Page Eight THE SUMMER DAILY Saturdkay, May 12, 1973 Page Eight THE SUMMER DAiLY Saturday, May 12, 1973 Record city budget skimpy on services Charges dismissed for Ellsberg, Russo (Continued from Page 3) "The situationrcould become critical next year, if our man- power is not markedly increas- ed," Krasny adds. THE OTHER department heads tell much -the same story: Despite enough funds to add six men and another truck to the Fire Department, the depart- ment's capabilities have been termed "very close to the critical level" by Sheehan. The Fire Department request- ed 15 per cent more money than it is budgeted to receive. THE HUMAN RIGHTS depart- ment, which investigates com- plaints of discrimination and ini- tiates action against firms not Union lawsuit "dismissed by Circuit Court (Continued from Page 3) George Maurer, attorney f or McCracken, claimed at the hear- ing that the union officers were willing to settle the dispute out of court, offering to allow Jos- lyn and his supporters to hire their own accountant to examine the books. HOWEVER, when Joslyn's at- torney, David Goldstein, asked whether the defense wold agree to make the offer legally bind- ing, Maurer declined, claiming the Broom Committee was "mak- ing use of this court for their political purposes." Broom union presidential can- didate Jim Hines denied this later. "We tried to bring this up two years ago. We didn't bring up a slate until he (McCracken) denied us access." Hines said the. suit had serv- ed a purpose despite the dis- missal. "The membership knows what the score is," he remarked. "The ony way to beat the man is to replace the man." complying with city anti-discrim- ination statutes had its budget cut from the present level. HRD director James Slaughter, contends his office will be seri- ously impaired by the cutback. "The department initiated cases will drop significantly if we don't receive more funds," Slaughter says. HE CLAIMS the budget alloca- tion may indicate city govern- ment refuses to recognize the needs of discriminated against minorities in the community. Sheehan syas the HRD budget, was decreased "because there is not that much of a human rights problems in Ann Arbor." To counter the loss of funds Slaughter claims he will not "completely ignore budgetary restraints" but will fully pros- ecute complaints regardless of cost. HAROLD ROTHBART, who co- ordinates the Building and Safety department, predicts that unit could not complete the number of building inspections required by law because of budgetary prob- lems. "There may well be severe problems especially in the area of' fire protection," Rothbart comments. His department must also enforce the unit pricing and non-returnable bottle ordinances. Building and Safety will be un- able to adequately insure com- pliance with these laws, ac- . cording to Rothbart. THE CITY'S austerity budget has forced departments to tritn the fat from their opperations. But apparently a lot of muscle has been cut ,away as well. The budget contains no leeway, no frills, and perhaps just not enough money to go around. Unfortunately the money crisis in local government extends be- yond fiscal 1974. In the future the budget squeeze will become tighter and city services may become even less efficitent. (Continied from Page 1 could have failed to see the dis- honesty on the part of the gov- ernment," he said. Judge Byrne said a prelimi- nary study of the motion for ac- quittgl indicated there were in- sufficient grounds; but that the dismissal insured that neither Ellsberg nor Russo would be tried again on the same charge. JUDGE MATT BYRNE, who ASKED HIS immediate plans, dismissed all charges against Ellsberg said: "I'm going to Daniel Ellsberg yesterday. make love to my wife." Report finds dirt in 'fast food'kitchens IN THE OTHER major Water- gate development, Saturday edi- tions of the Baltimore Sun re- ported that ex-FBI chief Gray telephoned Nixon shortly after the June 17 bugging raid. Quoting government sources the Sun said Gray told federal investigators he received "no re- action" from the President when he expressed his concern that the FBI and CIA were being "used" by persons close to Nixon. THE NEW YORK Daily News and ABC Television publicized similar accounts. In his April 30 nationwide TV address, Nixon flatly denied all knowledge of a Watergate cover- up until March of this year. In other Watergate develop- ments: -Former CIA Deputy Director Robert C'tshman said yesterday he ordered the agency to stop aiding in whet became the bur- glary of Daniel Ellsberg spsy- chiatrist's office. -Former Atty. Gen. John Mit- chell, indicted on charges of con- spiracy to obstruct justice and defraud the United States, took a leave of. absence yesterday from one of Wall Street's most pres- tigious law firms. -NEWLY APPOINTED White House advisor John Connally took a similar leave of absence from his Texas law firm after it was disclosed the firm represents a Houston company whose presi- dent is under grand jury ques- tioning about a $100,000 Nixon campaign contribution linked to the Watergate bugging. tContinuedfrom Page12) In some cases, equipment goes insufficiently cI e a n e d because managers don't care enough to make sure the staff members are doing their jobs. Food poison- ing may result. OTHER contamination m a y occur when the employes throw flies into the. chicken cooker to "watch them pop." Local fast food restaurant man- agers were somewhat skeptical of the gory picture presented in the report. Jim Gould, a McDonald's store manager, thinks PIRGIM "exag- gerates quite a bit. I don't think it's as bad as they make it out to be." "WE TRY to keep our own place as clean as possible," he added. One Gino's m a n a g e r said "there's no way I'm going to run a dirty store." However, he did say that "the place does get a little dirty at times," especially during rush eating periods. "But it doesn't stay dirty for long," he says. WASHTENAW County was peg- ged at level III-"marginal" sta- tus which "requires immediate action to meet public health needs." The evaluation is made on the basis of "average demerit scores" of food establishments within the jurisdiction of the agency being evaluated. David Hodgson, Assistant Chief of the Division of Food Services Sanitation of the MDPH feels there is "some validity" to the report, but did not agree with the way some of the statistics were interpreted. On the whole, Hodgson feels less than 10 per cent of the fast food restaurants are not in com- pliance with state laws. Hodgson admits that "problems with employes will happen. I don't dispute that a bit." HE FEELS, however, that the gruesome stories cited in the re- port are "isolated incidences" which don't necessarily indicate that the whole industry operates that way. If the report is widely circu- lated, "it could be very damag- ing to the food industry," Hodg- son adds. _ if vnuu'p QWrku about backpacking- Stag+bag wth gs - nearly as wanbut cost Wea lotless than down e b We aren't putting down down. We make a great line oft ? down-filled bags and trail clothing. But now we have a : n new line of Stag tral bags stuffed with DuPont Dacron* Fiberfill It. Different weights and lengths in mummy, tapered companion and rectangular bags. All with nylon covers and - liningsand awater- proof stuff bag. These bags can get soaked, yet they'll dry quickly = ' when wrung out and hung open. Down is great, but it won't recover qrat like this. Most im- portant, our Stag bags ofer the warmth of down at only a bit more weight. Our popu- lar mummy bag, filled with 3 lbs. "oea at Fiberfill I, weighs only 4 lbs. and it's rated for cold weather. What yo.u need to know about Dacron Fiberfill If: M;« LI Compacts easily into a small stuff bag Q Recovers IN quickly from compression and is easy to refluff E] Keeps its fluff and insulating value even when wet Q is machine washable and dryable L] Long lasting, non-allergenic, odorless and consistent in quality Q l Costs a lot less than down. * When price is important, consider a Stag ecw ,.. trail bag. Compare them and our trail tents 40 and backpacks at your sporting goods dealer. He might be having a sale right nowt Send 25c for new "Be Kind to Your Outdoors - booklet of trail tips and catalog to: Hirsch- Weis/White Stag, Dept, CNP, 5203 S.E. John- son creek Blvd., Portland, iregon 97206 STAG Name Trail Gear city State Zip r1 ( College A+ + iii :'t~a t w liii Q t#j r ts DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Saturday, May 12 CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT DAY CALENDAR 320 SAB, 764-748e. Tennis: Michigan vs. Northwestern, INTERVIEwS ON CAMPUS: Dept. of Courts nr. IM Bldg., 1 pm. Interior, Bureau of Sport Fisheries & Track: Michigan vs. Indiana, Ferry wildlife will be at CP&P on Thurs., Finla, 4:3 y pm. ,May 24, 1073 recrutilng for: Fishery B- Sunday, Hay 13 oiogists, Wuliltie Biologists, & Rtefuge TV Center: "The Singer's Art: The Mgr. Phone or stop in to schedule an Impressarlo," wwJ - TV, Channel 4, interview. noon. TEACHER CORPS / PEACE CORPS: Monday, May 14 Earn a -teaching certificate in Etem. en meeting, 3324 SA , neon o Phys, Ed. along with a M's degree & be SACUA: w. Alcove, anham, 2 pm. pt. while doing it, a combined pro- SACU: W Alove Rakha, 2pmgram is offerei t aiWash. State U. for Senate Assembly: Rackham Amph, 2 the lot year & in Venezuela the nest 3:pmWrite: Rm. 12 mt y. Senate Assembly: Rackham Amph.u ,W a . 102, Smith 6.m., 3:13 pm. . Pu1an, wash.sua. Music School: rCaillon recital, Hud- State U. College at Buffalo offers 2 son Ladd, carillonneur, Baird Caril- Intern Programs: 1) grads w major in Ion, 7 pm. Eng., 3 yr. Prog leading to M's degree SUMMER PLACEMENT (2 yrs. In Afganistan), 2) open to 212 SAB elem. ed. grads; 1 yr. plus 1 summer STUDENTS: JOB openings still avail- in Buffalo Pub, Schools leading to M's able in Detroit area. Also some cur- degree in Educ. ($90 per wk plus tui- rent camp openings. Come in and tion in both programs). Applic deadline check, Summer Placement Service. 6/15/73. a