Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, February 26, 1976 Page EIght THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, February 26, 1976 Wisconsin paper ends strike Ford confident after N.H. win 30 lottery losers By MIKE NORTON The Daily Cardinal, student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin (Madison), avoided a threatened strike last week when university officials buck- led under to the paper's de- mands for greater freedom. The Cardinal's s t a f f had threatened to walk out yester- day if the paper's Board of Con- trol did not agree to eliminate faculty control over its fiscal policies. I Disagreement b e t w e e n the staff and faculty surfaced when the paper proposed donating $5,000 to the legal defense of activist David Fine. Fine, a Cardinal staff member, is ac- cused of the August, 1970 bomb- ing of the university's Army Mathematics Research Center. The five elected student mem- bers of the Board of Control, as well as the Cardinal's editor- in-chief and business manager, voted to support the donation. They were overruled by faculty members, however, who are al- lowed absolute veto power over financial matters. The staff responded byj proposing changes in the pa- per's bylaws which would elim- inate the faculty's veto power, and backed their demands with a strike threat. But last Wednesday the Board' (faculty members included) ap- proved this proposal, marking, a victory for the Cardinal. ' (Continued from Page 1) will have to win decisively inI Florida in order to stay in the race. That probably overstates the case; another near deadlock wouldn't be enough to get rid of Reagan. But the challenger is going to have to start win- ning soon. He's the one whoC must convince Republicans they should make a change, and drop Ford. Neither narrow de- feats nor slender victories will do that. PRESS Secretary Ror sen said Ford will wi Tuesday in Massaci where Reagan's name is ballot but he has no car organization; in Vermont, Ford is unopposed, and following Tuesday in F That is the next one tha ly counts. Reagan, campaigning day in Illinois where he Ford in the March 16 pr released a financial statement cn Nes- showing him with a net worth to re turn to . dorm s in next of $1,455,571. The statement husetts, said Reagan's total income for on the the five years ending in 1974 jects to other exceptions, like they wouldn't have to have a rmpaign was $528,518; his estimated the one for football players. lottery." He also attacked the where 1975 income was $282,253. Koontz feels "the whole or- categorical exceptions saying on the deal" (the lottery) was neces- "I feel everyone should have Florida. Among the Democrats the j sary only because the Univer- the same chance." at real- final vote count gave Jimmy sity wants to make more mon- Carter 22,895 votes; or 30 per ey by admitting more fresh- South Quad loser Tony Rein yester- cent, Morris Udall 19,594 or 24 persons. disagreed with the special ex e faces per cent; Senator Birch Bayh } AT ALICE Lloyd Hall, where ceptions "in a mild way. I'm rimary, of Indiana 12,557 or 16 per cent; all reapplicants will be able pretty apathetic this year.' Former Sen. Fred Harris of to return, Resident Director Rein said he entered the draw Oklahoma 8,824 or 11 per cent;IJackie Armstrong said, "There ing as insurance in case he Sargent Shriver 6,649 or 9 per is some feeling that the Uni- could not move to Oxford Hous cent; and Sen. Hubert Hum- versity should build more ing which has extra spaces. phrey 4,347 or 6 per cent, on dorms." She added laughingly, write-in votes. "with all singles." SCOTT Pemberton, another Bursley freshman Brian Dic- drawing loser, said, "If I had But not John Connally. De- I kerson echoed Armstrongs' wanted to get back into the spite an unauthorized, last-min- statement. "The University dorm I would think that the ex ute campaign to get him write- should build more spaces so ceptions were grossly unfair." in Democratic votes, Connally's name went virtually unnoticed. H a s only h snwaRpb s d L D lH e ss dapparently got 33 Demo- cratic write-in votes, which a r 51 THE HIGHLAND APPLIANCE SOUND SHOPS; EVERYTHING YOU NEVER EXPECTED FROM AN APPLIANCE STORE! APPIANCE CU I sm pe ttion Highland's Audio Prices? Hardly ever. They try, but in the long run you'll find that you'll do better at Highland. Why? Because other dealers find its too costly to keep pace with High- land's high-volume buying power. Our suppliers tell us that our chain of 15 stores in Michigan and Ohio (2 more opening this year) purchase far more audio components than their other dealers. Because our enormous purchasing enables us to buy at great savings, just about everything we sell is at incredible rock-bottom prices. But even so, a competitor will occasionally advertise an item below our price - but you still dont get hurt if you purchased the same item at Highland. You get our famous 30-day low-price guarantee which states that if you see the same item anywhere in the area for less within 30 days of purchase. we'll refund the difference, plus 1D0 r of the difference. You just can't go wrong with a Highland price! We put it in writing' would mean that they cost con- servative fund-raiser Richard Viguerie, who staged the mini- campaign, nearly $1,000 apiece. Udall went on to Boston say-I ing. he was satisfied with his 24 per cent, second - place finish in New Hampshire. He said he hopes to emerge from next T u e s d a y' s Massachusetts primary as "the clear leader of the progressive forces . " SAN FRANCISCO (A')-A psy- chiatrist who portrayed Patricia Hearst as "a naive schoolgirl" before her kidnaping conceded I under cross-examination yester- day that she had smoked mari- juana, used mescaline and may have experimented with LSD: But Dr. L. J. West insisted that information had nothing to, do with his evaluation of the 22-year-old heiress. He said he meant she was politically naive. THE REFERENCES to Hearst's drug use were the first before the jury, although a re- cently published book by her former fiance also covered the subject. After the conclusion of West's cross-examination, Hearst's de- fense team indicated it would have lengthy redirect question- ing for the doctor, who under- went a battering during three days of government questions. At the government's direction, West read to jurors a letter he had written to the Hearst family on June 3, 1974. If the then- missing heiress were found, the letter said, "in spite of charges againsther, Ibelieve powerful legal and medical arguments can be mobilized in her de- fense." West also said he en- closed reprints of articles on brainwashing with the letter. He called the letter simply a show of sympathy from parent to another. West insisted he ap- proached his examination of Hearst later, "not only with my usual objectivity but with extra precautions." Enlargement Special 3 for the price of 2 (some size) PLUS 20% off-Kodak Processing 5x7 from 35mm or larger negatives 50c ea. SUN PHOTO 3180 Packard I Bik. E. of Platt easy driving and parking 973-0770 offer expires Mar. 1 5 SHORT or LONG Haircuttinq By Experts DASCOLA STYLISTS Arborland-971-9975 Maple Village-761-2733 E. Libert-668-9329 E. Universty-662-0354 II AKAI GX-230D 3-MOTOR STEREO TAPE DECK Now add reel-to-reel recording and reproduction characteristics approaching that of professional quality! AC servo motor plus GX head characteristics assure you of complete tape travel stability! Automatic & manual reverse play- back. Three GX heads; FORWARD PLAYBACK, REVERSE PLAYBACK and combination RECORD/ERASE head. Wow and flutter less than 0.07% at 7-1/2 ips. Automatic stop, pause control, expanded VU-meters & sound mixing. B.I.C. VENTURI FORMULA 6 4-WAY SPEAKER Extend your system to the very liniits of bass and treble perception. The For- ' mula 6 performs with modest power amps and receivers, yet will handle up to 125 watts! With an exclusive DYNAMIC TONAL BALANCE circuit (patents pending), the Formula 6 lets you hear all the music all the time, no matter what the listening level. The 12" woofer, 2 tweeters and 2 midranges are scientif- ically mounted in an enclosure of handsome oiled walnut. .. . . NANCY HARDESTY Friday, Feb. 27th, 3-5 p.m. Pendelton lounge, Michigan Union Nancy Hardesty is the author of "All We're Meant To Be." Sponsored by Office of Ethics and Religion We've sold many at $4BB, our new low price: $348.00 Former Fair Trade: $295 our new low prise: $198.00 764-7442 DUAL AUTO/PROFESSIONAL 1228 TURNTABLE If you value your present system, you'll want to add this outstanding turntable. Its precision tonearm is scientifically balanced in all planes by a four-point gyroscopic gimbal. A high-torque synchronous motor provides constant platter speed regardless of voltage variations. Plus you get anti-skate calibration, tracking-force adjustment and multiple play. A 6"u pitch control has built-in illuminated strobe. SANSUI 881 AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER Building a system around this top-of-the-line receiver will bring you sound re- production you may not have thought possible. A booming rating of 63 watts per channel, min. RMS, both channels driven at 8 ohm load from 20 to 20,000 hertz with no more than 0.03% total harmonic distortion. Bass, midrange & treble tone controls. Other features give you performance that's unsurpassed in this price range. FormerwFair Trade: $529.95 . our new low price: 6 . Former Fair Trade: $19995 our new low price: $119.00 PIONEER CT-F2121 DOLBY CASSETTE DECK Probably the most extraordinary cassette recording deck value ever offered for your system! Dolby Noise Reduction system provides interference-free recordings of FM stereo broadcasts through a built-in multiplex filter. Front- load and front controls give you stacking convenience. Bias & equalizer tape selector switches, twin record level meters, digital tape counter and lighted cassette compartment Cab. opt extra. AKAI AA-810 AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER Your first system need not be mediocre with the AA-810 receiver. Quality stereo performance is yours with continuous power output of 10 watts per channel, min. RMS at 8 ohm load from 20 to 20,000 hertz, with no more than 0 8% total harmonic distortion A low-noise FET front end & 3-gang variable capacitor eliminates inter modulation distortion. A full complement of con- trols and input/output jacks give you all the flexibility you'll need. Former Fair Trade: $199 95 our new low price: $159,00 Sold regularly at. $168 our new low price. $108.00 SHURE V-15 TYPE III CARTRIDGE Your turntable is only as good as its cartridge; the V-15 Type Il makes it tops! Manufacturers suggested retail: $85.00 1 PIONEER SE-305 STEREO HEADPHONES Padded, lightweight low- impedence for a 500mW input. 16' 5" cable included. Manufacturers suggested retail: $35.00 $19.00 "it $42.00 . yBANKAMECARD. EASY TERMS INSTANT CREDIT ® FREE SERVICE Y R n-r A 1 t'r f1 rf r r> 1T .. .. . i... ... . . .. ._ - - - - -