Page Teri THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, JuTy 24,_19711 Saturday, July 24, 1971 of Sue( a th and Council will consider third party proposal Monday (Continid from Page 3) vises continuation of the present gestions of- the committee. the If the referenda passes, then the number of votes of the policy that the candidate receiv- proposal will be sent to Gov. there is a good chance that the cessful mayoral candidate for ing the plurality of the votes William Milliken to check over, electoral system in Ann Arbor tird party to get on the balot. should be declared the winner. and then will be put to a city- will drastically change. perhaps "as much as 10 per crnt to However, a minority report wide referenda. by next spring's elections. stay on." Although Faber says he "agrees with the need" to allow third parties on the ballot, he adds that he feels "the only meaningful reform is within the two parties." Still another councilman in- dicated his feeling that the one per cent figure is too low. James Stephenson (R-4th ward, gen- erally accepted as the Republi- can leader on council, stated general support for the majority . report, but added that he thinks the best figure for the petition would be "somewhere in be- tween" the majority report and Guthrie's minority report. Another important issue deals with run-off elections. which a majority of the committee op- poses. The majority report ad- signed by attorney George Sal- lade and RIP member Eric Chester says that a candidate winning with only a plurality could "undermine the legitimacy of elected officials" and suggests a system of voting for both first and second choices if there are more than two candidates for an office. "If one of the candidates re- ceived a majority of votes cast." the report says, "then the sec- ond-choice preferences of the candidate with the least votes would be distributed among the other candidates . . . until one received a majority." Harris says he is looking into the "mechanical possibility" of such elections. but wondered if they would cause "monumental confusion." If council approves the sug- Cost of tiving takes slarp rise (Contiinied from Page 1 rate the first three months of 1971. Living costs rose 5.5 per cent in calendar 1970 and 6.1 per cent in 1969. O'Brien sharply criticized Nix- on's economic performance. "The devastating report that the cost of living suffered its sharpest in- V.8. economy hit by Burns (Continued from Page 1) board before, but never with the same urgency. "The problem of cost-positin- flation, in which escalating sages lead to escalating prices in s never-ending circle, is the most difficult economic issue of our time," he said. His statements c o n t r a st e d sharply with those of Nixon ad- ministration economists who have boasted of moderating wages and prices in recent months. crease in 15 months makes a mockery of Mr. Nixon's continu- ing refusal to use the power of the presidency to hold down spir- aling prices and wages, "the Democratic spokesman said. "No official explanations and justifications will fool the Amer- ican people any longer. The fail- ure of President Nixon to re- spond to this clear economic dan- ger signal can only play further havoc with the livelihood of mil- lions of American families," O'Brien said. Sen. George McGovern oft South Dakota, a potential 1972 Democratic presidential contender called Nixon's economic policies a failure and urged him to use power Congress gave the White Hottse to inmpose wcage and price controls "before the Amtericant dollar declines further." He said Americans have lost 1 per cent in purchasing power since Nixon took office. The bureau's report showed the 1967 dollar now worth 82.3 cents and the 1959 dollar worth 70.8 cents. Program Infornmation 434-1782 24--:AW, - 302a WASOTENAw ito434-t72 On Washtenaw Ave. 1 Miles East ofU.S. 23 2nd HIT WEEK! Now Open Doily at 12:45 SHOWS EVERY DAY AT 1, 3, 5, 7, & 9 PM ' JIMINY CRICKET _---whata *4 WALT DISNEYS ALL-CARTOON FEATURE TECHNICOLOR" We y m --u c 7So G i Join The Doily DIAL 8-6416 YOU MUST BE 18 OR OLDER. PROOF OF AGE REQUIRED ADMISSION $2.50 THE UNPUBLISHABLE NOVEL IS NOWAMERICA'S MOST CONTROVERSIAL FILMf EAsAMA ANC x __EO1 e DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- - sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to 499 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.. Frday foe Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only. Stadent organization notices are not accerltted for pablication. For more intformation, phone 764-9279. SATU'rDAI, JULY 24 Ann Arbor Street Art Fair. F r e e Arts Festival: East & South University 1venues, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. (Festival until Ann Arbor Film oopraive: "Wait Jntil Dark." Aud. A ,Angell Hall, 7. ":39pci. Mirctgan Repertory: tiversity Play- 'ci "TauNee r CtinTell." Hendels- sohn Theatre, 8 p.m. Residential College Summer Players: "The Miser," East Quad. Aud., 8 pm. SUNDAY, JULY 25 Rock Concert: Call 769-9405 for to- cation, 2-6 p.m. Summer Filmn Festival: "Alice's Res- taurant" 5 & 9 p.m., "Yellow Sub- marine.-7 & ii p.m., Aud. A, Angell MONDAY, JULY 6 Audio-Visual Films: "Rise and Fall o fthe Great Lakes. Wool in Australia, Industrial Worker, Two Deserts: Sahara and Sonora, Winemakers in France, Af- rican Craftsmen: The Ashanti 'UGLI Multipurpose Rm., 7-9 p.at Regents' MeetingSept. 17: Communi- cations for consideration at this meet- ing must be in the President's hands by Sept. 2 Summer Commencement Exercises: Aug. 15, 1971 2 p.m., Hill Aud. All graduates of 1971 sprintg-summer term may attend. Reception for graduates, relatives and friends in Mich. League immediately following ceremony. En- ter League at west entrance. Tickets: Four to each prospective graduate, to be distributed from Aug. 2 to Aug. 13. Diploma Dept. 1518 LSA, except on Aog. 7. Assembly foe Graduates' p.ttt in Nat. Sri. Bldg. algnt willdi- ctigraduates to proper stations. Pr- grams: distributed at Hill Auditorium. Annotuntcements: limited numbter Ice sale at Ina. Desk, First Floor Lobby, LSA Bldg. Candidates who qualify for a doctoral degree from the Rackham Graduate School and WHO ATTEND THE COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES will be presented a hood by the Uni- versity as part of the ceremony. CARlER PLANNING & PLACEMIEN General Division Jumly 23, 197t Data Control, Rochester, Mich. will interview Thurs, July 29 from 9 to 4:30; openings for assistant buyers (B.B.A. in Bus. Ad.). Further details available; register by phone or in per- son. 3200 S.A.B. 764-7460. Kenwood KT 201UI-$9V.9 TAKE IT FOR GRANTED that Kenwood's continuing craftsmanship is built-in the KT 2001 AM/FM Stereo Tuner. Smartly styled, it matches the KA 2002 amplifier. For tuner sensitivity, take it from us -you'll like the KT 2001 from Kenwood. Nice price, too ANN ARBOR-EAST LANSING 68S. Main 769-4700 Comprehensive Repair Service Available .OD Y4, Yq'm O DY4 6 Y*c wody Juy2 Monday-July 26 RECORDING FOLK ARTIST NO Ward Frederick NO>COVER-NO INCREASE 208 W. Huron ~YMYO1DY5Y. O554Y Daily Classifieds Get Results "-MATINEE SUNDAY AT 5:00 P.M.-AUD. A, ANGELL ORSON WELLES SUMMER FILM FESTIVAL MICHIGAN REPERTORY '71 * TONIGHT * show's YOU NEVER CAN TELL LYDIA MENDELSSOHN 8:00 p.m. Ph: 668-6300 $1.50, 2.00, 2.50 ---- ------------ -- - UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 E. Huron 10:00 a.m.-"Confrontation," Calvin S. Malefyt 1:00 p.m.-"Finding God's Wii," Bible Study STEREO VISION TONIGHT 7:14-9 P.M. ARM Michigan Film Society Ecumenical Campus Center Gogol's The Over "a splendid collaboration between and sensitive director and an actot skill." "Exquisite."-Time "Magnificen TONIGHT Tuesday July 27 coat Ship of Fools nan intelligent :n r of remarkable .*... -N.Y. TIMES t,"N.Y p Wednesday t."-N.Y. Post uy 2 *J uly 28 9:30 finally really )2 E. Huron Marcel Camus' near StatekOrp 761-7849 Back heus 7 :30 TONIGHT 1st BAPTIST CHURCH-5( $1 contribution free coffee