Page Two THE MCHIGAN DAIL Friday, August 2, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAIL's Friday, August 2, 1974 TV tonight 6:00 2 4 7 11 13 News 9 Andy (Griffith 20 Leave ItTo Beaver 24 ABC News-Smith/ Reasoner 30 Hodgepodge Lodge 50 Avengers 56 Antiques 57 Sesame Street 6:30 2 11 CBS News- Walter Cronkite 4 13 NBC News--John Chancellor 7 ABC News-Smith/ Reasoner 9 I Dream of Jeannie 20 Nanny and the Professor 24 Dick Van Dyke 30 Man Builds, Man Destroys 56 Book Beat 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly hillbillies 11 To Tell the Truth 13 What's My Line? -20 Rifleman 24 Dealers Choice 30 56 Aviation Weather 50 Untouchables 57 Electric Company 7:30 2 What's My Line? 4 Hollywood Squares 7 Secrets of the Deep 9 Bewitched 11 Wild, Wild World of Animals 13 Truth or Consequences 20 Movie "Spring Meeting" (English, 1941) 24 Ozzie's Girls 30 Under the Dome 56 The Natucalists 57 Ohio This Week 8:00 2 11 Your Hit Parads 4 Sanford and Son 7 24 Six Million Dollar Man 9 Pig and Whistle 13 Ohio ligh School Footba"l Classic 30 56 Washington Week in Review 50 Mcale's Navy 57 Washington Week in Review 8:30 2 11 Baseball 4 Brian Keith 9 Tommy Banks 30 56 Wall Street Week 50 Merv Griffin 57 To Be Announced 9:00 4 Movie 'Kaleidoscope" 9 News 20 Good News 30 57 Masterpiece Theatre :,6 Fanfare 9:30 7 24 Odd Couple S Sports Scene 70 Seven Hundred CbS 10:00 7 24 Toma 9 Ronnie Prophet 70 international Performance 50 Perey Mason 56 It's Your Turn 57 Aviation Weather 10:30 56 It's Your Turn 57 Day At Night 11:00 2 4 7 11 13 24 News 9 CBC News-Lloyd Robertson 50 Night Gallery 11:20 5 News 11:30 2 Movie "Madame." (French-Italian, 1061) 4 13 Johnny Carson 7 24 Wide World in Concert 11 Movie "The Premature Burial" (1962) 20 Rlight On 50 Movie "Wing and a Prayer" (1944) 12:00 5 Movie "The Body Snateher." (1945) 1:00 4 13 Midnight Special 7 Don. .Kirshner's Rock Concert 1:20 11 News 1:30 2 Movie "The Lost Missile." (1958) 2:30 4 7 13 News 3:00 2 What's My Line? 3:30 2 News Daily Official Bulletin Friday, August 2 Day Calendar WUOM: M. McCluhan, author, The Medium is the Message & The Gutenberg Galaxy, 91.7 MHz, 10:00 a.m. Hosp. Commission for Women: W10410 Hospitai, noon. Engineering: 'The Future of T e c h n o 1 o g y Assessment'. letcture - discussion, Aud., Chrysler Ctr., 1 pm. A-v Ctr.: "Citizen Kane", Aud. 3, MLB, 7, 0:15 pm. .Musicoh.:11th Annual Trumpet Workshop, Recital Hall, 1:00 pm. NUMBER ONE BRASILIA UPI - Brazilian sugar exports -for 1974 are ex- pected to reach a level of 2.4 million tons, according to the Sugar and Alcohol Institute. The expected level of sugar ex- ports will be drawn from the expected total production of seven million tons. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 54-S Friday, August 2, 1974 is edited and managed b students as she University of Michigan. News phone 704-0503, Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 40106. Published d a ily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity yesr at 430 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subocrption rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); 112 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Bummer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); 0 $.00 local mail (MichigaB and Ohio); 00.50 n n- ioeal mall (other stases and foreign). 989 and 222 . . . are this week's winning lottery numbers. The second chance numbers are 992 and 525. The winning numbers in the "Gortune Maker" bonus are 848 and 439. In the $1 gold tick- et "Jackpot" drawing the win- ning three digit number is 364, the five digit number 47358 and the six digit number 660763. Los- ers in the jackpot drawing should keep their tickets for a loser's drawing on Sept. 19. ' 0 willresign SACRAMENTO, Calif. OP) - Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke said yes- terday he will resign his office voluntarily when he is sentenc- ed for perjury. He said nobody will have to go to court to force him out. State Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger ruled yesterday that the lieutenant governor is auto- matically removed from office when he is sentenced. Reinecke is scheduled for sen- tencing Aug. 30 in a Washing- ton, D.C., federal court for ly- ing to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee. "At the time the judgment is entered, the office of lieutenant governor automatically becomes vacant," Younger said at a news conference, releasing his official opinion on what s t a t e law requires. "An appeal would not delay or stay such an ef- fect," Reinecke refused to meet with reporters, but he issued a state- ment saying he would abide by Younger's ruling. "The office of lieutenant gov- ernor will never have to be va- cated through legal action by the state. I will voluntarily re- sign prior to such° an action be- log necessary," said Reinecke, a defeated candidate for the GOP gubernatorial nomination. Drivers bypass seatbelt ,uzzers WASHINGTON (UPI) - A new study says that 41 per cent of the drivers of 1974 model cars have found ways to bypass a system designed to force them to buckle their seatbelts before the car will start. A separate study published in the August issue of the Ameri- can Journal of Public Health concludes that the earlier buz- zer-light system installed in some 1972 model cars and all 1973 -cars to remind drivers so use belts was "a public health failure" because it did not sig- nificantly increase use of the safety precaution. The studies were conducted by the non-government Insur- ance Institute for Highway Safety, which also released a previously undisclosed govern- ment study showing that only 18 per cent of drivers in Puerto Rico are wearing belts despite a mandatory seat belt use law there. The study on seat belt use in 1974 cars indicates that belt use has increased among driv- ers in big city areas since the introduction of the so-called ig- nition interlock system. A fed- eral standard effective last Aug. 15 required a safety belt sys- tem that allows the automobile to start only if the safety belts are properly fastened. "In spite of the interlock sys= tem, however, 41 per cent of drivers in the 1974 vehicles were not using any belts," said the study by Leon S. Robertson, a behavioral scientist with the institute. "Thus, they (the drivers) con- tinue to be unprotected by re- straint systems in low to mod- erate speeds, as well as high speed crashes. Help Elect our First Congresswoman .. . Mrn'j Lansing It's not easy for women to go to Congress. Of 435 House members, 16 are women, and four of the most experienced women are retiring this year. As a former New England Coordinator for the Henry Wallace peace campaign, former Research In- vestigator for the U.S. Senate Judiciary subcommittee, former Field Consultant for the National Federation of Business and Professional Women, former Chairman of the Eastern Michigan University Political Science Department, First President of the Ann Arbor Democratic Women's Club, member of the Founding Committee of the UM Center for the Continuing Education of Women, teacher of the first women's studies course at EMU, nationally recognized authority on the politics of women, and former Chairwoman of the Ann Arbor Township Committee and Washtenaw County Demo- cratic Committee (the list goes on . . .) Marj Lansing is an unusually well qualified candidate for Congress. Yet she is one of the few women in the country, and the only woman in Michigan, with a good chance to go to Congress this year. The impeachment of Nixon and the discrediting of his administration will provide Congress with certain opportunities. Marj wants Congress to reassert its powers, par- ticularly in control of the military. She will fight for an end to U.S. funding for the continuing war in Southeast Asia, Congressional control of the Pentagon and the C.I.A., drastic cuts in the military budget, and go to Saigon to help end American complicity in political imprisonment and torture by the Thieu regime. Marj has called Esch a "fair-weather friend of education." She has been ranked "most qualified" by the Michigan Education Association, and received the EMU Student Senate Excellent Teacher Award in 1972. She was narrowly defeated for UM Regent in 1972. She supports federal programs to reduce or defer tuition and to improve the quality of higher education. She would be a highly effective advocate for education at all levels. VOTE TUESDAY, AUGUST 6 Students for Lansing or tate- F AYEDemora Facs For Snate Committe,,Richmond Broons. Treas.,40 Manor, A.A. 48105 CONSIDERATION Victims of crime should not become the victims of sloW judicial processes. FOR DISTRIC I- JUDGE Pol. Adv. --Poid Political Advertisement