100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

August 19, 1975 - Image 13

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1975-08-19

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Tuesday, August 19, 1975

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Seven

Tuesday, August 19, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven

Philadelphia oil fire"
nearly extinguished
P H I L AD E L P H I A (M fic from Sunday until late
- Two Gulf Oil Co. employes terday afternoon.
pushed a rowboat through a THE EFFORT to shut off
four-foot deep mire of hot crude naptha valve, spewing bete
oil, foam and water yesterday 500 and 600 gallons of vol
to shut a valve on a naptha liquid toward the flames e
storage tank. It was part of an minute, came at noon ye
effort to snuff a stubborn refin- day, several hours after
ery fire that had killed six fire was officially declared
firemen. der control at dawn.
A Gulf spokesperson said the Officials said Harry "Bu
blaze caused damage that may Koff, a man of about 25
exceed $10 million. By last has been on Gulfs firefigl
night, 36 hours after it started, department for six years; vi
most of the fire was extinguish- teered to try to close the vi
ed but one crude oil storage He and another man went
tank was still ablaze- in the boat as firemen pl
THE BODIES of six firemen, water on them and on the
missing since the flash explo- to lower temperatures esti
sion late Sunday afternoon, ed as high as 700 degrees.
were recovered yesterday. WITH THE naptha leak
Five more firemen remained fed, only one large storage
hospitalized yesterday, four of of crude oil was left bur
them in critical condition. Five That, firemen said, might
others were injured but releas- allowed to burn itself ou
ed following treatment. other methods did not wor
The Penrose Avenue Bridge, Rizzo said the fire del
the main artery between Phila- ment alone lost about $1 mi
delphia and its international in equipment, including
airport, was closed to all traf- fire trucks.

Female MD 'U' to operate with
blasts sexist $1.6 million deficit
yes- (Continued from Page 1) operate with a deficit. Accord-
fthe iU IU s doing what we can to reallo- ing to the state constitution, the
n tecate fuinds in eauinoent ra state budget must be balanced.
cate fundsm rrequ pment.cnd

-weenp
atile
very
ster-
the
un-
itch"
who
hting
olun-
alve.
t out
sayed
tank
mat-
snuf-
tank
sing.
t be
it if
-k.
part-
illion
four

(Continued from Page 3)
the businessmen aren't used to
hearing a woman talk."
"THEY (t h e businessmen)
can't quite take me seriously-
but then it's such great fun sit-
ting around a board room. The
men always look so ridiculously-
uncomfortable, they don't know
what to say around me."
Avery, the first female to head
the children's hospital, is also
a major department chief in the
Harvard medical school and re-
ceived a honorary doctor of
science degree from the Uni-
versity Sunday, as keynote com-
mencement speaker.
She spoke yesterday at an
informal tea held in her honor
by the International Women's
Year Committee, Michigan Wo-
men in Science and Medical
Center Commission for Women.

renovation areas."
Rhodes made it clear yester-
day that belt tightening in
equipment and renovation areas
would clearly not be enough to
close the gap,
"THOSE ARE just the easy
areas," he said. "We'll have to
have some savings of funds."
He added that his office would
be conferring in the next couple
of weeks with all departments
within the University to see
where further cuts can be
made. Formal proposals will be
made to the Regents at their
September meeting.
At least two- members of the
Board have expressed reserva-
tions about the University going
to a deficit spending plan.
Regent Thomas Roach (D-
Grosse Pointe) said he won-
dered if the University, as a
state institution, could legally

"I [ON'T KNOW if it is even
feasible to operate on a deficit
budget," said Roach.
A highly knowledgable source
in the office of state Attorney
General Frank Kelley, who de-
clined to be identified, agreed
that it would be unwise, if not
necessarily illegal, for the Uni-
versity to operate at a deficit.
"You can argue that no one
can really operate at a deficit
unless they have the power to
print money," he said. "The
term 'deficit' is so meaning-
less anyway, it's usually used
for public relations value.
"It depends how they set it
up," he explained. "It could or
it could not be (illegal)."
Rhodes, asked if the Univer-
sity's officers had considered
the constitutional question of
deficit spending said, "No, we
haven't. But you make me
nervous."

C00
..missing out
{ F } J on some of the
-AILIES because
ff1 ~ delivery
OR... *
dsagree wth abill
we sent you for THE DAILY -
W E'D LIK E TO T RY TO ST RAIGH T- I
EN OUT T HAT PROBLEM, BUT WE 1/~
CAN'T IF YOU DON'T LE T US I /
KNOW ABOUT IT.
Mnday thru Friday, 10 A.M to 3 P.M.
CIRCULATION -~ I -di3~ -ki~ 7405
DEPARTMENT t181 i 6-58

Goncalves rallies leftist support

(Continued from Page 1)
In making his first public ap-
pearance since the Socialists
and the PPD forced him to
name a new, transitional gov-
ernment by walking out of the
old coalition seven weeks ago,
Goncalves selected a Commun-
ist - dominated industrial zone
to take up the antileft chal-
lenge to his government.
THE PREMIER'S appear-
ance alone was interpreted as

support for Communist party
leader Alvaro Cunhal who, af-
ter being menaced in Alcobaca,
pushed on with a plan to lead
a rally today in the conserva-
tice city of Porto staging area
for a wave of anti-Communist,
antigovernment and antiarmed
forces violence.
Communist officials in Lisbon
made clear the party's armed
guard would fire on attackers.

FEA sees 3-cent
gasoline price hike

(Centin" 0*from Page 5)
force everyone to conserve fuel,
"not just the poor."
IN WASHINGTON, Zausner
said the price increases would
prompt Americans to conserve
some 700,000 barrels of oil daily
by the end of 1977, compared
with what they would otherwise
use.
With other energy measures
added, the nation's oil consump-
tion by the end of 1977 could be
held about 1.5 million barrels
per day below forecast levels.
Zauzner admitted that the ad-
ministration no longer expected
to make its original deadline of
cutting demand by some two
million barrels per day by the
end of 1977, although that goal

would be reached later.
CONGRESS HAS voted to ex-
tend oil price controls beyond
the Aug. 31 expiration date, but
President Ford said he would
veto the extension and Zausner
said the administration thinks
the veto would be sustained in
Congress.
. Presidential energy advisors
predicted that the price increase
would be "roughly three cents"
shortly after Ford announced
his intention Friday to veto the
bill to extend price controls.
Energy Administrator Frank
Zarb and economic advisor Alan
Greenspan said the increase
would not come quickly, but
would be a gradual rise over a
period of one to nine months.

STEVE'S LUNCH
1313 SO. UNIVERSITY
HOME COOKING IS OUR SPECIALTY

Breakfast All Day
3 Eggs, Hash Browns,
Toast & Jelly-$1.15
Ham or Bacon or
Sausage with 3 Eggs,
Hash Browns, Toast &
jelly-$1.65
3 eggs, Rib Eye Steak,
Hash Browns,
Toast & JeIly-$2.10

SPECIALS THIS WEEK
Beef Stroqanoff
Chinese Pepper Stek
Delicious Korean Bar-q Beef
(served after 4 Daily)
Veqetable Ema Rolls
Nome-made Soups (Ieef.
Barley, Clam Chowder, etc.)
Chili. Veaetable Tempuro
(served ofter 2 p.m. )
Hamburqer Steak Dinner -
1lb.) . $1.99
Sr oahetti in Wine Sauce
Beef Curry Rice '
Baked Flounder Dinner $2.25
1/4 lb. Ra. .Beef Kaiser Roll
.$1.69
1/41b. Horn on Kaiser roll $1.39

FAST AND FRIENDLY SERVICE BY MR. AND MRS. LEE
SUMMER HOURS
' 1MONDAY-SATURDAY 8-8
SUNDAY 9-2
.444 7a9-2288
1313 SOUNIVERSITY
'STEVE'S LUNCH

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan