Friday, September 6, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three . fiXYa/ Y.~ yS ti£ y} 5£\\ . ,>~ . F 28 Mioslems slain in massai re ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philip- commander in this port city on pines (4) - Armed men, de- the island of Mindanao, 525 scribed by villagers as Christ- miles south of Manila, said the ians, raided an upland settle- killings appeared to be in re- ment yesterday and massacred taliation for an ambush two 28 Moslems, police reported. weeks ago in which 26 Christ- Police counted 15 children, 10 ans were killed. men and three women killed by' In Manila, the government an- five raiders armed with bolo nounced recapture of the town knives and automatic rifles. One of Halabagan which was seized man died of bullet wounds, they 11 days ago by suspected Mos- said, and the rest were hacked lem rebels seeking independ- to death. ence for Moslems in the south- Lt. Pedro Francisco, p o 1 i c e ern islands of the Philippines. SMedical costs soar THE DEFENSE Department' said government troops of the central Mindanao command "successfully dislodged heavily armed outlaws" on Tuesday and regained control of the predom- inantly Moslem community of some 25,000 persons. It report- ed one soldier was killed and another injured during the oper- ation. Military commanders had re- ported earlier that some 700 rebels, identified as members of the secessionist Moro Liber- ation Front, seized the munici- pal hall and took over the town on Aug. 24. The latest massacre of Mos- lems occurred at Mala village, 23 miles northeast of here. Francisco, his khaki uniform bloodied, said on return from the village, "My God, this is the most inhuman thing I've witnessed in all my life." CALLING the killings a like- ly reprisal for the ambush, Francisco said, "I am afraid there will be more senseless killings." Francisco quoted Mala village survivors as saying the raiders were three men armed with two-bladed bola knives and two others carrying automatic rifles. Villagers said the men spoke Tagalog and Visayan dialects commonly used by Christian settlers from the central and northern Philippines. T h e y claimed the two men carrying firearms were in army uni- forms, the lieutenant said. The villagers called the men "ilagas", a local word for rats applied to Christian vigilantes who have long fought Moslems here in clashes dating -to the 1950s. A few years ago, an enter- prising mortician opened t h e first U.S. drive-in funeral par- lor in Atlanta. WASHINGTON () - Hospitalj and doctor costs have increased 5 per cent faster than the econ- omy as a whole since May and if unchecked could cost Ameri- cans an additional $13 billion over the next two years, Caspar Weinberger, secretary of health, education and welfare, said yes- terday. "This we must and will mod- of 17.7 per cent, he said." "WITH SUCH skyrocketing inflation, the costs for health care in this fiscal year will in- crease an additional $4 billion, and, next year, an extra $9 bil- lion," the secretary said. More than 70 per cent of those higher costs will come out of consumers' pockets, he add- ed. erate," he said. In a statement released later Engaging in a little economic in the day, Weinberger esti- jawboning of his own, Wein- mated that inflationary health berger told the American As- costs may add another billion sociation of Medical Clinics dollars to the federal budget that health care price increas- even if the rate of increase be- es "are a prominent fuel in the; gins to taper off. acceleration of the nation's in- If not controlled, he said, the flation."W' i irac uill hin da binr~ri Since federal wage-price con- trols expired April 30, physician, fees have risen at an annual, rate of 19.1 per cent and hos-I pital charges at an annual rate increases wii nner omedical research into cancer and heart disease and seriously jeopardize development of a comprehen- sive national health insurance system. Daily Official Bulletin Kdi . s.r. }. i :v ":}3: j'..:. AP Photo Down with English! Two Cabin Creek, W. Va., miners picket outside a mine in protest against the use of English Bummed Out on Car Repairs? Friday, Setember 6 textbooks in county schools. Day Calendar ICLE: Employment Discrimina- tion, procedure, preparation & liti- gation, Campus Inn, 9 am. THE MICHIGAN DAILY WUOM: Robert Penn Warren, poet & novelist, on "Democracy and Volume LXXXV, No. 2 Poetry," sponsored by National En Friday, September 6, 1974 dowment for the Humanities, 10:05 is edited and managed by students am. at the University of Michigan. News Music Sch: Karen Ruczynski, so- phone 764-0562. Second class postage prano, Recital Hall, 8 pm. paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. -- Published d a 11 y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); A theres $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and 0 " 0 foreign). Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier ")0 ° (campus area); $6.00 local mail . (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- local mail (other states and foreign). FOR A TASTE OF THE WORLD TO COME SHABBAT The Sabbath Queen will make her first appearance of the semester this FRI. EVENING SEPT. 6, 6:30 P.M. in various Sabbath circles of worship and song-flavors choco- late and strawberry - traditional and creative. SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE followed by Community Sh~abbat Dinner at 7:30 Please make reservations by noon Friday, Sept. 6 Followed by an ONEG SHABBAT Refreshments-Song & Dance at 8:45 P.M. Come to one-Come to two or Come to all NEW YORK (AP) - Fog can, raise havoc with the average motorist's vision in more 'vays than one. Pedestrians, trees and on - coming vcehicles viewed through fog may look twice as far away as they realy are, reports C1T Service Leasing Corp., which provides safe-driving inf Erma- tion for users of its cars a n d truck fleets. What's more, a motorist driv- ing through fog may feel that. he is going at only half his acc- tual speed. 11 TONIGHT 3 W. C. FIELDS FLICKS! Punch and Cookies Live People OPEN HOUSE U. Reformed Church 8-1 1 1001 E. HURON (at Fletcher) We offer quality personalized service Major & Minor Reairs I- I VOLKSWAGEN DATSU N V EGA VOLVO TOYOTA CORVA IR AUD I; DOMESTIC COMPACTS Modified Sports Cars thr Classified The loon, Minnesota's state bird, has a wing span of up to five feet. CIRCLE BOOKS "The Sun Is Shining Sa complete astrological &metaphysical Bookshop publishers of the Circle Book of Charts and the Circle Astrological, Calendar SINDIVIDUAL HOROSCOPES FOR 300 Q We hope that our Chart Casting Service will stimulate the individual to inquire into astrology & help draw out thelight ^in each of us. U 215 S. State St. 769-1583 HOURS: Mon.-Sat. 10-6 WE HAVE MANY BOOKS FROM ALL SECTIONS ON SALE (, so<-y o< o ,>o <=y o < >o<-o<-=>oe SPECIAL for STUDENTS The University of Michgian Employees' Credit Union oi"ers these excellent investment opportunities PROMISSORY CERTIFICATES 30 day promissory certificates-7% 60 day promissory certificates-7% SPECIAL $5OO minimum for students Interest earned from the day of deposit to the date of maturity. A penalty is called for early redemption. PROMISSORY CERTIFICATES DO NOT REQUIRE MEMBERSHIP IN THE CREDIT UNION. ANTI-INFLATION DEPOSIT ACCOU NTS 3 month maturity paying 7% 6 month maturity paying 6.5% 9 month maturity paying 61/4% Interest is calculated on a monthly basis and paid at the end of the maturity period. Deposits made by the 10th of the month earn interest for the full month. Insured by N.C.U.A., the National Credit Union Ad- ministration, an aency of the U.S. Government. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 761-0500 1150 Rosewood 663-2441 r HILLEL HOUSE-1429 Hill I I MEDIEVAL and RENAISSANCE COLLEGIUM Creative education begins with seeing the old in new ways. The Medieval-Renaissance Col- legium, an interdisciplinary program committed to this end, is offering a selection of stimulat- ing and innovative courses for fall term which are still open for enrollment. These courses are: MARC 311. (Hist. 310, RC Hums. 336) THE ROLE King Aruthur and his knights. Beginning with OF MATERIAL RESOURCES IN MEDIEVAL AND the early chronicles and a discussion of the possible RENAISSANCE CULTURE. historicity of Arthur, the course will examine the Jeanne Gordus, History, with others. MWF 4:00. Celtic sources and literary development of Arthur- 4 credits. ian Romance, especially in France and England. Man's increasing c o n t r o I over his environment, Pride of place in the course is assigned to Le Morte examined from many different perspectives. The Dartbur of Sir Thomas Malory. geography and climate of western Europe; basic methods of cultivation and systems of land tenure; MARC 357. (Eng. 313) THE COURT OF RICH- livestock and the wool trade; spices; metalwork- ARD II. Jeanne Martin, English, with others. ing, stone work, shipbuilding, and artistic tech- .TTh 1:00-3:00. 4 credits. niques; the development of printing and gunpow- The world of Chaucer, of Froissart, of Gower, of der; alchemy and other systems for manipulating John of Gaunt, of the Peasants' Revolt, of Dick natural substances. Whittington. Richard II as a royal patron of art, MARC 315. (Hist.316, RC Hums. 337) LAWmusic, and poetry, and the effect of political de- MORALS, AND SOCIETY. Charles Donahue and ties of iurEngland upon the cultural activi- Thomas Green, Law School, and Thomas Tentler, 4red with others. TTh 11:00 and Th 4:00. MARC 372. (Hist. 396) INTELLECTUAL CUR- AnRENTS OF THE RENAISSANCE. Pauline Watts, An exploration of the interplay between legal History, with others. T 3:00-5:00, Th 3:00. theory and moral systems, within the bounds im- posed by existing social and legal institutions in the An exploration of some major areas of Renaissance Middle Ages and Renaissance. Four specific themes thought: the nature of God, his relation to Nature; will be examined as touchstones for understanding his relation to Man; man's place in the order of both the multiplicity of legal systems, secular and the universe; the influence of ancient thought on ecclesiastical, and also the interrelationships sug- the development of Renaissance problems. The re- gested by the course title. They are: royal succes- lation-of intellectual inquiry to other aspects of sion (the deposition of Richard II, 1399), mar- Renaissance civilization. riage (High Middle Ages), homicide (High Middle Ages), and witchcraft (Late Middle Ages and MARC 490. DIRECTED READINGS. Charles Trin- Renaissance). Previous work in the history or kaus and staff. Time and place arranged; permission thought of the period may be helpful but is not of instructor required. 1 to 4 credits. recquiredi. Intended' for the advanced student who wishes to continue work beyond the limits of a formal MARC 325. (Eng. 355) THE ARTHURIAN TRA- course. Written permission of the instructor must DITION. John Reidy, English, with others. be submitted to the MARC office before enroll- MW 1:00-3:00. 4 credits. ment will be valid. Inquire at the MARC office, A survey of the main elements of the tradition of room N-12, Law Quad (763-2066) for details. WINTER TERM COURSES 1975 MARC 201. 4 hours. THE HTGH MIDDLE AGFS: MARC 345 (crosslisted History of Art 545). 3 hours. BACKGROUND & BASIC CULTURAL THEMES. BASILICA TO CATHEDRAL, MEDIEVAL BUILD- Duncan Robinson. ING. Clifton Olds. MARC 326. 4 hours. MUSIC OF RENAISSANCE: MARC 369 (crosslisted English 468). 3 hours. SHAKE- ITALY & SPAIN. David Crawford. 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