Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, June 30, 1977 Interesting facts about the U. of M. The University's Biological The Exhibit Museum at the Station near Pellston, Michigan, University, one of the largest on is the world's largest inland any university campus in the field station for teaching and country, is visited by some research in biological science. 50,000 children a year. Subscribe to The Daily-Phone 764-0558 19, here IS a difference!!! ( PREPARE FOR: MCATO DATO LSATO SAT GRE * GMAT 0 OCAT * VAT sr broad rangeor programs provides an umbrella of test n,?ow-how that enables us to offer the best preparation aibe no nater which coarseis taken Over 38 years oftspnrtence'and success. Small classes. Voluminous im-ne study materials Courses that are constantly up- 1,tod Perranept centers open days. evenings & week ands ii year Cbmplete tape faciltes for review of class cssonsd for usetof supplementarymatenals. Make-ups frrrtassv-dtlcssons at our centers ECFMG 0 FLEX NAT'L MEDICAL & DENTAL BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours Write or call 1945 PAULINE BLVD. ANN ARBOR 48103 662-3149 asrSt 05 -2 -x 4 EDUCATIONALC ENTER CALLTOII Frm U'L *~ gei'. Mi(8 ite ndLgaooer l a** TEST PREPARATION SPECIALSTS SINCE 1938 ader organizes push for federal consumer WASHINGTON (M) - Ralph Nader is organizing a campaign to bring lobbying pressure on 78 legislators in an effort to get the House to approve stalled legislation creating a federal consumer agency. The campaign by a new coa- RACKHAM GRADUATE' STUDENTS If you intend to graduate this term with either a master's degree or an intermediate de- gree awarded by the Rackham Graduate Schoo, you must submit a Diploma Application to the Records Ofice, Room 1014 Rackham Graduate School, no later than Friday, July 8, 1977 in order to be placed on the Auigust decree tint. Diploma applications are avail- able in the Rackham Graduate School, Room 104, as well as infyour department or program offtce. lition of consumer groups, la- bor unions, farm organizations and businesses will urge con- sumers to mail nickels - along with letters - to the 78 legisla- tors who are considered unde- cided on the bill, he said. OPPONENTSOF the propos- ed agency argue that it would cost too much. However, Nader said the agency's first year budget of $15 million would come to about a nickel for each American taxpayer. "It will cost the : average American only about 5 cents each to create a consumer voice within federal agencies," he said. "Let big business spend millions on massive lob- bying and full page ads. Con- sumers will spend nickels to make their power felt. "We want to build a fire un- der them in their district. We want them to understand that there is no issue in America that has broader support than By the time 're old enough to re children, we've en thoroughly sold the idea. By our parents, r grandparents, r friends and ghbors, the media, !ryone. It's hard to nember we ever I a choice in the t place. But there is a >ice. Having a Id is a tremendous ponsibility and important decision. bably the most )ortant decision '. ever make. And once it's de, it can never undone. Just remember ... i do have a choice. So think about it, i do what's right you. more information write: --- - -_____. . itional rganization r Dn-Parents Reisterstown Road !more, Maryland 21208 e to know more about N.O.It se send me your free I Parent-Material' package. atezip - ------- ws V agency the consumer interest in health and safety and the quality of life," Nader said. HIS COALITION, which he dubbed the "nickel brigade," will urge consumers in the dis- tricts of tIe 78 House members to send the five-cent contribu- tions to their representatives and watch how they vote on the bill. The proposed agency would advocate consumer viewpoints before other federal agencies and appeal their decisions in court when they think the ag- encies ignored the law. The sponsors contend busi- ness representatives dominate proceedings before federal reg- ulators now with lawyers and lobbyists and that consumer viewpoints do not get through. O R G A N I Z A T I O N S opposed to the agency have said it would be a costly bu- reaucracy that would create un- necessary federal red tape. In past years, the House has passed bills three times to set up such an agency and the Sen- ate has done so twice. But the bills have never become law, primarily due to opposition from the Nixon and Ford ad- ministrations. This year, despite President Carter's support, the bill is in trouble in the House, where sup- porters acknowledge it would lose by about 25 votes if it were brought to the floor now. S. African black fined for a kiss JOHANNESBURG, South Af- rica (AP) - A Johannesburg court found a black man guilty yesterday of kissing a white woman on the cheek in an- ele- vator and gave him the choice of paying a $230 fine or going to jail for 200 days. He paid the fine. In a Pretoria court the same day, a married white man was given a suspended nine-month jail sentence after being found guilty of enticing a young black woman to commit immorality. BOTH CASES were among more than 300 brought into South African courts each year under laws that affect physical relations, including sex, between the races. The ImmOrality Act, amended in 1950, forbids any sex acts be- tween whites and nonwhites and a 1949 law, amended in 1968, prohibits marriages between whites an4 nonwhites Christostome Magubane, 26, who earns $163 a month, pleaded innocent and denied Amour Lo- ren's accusation that he kissed her in an elevator in Johannes- burg's central post office on March 31. MAGUBANE SAID Loren jab- bed him with her elbow. When he asked her what was wrong, she said he was a "kaffir" (equi- valent of nigger) and stank, he said. When he told her to go back to school and'learn man- ners, she left the elevator, he said. In a June 3, 1975, case a judge in Natal province ruled that use of the term "kaffir" was an insult and ordered the minister of police and a former police constable to pay dam- ages of $172 to a black toward whom they used the term.