Poge 2-Wednesday, October 10, 1979-The Michigan Daily -& Graduating Seniors and Grad Students JOB OPPORTUNITIES in THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE DRUG ENFORCEMENT ADMIN. 70 Special Agent Positions (Criminal Investigator) Contact: Mrs. Virginia Stegath 3200 Student Activities Bldg. 763-1464 for additional information and application DEADLINE: 10/1 ..... ..... CONSUMERS WILL FEEL PINCH Tight money to limit housing NEW YORK (AP) - The first vic- tims of the Federal Reserve's new tight-money policy will be the people who buy, sell, and build houses. But analysts say consumers and businesses also will feel the impact of the Fed's moves. SYDNEY, Australia (AP)-When a truck loaded with champagne and wine crashed near Sydney recently dogs came from miles around to lap up the liquor flowing through the streets, says driver Colin Bennett. "Finally they fell over dead drunk," he said, "and we had to drag them to the sidewalk to let them sleep it off." "I would think that it's going to be a little harder to get a car loan, a little harder to get a mortgage," said economist William Gibson of the brokerage house Smith, Barney, Harris, Upham, & Co. Inc. "IT WILL be very tough to buy or sell homes without mortgage financing available. It's difficult to see in- stitutions funding mortgages one or two months in advance when the cost of money is 'so uncertain," said bank analyst Jonathan Gray of Sanford Ber- nstein & Co., Inc. The tight mortgage situation is likely to slow homebuilding. And that means makers of appliances and home fur- nishings may face slower sales and rising inventories of unsold products as their major market shrinks. The Federal Reserve, in a bid to con- trol inflation, moved to curb lending by boosting money market interest rates and by raising the percentage of deposits banks must hold as cash. AN IMMEDIATE result of the moves was a one-point jump in the prime len- ding rate at most institutions to a record 14 per cent. The prime is a bank's charge on loans to top-rated borrowers. "There's been a general tendency for banks to price more and more business loans in terms of the prime," said Gib- son. "All those loans are going to be more expensive," and prices may rise as businesses pass on higher loan rates to customers. Even at high rates, "the small businessman looking for a loan may be asked to take a smaller amount than he's looking for because the bank doesn't have as much money available," said Irwin Kellne , economist at Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. AND "THE MAN on the street may ultimately feel the effect" of the Fed's moves "in that his own job may be at stake," Kellner said. The housing industry already was slowing to a rate of 1.7 million new homes annually from last year's 2.02 million clip as high-yielding short-term money market certificates and mutual funds cut into the ability of savings in- stitutions to provide long-term mort- gages. COMMITTEE MEMBERS NEEDED ahk,~intn,9 Internal MSA. committees: " Communications SAcademic Affairs " Legislative Relations * Student Organizations Board 9 Minority Affairs o Student General Council University Committees: + Communications (4 students) + Civil Liberties + University Council + Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics + University Relations SFreePregnancy Testing Immediate Results Confidential Counseling ta'Complete Birth Control Clinic Medicaid " Blue Cross (313) 941.1810 Ann Arbor and Downriver area S(313).559-0590Southfield area - Northland Family Planning Clinic, Inc. Low-flying airplane buzzes UN buildings Applications Available at MSA OFFICE 3909 Michigan Union YOUR STUDENT GOVERNMENT (Continued from Page 1) way of taking matters into our own hands and getting what we want." Baudin agreed to land his Cessna single-engine plane only after publishing executives promised to discuss his grievances with him. THESE INCLUDED not spending enough to publicize his autobiographical book, "Confessions of a Promiscuous Counterfeiter," and not editing it to his satisfaction. Baudin, who was calm and dressed in a tweed suit, told reporters that he had taken his grievances to Harcourt, but they told him to "Go to hell. Take any action you feel you need to take." In a taped message he had sent to the New York Post, he said the company had made him so mad he "felt- like flying the plane through the executive office windows" of the publishing com- pany. ACCORDING TO the publishers, 6,000 copies of his autobiographical book, published last April, were sold and it had not been heavily promoted. It has been "generally well received," a spokesperson said. He told police by radio that he "would put the plane in the water rather than hurt anyone," according to Sgt. Leo Ingenice. OltC At the height of the scare, two busy arteries outside the U.N.-First Avenue and the East River Drive - were closed *to traffic. Fire apparatus screamed in- to the area. The city sent in two mobile emergency rooms, capable of treating up to 60 persons at a time. Six ambulan- ces were on the scene, and hospitals in the area were placed on alert. ALL EMPLOYEES were evacuated from the Secretariat building, a 48- story glass-walled slab, and the much lower curved General Assembly building. Harcourt Brace's Third Avenue building also was evacuated. .Before Baudin took off in mid- morning from a New Jersey airport, he had a tape cassette delivered to the New York Post, but too late for authorities to be alerted and the flight prevented. Craig Ammerman, managing editor of the Post, said Baudin had contacted the newspaper "at least a dozen times over the past two months. . . to tell us that he was going to make this points." HE ADDED that "At every juncture the people he talked to told him he shouldn't do it, it might be illegal and we wouldn't have anything to do with it. Ammerman denied allegations that the Post had collaborated with Baudin, terming such reports "ridiculous." Daily Official Bulletin Yesterday's story on University faculty awards omitted the name of the recipient of the Josephine Nevins Keal Fellowship. Shulamit Reinharz; professor of community psychology, received the fellowship. She is on sab- batical this term. THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume LXXXX, No. 30 Wednesday, October 10, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters) ;$13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postage aid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- ASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1979 Daily Calendar: Commission for Women: Women's Issuea, tray lunch, Regent Sarah Goddard Power, Room 4 Michigan League, noon. _Afro-American Studies: George Bell, "Afro- American Studies in the Public School System," 246 A&D, 12:15p.m. CRLT: David McMillen, "PSI-Personalized System of Instruction (Keller Plan),",2417 Mason Hall, 3:10 p.m. Computing Center: General User's meeting, 25 Angell Hall, 3:30 p.m. Engineering: T. M. Harvey, "Selective Ionization and Computer Techniques for Mass Spectrometic Analysis of Air Poollutants," 136 Eng., 1-A, 3:30 p.m. Mech. Eng./Applied Mechanics: Harvey Green- span, Mass. Inst. of Technology, "Some Fluid Dunamical Problems of Cell Biology," 206 W. Eng., 3:30 p.m. Industrial and Operations Engineering: "Operations Research in the 10E Department," 229 W. Eng., 4p.m. Physics/Astronomy: O. Overseth, "Magnetic Monents of the Hyperons," 296 Dennison,,4 p.m. Stastistics/Biostatics: Anita Parunak, "Graphical Analysis of Ranked Counts (of words)," 450 Mason Hall, 4 p.m. Chemical Engineering: Brice Carnahan, "The Amdahl 470/v6 Computing System and MTS," Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 p.m. (l ivites tJQrA to ceie6r~te f~z 75tx r "I IN THE MORN ING ANN ARBOR'S ONLY MORNING NEWS- PAPER DELIVERS TO YOUR DORM OR DOOR FFORE 8:00 AM TUESDAY-SUNDAY 13 octceer SrM 2 Am jot4iC~tL02,c T2.L1CkudG &mrth&-az czxKe 6irtf ~Xna 1 r2ZA'tC idAbe66r A , 4X 1 " C f c I i I I j I