PogeTwo
THE MItCHIGAN DAtIL
Saturday, May 11,' 1974
Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, May11, 1974
Around Ann Arbor
Monday is the last day of
voter registration for the June
10 school board election. If
you haven't registered, you may
do so on Monday 8 a.m. to 8
p.m. at the City Clerk's office
in City Hall.
Wednesday's Daily reported
that the American Federation of
State, Couaty and Municipal em-
ployes had lost a ratification
vote for representation of the
University's clerical workers.
According to AFSCME spokes-
woman Margaret Thomas, since
the vote was a straw poll tak-
en by organizers of the C o n -
cerned Clericals for Action, not
by the general clerical staff, it
is not legally significant.
The second of a series of
special summer carillon recitals
from Burton Tower will be held
Monday from 7 to 8 p.m. Guests
from three foreign countries and
several leading American car-
illonneurs will perform this
summer as part of the Music
school's contribution toward the
Ann Arbor sesquicentennial
celebration.
Today at the movies, the Ind-
ia Students Association shows
Kapoor's Bobby in Aud. E of
the P&&A Bldg., 3:30 and 6:30
p.m. Cinema Guild presents
James Dean in Rebel Without
a Cause in the Architecture
Aud. at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Cin-
ema II features Bette Davis in
Jezebel at Aud. A Angell Hall,
7:30 and 9:30 p.m. And the New
World Film Co-op offers Dis-
ney's Dumbo in the Nat. Sci.
Aud., 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.
ChupcA 4ie'*dice4
In the news
National
WASHINGTON - Republican Sen. Richard
Schweiker of Pennsylvania called for Presi-
dent Nixon's resignation because of what he
called "the now obvious moral corrosion
destroying and debasing the presidency." Sen.
Milton Young (R-N.D.), said Nixon should
consider stepping out of office while impeach-
ment proceedings are under way. Nixon met
privately with Vice President Gerald R. Ford
for an hour. The White House declined to give
details of the meeting but said there was no
talk of a possible Nixon resignation.
WASHINGTON - Top dairy cooperative
leaders tried to raise a quick $300,000 for
President Nixon's campaign within hours of a
White House meeting on milk price supports
in March, 1971, according to secret Senate
Watergate Committee testimony, sources say.
Paul Alagia, former executive director of
Dairymen, Inc., testified that leaders of the
two other cooperatives asked him for the mon-
ey at a 4 a.m. meeting March 24, 1971, at the
Louisville, Ky., airport. Alagia, in a telephone
interview confirmed the account of his testi-
mony.
BUFFALO, N.Y. - Vice President Gerald
Ford said the rapport between him and Presi-
dent Nixon is "as good as always, and that
has been excellent." Ford spoke at a news
conference after flying here from Washington
where he met privately with Nixon earlier
in the day. In answer to a question about
his relations with the President, Ford said:
"There was no indication of any displeasure
on the President's part in the role that I have
played." The vice president told an Illinois
audience Thursday that Watergate has caused
"an erosion of confidence in our federal gv-
ernment that I believe has reached crisis
proportions."
SAN JOSE, Calif. -San Quentin convict
CANTERBURY HOUSE
218 N. Division-665-0606
Col Eucharist at noun at
Canterbury House.
BETHLEHEM UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST
423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149
Minister: Howard F. Gebhart
10 a.m.-Worship Service and
Church School.
UNIVERSITY REFORMED
CHURCH, 1001 E. Huron
Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice,
Ministers
Services at 10:30 a.m.
5:30 p.m.-Student Supper.
FIRST UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH and WESLEY
FOUNDATION
State at Huron and Wash.
Services at 9:30 and 11:00
a.m.
Sermon by Dr. Donald B.
Strobe: "On the Building of
Houses."
this morning
Ruchell Magee pleaded guilty to a charge of
aggravated kidnaping stemming from the
August 1970 Marn County courthouse raid in
which a judge and three abductors were
killed. The maximum sentence under the
charge is life imprisonment. Magree was tried
in San Francisco in 1973 by a jury which
disagreed on charges of murder and aggra-
vated kidnaping.
ST. ANDREW'S EPSICOPAL
CHURCH, 306 N. Division
8:00 am.-Holy Eucharist.
10:00 am. - Morning Prayer
and Sermon.
7:00 p.m.-Holy Eucharist in
chapel.
BETHEL A.M.E. CHURCH
John A. Woods, Pastor
900 Plum St.
Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104
Church Phone-NO 3-3800
Services:
Early Morning-7:30 a.m.
Sunday School-9:00 a.m.
Morning Worship-10:30 a.m.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH, 1432 Washtenaw Ave.
Ministers: Robert E. Sanders,
John R. Waser, Brewster H.
Gere, Jr.
"Where Christ, Campus and
Community meet"
Worship Services at 9:30 and
11:00 a.m.
Sermon Title: "Can You Be a
Christian Today?"
WASHINGTON - President Nixon announc-
ed that the government is making available
$10.3 billion to help people buy new homes
more cheaply and thus invigorate the na-
tion's stagnant housing market. The effort
will center on subsidies for both government-
insured and conventional home mortgages. For
buyers the programs would mean a savings
of about $15 in their $236 maximum monthly
payments for a $30,000 mortgage financed over
30 years.
"
State
LANSING - The State Supreme Court is-
sued a stay order vacating a circuit court in-
junction against six Detroit-area movie thea-
ters shut down for showing hard-core X-rated
movies. The stay, which will permit the thea-
ters to re-open at least temporarily, was is-
sued on a 5-1 ruling pending the outcome of
an appeal by the theaters before the State
Court of Appeals. The six theaters were or-
dered padlocked in a May 1 decision by Wayne
County Circuit Court Judge Thomas Foley.
0
Weather
Warmer but wetter. As a storm system mov-
es in from the southwest today we'll h a v e
milder weather with an increasing chance of
showers and thundershowers as evening ap-
proaches. Showers and thundershowers are
highly probable tonight. Maximum tempera-
tures today 60 to 65 with minimums tonight
53 to 58.
DAILY CLASSIFIEDS
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11
Daily Official Bulletin
saturday, May 11
Day Calendar -
WSOM: baseball bradcast, UM
vi. Ohio State. 91.7 M~tz, 1 pm.
Sunday, May 12
TV Center: "Social Animal: Be-
havior & Its Consequences," WWJ,
Channel 4. noon.
Monday, May 13
SACUA Meeting: 4079 Admin.
Bldg., 2 pm.
Physics: M. Ross. "American
Physical Society Summer Study
on Energy," Colioq Rm., P-A Bldg.,
4 pm.
Music School: carillon recital,
Hudson Ladd, carillonneur, open
tower, visitors welcome, Burton
Tower, 7 pm.
Education: 'Population & the
American Future," Schorling Aud.,
SEB, 8 pm.
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Volume LXXXIV, Number 4-S
Saturday, May 11, 1974
is edited and managed by atudente
at the University of Michigan. Sews
phone 764-0552. Second class postage
paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106,
Published d ai l y Tuesday through
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Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription
rates: $10 by carrier (campus area);
$11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio);
s12 non-local mail (other states and
foreign).
Summer session published Tues-
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Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier
(campus area); $6.50 local mail
(Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-
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