Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, Januar1 29, 1976 i All-Campus T.G. AT THETA XI fraternity FRIDAY, Joan. 30th-9 p.m.-1 a.m. MONDAYS-12 noon Rackhar-East Conf. DNA Recombinant Research:, Key Issues FEB. 2: Susan Wright, Don Michaelj "Community involvement in decisions"I Senate overrides Ford veto on bill Birth control pill linked to gallstones Band: ALL IN LOVE DANCING 1345 Washtenaw (near South University St.) BEER - ~.- ~ -- - - WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF A PROFESSOR ACCUSED YOU OF CHEATING ON AN EXAM??? If you're an LSA student, you would probably have a hearing before the LSA Academic Judiciary The Judiciary handles most cases of alleged cheating and placerism in the Colleqe, and that orobably makes it the most important committee that students sit on in LSA. The Judiciary is composed of 7 students and 7 faculty members. However, the LSA STUDENT GOVERNMENT is currently filling four vacant student positions. If you are interested in opplying, you must sign up for on interview at the LSA Student Government office--Room 4001 Michigan Union. DEADLINE FOR APPLYING IS SUNDAY, FEB. 1, 1976 at 5:00P.m. - - - - - -- - - -- - - FEB.9: Research panelists and continued discussion FEB. 16: Further discussion __. TONITE ONLY A film about Spain under Franco "DREAMS AND NIG HdTMARES" followed by an open du-Io S ° discussion (Continued from Page 1) Sen. Edmund Muskie (D-Me.),' chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, a s s u r e d his col- le-Agues that the bill did not ex- ceed Congress's own budget for the current fiscal year adopted in December. It is over Ford's budget, Mus- kie agreed. But he said the leg- slators, in adopting their own midget, had decided more funds should go into programs of the, Health - Education - Welfare and Labor Departments and less in- to others, such as military out- lays. THE BIGGEST increase in the bill over the President's budget was for the research ' programs of the National In- stitutes of Health, with cancer 1' W e'll never tell. UM Stylists at the UNION, Dave, Harold, and Chet. aid heart, hing and stroke get- ting the biggest boosts. Ford now has been overridden eight times in the year and a' h alf of his nresidencv. He has vetoed 44 bills. STRIDES MADE IN POLLUTTON CONTROL NEW YORK (A) - Dr. Richard Schmidt, vice presi- dent and general manager of Ecod.ne's industrial waste treatment division, told an editorial roundtable that recent developments in water poli- tion control technology could significantly cut the amoumt in- dustry must spend on the envi- ronment. Schmidt pointed to a North- eastern naner mill that saved a tot-Il of 50,000} on inollution con- trol costs and more than $"4,00 rearly on energv and other on- ernting costs by incornorati'ag reent innovations into its w-gtewter t r e a tm e " t ssten The imnact of such canitnl Pod onerting saving on the in- dtstrinl eoonomv should not: he-inimized Schmidt said, rnlotinr? Council of Environ- mental Quality figires which iedicate some industries will Ispnd 10 to 20 ner cent of their toMtal plant and eaininment in- -estment on rollution controls to meet existing federal laws. KICKS 95 POINTS PHILADELPHIA () - Don Bitterlich of Temple led the nation's collegiate kick scorers by getting 95 points last season, fourth best point total in the country. He kicked 21 field goals and 32 extra points. Ronnie Kruse of Tulsa led in extra points with 42. Twelve. field goalsngave him a 78-point total. BOSTON Pj --Researchers claim they have found new evi- dence to link oral contracep- tives wth increased dangers of gall bladder disease, including gallstones. A study shows that women who took normally prescribed doses of oral contraceptives ex- perienced a "significant rise" in the level of cholesterol found i, their gall bl-dder bile, the rnsearchers reported. SUCH INCREASED levels can lead to the formation of gall- stones, the researchers said in an article published in a recent' edition of the New England' Journal of Medicine. The scientists said they se- lected white and American In-' dian women between the ages of 19 and 39 in Phoenix, Ariz., for the su>rvey. One g-oup of women was stu- died before and after starting use of oral contraceptives. A second grouip of women who had been on the pill for an aver- age of 37 months was tested while on the pill and during their menstrual periods, the re-, port said.# IN BOTH GROUPS, the re- searchers found the increase in c&olesterol saturation of gall bladder bile "highly significant" during the times when the wo-' men were on the pill. Bile is the fluid secreted by: the liver. The researchers said there are two nossible reasons for the incrnased cholesterol level-and both may be operating in wo- men on the pill. The contraceptives might in- crease the secretion of choles- terol by the liver into the bile, they said, and it could also de- crease those bile acids which woild normally work to break down the cholesterol. THE STUDY is believed to be the first one nublished to docu- inent the effects of estrogens and progestins. the prime in- gredients in oral contraceptives, on human gall bladder bile. Sig-ilar studies have been made on laboratory animals. Scientists have already docu- mented a close association be- tween gall bladder disease and oral contraceptives and found a correlation between the need for gall bladder operations in post- menonausal women and estro- gen therapy frequently pre- scribed to ease change of life symptoms. TIE PESEARCH team agreed that in view of their findings doctors ought to consider the high gall bladder cholesterol level, which usually 'precedes the formation of gallstones, as a possible side effect of the pill. The New England Journal of Medicine study was written by Lynn Benion, Ronald Ginsberg, Marc Garnick and Peter Ben- nett. led by PAUL WE LLMAN, veteran of the 15th International Brigade. 1421 HILL 761-1451 ME 1 N 1.1 M m l .II ,- W1HtECCCUi TYM[ QIEDEUIVISC A4t[ M, AT E Ems TT - NO ADMISSION CHARG W U IHOURS WED.,THURS.,FR.6-10P.M. SATURDAY 10-10 SUNDAY 12-6 M0 rJackson _. Jackson- 1-94 E Huron Huo C0-SPONSORED B - OLD Downtown WORLD Ann Arbor VILLAGE MALL Stadium n t o A 3 1 r% ~A ni+ GRAD THEATRE PARTY "ARMS IN THE MAN" 8:00 p.m. SAT., JAN. 31 call HILLEL for tickets 663-3336 I i E State of emergenc declared in Zambia (Continued from Page 1) South. IN HIS ADDRESS, President Kaunda said the move was THE, PRESIDENT said thi necessary because of a deterio- government was taking the pow rating situation on 'Zambia's ers to put itself "in a positior borders. Devolpments t h e r e to counter any moves to destroy "pose a grave threat to peace our country. , We a a na and security in Zambia," he tion must prepare for the worst, said. We are at war, make no mis Zambia also faced grave eco- take. There is.foreign interfer nomic problems, with the price ence in our country." of copper-the country's major Zambia has not recognizes source of foreign exchange-un- the MPLA (Popular Movemen likely to improve for some time for the Liberation of Angola) a, from its present low interna- the legitimate government o tional level. the former Portuguese territory He also told Zambians that It has called for a governmen the situation was grave in of national unity between the white - ruled Rhodesia to the MPLA, the ,FNLA (Nationa te V- in e ------ - DON'T MISS THIS! I Front for the Liberation of An- gola) a n d UNITA (National Union for the Total Indepedence of Angola). I 0 I I ® U P lit' 1/ // t t I