west area from Windsor, Ontario to Kalamazoo and a north-south area from Saginaw to Bowling Green, Ohio. Ann Arbor's last television station, Channel 20, aired from 1954 to 1958. Thomas Mott Osborne, as waren of Sing Sing Prison in New York State, initiated a program of convict self-govern- ment. A solar cooker uses a concave mirror to focus the sun's rays on a single spot that can cook food by the sun's heat. (Continued from Page 1) in September and 7.3 per cent, or 288,700 jobless workers, in October 1974. AFL-CIO President George Meany said the figures show that "the twin evils of recession and inflation are still plaguing America." MEANY SAID job-creating legislation and other measures the President either vetoed or has threatened to veto are "es- sential measures" for restoring economic health. "No one can. look at these figures with satis- faction," Meany said. "No one can pretend. that the recission is over or that information." This assessment was disputed by Julius Shiskin, commissioner of labor satistics, in testimony 1 IL (Continued from Page 1) # sideration to minorities and wo- , The department "does not before the Joint Economic Com- the unemployment rate reached ment's memo, "Colleges and men alone." j require that job requirements mittee of Congress. "Although its recession peak of 9.2 per universities are entitled to se- I be waived or lowered in order miteelofCngess . Although Iitsce ssion eaky. 92 t er -lect the most qualified candi- HEW ALSO stressed that an to attract women and minority developments in the over-all cent last May. Since then, und grad- date, without regard to race, . affirmative action plan should candidates. Indeed, it express- September. and October appear ually as the nation began its sex or ethnicity, for any posi- not pull down hiring standards ly forbids differential standards to be mixed, on balance the recovery from the recession, tion. The college or university, merely to meet the program's based on race, color, sex, re- evidence shows that the eco- falling to 8.6 per cent in June not the federal government, is objectives. ligion or national origin." nomic recovery continued in Oc- and dropping further to 8.4 per to say what constitutes qualifi tober," he said. cent during the summer and cation for any particular posi- I De-finally to 8.3 per cent in Septem- tion." Initseortdthe Laboro ber. Also, the recruitment of wo- d e fin d s H ears unemployed in October increas- Labor Department officials at- tutes a violation of HEW guide-g ed by 230,000 to 8 million. The tributed most of the increased lines. number of Americans with jobs jobless in October to persons Says the department, "A mae n tallcoeten t stood at 85.4 million, about the reentering the labor force, ap- jor purpose of the affirmativeI a. y same as m September. parently in the hope of finding action provision.. is to broad- THE SIZE of the nation's ork as production in the na- en the pool of applicants so (Continued from Page1) i tal competency to stand trial." T Sbrtion's factories picked up. that women and minorities will ''She's a cool customer," Mc- about 250,000 to 93.4 million last be considered for employment Donald said. CARTER said Drs. Pollack, abot. 20 tThe common crow lives over along with all other applicants. Ci Donald Lunde and Margaret month. most of the United Statesand The affirmative action process CARTER said i his written nger all agreed that their The increase in joblessness Canada. Crows often form large must not operate to restrict con- decision that Hearst had openly Sin ioal agreed ta ei mustnotopeateto rstrct on-ex~aminations disclosed no evi- last month was the first since flocks of several thousand birds. discussed the bank robberys -- --f charges with the psychiatrists deuce of psychosis or other I 7 _ylhiatrpsts serious mental disease or defect ~A±~iV htwol epiehrhfcm k 3 r :, '- t -ADVERTISEMENT-- Dinin O inAnn Arbo. lirA) loses minority recruitment wo examine ner. tawoldervhrofz - He quoted one doctor as say- petency. ing she "demonstrated full un- derstanding of the significance He said Lunde found that of the bank robbery charges if "Ms. Hearst is oriented to date, she were convicted." place and person." The same psychiatrist, Dr. The judge said he was not Seymour Pollack, was quoted as ruling out the possibility that saying the newspaper heiress Hearst needs psychiatric -ther- _ IIL_ ~rs.t....,, :..tnt. i- U- t. - UaAf"e 4 w AT THE a r YOU WILL FIND G Good Food at reason-A able prices. Lunches or dinners p 1 u s cocktail hour 4-8 p.m. LIVE ENTERTAINMENT FOR YOUR LISTENING AND DANCING PLEASURE 0 SPECIAL EVERY THURSDAY NITE:" Greek Food, x Music and Dancing v HOURS: M-F 11-2 a.m.;0 Sat. & Sun. 5-2 a.m. Highlights from our fine Greek menu: GYROS.. E. . $1.43 SHISH-KA-BOB...1.40 MAUSAKA .........1.75 PASTITSIO.........1.75 DOLMADES.........1.75 SPINACH PIE .......1.75 GYROS PLATE......2.25 COMBINATION PLATE...........3.65 HOURS. Mon.-Sat. 11-12 midnight Sun. 12-12 midnight football weekends (Fri.-Sot.) 11 -3A.M. 226 S. MAIN 994-1012 A weekly guide to great eating FEATURING THIS WEEK: "1still has difficulty relating "the anv, bunt he said the deense grievance emotionally disturbing events" already is permitted to provide of her 19 months with the Sym- such aid to her in her jail cell. bionese Liberation Army. But Her lawyers have repeatedly (Continued from Page 1) even on this subject, Pollack contended that Hearst should be affirmative action program for said she is "not fatally impaired transferred to a private psy- GSAs does not deal with it, they with respect to the issue of men- chiatric facility. say that this is merely a result negotiate its admission policies'U hospitaldoa r with a labor union. University official John For- syth attacked the GEO for act- a ng in bad faith. "They're trying contract at to win through the grievance procedure things they couldn't win at the bargaining table," he (Continued from Page 1) The two parties also agreed said. nel for blooddrawing units as to establish a task force to Daniel Tsang, GEO media soon as financially possible. An study the working hours and committee chairman, admitted HOA request to hire an addi- scheduling of interns and resi- that the memorandum did not tional x-ray technician has, ac- dents, many of whom work over specifically deal with recruit- cording to Hodeen, already been 100 hours per week. The group ment, but claimed that it includ- implemented. The HOA has con- will make recommendations af- ed it "implicitly." He said HEW tended that both blooddrawing ter its study is completed, but guidelines "require it." and x-ray technical work were those recommendations are not services which were lacking in binding. IT IS unclear at this point personnel and consequently were exactly what HEW does require. detrimental to patient care. "WE'D LIKE to see an 80- The University claims that its Only a minor procedural issue hour maximum." Hodeen com- GSA program exceeds any pub- remained unresolved in the con- mented, "but we didn't get a :lished HEW requirements. flict, such as the method by commitment." HEW has had an opportunity which the University will make Another task force will be to see the University's pro- contributions to a disability in- t gram, but has not commented surance policy for the doctors. created to collect data on the onig ytrTefeealdpat The University has refused arn racial and sexual composition of on it yet. The federal depart- OA equest to makerthes con the house staff, and to formu- ment has, however, approved tribution through a "check-off" late a plan which will increase the University's overall affirma- system of direct paycheck de- the representation of women and tive action plan. ductions.ymtem ofdiecnayhek e tiedcin. minorities among the interns 3 tnn resin__- s._+V LIIOknnrr1% nn I~lI r t Contrasting the small crowds of late with its fine quality menu and live nightly music, the Golden Falcon at 314 S. Fourth Ave. appears to be the most underratcd entertainment spot in Ann Arbor. One can drop into the Falcon for an afternoon meal and often listen to one of the bands practice troublesome numbers and warm-up for the night. It's this kind of casual elegance that distinguishes the Falcon. The featured entree among diverse offerings is Ginger Beef. Choice sirloin is sauteed with Ginger sauces and topped with green peppers to create a soulful and distinct plateful which is served with fluffy steamed rice. Choice of soup or salad and rolls round out this most satisfying $3.60 dinner. A Mediterrannean Salad Bowl at the Falcon can put an end to your lunchtime doldrums with Feta cheese, ripe olives, tomato wedges and imported an- chovies over an awesome portion of tossed salad. If you crave the bounties of the waters, try Pan Fried Colorado Springs Trout, fresh-frozen and rush- ed to our fair city. Or if it's the ocean flavor that must be savored to slake the urge, try the Scallops, or Golden Fried Shrimp. The Falcon's menu has the full range of sand- wiches that America loves best: Tenderloin Steak Sandwich $3.45, 3-decker Club Sandwich $1.50, Rue- ben $1.40, The Falcon'Deluxe one-third pound ham- burger with all possible fixings $1.40, Hot Pastrami on special bun $1.00, Hot Corned Beef on Rye $1.00, Cold Turkey Sandwich $.95, and others. All items on the menu are served from 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. Live entertainment every night of the week ap- pealing to divergent audiences has been the trade- mark of the Golden Falcon. Manager Nick Benos owns to his ethnic roots on Thursday nights with Greek food, music and dancing. All are welcome to join in the traditional folk danc- ing, listen to the Bosouki music and enjoy the popu- lar dishes. The band Headwind has been pleasing listeners and dancers alike at the Falcon for months. You can still find them on stage Friday and Saturday nights. 'D.J.' eminates soulful sounds on Wednesday and Sunday nights and consistently draws a boogie-get down black crowd, especially on Sunday nights ac- cording to Benos. The week's entertainment is rounded out with the jazz sounds of 'Jack Crim', the reorganized Ann Arbor Experimental Jazz Band, on Tuesday and Monday nights. The weekend cover charge is $1. On July 29, 1900, Hubert I, SKinfof Italy, was assassinated. THE MICHIGAN DAILY I Volume LXXXVI, No. 57' Saturday, November 8, 1975 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News p ~hone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d a iily Tuesday through Sunday morning duriing the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by maili outside Ann Ar- Ibor Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. C h'c 'adresidents. A tho h no dt INSTEAD, the'U' prefers to has been collected, it has been add an equivalent amount to estimated that approximately 95 the six per cent salary increase per cent of the doctors are already granted to the doctors. white males. Hodeen emphasized that this is On Wednesday, HOA members a difference of procedure, not. began picketting at the entrance dollars, and that the amount of to 'U' Hospital and doctors the contribution to the insurance working inside the faclity ne- policy, $50, had already been glected s o m eadministrative agreed upon. work. The. protest continued Hodeen remained non-commit- t h r o u g h Thursday and was tal when aske to predict the terminated as the HOA re- outcome of Wednesday'sratifi- solved their dispute early yes- cation vote. "We'll see what the terday morning. membership wants to do," he said. He went on to warn that The Phoenicians were the "the disability issue could cause boldest sailors of the Mediter- a problem at ratification time." ranean in the ancient world. W'P4hi0p e'ice4 ' a goo d Pit 9/ 4 . SERVING LUNCHES AND DINNERS Mon.-Sat.: 11:00 a.m.-2:00 a.m.; Sun.: 12 noon-2:00 a.m. Kitchen Open until 1 a.m. Cocktails until 2 a.m. 208 W. HURON NEAR MAIN ANN ARBOR 995-0505 DANCING FRIDAY & SATURDAY With STRUTTERS' BALL SMORGASBORD WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY 100 FOODS $4.95 DINNERS FROM $3.95 UP LUNCH $1.50 UP SUNDAY BUFFET $2.95 9 COCKTAILS 0 WINES BANQUETS 'uba it Continental Dining 102 S. FIRST 663-2401 OYSTER BAR & THE SPAGHETTI MACHINE 301 W. HURON 663-2403 SALAD BAR 13 TYPES OF SPAGHETTI GREEN & WHOLE WHEAT NOODLES OYSTERS, CLAMS, SHRIMP, SCALLOPS, LOBSTER, RAINBOW TROUT VEAL, BEEF TOURNADOES OSOBUCO COCKTAILS-WINE AN UNUSUAL CONCEPT OF P U B L I C DINING WHERE EVERYTHING HAPPENS IN FRONT OF YOUR EYES-WITH FRESH INGREDIENTSONLY. AT EXTREMELY MODERATE PRICES Heidelberg 215 N. MAIN 0 663-7758 DINING: Complete German a n d American menu 1 1 a.m.-1 :30 a.m. Salads DANCING: German Bands on Saturday nights BANQUET FACILITIES RATHSKELLER:. Folk music sing-along Fri. & Sat. nights (NO COVER)I UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN THE NAZARENE CHURCH (ALC-LCA) 409 N. Division - (Formerly Lutheran Student M. Robert Fraser, Pastor Gordon Ward, PastorI Church School-9:45 a.m. Chapel) Morning Worship-11:00 a.m. 801 S. Forest Ave. at Hill St. Evening Worship-7:00 p.m. Sunday Service at 10:30 a.m.< * * * * * * UNIVERSITY CHURCH FIRST PRESBYTERIAN I OF CHRIST CHURCH Presently Meeting at 1432 Washtenaw-662-4466f YM-YWCA, 530 S. Fifth Worship - Sunday, 9:30 and! David Graf, Minister 11:00 a.m. Students Welcome. Holy Communion-Wednesday, For information or transpor- 5:15-5:50 p.m. tation: 663-3233 or 662-2494. Young Adult meals-Sunday, 10:00 a.m. - Sunday Worship 12:30 p.m.; Wednesday, 6:00 Service. p.m. ($1.00). * * * Study and discussion- CAMPUS CHAPEL 11:00 a.m. Sunday-Adult Bible 1236 Washtenaw Ct. study. Pastor: Don Postema 8:00-9:00 p.m. Monday-semi- Christian Reformed Worship. nar on Dietrich Bonhoeffer's' Sunday Worship-10 a.m. and "Ihe Cost of Discipleship." 6 p.m. 12:00-1:00 Thursday - Thurs- day Forum (includes lunch, $1). UNIVERSITY REFORMED ( Chancel C h oi r - 7:00-8:30 CHURCH, 1001 E. Huron Thursday. Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, For other information on the Ministers Young Adult Program call the 9:30 a.m.-Church School. Rev. Peter C. Budde or Jo Annt 5:30 m.-Student Suimer Staebler, 662-4466. ANN ARBOR CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 W. Stadium Blvd. (one block West of U of M Stadium) Bible Study - Sunday, 9:30 a.m.-Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Worship-Sunday, 10:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Need Transportation? C a 11 662-9928. * * * FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Stat. -t Huron and Washngton Worship Services: 8:30 a.m. - Communion Serv- ice-Chapel. 9:30 a.m.-Worship Service- Sanctuary. 11:00 a.m.-Worship Service- Sanctuary. S e r m o n: "What Do You Want?" by Donald B. Strobe. Worship services are broad- cast over WNRS-AM (1290) each Sunday from 11:00 to 12:00. WESLEY FOUNDATION Sunday, Nov. 9: 5:30 p.m. - Undergrads Cele- bration. 6:15 p.m.-Supper. 7:30 p.m.-Grads and single young adults on Transidental Mediation in lounge. Thursday, Nov. 13: Grads and single young adults meet at 7:00 for dessert and program at Harriet Behm's. 8:00-Divorced and separated group in Green Room. * * * 10:30 a.m.-Morning Worship. * * * * * * BETHLEHEM UNITED Cottage INN re- a sa - A A. The Real ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF CHRIST CHURCH, 306 N. Division 423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149 8:00 a.m.-Holy Eucharist. Minister: Orval L. E. Willimann 10:00 a.m. - Morning Prayer, 9:00 a.m.-Chapel Service. and Sermon. 10:00 a.m.-Worship Service.I * * * 1 10:00 a.m.-Church School. I FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Child care at 10:00 a.m. serv- II lI 11 I I I 1'