Page Ten THE SUMMER DAILY Tuesday, May 15, 1973 Page Ten THE SUMMER DAILY Tuesday, May 15, 1973 Council approves budget The Republicans also passed a slate of amendments to the bud- get, including an additional fund request for the police department and minor appropriations to other departments The police department received the largest slice of the fiscal pie, with a next rear's budget of ne-arly 43.5 million. The fire and sanitation departments also re- ceived large sums. REPUBLICAN Mayor James Stephenson said that the budget "will more than serre the le- gitimate needs of the city." He indicated, however, that he felt budget appropriations were hand- cuffed by the city's extensive debt. "The general funds budget," he said;' "concentrates on non- social service-oriented programs, since they are funded by other expenditures. - Both the Human Rights Party and Democratic council mem- bers, blasting the budget, offered amendments to deal with what t h e y considered high - priority i t e m s - drug-help programs, health services, and childcare. THE HRP COUNCIL members proposed large cuts in the police department appropriation, with the money g ing to sarious hi- man service groups, such as Oc- tagon house and the Community Women's Clinic. The Democrats on council pro- posed trimming "administratise fat" from the budget, with more of an emphasis on community programs, as well as asking for an increase i nthe parks and recreation department funding ler~et. Stephenson claimed that the Democratic and HRP amend- ments had been considered and included in the budget approved by council last night. CAROL JONES (D - Second Ward) howover, contended that the Republicans merely made a token gesture. "I don't believe the Republicans truly incorpo- rated Democratic or HRP pro-, posed changes, since these areas are insignficaotly funded, if at all," she said. J e r r y DeGrieck (HRP-First Ward) said the budget in no way reflects IIRP priorities for city spending. "We cannot support a budget which ignores all social services creasing budget. He te "a norl the city needs white in- the police department rimed the entire budget, oless waste of mTione." COMING!l hW' WITH: Santana Grateful Dead Hot Tuna Quicksilver Boz Scaggs It's A Beautiful Day Cold Blood Elvin Bishop Group New Riders of the Purple Sag/ Bill Graham NEW WORLD FILM COOP DAILY OFFICIAL 'rie Daily Official Fittlletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to 449 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and ya a p. Fridiy forSaturday and Sunday. Itemts appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For "ore intormation, phone 764-9270. 'Tuesday, May I DAY CALENDAR Baseball: Michigan vs. Western Mich- igan Univ.. Fisher Stadium, 2 pm. Physirs: C. M. Surko, Bell Labs, Nt, "Light Scattering as a Probe of Con- densed Media," 296 P-A Bldg.. 3 pm. Grad Coffee Hour: E. Conference Rm.. Raskham, 8 pm. CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3200 SAB, 764-7460 INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS: Dept. of Interior, Bureau of Sport Fisheries & Wildlife will be at CP&P May 24.re- cruiting for: Fishery Biologists, Wild- life Biologists, & Refuge Mngr. Phone or siop in to schedule an interview. TEACHER CORPS / PEACE CORPS: earn a teaching certificate in Elem. Phys. Ed. along with a M's degree & be pd. while doing it; combined pro- grain offered at Wash. State U. for 1st yr. & in Venezuela tihe next 2 yrs. Write: Rm. 142. Smith Gym., Pullman, Wash. 99163. State U. College at Buffalo offers 2 Intern Programs: 1) grads w major in Rng., 3 yr. program leading to M's de- gree (2 yrs. in Arganistan). 2) open to elem. ed. grads; 1 yr. plusIsummer in Buffalo Pub Schools leading to M's de- Sre it iica. ($sf per s-bpisus ti- tion inibotiiprograms) Appication deadline 6 it 73 c this offie ufo de- tails. SUMMER PLACEMENT 2t2 SAB STUDENTS: JOB openings st itaval- able in Detroit area. Also .some cur- rent camp openings. Come in and Wiretap files found in Ehrlilchmran safe (,Continued from Page 34 office. Ehrlichman resigned as President Nixon's principal do- mestic adviser April 30 after White House involvement in the Watergate affair became known. Mardian claimed former FBI Assistant Director W. C. Sullivan had removed the files from the FBI, Ruckelshaus said, because he felt that former director J. Edgar Hoover "might use the records in some manner against the attorney general or the Presi- dent.' CONTROVERSIAL f i r m e r White House counsel John Dean made the news again yesterday as he testified before Chief U.S. District Judge John Sirica that papers ie had stolen out of the White House and locked in an Alexandria, Va. bank were Water- gate documents with a classifi- cation stricter than top secret. The judge ordered copies made available to prosecutors and Sen- ate investigators, with the orig- inals to be held by the clerk of his court. It meant the White House, which asked their return, will get copies from the Justice Department. Meanwhile, the Senate Judi- ciary Committee yesterday ques- tioned Elliot Richardson for the third day for his confirmation as attorney general to replace the resigned Richard Kleindienst. Richardson told newsmen he had narrowed his choices of a special Watergate prosecutor to four men: - Harold Tyler Jr., a U.S. District judge in the southern district of New York, a Republi- can who served as an assistant attorney general in the last year of the Eisenhower administration, - David Peck, a former New York state judge now in private practice, - Judge William Erickson, of the Colorado Supreme Court, who helped draft the American Bar Association's administration of criminal justice standards, and - Warren Christoper, a Los Angeles attorney and former dep- uty U.S. Attorney general. RICHARDSON testified he had not consulted with Nixon or any of his aides about his choice, but said two or three names had been passed to him by White House people. "They failed to meet what I thought were applicable criteria," he told the Judiciary Committee. Two of the names mentioned by the White House, he said, were former Missouri Gov. Warren Hearnes and former California Gov. Edmund Brown. Both are Democrats; Brown defeated Nix- on in the 1962 California gover- nor's election. RICHARDSON said he hoped to name the special prosecutor to- day. 3035 Washtenaw across from Lee Oldsmobile Subscribe to The Daily Phone 764-0558 JACOBSON'S OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. MICHIGAN UNION MIXED LEAGUES Free Instructions Sign Up Nov! Pocket Billiards M PIN BOWLING Thursday 7-9 P.M. Win a free game "Learn from a pro" OPEN II A.M. MON.-SAT.; 1 P.M. SUNDAY "An exemplary piece of comera." N.Y. Times Brando's favorite performance (1970) MARLON BRAND( J l pr 1 Ma hi O ilCOLOR by Dexe* POTECORVO *UnitedlArtists ALSO: "SINISTER HARVEST" 1930 classic of dope smoking in Egypt. Don't miss it! THURSDAY and FRIDAY NEW WORLD FILM COOP Texas Instruments electronic slide rule calculator with split-second accuracy, clearly visible 12-character read-out with 200 decade range number display, 10-digit keys plus decimal point and 12 function keys. 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