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January 24, 1976 - Image 8

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1976-01-24

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Saturday, January 24, 1976

Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, January 24, 1976

1

EGADYOUR CA.R'S LIFE IS IN DANGiER!'
WILL IT ISE SAVED OR WILL M PREVAIL?
a--laWETY (CAR, ASH - -
T THE RESCU1E WITH. HEATED FLOORS
SOAP, RINSE, WAXC
HO3SS'ER ,SI L/,O E 4 H U SS L -EV18 W . LIBERT Y JU T WEST OF R.R. TRACKS)

Colby asks tighter security

The Jewish Community Centers of Chicago
OFFER
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUN ITIES
SOCIAL WORK ORIENTED COUNTRY CAMP
CAMP CHI-located 50 miles north of Madison & the
University of Wisconsin.
POSITIONS: Counselors- male & female. Specialists -
Tennis, Sailing, Music, S e n i o r Adult Proqram Staff,
Compcraft.
UNIT HEADS-male and female.
INTERVIEW DATES: CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
January 26, Monday-Call Mrs. Cooper (SAB Rm. 3200)
at 763-4117
January 27, Tuesday-Call Mrs. Garvin at Hillel, 663-
3336. 1429 Hill
- -. - ..-m.

(Continued from Page 1)
large operations in the face of
widespread knowledge of their
existence without any admis-
sion or explanation from the U.
S. government."
BUNDY disagreed with Col-
by on the subject of making
the CIA budget public. Colby
has consistently opposed any
revelation of CIA spending fig-
ures. Bundy maintained that
U.S. intelligence spending is
"almost surely better known to
our adversaries than to us" and
urged the disclosure of over-all.
spending figures.
In criticizing Congress for
disclosing intelligence secrets,
Colby flatly denied a sugges-
tion made recently by Sen.
Clifford Case (R-N.J.) that the
leaks were coming from the
CIA in an effort to discredit the
congressional committees.
Colby, who is expected to be
replaced by former GOP chair-
man George Bush after a.Sen-
ate confirmation vote scheduled
for next week, seemed to re-
serve his harshest criticism
for the House.
MEANWHILE, Chairman

Otis Pike (D-N.Y.) said that
the House Intelligence panel's
report includes a great deal of
classified material that both
Colboy and the White House
said should remain secret.
"There's no way we're going
to file this report and satisfy
the executive," Pike said. "The
executive's original request was
tthat we strike out half of the
entire report."
The draft report contains in-
formation on such top-secret U.
S. activities as submarine spy-
ing on Soviet missile launchings
and CIA aid for Angolan troops
and political parties.
IT SAYS U. S. intelligence ag-
encies spent $10 billion a year
on overseas operations.
Pike says staff negotiations
and then votes by committee
members knocked out informa-!
tion that, however remotely,
might expose individuals or em-
barrass the United States in dip-
lomatic relations.
He said the committee also
revised sentences "considered
unduly critical of members of
the executive branch.

committee softened criticism of
Secretary of State Henry Kis-
singer, Pike said the report
would leave no doubt the com-
mittee was critical of some
members of the Ford adminis-
tration.
Pike said the committee took
out "a little over half" of the
information intelligence offic-
ials specifically objected to.
But Colby accused the com-
mittee of side-stepping an
agreement under which Ford'
was to get the final word on
what secrets could be released.
THE COMMITTEE voted 8 to
4 this week that, in effect,
agreement does not apply to the
committee's final official re-
port.
Colby told a Senate commit-
tee the result was "an'absurd
situation in which a committee
agrees not to release individual
reports of secret activities but
then proposes to publish them
in its final report.
"This is just impossible,"
Colby said, adding secrets "do
not become declassified by be-
ing taken off one piece of pa-
per and put on another."

ASKED IF that meant

the I

_

I - I

Ut

t

t

0

On

our

oostt.

AP Photo
Frosted firenmn
Moustache adds a place for ice to form on this .fireman working in South Boston early yes-
terday. They were hampered by below-zero temperatures and wind gusts of up to 50 miles
per hour, freezing hoses and hydrants as well a.s firemen.
Cost of President's Medicare
plan could be underestimated

9

(Continued from Page 1)
they tell me they've got to be
higher, I'm not concerned be-j
cause we've got the funds to
cover it."
O'NEILL acknowledged that
because government planners
were still trying to decide how
generous the legislation should
be, Social Security actuaries
were "flopping around quite a
bit" in trying to come up with
firm cost estimates.
Senate committee staff mem-I
bers have emphasized, he said,I
that the Medicare legislationj
must be drafted tightly to pre-
vent hospitals, doctors and
nursing homes from hiking
their charges as soon as a p-a-
tient has paid his limit and the
government picks up the rest
of the bills.

The lower budget estimates
were based, sources said, on an
assumption that a patient who
left the hospital for 60 days
and then was readmitted would
have to start paying up to the
$500 limit all over again.
The higher estimates reflect
OMB's decision to offer catas-
trophic protection for a full
year, doing away with the pres-
ent system which charges a*
patient $104 for the first day
in a -hospital, nothing for the
second through 60th days, and
$26 daily for the 61st through
90th days.
In addition, Medicare now al-
so provides an extra 60 days

of continuous hospitalization,
the way it works now, a Medi-
care patient loses hospital cov-
erage.
President Ford's p'roposed
new financing plan would
charge patients the first $124
of their hospital bill in 1977 and
then 10 per cent daily up to the
$500 ceiling which would be
reached, on the average, by
about the 75th day.
PROTECT PETS
NEW YORK (UPI) - Veter-
inarians advise preventive
treatment for hepptworm by
April for all dogs in the United

I

of hospital coverage than can States. The parasite, w h i c h
be used only once in a per-' often is fatal, formerly was
son's lifetime, costing the pa- confined to the southern U.S. It
tient $52 daily. After 150 days is turning up with increasing
frequency in colder areas.

Why wait until the afternoon to catch up on what's happening when the Daily
can be at your doorstep in time for breakfast?'
The Michigan Daily can fill you in on all the important c a m p us and local
events, as well as offering you indepth national news coverage - so subscribe
now and don't miss another issue!
TO SUBSCRIBE-just fill out the card b e I o w and send it to "The Michigan
Daily," 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, 48109. Or call 764-0558.

*.PREAREFOR- *******"0************
rECFMGFLEX 0
* S
NAT'L MED.& DENT. B'DS
FLEXIBLE PROGRAM and HOURS
* j3kt 4-RANN ARBOR,-MI, 48103
N 1945 PAULINE, SUITE A
i DCTfMLCNM662-3149 "
"'* Southfield-354-0085w
TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938
iii iii ii' BRNCM , N AJORp U s tlS0 00 0i " ,

Heartworm is spread by
mosquitoes. Treatment is by
an intravenous injection to kill
the worms in the dog's heart
and oral dosage with an organic
iodine compound to. kill cir-
culating first-stage larvae, fol-
lowed by drug treatment to
prevent future invasions.
Preventive medicine is avail-
able as an elixir or tablet given
daily or in a medicated food
sold only with a veterinarian's
prescription. ____

. -

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LY $5.50 (now thru April)

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(THE HOUSE WITH THE BIG WHITE PILLARS)

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Jan. 25-31,

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