The Michigan Daily-Sunday, March 25, 1979-Page 5 PAKISTAN COUR T RECOMMENDS CLEMENCY Bhutto sentence upheld hI ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - The Pakistan Supreme Court yesterday unanimously upheld the death sentence against ousted Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. But the court recommended clemency, thereby leaving him one last hope of escaping the gallows. The ruling threw Bhutto's fate into the hands of the man who toppled him from power in 1977, President Moham- med Zia ul-Haq. GEN. ZIA, who has refused clemency ...;'....to almost 400 convicted murderers in his 20 months in power, had no im- mediate public comment on the decision. He said previously he would support the high court's findings, but it was unclear what influence the clemency recommendation would have. Bhutto, convicted of murder con- spiracy, has said he will not ask for mercy because it would be an ad- mission of guilt, and he has forbidden his family from doing so.- But after the court recommended clemency yesterday, his lawyer, Yahya Bakhtiar, concluded: "The death sen- tence is out. I feel relieved. But I was disappointed in the rest of the judgment. Mr. Bhutto should not be hanged after this.". DOZENS OF WORLD leaders, in- cluding President Carter, Pope John Paul II and Soviet President Leonid AP Photo Brezhnev, have asked Zia to spare the 51-year-old Bhutto's life. Any Pakistani vay toward can file an application. for executive clemency, or Zia could act on his own without one. t It was not known whether any ap- plications would be made. Any must be uthwestern filed within seven days of official travellers notification of a death warrant, which is expected in about a week. That means Bhutto may have as little as two weeks to live. In London, Bhutto's son, Shah Naoz Bhutto, told reporters he will not request clemency, "because my father himself has said he will not. I was told from Pakistan today that when his lawyer told him about the court decision, my father again repeated that he will not ask Zia for mercy." IN SUGGESTING clemency, the judges said they supported Bakhtiar's position that the sentence should be commuted to life imprisonment because Bhutto did not wield the mur- der weapon and was not at the scene of the crime. The High Court in Lahore last year convicted Bhutto of ordering four of his security police to ambush, a political. rival, Ahmed Reza Kasuri, in 1974. Kasuri survived *but his father was killed. The four agents also were con- victed and condemned to die. / 'i/f ( I, 7 *t. d Founded by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi E INTRODUCTION to the Transcendental Meditation Program TUESDAY, MAR. 27th 8:00 P.M. Multi-Purpose Room, UGLI THE FLOOD-SWOLLEN Illinois River has engulfed this park in downtown Peoria, Illinois and is inching its w the city. Winds and rain lash Midwesi By the Associated Press Winterlike weather 'refused to leave the Midwest ,yesterday, lashing the region with wind, snow and rain. Roads were drifted over, power lines were torn down by falling trees and water- logged Illinois was threatened with more flooding. Temperatures plunged in the- Mississippi Valley, ranging from the teens in Minnesota to the low 30s as far south as Arkansas. As rain and snow pelted Illinois, authorities kept watch on the swollen Illinois River, which already had chased 2,000 people from their homes along a 100-mile stretch from Hennepin and Beardstown. THE RIVER had held steady at 28 feet, 7 inches at Peoria-an inch below the record set in 1943-since Thursday, but the National Weather Service predicted it would crest at 29% feet last night. Muddy water swirled through city streets as police in boats picked their way through logs and other debris to seek out trapped people and guard against looting. "Any precipitation adds to the flooding," a spokesman for the National Weather Service said. "We expect 1 to 3 inches of accumulation. And the ground is so saturated there's no place for it to go." Friday night rains in northern Illinois and Indiana worsened the flooding, which has been caused primarily by melting of the winter's record snowfall in northern Illinois. MICHIGAN'S Upper Peninsula, which already had recorded 340 inches of snow, got up to 12 additional inches as 40 mph winds piled drifts five feet high on ice-slicked roads and highways, state police said. State trooper Jack Hodges said some snowplows had bogged down and others had been ordered off the roads. Michigan 23 was closed the 44 miles from Munising to Marquette. "People can't get into Marquette" from ,any direction, Hodges said. Power was knocked out for two hours in parts of Marquette Friday night when freezing rain that preceded the snow caused a tree to fall on a power line. Another outage hit Houghton for several hours yesterday morning. IN WISCONSIN, up to 6 inches of snow left many secondary roads in the northern part of the state impassible, and the northbound lanes of Interstate 94 were closed by drifts in the 7-mile stretch between Foster and Ossee. Slippery conditions were reported in much of the rest of the state. Snowdrifts as high as truck cabs were reported along U.S. 14 in sou Minnesota, and hundreds of were re orted stranded. High winds accompanying the rain- storm in North Carolina ripped off roofs, uprooted trees, knocked down power lines and damaged several air- planes, authorities said. A tornado reportedly touched down in Castle Hayne, damaging the roof of one house but causing no injuries. IN LONG BEACH, parts of the roofs of two cottages were ripped off and carried more than a half mile by strong winds. A forest service light plane was flip- ped over and destroyed at New Hanover County Airport in Wilmington. A hangar also was severely damaged, and two Piedmont Airlines aircraft sustained minor damage when one was spun around into the other. Kansas was cleaning up from a snowstorm that left some cities without power for as long as 10 hours Friday as near-freezing temperatures, up to 6 in- ches of snow and winds gusting to 55 mph caused the worst damage ever to the state's electric power system. No storm-related deaths or injuries were reported. Profs. win fellowship Two University faculty members are winners of the Sloan Fellowships for Basic Research. They are astronomy. Prof. Robert Kirshner and physics Prof. Rudolf Thun. The fellowship, which runs for two years and allots $10,000 a year, is given this year to 78 young scientists in 39 colleges and universities in the United States and Canada. The fellowship, given by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, is for "stimulating advances in fundamental research by young faculty scientists at a time in their careers when government and other support is difficult to obtain." or every Wednesday-Noon & 8:00 P.M.-Michigan Union For Information Call 668-8256 Room 4313 (C) 1976 World Plan Executive Council-U.S. All rights reserved. Transcendental Meditation is a series of WPEC-U S a nonprofit education organization THE lSRA4EL SIUDENT ORGANZA1T0N INVITES THE PUBSIC TO A Cele b ratio n of Peace 7:30 P.M. MONDA Y, MA RCH 26 th ALICE LLOYD, BLUE LOUNGE ' ga a--. .- r- - .---. I I You don't like the shape America's in? O.K. change it. America's got too many poor people, right? And there's plenty of other problems too. Take our cities. The shape of some of them is enough to make you cry. And waste and ignorance, the cycle of poverty that traps one generation after another because they're too busy just holding on to get ahead. The' ravages of hunger and disease. Education that's either too little or none. Skills that are lacking, and the O.K. now's the time for action*... join VISTA: Volunteers in Service to America. If you're eighteen or eighty-great, we want you. We want you to organize in your com- munity, or someone else's. Helping miners in Appalachia learn a new skill. Or migrant farm workers' children to read. We want you to organize a clinic in Watts. Or fight poverty around the corner. We don't care how much you make now, home about either. But there's one thing we can promise you, there will be plenty to write home about. About the things you've learned while working with others. And the progress you've made. And that feeling deep inside you, know- ing that you've returned the favor America gave you. 0. K. you know what's wrong, right? Now go ahead, change it. In VISTA. Call VISTA toll free: 800-424-8580. Or write The Earle is the only restaurant in the Ann Arbor area serving traditionally prepared dishes from the provinces of