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University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Montana Kaimin, 1898-present Associated Students of the University of Montana (ASUM) 10-7-1975 Montana Kaimin, October 7, 1975 Associated Students of the University of Montana Let us know how access to this document benefits you. Follow this and additional works at: hps://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper is Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Associated Students of the University of Montana (ASUM) at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Montana Kaimin, 1898-present by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Recommended Citation Associated Students of the University of Montana, "Montana Kaimin, October 7, 1975" (1975). Montana Kaimin, 1898-present. 6412. hps://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/6412

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University of MontanaScholarWorks at University of Montana

Montana Kaimin, 1898-present Associated Students of the University of Montana(ASUM)

10-7-1975

Montana Kaimin, October 7, 1975Associated Students of the University of Montana

Let us know how access to this document benefits you.Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Associated Students of the University of Montana (ASUM) at ScholarWorks atUniversity of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Montana Kaimin, 1898-present by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks atUniversity of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected].

Recommended CitationAssociated Students of the University of Montana, "Montana Kaimin, October 7, 1975" (1975). Montana Kaimin, 1898-present. 6412.https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/6412

UNIVERSITY O F M ONTANA • STUDENT NEWSPAPER J

Tuesday, Oct. 7, 1975 Missoula, Mont. Vol. 78, No. 6

Pettit wants funds for needy students

Crowded classrooms plague some courses

By RICH ECKEMontana Kalmln Reporter

University of Montana classroom space “is pretty well booked up and approaching the saturation point,” Philip Bain, director of admissions, said yesterday.

But, he continued, the situation isn’t critical.

"It's nice to utilize space fully,” he said.

Bain said that the admissions of­fice is not usually able to grant special requests from academic departments or other groups for reading rooms or study areas.

However, he said, UM has not "reached the point where a class can't be held,” with the exception of additional sections of classes that re­quire special facilities, such as art labs and photography labs.

He said that one option available to his office would be to schedule more

CorrectionThe Montana Kaimin last

week reported Central Board passed a resolution requesting the Board of Regents to con­sider cutting some or all intercollegiate sports within the Montana University System.

The resolution should have read requesting the Board of Regents "to consider the feasibility of eliminating some or all intercollegiate ath­letics . . . "

classes at night, which would also help students who have part-time Jobs during the day.

Robert Kiley, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said yesterday the trouble with art is that all its programs take space.

Whether the class is dance, sculpture or painting, Kiley said, they each require more room than an ordinary lecture-type class.

The "very popular" photography classes are relegated to a very small lab, he said. He added that there is no room for expansion.

Kiley said renovation of the old library would help his department, “if they ever get it finished."

He said he believes the Religious Studies Department could move to the old library and free space in the Fine Arts Building for his department to use.

More faculty members to teach more sections of beginning art, dance and art education courses would also help, he said.

"Dance," he said, "has been just swamped."

Sixty students each quarter are turned away from dance class, he said.

History Department Chairman Robert Lindsay said yesterday the only serious problem for his department is the History of the Old South class taught by David Em-' mons.

Emmons said last week his clas­sroom can hold 60 people but 80 enrolled in the class. The extra people got in the class by accident, he said.

According to Bain, sometimes "they’ll go ahead and let students

into classes" and try to find better ac­commodations for the larger number of students later.

In this case, said Emmons, a larger classroom was not available, and History of the Old South has become a real problem.

The usual drop-off in classroom attendance will solve most of the dilemma, he said. But, he said, he will need an extra room for ex­aminations.

Lindsay said there were no serious shortages other than the Old South course, but he said he would like to see more large lecture rooms with better acoustics.

By JONATHAN KRIMMontana Kalmln Reporter

Revenue from any new or in­creased mandatory student fees should be partially earmarked for helping needy students, Lawrence Pettit, commissioner of higher education, said yesterday.

Pettit said that he intends to recommend the Board of Regents use some of the money from new or higher fees for loans, scholarships,

. or some form of assistance for poor students.

The proposal would include all student fees except special fees, such as those levied to support the health services, he said.

Pettit said several regents have asked that e lim ination of intercollegiate athletics within the Montana University System be studied.

Central Board last Wednesday night passed a resolution requesting the regents to consider the feasibility of cutting some or all intercollegiate sports.

The regents will not “foreclose the option” of eliminating intercollegiate athletics, he said.

He added that he is uncertain of his views on the athletic question.

“ I’m not sure the issues have been clearly presented to the students, or to anyone,” Pettit said.

“ I can’t answer the question of what intercollegiate athletics means in terms of public support or in terms of student enrollment or in terms of stimulating contributions to the University."

He said that if the University of Montana remains in the Big Sky Conference it should be competitive.

He added that the regents are always looking for ways to cut the cost of athletics.

Pettit said that the regents will

Lawrence Pettll

make the decision on athletics after weighing all the issues—including how students feel about the issue.

“We cannot always hold a plebis­cite,” he said.

“The Board of Regents has to ex­ercise Independent judgment, and there are times when the majority may think it is wrong.!'

Attorney files ‘gag-rule’ petition to halt Sheriff Moe’s pre-trial talk

By BILL McKEOWNMontana Kaimin Reporter

A gag-order prohibiting pre-trial statements by Missoula County Sheriff John Moe was filed last Fri­day by Attorney Robert Campbell.

The motion, awaiting action by Justice of the Peace Dean Lockridge, was filed by Campbell who is defen­ding University of Montana student Michael Pepion, who was arrested for alleged narcotics possession.

The motion for the ’gag-order’ is a response to Moe's “grossly Im-

i proper” statement about the arrest, Campbell said yesterday.

Moe's statement appeared in last Friday’s Missoulian.

Pepion was arrested inside the Harry Adams Field House while attending the Sept. 27 Edgar Winter Group concert.

Pepion and Arthur Christian

£ *0 -

Idaho un ivers ities ’ moves to end m andatory sport fees please ASUM president

ASUM President John Nockleby said yesterday that he is pleased by the stand against mandatory athletic fees taken by student leaders at two Idaho universities last week. He said UM and Montana State University are no longer isolated in the Big Sky Conference in their opposition to student athletic fees.

Idaho State University Student President Pat Anderson told the Idaho State Board of Education Thursday that students are concerned they are pay­ing too large a share of the cost of Intercollegiate athletics.

Anderson said that students want their student fees put to better use.John Hecht, a student leader at the University of Idaho, said an optional

athletic fee should be considered, rather than requiring students to support athletics.

Nockleby said he was called by student representatives from ISU regard­ing athletic fees. He said he was asked to explain how students at UM ended student funding of athletics.

Nockleby said he expects to meet with student presidents of the Big Sky schools in the near future, to organize student oppostion to athletic fees.

Jones, 20, were arrested by two Region One narcotics officers and charged with illegal possession of marijuana, a misdemeanor.

Arrests No Civil Rights ViolationMoe, according to the Missoulian,

said there was no question that the arrests made by the two officers were legal.

The searches of the two defen­dants were incidental to their arrest, and not a violation of their civil rights, he said.

Campbell said the legality of the

arrest and searches have not yet been determined in court, and, therefore, Moe’s statements are "highly prejudicial."

Moe, as a lawyer and law en­forcement officer, has "violated the ethics" of the legal profession by commenting on a case that has not been tried, Campbell charged.

But, Dept. County Atty. Edward McLean, said yesterday he does not believe Moe committed any legal or ethical violations because Moe did not mention any names in his statement to the Missoulian.

McLean also said that he will ask Justice of the Peace Dean Lockridge to have the case sent directly to Dis­trict Court. He said this is standard procedure in 90 percent of his cases.

Civil Suit ConsideredCampbell said his client has not

decided whether to bring a civil suit against Moe or any narcotics officers for violating his civil rights.

Campbell also said he doubts If his client’s case will affect the ruling made last spring by Atty. Gen. Robert Woodahl allowing searches at public concerts.

The defense attorney claimed the Woodahl ruling pertained only to alcohol, not narcotics.

The ruling prohibited searches ex­cept when the search is incidental to an arrest or when permission is given to be searched, Campbell said.

The motion for the gag-order is pending in Lockridge's court, Campbell added.

Sheriff Moe could not be reached for comment.

< ------------------------------------------------— ------------ N

I montanakaimin________ m , IINIVFRSITY O F M ONTANA • STUDENT NEWSPAPER.

opinion

Security Is Everyone's Business

C a MPUS SECURITY can police the University day, night, in cars, on foot, using radios, guns, dogs and spotlights, but it takes student in­volvement to make this campus secure.

Bicycles make an urgent example.UM students are beginning their

second week of classes and, according to Herb Torgrimson, UM manager of safety and security, Physical Plant already has had reports of seven stolen bikes and two reports of parts being stolen from chained bicycles.

Torgrimson said two bikes were stolen yesterday morning in daylight.

Students can fight bicycle theft in five ways:

T. If you own a bike, keep it indoors as much as possible. When parking outside, chain it through both wheels, the frame and to one of the chaining posts or bike racks on campus. Don’t chain your bike to trees; it can damage them.

2. Chain your bike in areas where it constantly will be in view of people. If you must fasten it outside at night, lock it under a light or in a place where a thief will have to make noise to get at it; for example, on your porch behind the lawn mower, rakes and Tonka toys.

3. Register your bike. A Missoula city ordinance requires that ail bikes be licensed, for a $1 fee, in the office of the City Treasurer. It’s a good idea; the police might be able to come up with your stolen bicycle some day.

4. Report any thefts or vandalism to campus security and Missoula police immediately.

5. Check up on any suspicious ac­tivity near parked bikes.

item five applies to everyone, whether he owns a bicycle or not. It is almost unfeasible that someone could use bulky bolt cutters to chomp through a bike chain without someone seeing the operation. And it really wouldn’t take a superman to prevent a bike theft. If you see someone poking suspiciously through locked bikes, stand and watch him for a minute. If the situation really looks fishy, send someone to call campus police. Walk up and ask the fellow what he is doing. Don’t be leary that you will be thought a fool if the person turns out to be the owner of the bike he is fiddling with. Most cyclists will welcome your concern for their bicycles.

If you EVER see someone with bolt cutters, superheavy-duty, short- bladed scissors, or a hacksaw, call security. Few people on campus need such tools for legitimate work.

For now, let’s be bent on preventing thefts. Take the responsibility to police the campus and protect your property and that of others.

Richard E. Landers

editor’s notes . . .WHEN YOU PULL the tab off your aluminum can of beer or soda, don’t immediately drop it into the can, two Chicago doctors warn. People who are

intoxicated have been known to ingest the ring-tabs and lodge them in their stomachs or lungs.

To make matters worse, the ring-tabs are usually made of aluminum, which shows up faintly on x-rays, according

..to the doctors’ report in a July issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Dropping ring-tabs into full cans of beer or soda was advised by en­vironmentalists to help reduce litter and protect wildlife.

The Chicago doctors suggested that the tab be placed in a pocket or on a finger and later dropped through the slot of the can when empty.

lettersRepublican raps KaiminEditor: As a journalism student interested in

the news value of the survey taken during registration week by the College Republicans, I would like to inform your readers of the results.

The job Gerald Ford is doing as President was approved of by 61.4 per cent of the students polled. Students were divided 118 who generally approve or approve of Tom Judge as governor, and 114 who disapprove or strongly disapprove.

The majority of students surveyed feel that coal and energy development and resource management are the most serious problems facing Montana. When asked about the cost of state government,76.7 per cent feel that it is in many cases more than the taxpayers can af­ford. Those who feel that it is a fair price to pay for government services total 23.3 per cent.

The cost of state government in 1969 was $163 million and has increased by two and one-quarter times to this year’s budget of $371 million.

The Montana Kaimin inaccurately reported

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that I said at last week's College Republican meeting that the question should have read that state budgets have “doubled." I said that they have more than doubled and supplied the Kaimin with the actual figures.

The Kaimin also inaccurately reported that club chairman Mark Overton linked approval of Ford with Republican support on this cam­pus. What Mark actually said was that the purpose of the survey was to determine if any students on this campus actually agree with Republican principles.

The Kaimin reported the number of students answering the Ford question as the total number surveyed. More than 300 were polled, only 295 answered the Ford question.

The page editor and two reporters checked with each other on the details of the story rather than with me.

College Republicans cared enough to ask students for their opinions. How can we ex­pect responsible government when we don’t even have responsible student journalism?

Kathleen Sullivan junior, journalism

Prisoner seeks lettersEditor: I am an inmate at the Chillicothe,

Ohio correction facility. I have been here for two years and in that time I lost.most all con­tact with the outside world.

If anyone reading this letter would like to become friends with a lonely man in prison through a correspondence, please write:

Eugene Blazll No. 139.327P.O. Box 5500, Chillicothe, Ohio 45601

Dog lostEditor: I would like to make an appeal forthe

return of my Great Dane/Black Lab puppy, "Rupert,” lost in the vicinity of the Brooks St. and Rose Park last Tuesday. There is a reward for any information leading to his return. Call 549-1501.

If the party who found him intends to keep him, please get him his rabies shot. He is just old enough for it this month. If you can’t do that, get a shot yourself.

Don Larsongraduate, political science

I montana

Kaimin-----------^ — UNIVERSITY OF MONTANAUNIVERSITY OF MONTANA

rlchard e. landers editorrlchard kaudy managing editor john steffens business manager

chris rubich, senior editor;Steve macheledt, associate editor; kathy mensing, associate editor; ; L ron hauge, entertainment editor; doug hampton, news editor; larry winslow, associate news editor; diana hinze, montana review editor; dave lowrey, j | photo editor; gary thompson, v photo editor; paul schulz, a art editor; john dahl, art editor

Published every Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday and Friday of the school year by the Associated Students o f the University o f Montana. The School o f Journalism utilizes the Montana Kaimin fo r practice courses but assumes no responsib ility and exercises no contro l over po licy o r content The opinions expressed on this page do not necessarily reflect the views o f ASUM. the state or the University adm inistration. Subscription ratdS: $ 4 00 a quarter. $10.50 per school year Entered as second class material at Mis­soula. Montana 59801.

A ll material copyrigh t* 1975 by the Montana Kaimin.

Tax breaks for school costs may be new form o f federal aid to students

By THE COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE

When Congress overrode President Gerald Ford’s veto of the education appropriations bill In early September, it approved money for specific federal programs like Basic Grants and Guaranteed Student Loans to aid education. But these programs, according to some senators and representatives, aren't the only way Congress can support schools and students around the country.

Tax breaks for education—allow­ing deductions against an In­dividual's income tax payments for money spent on education—Is an Idea growing In popularity, If the number of bills In Congress on the subject Is any indication.

Tax breaks currently provide some $91 billion in benefits largely limited to wealthy Individuals and corporations. While some tax ex­perts would prefer to do away with these loopholes altogether, others see them as legitimate ways to serve the public interest that could be ex­panded to such fields as aid to education and that could also aid the poor and middle class.

Proposals ClashAt least 55 bills on educational tax

breaks were introduced in the House as of July 1, with that number, ac­cording to one House aide, now close to 75. At least six bills on the same subject have been proposed in the Senate.

But while some of the bills are Identical, others clash dramatically over who would receive the tax break benefits and for what kind of education the breaks would be allowed. Recent bills introduced by Rep. Herbert Harris, D-Va., and Sen. James Buckley, R-N.Y., illustrate some of these splits.

Rep. Harris' bill provides for an In­come tax credit of up to $675 based on most of the expenses students normally incur for higher education. Money spent for tuition, fees, books, supplies and equipment—but not room and board—would be eligible fbr credit and students enrolled In schools "regu la rly o ffering education above the twelfth grade or those offering an accredited program of business, trade or vo ca tio na l pos tsecondary education" would be eligible.

Adjusted to Income According to Harris, the “total tax

credit allowed would be adjusted in proportion to family income so that the maximum benefits would be provided to families with the greatest need.” To this end, credits would be reduced by one percent of a tax-

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payer's adjusted gross Income over $25,000.

Income tax law currently provides relief only for expenses for job- related training, said the Virginia lawmaker. "Thus a $50,000 a year business executive can take a tax deduction for the expenses of a refresher course in management techniques," claimed Harris, "but a young college student, struggling to make ends meet, cannot take a deduction for an equivalent course."

While Rep. Harris' bill is designed to help "those who need the as­sistance most" go to college or a postsecondary vocational school, Sen. Buckley's bill would apply.to all levels of education—elementary,, secondary and postsecondary. And the Buckley bill, which provides for a tax deduction of $1,000 to be applied against tuition, Is not primarily designed to help low-income students attend school.

Aimed at Middle ClassThe rich and poor are taken care of

in education, claimed an aide to the New York Senator, and the Buckley bill is targeted to help the middle class. In addition, claimed Buckley's aide, the bill deals with “the Issue of liberty in education.”

The Buckley bill provides for aid through the tax subsidy not only to students who attend colleges and universities, but also to students who attend religious and private elemen­tary and secondary schools, in­cluding those set up In the backlash against racial integration and busing.

In introducing his bill, the Senator charged that public education was rapid ly developing into a “monopoly" and attacked those who would “strip parents of all control over schooling and who would use the educational system as an Instrument to impose their own values and to substitute a state en­forced conformity for the diversity assured through private choice."

Buckley's aide characterized the bill as a vehicle to initiate debate and to raise questions about the source of education. Freedom of choice in education is so important, the aide said, that it is getting to the point “where it’s not who controls the means of production, but who con­trols the means of education."

Prospects BleakBut for all the bills, sponsors and

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rhetoric, the prospects for any education tax credit or deduction are considered bleak. One reason is the amount of money involved.

With the large number of students presently enrolled in schools across the country, tax breaks for education could provide "a very substantial drain" on tax revenues, said one House budget aide. "A major con­sideration Is how much money can be lost," he said.

Some Ways and Means committee members, who would be the first to consider any tax breaks for students feel the government shouldn't get Into subsidies of education through the tax systen, the budget aide said. He added that the Ford ad­ministration Is opposed to this kind of measure.

The budget aide noted that none of the education tax break bills are scheduled for consideration by the Ways and Means Committee and there is little prospect that such measures will be put on the agenda in the near future.

The U.S. Supreme Court refuted yesterday to hear arguments that Americans have a “fundamental right" to possess and smoke marijuana in their homes. The court let stand the decision of U.S. District Judge James Comlsky of New Orleans who refusod to convene a three-judge court to hear a challenge to state and federal laws against private possession and use of marijuana. Comisky said the challenge was “plainly without merit.”

The Supreme Court also decided yesterday to hear an appeal by the state of Montana from a federal court ruling exempting Indians on the Flathead Reservation from state taxation. Montana Atty. Gen. Robert Woodahl, calling the tax Immunity “an unlawful and unconstitutional racial discrimination in favor of Indians," said the state lost $591,000 In cigarette-tax revenues on the reservation in the last three years.

Prasldant Gerald Ford proposed yesterday a $28 billion permanent tax cut to take effect next year and to be contingent with a similar cut in annual federal spending. Ford said that tax cuts for Individuals and corporations “must be tied together in one package” and that federal spending for the 1977 fiscal year should be held at $395 billion, about $28 billion below present budget projections.

Gunmen, thought to be extreme rightists, machine-gunned to death a Basque bar owner In northern Spain late Sunday. The death is believed to be In retaliation for the bombing deaths of three civil guardsmen 12 hours earlier. Meanwhile, the Spanish government is detaining five priests in Madrid for reading sermons that commented on the growing Spanish political violence, that has claimed seven lives in the past five days and 50 since January.

H

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The fever that won’t break:THE RISING C O ST O F A M ED IC A L EDUCATION.

Like most things, the cost of attending medical school has risen sharply over the lastdecade. To many j M , w k medical students agMQgp; that cost repre- l ip i l . -,sents a heavyburden, a financial T * 3" — ' problem that can 1 affect your con- ' centratlon.

It needn't be that way. The Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program was originated to free you from those worries. Men ond women who qualify will have the costs of their medical educa­tion covered, and will also receive a substantial monthly

' allowance.The program offers

more than tuition and salary; it offers you the opportunity to begin your practice under very favorable conditions. As a health care officer in the military branch of your choice, you'll find . yourself with responsibilities fully in keeping with your training, and with the time and opportunity to observe a ftjll spectrum of medical specialties.

When you decide on the specialty you wish to pursue, you may find yourself taking those graduate medical studies at one of our many large and modern medical centers. If so, you can count on that training being second to none.Both the clinical and research work being done in them have made Army, Navy and Air Force hospitals a major new national medical resource.

If s a long road, but the first step is simple. Just send in the coupon. The details we send you may make the whole way a little smoother.

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T T d lS IS D M KPART I

IVAN THE TERRIBLE PART I portrays a foreboding image of 16th century Rus­sia. In a larger than life epic style, we follow the volatile Tsar Ivan IV from his coronation in Moscow to his ab­dication and subsequent popular recall.

-Tuesday, Oct. 7,1975 9:00—U.C. Ballroom

-Part II to be Shown Oct. 9—Thursday

-Program Council Foreign Film Series—

DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau

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One gun killed RFK, experts sayBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Only one gun was used in the as­sassination of Sen. Robert Kennedy in 1968, a panel of firearms experts reported Monday.

The seven ballistics experts said that working independently they had all arrived at the same conclusion after examining the bullets taken from the assassination scene and fir­ing new bullets from the .22-caliber Iver Johnson revolver of convicted assassin Sirhan Sirhan.

Since the assassination some people have beieved Sirhan did not act alone and some ballistics experts who studied photographs have said a

second gun was used. The Los Angeles Police Department said only one gun was involved.

victed of the assassination and is serving a life sentence at San Quen­tin Prison—his original deathsentence having been voided by the

More upperclass students living in dorms, report says

"We find no substantive evidence to indicate more than one gun,” the experts said in a report read by Superior Court Judge Robert Wenke.

Sirhan, a Palestinian, was con-

A report on residence halls oc­cupancy released yesterday in­dicates that increasing numbers of upperclass students are living on campus.

According to the report, upperclass students accountfor52.5 per cent of dorm occupancy this year in contrast to 50.4 per cent two years ago. Freshmen now constitute 47.5 per cent of campus residents, down 2.1 percent from 1973.

“ It appears we can attract more returning students to the dorms,” Tom Hayes, director of residence halls, said yesterday.

The report also showed that dorm occupancy has remained at about 98 per cent over the last three years.

That occupancy level has been maintained, Hayes said, even though freshmen no longer are required to live on campus.

Hayes said the requirement that freshmen live on campus was

. eliminated this year because of the likelihood that the rule will be struck down in federal court as un­constitutional.

Statistics for the residence halls report were compiled Oct. 3.

U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling against capital punishment.

But critics questioned whether adequate ballistics tests had been performed.

The gun used by Sirhan was refired four times Sept. 26. The bullets were retrieved from a barrel of water and were used in the study by seven experts that led to the con­clusion announced Monday.

The investigation was ordered last August by Judge Wenke after Columbia Broadcasting System Inc. and Paul Schrade, who was wounded in the shooting, filed a series of legal actions in an attempt to open the files on the original inves­tigation.

Federal ru lin g on abortion w ill not a lter M o n tan a law

By RICHARD KAUDYMontana Kalmln Managing Editor

and

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A decision made yesterday by the U.S. Supreme Court to review a Mis­souri law imposing restrictions on abortions will probably have no impact on Montana's abortion laws.

The court will hear arguments in the present session disputing the ruling of a three-man federal court that the 1974 Missouri law is constitutional.

The law was passed in response to the Supreme Courtis ruling in 1973 that women have a constitutional right to terminate pregnancy in con­sultation with their physicians.

The Missouri law requires the written consent of the patient, of her hus­band if she is married and of a parent if she is under 18 and single before an abortion can be performed.

It provides that if a live birth results from an intended abortion, the parents lose their parental rights and the child becomes a ward of the state.

The law also prohibits the saline injection method of abortion after the first 12 weeks of pregnancy, requires physicians to keep specified records and redefines fetus "viability."

The Montana abortion law probably will be unaffected by the outcome of the case since Montana law does not impose the same restrictions.

The law was challenged by Planned Parenthood of Central Missouri; Dr. David Hall, chairman of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Missouri Medical School; and Dr. Michael Freiman, a St. Louis obstetrician and gynecologist.

They said new guidance is needed from the Supreme Court so that legislatures “will not continue cavalierly to pass legislation which violates the spirit, intent and meaning" of the 1973 ruling.

They told the court that at one St. Louis clinic, 49 women a month were denied abortions for lack of their husbands' consent, and 31 girls a month because they failed to obtain parental consent.

Montana law requires notification of the father by the mother of the un­born child and the "informed consent,” of the women prior to the operation.

Under this requirement the women and her physician must sign a consent form stipulating the patient is aware of the consequences of the abortion, such as possible health risks.

“This is a good law for both parties,” Dr. Robert Curry, directorof the UM Student Health Service, said yesterday. "It protects the woman and physician and lets the doctor know the patient fully understands the ramifications of the operation.”

The health service does not perform abortions, Curry said, but does give pregnancy tests, and will refer a woman to a physician who might perform an abortion.

BUTTREY’S SUBURBAN welcomes •

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Council delays vote on cable request

HBy BILL McKEOWN

and

TOM DOHERTYMontana Kaimin Reporters

City Council last night postponed any decision on a resolution proposed by Teleprompter Cable TV.

KGVO-TV had asked the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to prohibit Teleprompter from broadcasting any show that would be shown the same day on KGVO.

In response, Teleprompter asked the council to request that the FCC deny KGVO’s petition.

Teleprompter rebroadcasts programs from Spokane and Denver to Misspulians who pay for the service.

Alderman Fred Thompson said that the council's decision would have no binding effect on the FCC.

Because of public approval, the council's Board of Review decided last M onday to su p p o rt Teleprompter's resolution, John Patterson, alderman and board member, said.

James Robinow, manager of Teleprompter, said that, other than

C \

goings on• INCO Club, 4 p.m. today, East

Brantly Lounge.• SPURS, 6 tonight, Montana

Rooms I through J.• Publications Board, 7 tonight,

UC Conference Room.• Divine Light Mission, satsang

and meditation discussion, 7:30 tonight, Montana Rooms.

• State Employment Service of­ficer, job counseling by appointment from 1 to 5 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, Student Affairs Office, Lodge 101, 243-4411.

• Haskins & Sells, placement interviews, Oct. 8 and 9, make con­tact with Placement Services.

the $10 business license, Teleprompter pays no taxes to the city.

Earl Morgenroth, President of Western Broadcasting, which owns KGVO-TV, said that because KGVO is a local business and pays taxes to the city, it deserves the public's sup­port.

Teleprompter’s "dumping" of the Spokane station on Missoula is equivalent to "dumping" three universities on Missoula, he said.

In either case, he said, the institutions will be "watered down" and will be less effective than one or two institutions.

He said KGVO hires local em­ployes whose money is spent in Mis­soula, and he added that he believes Teleprompter has "pulled" $500,000 in profits out of Montana.

Larry Cooper, KGVO-TV news director, said news service is the most costly service KGVO provides.

If viewership is high, the revenue from advertisers is high, thereby providing more money to expand and improve KGVO's news service, he said.

If viewership drops because persons are watching cable TV, the revenue needed for expanding services will not be available he said, adding that Teleprompter offers no services other than retransmission of out-of-state signals.

Because of the public comment, the city postponed a decision on the resolution until the Oct. 20 council meeting.

In further action the council unanimously resolved to set the mill levy for the city of Missoula from 71.92 to 75.83 mills. The resolution levied the millage in excess of the certified millage.

Each mill increases the city budget by $31,641.48.

The increase of $122,918.18 will be added to the annual appropriations fixed by the council for the city of Missoula in the 1975-76 budget.

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House votes to kill Gl BillThe U.S. House of Representatives

voted yesterday to halt Gl Bill educational benefits for persons who enlist ip the armed services after Dec. 30, 1975.

Gl students currently receive a monthly minimum of $270 which covers tuition and other expenses.

Cutting off veterans' benefits would save the government $1.5 billion in the next five years, ac­cording to a House Veterans Affairs Committee report.

Correction

The Montana Kaimin erroneously reported last Si Tuesday that a Scholars Press Si editorial position is threatened -K because of budget cut-backs. &

The article, that said the |j§ position of John Miles, as- sistant director of Scholars IS Press, was threatened, | reported a situation that no longer exists. Si

Miles, who was also an as- S sistant professor of religious :•!; studies, left the University of :i; Montana after last Spring Quarter to teach at another university. S

Both positions vacated by ® Miles were filled Aug. 1 by Doug Adams. ijii

The story also wrongly reported that the Scholars Press is now seeking funds. iji:

“We are set for the current :i; academic year,” Robert Funk, chairman of the religious >$ studies department and direc- i|:j tor of Scholars Press, said last i i week.

The bill will not affect veterans presently enrolled at the University of Montana.

Veterans account fo r ap­proximately 12 to 13 per cent of the

student population, according to UM veteran’s coordinators.

However, the bill will have an effect in a few years.

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Larry Paige, veteran's counselor, expects veteran enrollment at UM to decrease in the future because of the bill.

Max Baucus, D-Mont., voted against the bill, which he termed “poorly conceived." The House vote was 298 for and 106 against the bill.

Baucus said yesterday that he believes education benefits act as an incentive for persons to enter the services.

Baucus also said he believes the bill was ramrodded through the Veterans Affairs Committee and through the House.

Not enough time was spent refin­ing the bill, he said.

House discussion revealed that no transition period was provided, which Baucus said is not good.

It was the general consensus on the floor, however, that if a transition was needed, the Department of Defense could provide it, he said.

“Sin the mother, and shame the daughter of lewdness" . . . Sir P. Sidney.

CENTERCOURSES

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BridgeSign Language

Astrology

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sign up early

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fo r the 1975-76

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m an d atory p r a c tic e s O ctober 8 -9 7 -9 F ie ld h o u se apply at UC 104

reviews

(Kalmln photo* by Dave Lowrey)

Raitt, Waits to be applaudedBonnie Raltt/Tom Walts

Oct. 5, UC Ballroom

By FRED DOWNINGMontana Kaimln Reviewer

Those lucky enough to get tickets to the Bonnie Raitt/Tom Waits concert Sunday night witnessed some kind of miracle.

The UC Ballroom Is a difficult place to produce good sound. The acoustics are no better than a bowl­ing alley's. Amplified sound reverberates from the floor and walls, causing an echo. It takes a good soundman to overcome the problem.

The size of the room forces a personal style on the performer. He or she must make the audience feel thehnuslc, rather than just listen to It. The entertainer must be accustomed to and derive pleasure from playing to a small crowd in a small room.

It all came together Sunday night. Bonnie Raitt and Tom Waits gave fine performances. Each went away knowing the Missoula crowd would pay to hear them again.

Tom Walts began the show with a type of humor reminiscent of that found in some smoke-filled Greenwich Village honky-tonk.

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His voice has all the sweetness of a rock slide as he sings about '55 Buicks and a phantom truck driver named Big Joe.

When he was not singing behind the piano or playing guitar, Waits stood up to the microphone and snapped his fingers to the beat of his story. Besides writing beautiful lyrics and pleasant melodies, Walts can tell some funny stories.

For her part, Bonnie Raitt executed a well-planned set with style, moving smoothly from traditional to contem­porary blues. Raitt has an honest voice. She does not over-use her falsetto, nor does she moan or cry while singing. Along with her own

songs, she plays numbers borrowed from among others, John Prine, Jackson Browne and Allan Tous- saint.

Bonnie Raitt may never achieve the mass audience appeal of Cher Bono, Helen Reddy or Olivia Newton-John. And for one reason: She hasn't allowed herself to become Involved in the over-commercialized form of "sing It to sell it” pop music— the kind of music we hear so much of today.

Raitt will not allow herself to be "packaged." The singer, like her albums, stands as a simple statement of herself.

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| Dance performance made free ia t «i iv:j:j Student tickets for the Group Motion dance performance will be ® •£ free of charge, Program Council announced yesterday. %

Dennis Burns, Program Council chairman, cited a "profit on pop 8 concerts, especially Edgar Winter,” as the reason for the price %

0. reduction. S

Students' tickets were to have sold for $2.

•jit . The price of tickets for non-students remains $3.

Group Motion expects, to make $4,000 from the Missoula |! performance. |

Drama scheduleA schedule of productions for the

1975-76 UM theater season has been released by the UM department of drama.

The season Includes three produc­tions In the University Theater, In­cluding Heartbreak House, Valley Forge and another show to be an­nounced.

Productions in the Masquer Theater include One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and Biedermann and the Firebugs. A spring dance concert also will be presented.

One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, the first production, will be presented Nov. 5 through 9. Show time is at 8 p.m„ and tickets cost $1.50 to UM students.

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An interview with Tom Waits:

Not just another pretty voice— -thank God

By RON HAUGEMontana Kalmin Entertainment Editor

The austere setting of the Village Motor Inn seems hardly a likely haunt for Tom Waits' Ghosts of Saturday Night. His sleazy "tight- slack-clad girls" are at worst uniformed and clean; his “cigar-

through his lyrics, he seems to deal with it very well.

Although Waits’ education never passed beyond high school class clown to college (“Make that 'institution of higher learning’," he interjects. “ It sounds more intellec­tual."), careful listeners to his music

(Montana Kaimin photos by Brad Willis)

chewing Charlies” are confined to the lobby; even “Adam an Eve on a log” is served on a clean plate at upwards of $3 in the restaurant downstairs.

How, then, can Tom Waits, con­noisseur of indigestion, chronicler of drunken nights in countless fleabags, keep a low-life perspective during eight monthsayeartouring in the finest lodgings? Simple, he ex­plains: He uses the ritz as a butt for his comedy.

"I can deal with it humorously,” Waits says of his situation. And

will recognize a veritable doctorate in Simile and Metaphor.

His words stumble in growling tones through the side of his mouth as he yammers of a middle class used-car salesman wearing “a ‘Danger: high voltage’ coat," a pair of “ color television test-pattern polyester double-knit Banlon® slacks” or “Purina Checkerboard Square pants with white belt and white shoes."

Waits, now 25 and author- performer on two records, speaks his mind honestly from a genuinely

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earned perspective. He’s no Yale man performing a well-studied act, as one might at least suspect.

“ I been a cook, a busboy, a cabbie . . . ” He stops to take a long swig from the first in a long line of Budwiesers. " . . . a bartender, a janitor, firefighter, ice cream truck driver, in a jewelry store .. ." His voice trails off.

Waits, on stage and off, is a tragicomic figure. He maintains, somehow, two weeks’ growth of beard (“ It just grows that way and stops.”)- On stage, Waits’ mere appearance seems humorous — baggy black pants, vest and coat, cabbie hat and loose but knotted striped tie—but his off stage appearance is the same. He sings more often than not of truly touching situations: S ituations often immediately recognizable to the world’s many Saturday night good­time seekers. Still, audiences identify more with his humor.

“ I used to be scared to death going on stage and not knowing what to say,” Waits says. Not wanting to set­tle for “You’re a far-out crowd," and “You’re beautiful," Waits started building on story ideas to lead into his music.

Even when audiences beg him for encores, he denies the kind of self- confidence he oozes during his one- man high-energy on-stage performance. An hour before the concert, Waits, rocking more nervously than rhythmically back and forth, gets very serious about his popularity.

“Do you think anybody is here to see me?” he asks. "I’ve never been to Montana. Do you think they'll like my stuff?” He worries about a forthcom- ing review of him in Rolling Stone.

After the concert he is no better. “What did you think of the set?” Again he’s rocking.

Waits does not live a celebrity's lifestyle. He drives a 1954 black Cadillac and rents a modest $150 a

CENTER COURSES Auto Mechanics

Bike TouringT.V. & Stereo Electronics

Guitar—RecorderPhotography Beg. & Adv.

Seminarclasses—Oct. 6th

month apartment in Los Angeles."I'm a rumor in my own time,” he

says. He picks up a Viceroy and puts it in his mouth. In an evening he’s run out of Raleighs, Marlboros and Old Golds.

Later in the Oxford, Waits confides he would go the route of top 40, if he had to, to make his name.

“There's nothing a record com­pany would like more than to have you become a household word,” he says. “ I'm a merchandisable com­modity, just like Miller High Life or creamed corn.”

Could he take the pressure of be­ing a household word, I ask?

"It don’t bother me at all," he says. “ I don’t want to compromise my musical sensibilities, but . . . no, it don’t bother me at all."

Missoula is the fourth in a 40 city tour by Waits and Bonnie Raitt. The pressure of the travel seems to be more trying on him than anything.

"Doing the same thing, night dfter night, even when you’re sick,” he begins. “Yeah, sometimes it bothers me. Sometimes I’d rather stay home and watch Father Knows Best."

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Castaneda book C ^leads bookstore Lclassified ads____________________bestseller listing ------

Tales of Power by Carlos Cas­taneda sold 72 copies in three days to cinch first place in the paperback sales at the University of Montana bookstore, according to the bookstore purchasing agent.

Bryan Thornton, the agent, said second place went to All Things Bright and Beautiful by James Herrlot. Herriot’s All Creatures Great and Small ranked fourth.

Jaws by Peter Benchley ranked third. It has sold more than 350 copies this year.

The list was compiled by Thornton as a general guide to bestsellers and reflects which books sell best at the UM store, as compared to nationally compiled lists.

Other top paperbacks were Foxfire 3, Elliot Wigginton, ed., fifth; Crockery Cookery, Mabel Hoffman, sixth; Something Happened, Joseph Heller, seventh; Seven-per-cent Solution, Nicholas Meyer, eighth, and Strictly Speaking, Edwin Newman, ninth.

Hardbound books, other than text­books, have been sold at the bookstore since last spring and are "very successful," he said.

Thornton said he was told at a convention of bookstore managers and employes held this year at Colorado Springs, Colorado that "college kids wouldn't buy

1. LOST OR FOUND

LOST: GOLD w ire rimmed glasses in orange case. Call 243-4481 o r 721-1815 after 5:00 please. 6-2p

FOUND: BLACK oval-shaped bi-focals. across from University on Arthur on Friday. 543-6987. 6-4

FOUND: EARL W. BAHR’s property. Come and claim at the Kaimin Business O ffice. J-206. 6-4f

2. PERSONAL

SOCIAL WORK/RECREATION: Outreach Program in Fiji is asking fo r tw o Youth/Sports Program Advisors. See Peace Corps Recruiters in the Union, Tues.-Fri. 6-1c

VISTA NEEDS business, education, social work, recreation grads. To find out where you 're needed contact Recruiters in the Union, Tues.-Fri. 6-1c

TEACH MATH OR SCIENCE IN GHANA, KENYA, L IB E R IA , EASTERN C A R IB B E A N , F IJ I, MALASIA, MICRONESIA. In the Peace Corps. Your B.A. may qualify you. See Recruiters in the Union, Tues.-Fri. 6-1 c

FORESTERS, S ILV IC U LT U R IS T S , PARKS MANAGEMENT MAJORS: You could be working in Botswana as a National Parks Adm in istra tor or Teaching Forestry at a Univ. in Brazil o r maybe working in Malaysia next year in the Peace Corps. See sample jobs Tues.-Fri. in tne Union. 6-1c

WHO IS Andrd?? Any superstition? Come see the "M agician"! Andrd Kole in 9 d a y s .. . 6-1 p

SAC organizing carpool program for UM studentsThe Student Action Center is

ACCOUNTING/FINANCE MAJORS: We have the largest number o f requests fo r business grads ever—in fantastic spots too! Great way to get international experience and travel. See Peace Corps Recruiters in the Union Tues.-Fri. 6-1c

"WHAT’S IN IT FOR ME?" SEA meeting, Thurs. Oct. 9, 7 p.m. LA 102. 6-3p

NEED A BAIL BOND? Contact LeRoy M. White, Inland Bonding Co. 543-4105 day o r nite ll 6-4p

A N Y O N E IN T E R E S T E D in s t a r t in g a NONSMOKERS’ RIGHTS GROUP? Please call Ron, 728-2586 (leave name and phone no. if I’m not in). 6-3p

THERE WILL be a Public Shower fo r Gwen VanTG. A t Nina's Place, 616 E. Sussex, Wed. 7:00 p.m. All friends are invited to drop by. 6-2p

TROUBLED? LONELY? For private, completely confidential listening. Student Walk-In. Student Health Service build ing, southeast entrance.

-Every evening from 8:00 to 12:00 p.m. Daytime hours, room 176 in Student Health Service from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. 6-4c

SISTER MARSHALL—don’t forget the barleys!_______________________________________ 6-1 p

ARTISTS AND CRAFTSMENReserve a table now fo r the Homecoming A rt Fair,

O c t. 16 an d 17 U .C . M a ll $ 5 .0 0 n o n - students/students free. 50 table lim it. They are going fast. S ign-up now at the scheduling o ffice in the U.C. 5-3p

WOMEN'S PLACE health education/counseling, a b o rtio n , b ir th c o n tro l, p re g n a n cy , V.D. counseling, crisis, rape relief. M-F 2-8 p.m. 1130 West Broadway 543-7606. 5-tfc

A STATE Employment Service officer, J im Rowe, w ill ass is t jU n ive rs ity s tu d e n ts in f in d in g employment by appointment from 1-5 on Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Student A ffairs Office. Lodge 101. 243-4411. 5-4c

ANYONE KNOWING the whereabouts o f Rich Landini or my records please call Alice, 728-8464 after 5. 5-3p

FRIENDS OF the Rattlesnake w ill present a free slide show Oct. 8, Wed., in the UC Lounge. 4-4c

NEED STUDENT w ith car fo r hauling, lifting and doing errands. Call 243-5091 between 3 & 4 p.m.

4-3p

BIG, BUSY University fam ily would like experienced person to half) parttime w ith house and supper. Call 543-5359 between 6 & 7 p.m. (Be our glue, hold things together, have fun.) 4-6p

AVON, TURN spare hours in to spare dollars. Sell quality Avon products. No selling experience necessary. I'll show you. Call Avon D istrict Mgr.—Margaret May—549-1063. 3-5p

8. TYPING

TYPING ACCURATE; thesis experience. 543-6835._________________________________________8-37p

EXPERIENCED TYPING, papers, theses. 728-1638.5-5p

9. TRANSPORTATION

STUDENTS INTERESTED in form ing a car pool, stop in at Student Action Center, UC105. 5-4c

WANTED TO FORM CAR POOL from Stevensville to University. 777-5184, Chuck Fisher

4-2p

11. FOR SALE

FOR SALE: Magnavox stereo, two speakers. $90. Becky Browne 728-1568. 6-4p

FOOSBALL TABLE, $200 o r best offer. 543-6066 after 5. 5-5p

FENDER tw in reverb am p, tu b e -ty p e , like new—$395. MARTIN D-18 gu ita r w ith hard-shell case—$395. Leave message fo r Rich Landers, 243-6541. 4-6f

FOR SALE: Martin D-35 12-string, $500, 728-0721.4-3p

USED FURN. & antiq. Hoagie’s Papoose Hdqts. East Missoula. 4-8p

FOR SALE: 71 Honda 750, exc. condition. Best offer. See at 1020 Reserve. 4-3p

'62 CHEVY II. '55 Pontiac, ’63 Volvo, Earth Shoes size 11.75, 21" 10 speed bicycle. Call 728-6369 evenings. 3-5p

JEEP—1964 Wiilys CJ5 4 cyl. Low miles, $800.107 S. 3rdW . No. 31. 6-2p

AKC REGISTERED Great Dane pups, fawn. Reasonable 728-6925 after 7:30 weekdays o r all weekend. 6-4p

BRAND NEW blue suede PUMA’S size 10%—$25. Call 543-6790. 6-4p

DUNHAM HIKING boots. Size 7, $25, Call 543-6790.6-4p

TWO NEW Weaver V7 scopes, $50 each. 243-4128.6-3p

KONGSBERG 205 cm. touring fiberglass skiis, pin bindings, bought Feb. 75. $65; BINOCULARS, Vernon compact model. $25. 549-2874, keep calling. 6-3p

KIESSIL1600 or Head GK03 200cm never used reg. $135 w ill sell fo r $80. Call 243-4405. 6-2p

12. AUTOMOTIVE

1969 VW Bug. 5533 days o r 543-7704 anytime.5-3p

FOR SALE 7 0 Ford Torino G T convertible, good shape. 549-0724. 3-4p

14. MOTORCYCLES

1972 BULTACO Alpina 250, lights, $500.00 553 days, 543-7704 anytime. 5-3p

1971 KAWASAKI 500CC $600. 728-5466. 3-5p

20. MISCELLANEOUS

RECORDS. USED but well cared for. Sacrificial prices. Oct. 16th fair. 6-3p

DANCE CLASSES— Elenita Brown. Internationally trained-experienced teacher. Groups fo r all ages. Ballet & .Character, Modern, A frican & Jazz, Spanish. Pre-Dance fo r small children. 728-1683 o r 1-777-5956. 3-19c

hardbound books.But he said, that this has not been

the case at UM, where the hardbound volume of James Michener’s Centen­nial, costing $12.50, has sold three or four copies a week.

Missoula author James Welch's Winter in the Blood is the second bestselling hardbound book at the bookstore. And Albert Cullum's Geranium on the Window Just Died Is third.

"Whiskey is a good thing in its place. There is nothing like it for preserving a man when he is dead. If you want to keep a dead man, put him in whiskey; if you want to kill a live man, put whiskey in him" . . . Guthrie.

organizing carpools for University of Montana students living on the outskirts of Missoula.

Dave Hill, director of SAC, said yesterday students may leave their name, address, phone number and schedule at SAC's office in the UC and he will place them into carpools.

The carpools will help students who do not want to drive their cars every day, Hill said.

Carpooling will save gas, cut down on air pollution and reduce the demand for on-campus parking, he added.

CENTERCOURSES

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Speed Reading Going Thru Changes

register early—UC

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4. HELP WANTED

APPLICATIONS FOR Consumer Relations Board are being accepted at Student Action Center. Come to UC 105. 5-4c

MATURE, MARRIED couple, as substitute foster parents, fo r group home fo r teenage boys, part- time, apply by Oct. 10; 728-2936 or mail resume to 2407 S. 10th W. 5-3p

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