#age Ten THE M-ICHi N DAILY Tuesday, June 3, ; 975 ~oge Ten THE MICHIGAN £~A4LY Tuesday, June 3, 1915 Few jobs for graduates 'U' prof. to bargain release of hostages' (Ceu tin sed froim Page 3) P E OP LE still "in demand include majors in pure science and math jobs not related to teaching. Since last year, bach- elors in technical fields have seen only a 7 per cent drop, while business bachelors slump- ed 28 per cent. Local and state governments hired 18 per cent more degree holders over last year, and pe- troleum industry hiring prose 4 per cent. Predictably, the moat severe drop was in the automo- tive and construction industries, with a 60 per cent slump for each. The general 18 per coast drop since last year is the most se- vere decline since 19701-71 when a 27 per cent slump confronted grads,. "IT'S A little easier for a well-trained minority member or woman to find a job," says Ardis, although he is not as hopeful as ther placement sur- vey. "I would guess we are not going to experience quite the pain other placement offices are experiencing," A r d i s says hopefully, "since our students are mobile enough to go where the jobs are." Another factor in Michigan's. relative success is that a large number of its grads continue ingrad school, possibly 70 per cent from some departments. "This year the U-M is the larg- est producer of med school stu- dents in the world," Ardis claims with pride. (Continsued from rage 1) parents. According to Morgan, "they wanted somebody who wasn't part of the State Depart- cent for obvious reasons. They were looking for a lawyer.' Morgan added that although Steiner has no law degree he does teach at the law school, "and I can't think of anybody I'd rather trust." under the cir- cumstances. Lansing when contacted about the proposed mission refused to if you see news happen -call 16-DAILY A Capsule Report by thle MichiganF'harmaceutical Association a5a 'ps 0" Pinnng dwn fcts boutPharacy act Pin in 4 fatsabutPharmacy FactsPamc Pharmacists and consumer groups championed this law which :Facts wiill rxainie anid e.x- was designed to aid you, the consumer. As a public service, the ; ise ie issues ulircI yi (:i as- Michigan Pharmaceutical Association presents this information. s isi Vogl as a ituiisttrr of Q"What's a generic drug? P;t'I ies ilit On i.illiartiacy Its a drug or medicaiion that is produced by Thle genetric (Ia-nec-ik) more hdug latu, eiecive Muarcht moethan one manufacturer, such as penicillin :.iis atpitrilyle or aspirin. Most often these generic drugs of :MicihIigan Pitarmtiairutial identical chemical composition are distributed I Asic~ialiititi a rotisuiter under a multitude ot difterent brand names. : coialit iton. Phlarmttacy as lirst to, tiiil it as a puicb and ___ What does this law mean to you? : a ti-tlessioitul issue in 1971). - Ilitte e. sts counttless IIhr e i a cost difference between "brd : b randi s othe ailte siic-ang tug nae'rgs. the law permits your pharmacist to :is iitilittit lsc.hitil ii t. s seetaddispense the '"lower cost, quality }'c i tinflse, iiiiiy saryting bad'(nless your physician insists on a par- liii elyou canntot kitisw tiua rnd). Savings trom this service by your ill oi I le rla ilitifertit phrait are passed on to you. lIi 'tis and tutlaifaturir "ol-meichia tis - and in O Does this mean you will NOT get the ; tititi>essc-nitet' tait 'tiiu ,," ;do~ilt--tnt- ie tatryintg medicine your doctor prescribes? ;1pictes tallthle ttecapruiuc /') i ta. This, is your C" f N. Te law still requires the pharmacist to dis- pht lime istit tile. pneonly a qual ity medication as prescribed. Nowii' y rittiiaimraeist's spe Youtgt the prescription your doctor specities. ;ii it kiiotnlre ge can wiork lr *You in stelectinig tine rxac~t "cirt ig it est t lrd rud, for i/ie Q"Will all prescriptions be cheaper? ifirt ifl ittleitqutality braid ~( Not always._Many prescription drugs are onlyip tl G made by one manufacturer, and the pharmacist ; Future issues &r Topics 1 " has no control over the manutacturer's price. EFuttrie Pharmacy Facts- editionts wsiil deal with othe-r fl*Do'brand'drugs and generic drugs look alike?: tics wi cha are very y o r K : tart to you. MI'fA asks your hiel - itc yous hrvei -etnsi in. pperance may be noted. Your pharmacist * 1'he state assresiationr, mork- 'aa witcusel you eccordingly. The best pharmacy "drig in cooperatioin with fbc- J > taeibased on communications, contidence lit And regioneals, has coos- an oplete intormation about your medicer- "tuittees to ainisser your qtes- "Send tlsat question to,: How here's fhow to takce advantage of lis law. PAnt, 11112 in rhigei N - Consult your pharmacist who is most qualified to malea rational Them tiMlCst 'drug product selection" decisions for you. And remember, continued "shopping around" when it comes to FIk Ac avatage of the preacciption services can be hazardous to your health. "eect a4:nosi readily accessible 'lull seicePharmacy .. its the best investment in your good nirsmi e'i 'tof the health care health. .tearei neyourpharmacist. "A /i/ai-macy is rel diy avail'a- Asa arff I' ACrsIst...fo e p in /'/r lein al mtsevrery city,.aend usually oeneemore hours thee tray aier- nea by facility. dAd - hard to be/ievse is thin d ay and ag 'e01 aicfi/iit evies- many sillI eakre house calls ini 'f/ce.1/ormoitf realiseeldiveries an/remergency presrphio,* *dehict iits amy hoer, day er nrig/i/ comsment, terming it "highly political' and "dynamic." THE GUERRILLAS as still holding Carire Jane Hunter, 21, and Kenneth Smith, 22, both students at Stanford University and Emilie Van Bergman of the Netherlands. They have threatened to kill the hostages if the demands for $5000001 ransom, guns, ammu- nition and the release of guer- rilla leaders held in Tanzania are not met by mid-July. A LATE STARTER GREENSBORO, N. C. t Boh Avellini of New Hyde Park, N.Y., paced football play- ers in the Atlantic Coast Con- ference in 1974 in total offense with 1,689 yards. He averaged 7.4 yards per play and didn't become a starter for the Mary- land team until the season's third game. Avellini gained most of his yardage by com- pleting 112 of 189 forward passes. North Carolina's Stn Fritt led the league in rushing while Jimmy Jerome of North Caro- lina paced receivers. Roland Hooks of North Carolina State led scorers with 82 point. Sun.-Sun. ort 1-3-5-7-9 p m. Open at 12:45 Tues ot 7 & 9 .m. ony Open at 6:45 MONDAY is a GUEST NIGHT! Yeu and a ques-only $2.0 Sentenced to 21 ears in prison fr a crime he nee committed. Only twa thins can et him ut. A lot oi money and Chrles Bronson > 1 1I \. HURRY! ENDS SOON! Sat-Sun-Wed. at 1-2-5-7-9 .m. Mn-Tues. at 7 & 9 p.m. Only MONDAY is a GUEST NIGHT! You and a ques--onv $2.50 CHILD UINDER A LEAF is an absorbitsg experieice that had people arouind mse treepitug aloud"' DYAN CNNON CIIJLD UNDER b 1EAF AM PH C,HIPANHILb. A PndtiaraPat'tt.ain mrium s' Hc SEtPrcmeatibCtit.A'it'ii'itltti4iS' ft/ COMING SOON!