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February 29, 1976 - Image 6

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Michigan Daily, 1976-02-29

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Page Six

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Sunday, February 29, 19 fo I

Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 29, 19 ~

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LOOKING BACK

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New Hampshire
THOSE WHO sought definitive
answers from Tuesday's
election in New Hampshire will
find little solace in the results.
For unlike in past years, the
final tallies can't be read as a
clear mandate for any single
candidate; nobody was kayoed
from the race, but nobody could
claim absolute victory either.
In perspective, the race h a d
the look of fighters dueling for
the first time; they were test-
ing each other out, not seek-:
ing quick decisions, but thrust-'
ing out and parrying, always
looking for weak spots. And af-
ter the votes were counted the
aspirants reminded each other;
"We will meet again." The
quadrennial travelling r o a d-
show will move on to new battle-
grounds, and the war will be one
of attrition.
For the Reagan camp, stom-
achs must be quivering, but not
unduly so. The consensus is that
Reagan was hurt in the Granite
State. He had hoped to go in and
deal the President a quick, stun-
ning blow reminiscent of Gene
McCarthy torpedoing Lyndon
Johnson eight years ago.
Instead, the President won a
quite narrow victory, but in as-

THE WEEK IN REVIEW

sessing the win, it is evident
that he, too, was wounded by the
encounter. He is the Presi-
dent, and he has some of the
advantages of the incumbent,
but the race showed him to be
far from invulnerable to !attack.
Still, the President Ford Com-
mittee has more to gloat over
than the challenger. It was wide-
ly conceded that the Reagan
camp had a wide advantage in
organizing the state, the Presi-
dent's victory was clearly a
come from behind effort.
Q O NEITHER escaped from
New England unscathed,
but neither was damaged to the
point of quitting. The net result
may be to put the screws on both
candidates teo win a decisive
victory in Florida and build
some genuine momentum.
For the party of the donkeys,
the primary sifted the aspirants
out a little, but nobody w a s
shaken right out of the race.
After the contest, former
Georgia Governor Jimmy Car-
ter claimed the race proved his
acceptability to northern vot-
ers. And Morris Udall, the con-
gressman from Arizona, w as
quietly saying that he was emer-
ging at the top of the crowded
liberal pack.

Carter Ford

THE PROGRAM ON JUDAIC STUDIES
and the
DEPT. OF NEAR EASTERN STUDIES
are sponsoring a discussion on
CONTEMPORARY
ISRAELI LITERATURE
by
YEHUDA AMICHAI
The eminent Israeli poet and novelist

But there were no clear-c u t ers was up only modestly, from
victories for the Democrats ei- 6.2 to 6.6 per cent. And over-
ther. Some pointed to Jimmy all, the percentage of all minor-
Carter's win and noted that he ities dropped from 14.4 to 14
had the moderate/conservative per cent.
field to himself; the fighting ELLIE VARNER, former di-
judge, George Wallace, and the rector of the University's
Senator from Boeing, H e n r y Affirmative Action program
Jackson didn't run in the na- drew the correct conclusion
tion's first primary of the year. from the report when she noted
Even those who fared poorly that so far, University minor-
in New Hampshire - Birch ity hiring efforts have centered
Bayh, Sargent Shriver, and Fred on low-level positions which do
Harris - can all hope for not lead to tenure.
smoother sailing in the mr o r e The 300-page report scored a
liberal waters of the B a y State. number of LSA departments for
But while all may lay siege failing to set or reach hiring
to Massachusetts' bloc of lib- goals for women or minorities.
erals, there are only so many Included on the list were the
votes to go around; politics is a departments of history, political
zero-sum game, and two big set- science, psychology, sociology,
backs in a row may doom one or computer and computer science,
more of the also-rans. mathematics, astronomy, classi-
cal studies, German, history of
Affirmative action art, near eastern studies, Slavic
language and literature, and sta-
THE UNIVERSITY'S Affirnia- tistics.
tive Action Committee re- But these disciplines are mere
leased its second annual report pikers at failing to meet affirm-
this week, and confirmed t h a t ative action guidelines compared
only white women have reason to some areas at the University.
to rejoice. This week The Daily reported
The only minority group in the'j that the law school, one of the
University's staff which increas- I n a t i o n' s most prestigious
ed its percentage was w h i t e s<cho'ls, hid only white males on
women - they went from 44.1 to the faculty.
46.1 per cent - all other minor- The report recommended that
ities fell. steps be taken to meet the hir-
And even though the nwmber ing goals fir womeii and minor-
of white women was up, t h e i r ities, and LSA has responded
share of the teaching positions with increased efforts to recruit
rose to only 14.6 per cent - a capable candidates. But the com-
one per cent gain. nrtition for top scholars is keen,
For all minorities, defined as ad nobody has promised yet
blacks, Orientals, Spanish-sur- that the goals will even be met
named persons and American by next year.
Indians, the percentage of teach- -STEPHEN SELBST

mm

The Buffalo Bills averaged The Cincinna
390.5 yards per game during the the best team1
1975 football season. in 1975. They a
ao e of 123 . yar

ti Bengals had
passing defense
ilowed an aver-
ds Der game

The Cincinnati Bengals led
the American Football Confer- In 1974 there were more than
ence of the NFL in passing in $73,000 in uncashed mutuel tick-
1975, averaging 231.5 yards per ets following the thoroughbred
game. racing season at Finger Lakes
in Canandaigua, N.Y.
Houston had the best defense:
against rushing in the American Stan Musial was a pitcher!
Football Conference NFL last before he became one of the
season, holding opponents to National League's greatest hit-
120 yards per game. iers.

Bea Meadows racetrack in Outfielder Roy White of the
California is the West's busiest New York Yankees is preparing
track and is located in San for his 12th season in the,
Mateo south of San Francisco. American League.
The first Kentucky Derby was Ak-Sar-Ben racetrack in Om
won by Aristides at Churchill aha was closed in 1943 and 1944
Downs in Louisville, Ky., on when the U.S. Army occupied
May 17, 1875. the plant for war purposes.
Garden State Park in New
Jersey will have a thorough- Aqueduct racetrack in New
bred racing meeting lasting 112 York has a subway stop on the
days. It runs from Feb. 21 city's transit system and can
through June 10. be reached from Times Square.

Tuesday, March 2-2-4
3050 Frieze Bldg.

p.m.

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THIS WEEK AT:

Are You a Fat Cat?

Some people who don't understand how
our private-enterprise economy works
tend to picture stock owners as a bunch
of fat cats sleeping off a rich diet of
dividends earned by the sweat of some-
body else's brow.
Truth is, these fat cats are hard to find.
The typical stockholder is a retired senior
citizen, a blue-collar worker or a young
married planning ahead. One of every two
Americans owns stock, either directly or
through a union or company pension fund
or investment plan.
They don't get rich on their dividends,
either. In 1974, the average U.S. corporation
paid a dividend of about 41/2 cents on the
investor's dollar, less than the interest paid
on a bank savings account.
If you're one of America's millions of
stockholders, you probably invested your
hard-earned money in business with the
expectation of seeing your investment
grow as America grows. And it will grow,
as America's economy will grow, if busi-
ness can earn a consistently good profit.
That's an important "if" because profits
serve a double purpose. Dividends are
_! ..LL ~- .. fitrn~ -%-rn~t

modernize, create more jobs and make
more profits. It's a continuous recycling
process.
At Allied Chemical, we put back about
three-fifths of each dollar we earn into
building new plants, modernizing older
facilities, improving environmental control,
developing new products, creating jobs,
helping our stockholders' investment grow
During the next several years, business
will be asked to spend billions of dollars
to expand our economy. And much of this
will have to come from profits. That's why
we have to reverse the trend toward lower
profits. People will invest in business only
if they are confident of potential growth
through healthy profits.
It's our way of life that profits nourish, not
those imaginary fat cats.
~P allied.
chemical
Where Profits Are For People

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