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May 29, 1975 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1975-05-29

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Pnge Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Thursday, May 29 1975

Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, May 29, 1975

TV
tonight
6:00 2 4 7 11 13 News
9 Bewitched '
20 It Takes a Thief
24 ABC News-Smith/
Reasoner
30 57 Electric Company
50 Star Trek
56 Energy, Technology and
Society
6:30 4 13 NBC News-John
Chancellor
7 ABC News-Smith/
Reasoner
9 I Dream of Jeannie
it CBS News-Walter Cronkite
24 Mod Squad
7:00 2 CBS News-Walter Cronkite
4 7 News
9 Beverly Hillbillies BW
1 Family Aftale
13 What's My Line?
20 To Tell the Truth
30 Ohio This Week
50 Hogan's Beroes
56 Assignment America
57 Dig It
7:30 2 13 Truth or Consequences
4 Jeopardy
7 Let's Make A Dea
9 Room 222
11 Wild Kingdom
20 Voyage to the Bottom of
the Sea
$2.50

24 Ohio Lottery Buckeye 300
30 56 57 Consumer Survival
Kit-Report
50 Bogan's Heroes
:00 2 1S The Watons
4 13 Sunshine
7 24 Barney Miller
.9 Funny Farm
30 57 Bill Moyers' Journal:
International Report
50 Dealer's Choice-Game
56 Consumer Buy-Line
8:30 4 13 Bob Crane
7 24 Karen
9 Beachcombers
20 Happy Though Married
50 Merv Griffin
56 Detroit Black News
9:00 2 11 Movie-Drama
"The Great White Hope"
4 13 Movie-Suspense
"Terror on the 40th Floor,"
7 24 Streets of San
Francisco
9 News
20 Wreting
30 57 n Performance at
Wolf Trap-Music
56 Black Journal
9:30 9 The Palisers
20 700 Club
10:00 7 24 Harry O
30 57 Video: The New Wave
-Documentary
50 Dinah!
56 Masterpiece Theatre
10:30 9 To Be Announced
11:00 2 4 7 11 13 24 News
9 CBC News-Lloyd Robert-
son
20 appy Hunters
30 Janaki
56 It's Your Turn
57 Arabs and Israelis
-Documentary
11:20 9 News
11:30 2 Movie-Drama BW
"China Doll."
4 13 Johnny Carson
7 24 Wide World Special
Celerties and just plain folks
realize long-harbored dreams
11 Movie-Comedy Bw
"Onohead''
50 Movie-Comedy
"Wonder Man"
56 57 ABC News-Smith/
Reasoner
12:00 9 Midnight
1:00 4 Tomorrow-Tom Synder
7 13 News
1:30 2 Movi-Comedy BW
"Oinonhad,"
1:40 11 News
2:00 4 News
3:40 2 Mayberry R.F.D.
4:10 2 News
60 as Ibery
Please coll theatre for
special showtimes
"Bet c s. tb~e
AGi W
-NDEENNT -,1I M C ACASSN.
-NA1ONALBOARD OFRVEW
Theatre hone 668646

ACIi Ma N ON LCoRotATON RELE

In the newstoday.. I.

International,
I UKLA, Nepal - "I was very keae: to siale
it (it Everest), but it almost took my IfL."
Jurcko Tabei, the first woman to conquer the
world s highest mountain, also said 7esterday
that she found herself "a not so happy wo-
man" after her ascent and has decided to
climb sno more. Tabei, a 35-year-old Japanese
lou.searte, said when she reached the suiimlt
an May 1t she was exhausted and feared the
iong climb down again. But She said her 0-
ninute view of the Himalayas from the top
of the world delighted her. Tabei also declar-
ed that "the conquest of Everest is not enough.
There are several other peaks which have not
yet been scaled by women." While Tabei's
climb was indeed difficult, she apparently re-
ceived some help from a male guide. Ang
Tsering, who went along with her, said he
had to pull her to the summit with a rope
after she fell about 50 yards.
National
WASHINGTON - Even as our Postal Serv-
ice grumbles about a need for higher prices,
an administrative law judge has recommended
that the rate for first-class mail be reduced
to 8 cents an ounce. Law Judge Seymour
Wenner of the Postal Rate Commission said
yesterday that the present first-class rate -
10 cents - unnecessarily subsidizes users of
second, third and fourth-class mail. Wenner
suggests increases for those classes, which
handle air- mail, parcel post, magazines and
newspapers, to offset the loss of first-class re-
venue. He also thinks the cost of postcards can
be dropped to S cents each. The Postal Serv-
ice, however, issued a short statement on the
law judge's recommendations, warning that,
if adopted, his proposals could "severely ins-
pair the economic health of the postal sys-
tem." The rate commission will mull over
Wenner's ideas and accept, reject or modify
them in about two months. Meantime, some-

one will have to figure out how one pays for
an 8 -cent stamp.

0
SAN FANCISCO - San Francisco anethesiol-
ogists agreed yesterday afternoon to end their
nearly month-old walkout against soaring mal-
practice insurance rates and return to work
under the provisions of a new law. Dr. Clay
Thompson of Pacific Medical Center said it
would take time before the doctors, who have
withheld their services in all but emergency
cases, can get back to work. "Monday would
be the absolute earliest we could visualize
this happening," he said. Earlier, California
Gov. Edmund Brown characterized the doc-
tors' work stoppage as 'provoking a crisis" on
the controversial medical malpractice issue.
"
State
DETROIT - The increase in duty on import-
ed oil ordered by President Ford could result
in greater unemployment for auto workers,
according to United Auto Workers President
Leonard Woodcock. Ford's action "represents
the worst kind of economic nonsense," Wood-
cock said yesterday. "It will not help solve the
energy problem, but it will aggravate our eco-
nomic difficulties." The UAW president term-
ed the $1 per barrel increase as "another
hammer blow against the hard-pressed auto-
mobile industry . . . We ought to be importing
all the oil we can," he said, "while we are
able to get it, and preserve and build up
our domestic oil reserves for any future
crisis."
Weather
Plan some outside activities today, but be
prepared for a 30 per cent chance of showers
and thunderstorms this afternoon. Should the
day remain dry, you can expect partly cloudy
skies with high temperatures in the enjoyable
mid-70's. The winds will be breezing their way
through the city at 10-15 mph.

1
__ _

Norman
Blake

-
Sot.-Sun.-Mon.-Wed. at
1-3-5-7-9 p.m. Open at 12:45
Tuesdav-Thursday-Fridav
at 7 & 9 p.m. only Open 6:45
Guest Niqht is Suspended
This Week Only, But-Wed-
nesday is Barqain Day!
Sentenced to 28 years in
prison for a crime he never
committed. Only two things
can set him out. A lot of
money and Charles Bronson!
COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents
Sat.-Sun.-Wed. at
1-2-5-7-9 p.m.
Mon.-Tues. at 7 & 9 p.m. Only
Guest Nite is Suspended for
This Week Only-But Wed-
nesday is Barqain Day!
CHILD UNDER A LEAF
is an absorbing experience
that had people around me
weeping aloud"
-REXREED,NewYorkNews
DYAN CANNON
CIILbD UNDER
9EAF
lsotarng DONALD 5ILON
JOsEPH('O7A'ANJ ELYA
A Production of Potterson Prodctions, Inc.
ASE " resne byCRA IVE t P 'YCRRATION

Daily Official Bulletin
Thursday, May 29
Day Calendar
WUOM Lecture Hour: Dr. Harvey
Cox, theologian and author, "Re-
ligion in America - the Next 200
Years," 9:40 a.m.
If you have three or four ice-
cube pans in your refrigerator-
freezer, make sure you rotate
their use. Ice cubes can get
stale and acquire an off-taste.
Use cold water when you are
refilling ice-cube trays.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY
volume LXXXV, No.16-S
Thursday, May 29, 1975
is edited and managed by studes
at the University of Michigan. Ne::
phone 764-0562. Second class postage
paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 481W5,
Published doa iaty Tuesday throtuh
Sunday morning during the Univer-
sity year at 420 Maynard Street, An:
Arbor Michigan 48104. Subscription
rates: $10 by carrier (campus area);
$11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio);
$12 non-iocal mail tother states and
foreign).
summer session published re s-
day through Saturday morning.
subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier
icampus area) ; $6.00 local mail
(Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non-
local mail (other states and foreig).

SINGER-
SONGWRITER
One of the three
best flatpickers in
the country (Doc
Watson, Dan Crary,
and Norman Blake)
has backed up
June Carter,
Johnny Cash,
Bob Dylan,
Kris Kristofferson,
John Hartford, etc.,
and is now
becoming known
in his own right
as a fine solo
performer and
writer.

* "the RETURN
of the Pink
Panther'
United Artists
SHOWTIMES: Mon.-Sat. 7 & 9; Sun-Mon. 5, 7 & 9
9 0 =arbor, te'oaperative
Alfred Hitchcock's 1945
SPELLBOUND
A psychological mystery concerning an amnesiac
and his analyst who attempts to cure him and
clear him of murder. With a fantastic dream
sequence designed by Salvador Dali and the first
use of eelctronic music in film. Starring Gregory
Peck and Ingrid Bergman.
TONIGHT 7 &9 p.m.
AUD. A, ANGELL HALL $1.25
FRIDAY: CARNAL KNOWLEDGE and WAIT UNTIL DARK

4

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