rage Twenty THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, September , 1975 Page Twenty THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, September 5, 1975 L' e 14 Reasons to wash and dry clean your clothing at MR. STADIUM 1. 104 washers & dryers (no waiting) 2. 36 top load washers 3. 24 double load washers 4. 12 triple load washers (Only 50c on our Tuesday & Friday special) 5. 32 30 lb. clothes dryers 6. 3 dollar bill changers 7. 4 dry cleaning machines (Use our drop-off service-we do it for you) 8. Air cooled for your comfort 9. Plenty of parking (over 50 spaces) 10. Lots of hot (Miracle Soft) water 11. 2 free clothes steamers (removes wrinkles) 12. Open 24 hours every day 13. Attendant always on duty 14. We guarantee our services. WHAT MORE CAN WE SAY? MR. STADIUM Coin Laundry & Dr y Cleaning 958 5. Industrial Hwy, Ann Arbor The most beautiful laundry in the midwest College By FRED ROTHENBERG j But O AP Sports Writer demption NEW'YORK (P)-It's back to next wee school time. Everybody starts for most with a clean slate, new play- his w books and pressed pants-and with no losses, no missed lightedx blocks and a minimum of cut battle ba classes. Alabama classes.Missouri It's a time of optimism and game win enthusiasm. Even Oklahoma, year whi the class cheat, has been for- on a one given. Of c AFTER SERVING two years after the on athletic probation for re- most of A cruiting violations, the unde- one cam feated, untied and uninvited e i g h t h Sooners of last year have post-seaso stepped out of the principal's ant's boy office and are ready to defend SO IT their No. 1 ranking in The among I Associated Press poll. I game is football klahoma's year of re- Monday Night Television Bowl. doesn't begin until But it won't work. It's sill th k, when the bell rings regular season to Bryant, anc of the major teams. the Crimson Tide should rol f t. impressively . . . Alabama 35, eek's schedule is high- Missouri 3. by a Monday night Mississippi at Baylor: Las etween Missouri and season, the Baylor Bears ended at Birmingham, Ala. 50 years of non championship carries over a two- status by winning the S uth- ining streak from last west Conference title. So 11 ile Alabama is sitting: won't be much of a surprise -game losing streak. when Baylor ends Mississippi"s ourse, that loss came undefeated season on Saturday regular season. Like . . . Baylor 28, Mississippi 7. Alabama's defeats, this Pittsburgh at Georgia: Next e in a bowl game, the straight non-winning on trip for Bear Bry- s. isn't surprising that Missouri backers, this being billed as the II B 5 ft ft ft ft ft p ru n twn a DELTA Restaurant & Pizzeria Greek and American Food " Breakfast anytime " Different Specials every day " Complete Dinners on Sunday for $2.75 * Special Room for groups " Pizza HOURS: 7 a.m.-1 a.m. 7 days a week BEST BAKLAVA IN TOWN COMPLETE CARRY OUT SERVICE 640 PACKARD (corner of State) 662-7811 U U U U U U U Tomorrow's Games Mississippi at Baylor Western Michigan at Central Michigan W. Kentucky at Dayton Drake at N. Mexico St. E. Carolina at N.C. State E. Michigan at Ball St. Fullerton St. at Fresno Pittsburgh at Georgia Lamar at Houston S. W. Louisiana at Long Beach Marsnail at Akron Mississippi St. at Memphis St. William and Mary at N. Carolina Pacific at NE Louisiana Texas (El Paso) at San Diego St. SMU at Wake Forest W. Carolina at Toledo viiianova at Maryland West Texas St. at Wichita St. begins Saturday is Pittsburgh's lost e weekend. The Panthers will d face Oklahoma so they'll ht-ve 1 to put all their points for their first two games in one basket- first two games in one basket- t Georgia's end zone . . . Pitts- burgh 24, Georgia 16. Lamar at Houston: It won't - take very long for Houston to iget its Veer offense on the right track. As always, Houston has s only one track-it's offense. But a lack of defense won't hurt the Cougars against the Cardinals :t ... Houston 49, Lamar 14. VILLANOVA at Maryland: Two big basketball schools on the rebound with ravitalized football programs. Maryland, 8-3 and a trip to the Liberty Bowl last year, should deflate Villanova's football again . Maryland 34, Villanova 16. Mississippi State at Memphis State: Memphis State has a new sideline pacer this season in head coach Rich Williamson, whose opening night will be a long one . . . Mississippi State 20, Memphis State 3. East Carolina at North Caro- lina State: East Carolina is in the same state as the Wolpack but not in the same league .. . North Carolina State 30, East Carolina 13. Penn State at Temple: Penn State is the best in the East and Temple is not far behind. But this isn't horseshoes . . . Penn State 28, Temple 20. tomorrow CORN ROAST ALL GRADS WELCOME 4:00 P.M. Sat., Sept. 6 Campus Chapel Forest & Washtenaw Christian Graduate Fellowship AP Photo INDIANA'S HEAD football coach Lee Corso watches his Hoosiers work oit. While m pry collegiate football games get underway tomorrow, the Big Ten season doesn't start until Sept. 13. Indiana opens at home against Minnesota. i! *.. .* . . . _ _ i A message for the influencers: Today, millions of people who have never had a course in econom- ics are influencing the structure of our economic system by their action, or inaction. Yet the well-being of each individual and family depends on sound economics. Realizing that "the doctor" needs to know "the patient", The Business Roundtable is sponsoring mes- sages that discuss innerworkings of ourAmerican economic system. They are giving this special "mini course" monthly exposure be- fore the country's largest reading audience in Reader's Digest. SGC Needs Students - U-Cellar Board of Direc- tors has two openings for graduate students. " University Council has two student openings. INTERVIEWS for these committees will be held Tues. and Wed, nights, Sept. 16 & 17. Need more information? Stop by SGC Offices, third floor of the Union; sigh up for an inter- view and pick up an application. Big Ten games September 13 MICHIGAN at Wisconsin Ohio State at Michigan State Mirnesota at Indiana 'ni-ois at Iowa P 'rdue at Northwestern The American League had nine .300 hitters last season. Bill Treehan of the Detroit Ti- aers missed the select group at .29?. The Yonkers Raceway winter harness racing meet continues until March 1. *MORE JOBS? THERE ISA WAY * ton, N.C., PPG Industries N INE years ago near Lexing- converted a 150-acre farm into a sleek new factory. Today that factory employs more than oo people and produces 140 million pounds of glass fibers a year -for everything from draperies to lightweight automobile body parts. " On Michigan's Escanaba River, wood pulp is fed into one end of a new Mead Corp. papermaking ma- chine that almost fills a building a quarter of a mile long. At the other end emerges a band of paper 25 feet wide. Up to 6oo workers harvest the wood for this plant, while i100 make the paper-annually enough paper to cover a 16-lane highway around the earth at the equator. " At New Johnsonville, Tenn., DuPont built a plant to produce ti- tanium dioxide, the safe whitener that has replaced lead in paint and is used in scores of other products including paper and textiles. The year it opened, the plant provided jobs for more than 300 local resi- dents. Now, nearly three times that number are on the payrolls-which ran about $14 million last year. These three factories are the result of what economists call capital in- yestment. Their cost adds up to a huge sum-approximately $250 mil- lion. Each was financed with re- or borrowed funds, or both. Such capital investment is what our forefathers called "thinking ahead." When we still lived on farms or in villages, no one but a fool would consume all his garden, herds and flocks. A smart man kept some- thing for breeding stock and seed. But for some years now our coun- try has lived as if this commonsense wisdom applied to everybody except us. Between 1960 and 1973 we rein- vested an average of 13.6 percent of our real gross domestic product in new plants and equipment, com- pared with 18.2 percent in France, 20 percent in Germany and 29 per- cent in Japan. Some 6o to 70 percent of our exist- ing manufacturing capacity has been installed since 1960, versus 85 percent of Japan's. While our government was increasing demand by incur- ring deficits and voting new money payments to our people, we ran our old, lessefficient factories above their proper operating level. Nat- urally, this caused costs and prices to spiral. If we are to pull out of this reces- sion and avoid worse ones, we must begin now to invest much more in job-creating plants and equipment. But how? Most economists believe one solution lies in substantially in- creasing the investment tax credit, With today's unemployment, and with millions of young people getting ready to enter the job market, we must make it possible for companies to invest far more of what they earn today so that they can produce more tomorrow ings). Congress recently raised the among the last t credit from seven to ten percent. Re- black high scho spected economist Pierre Rinfret be- desegregated all lieves that we should permanently Clark directs a s enact a 20-percent federal investment The benefits tax credit. This would put us on a elsewhere. Surro par with most of our major foreign mills found the industrial competitors. pay scales to cor More liberal depreciation allow- labor was so sca ances would also help. Present tax came close to zer laws assume useful lives for build- According to1 ings and equipment during which Commerce figur companies stretch out tax deductions PPG paid last for their cost. But the assumed lives spent by empl often exceed the period of years like this: $1.8 m when the buildings and equipment million for hou are truly competitive. Thus, business operation; $800,0 frequently .finds itself still trying to million for transi recover original cost for buildings and education; $ and equipment which progress has and Social Sec rendered obsolete. medical care; $ To raise the level of capital invest- and $1.2 million ment and create jobs we must also including saving change popular attitudes. Too often .Beyond this,t when a new factory or power plant effect that opera is proposed, our response has been plant comes to t "Don't put it here." Nobody can Labor Statistics quarrel with the need for informed job in manufactu concern for the environment, but three other job nobody can quarrel, either, with the Lexington roster need for jobs. Consider the exhila- 1000 mark, thef rating benefits of capital investment porting 3000 ot in that PPG Industries plant in Lex- bus drivers to do ington, N.C.: Lexington can " Horace Hill, 36, was born on a PPG plant. Th tobacco farm, had to quit school after brick building, f the ninth grade, spent three years in white tent-likev the Air Force, got a low-paying mill architecturally, a job. Then PPG hired him and an keeps her kit trained him to make and repair the If the United $5000 platinum nozzles from which its pre-eminence the molten glass is spun. He now petitive industri heads a work force of ten. duce what we n " Carolyn Blevins, now 25, was full employment working in the spraying department thousands of nee of a furniture factory when she got one will have t the chance to go to PPG as an "end giving realities. finder," a highly skilled job which we allow Amer involves finding thread ends which cover the costs are then twisted onto bobbins. "I've much more rapii worked lots of places where they let sible. Only then a woman do a man's job-but they the means to kee don't >ay you for it," she says. "At perously expand PPG everybody's treated the same."_ IForrernswrt " Charles Clark, also 25, the son Readers iges, r of a common laborer, is one of four Prices: 10-75 5 ADVERTISEMENT 0 0 o graduate from the ol before Lexington its schools. Today, taff of 40. from PPG are felt unding factories and y had to raise their mpete. For a while, arce that Lexington ro unemployment. U.S. Department of res, the $1o million year in wages was oves approximately illion for food; $1.6 sing and household oo for clothing; $1.9 portation, recreation $1.9 million for taxes urity; $6oo,ooo for 200,000 for interest; for everything else, gs. there's a multiplier tes whenever a new own. By Bureau of calculations, each wring makes possible' s. So when PPG's r last year passed the employes were sup-, her workers, from octors. be proud of the new e low, central red- lanked by blue and wings, is handsome nd inside, no wom- chen looking nicer. States is to regain in the highly coin- al world and pro- eed with reasonably t and stable prices, w factories like this o become solid life- Thus, it is vital that ican industry to re-w of new investment dly than is now pos- will industry have p our economy pros- ing. L:Reprint Editor, The easantville, N.Y. 10570. 0-$2.5 ; 100-4 ;500- TIRED OF DECIG EVERYTHING No ? We know that schedule decisions are a problem right now and we would like to help. The University Theatre Program gives you a chance to buy a two series book of coupons at a DIS- COUNT now and allows you to choose the show and date later. It's called our SPECIAL DISCOUNT BOOK; and it. contains 10 special coupons, four cou- pons for each of the series listed here,, the Guest Artist Series and the Show- case Series, plus two Bonus Coupons whose use will be announced later. Use each series coupon as you like, all four for one production or one for each of the four shows in that series. The Spe- cial Discount Book is designed to fit your schedule and budget ( it's only $10). Inquire at our ticket office for more information. Guest Artist Series A selection of distinguished actors or directors join with our department's finest actors, directors a n d designers to create our own presentations in Power Center. Oct. 8-12 Arthur Miller's DEATH OF A SALESMAN Nov. 26-30 William Shakespeare's AS YOU LAKE IT Feb 18-21 the musical PURLIE April 7-11 Tennessee Williams' CAMINO REAL In addition to o u r Power Center productions, we en- courage our graduate students in direction and design by o(ferinu U iiversity Showcpse Productions Oct. 22-25 NEW BLACK SCRIPT in Truebloodi Theatre i m I I