Saturday, January 11, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Saturday, January 11, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Florida officials fire draft evader Chuch koAft i erice4 WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Swamped by a flood of public protest, Palm Beach County officials fired a Vietnam war draft evader four days after he began -his alternate service un- der President Ford's amnesty program. Albert Gargiulo, 28, had be- come an acute political embar- rassment, officials said in an- nouncing his dismissal from the county engineer's staff Thurs- day, "ONLY THE man himself can take the embarrassment off us," county commissioner Lake Lytal said. "If he stays, his job and even his life in the community is going to be very unpleasant. "You have no idea what this means to people," Lytal said. Gargiulo, who holds a mas- ter's degree in engineering, fled the draft during the height of American military involvement in Vietnam. He spent four years in South America, according to, Lytal, before deciding to return to the United States. LYTAL SAID part of the prob- lem was Gargiulo's $11,000-a- year salary. "I had one mother tell me 'I lost my son and all I got was a flag. This man hid and now he gets a good-paying job',". Lytal said. "They think he's being re- warded foravoiding what fath- ers and sons died for. "THEY SURE in hell don't want to forgive." Gargiulo remained secluded in his home with his wife and 8-year-old son after his firing. He would not speak with re- porters. "He is under a great mental and physical strain," said Gar- giulo's brother Frank, a county employe. S"WE HAVE good reason to be afraid . . for personal se- curity reasons." Gargiulo's attorney, Louis Sabatino of Miami, said he will "go to Washington or wherever necessary to fight this disgrace- ful thing." Lytal, a county commissioner for 30 years, said the public furor over Gargiulo's hiring was unparalleled. "I've had more calls on that than anything, and all of them were against him." ROBERT CULPEPPER, coun- ty commission chairman, said he will recommend "disciplin- ary action" next week against the county officials who hired; Gargiulo. He called the hiring a "clear violation" of county policy-becoming involvedaina federal program without the commission's knowledge. "I don't think you can call this a tempest in a teapot," Lytal said. "These folks think this man is not a very good citizen.They don't want their tax dollars supporting him." UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST Presently Meeting at YM-YWCA, 530 S. Fifth David Graf, Minister 3:00 p.m. - Sunday Worship; Service. Students Welcome. For information or transpor- tation: 663-3233 or 662-2494. * * * WELCOME TO ANN ARBOR FRIENDS MEETING (QUAKERS) 1420 Hill St.-668-9341 (if no answer, 769-3354,j .971-4875, 665-2683) Silent Meeting for Worship- Sunday, 10-11 a.m. First Day School, nursery/, high, 10-11 a.m. Adult Forum, 11-12. Potluck every first Sunday, Business meeting every tird Sunday after worship. D a i ly Morning Meditation (546 Walnut St.), 8:30-9 %'inm. Wednesday Sack Lunch (1073 East Engineering), 12-1 pal. Worship-sharing Groups (in homes), Tues. / Wed. / Tiurs. eves. , Friday Evening Family Night (1420 Hill St.), 7:30-11 p.m - s t o r'i e s, discussions, games, crafts, singing and dancing for all ages. American F r i e n d s Service Committee (AFSC), 1414 hill St., 761-8283. Bail & Prison Reform, 761- 8283, 761-8331. Friends International Co-op, 1416 Hill St., 761-7435. Friends L a k e Community,' 19,720 Waterloo Rd., Chlelsea, 475-8775. Movement for a New Sc.-iety (MNS), 665-6083. World Peace Tax Fund, Box 1447, Ann Arbor. OF CHRIST 530 W. Stadium Blvd. (one block west of U of M Stadium) Bible Study - Sunday, 9:30 a.m.-Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Worship-Sunday, 10:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Need Transportation? C a 11 662-9928. S * * UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday Services at 9:15 and at 10:30 a.m. Sunday Bible Study at 9:15. 'Midweek Worship Wednesday Evening at 10:00. ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL (Catholic) 331 Thompson-663-0557 Weekend Masses: Saturday: 5 p.m. and midight. Sunday: 7:45 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m., noon, and 5 p.m. (plus 9:30 a.m. North Campus). * * * CANTERBURY HOUSE 218 N. Division-665-0606 Events This Week: Sunday, Dec. 8, 12:00 noon- Holy Eucharist with a meal fol- lowing. Tuesday, Dec. 10, 8:00 p.m.- "Artists in the Church," an eve- ning with Ralph Carskadden and Steve Iverson. Friday, Dec. 13, 8:00 p.m.- Decking the Hall with greens. * * * FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH State at Huron and Washington 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Worship Services, Church School for all ages. Nursery Care. Sermon: "The Risks God Takes." by Dr AP Photo A MISSISSIPPI NATIONAL GUARDSMAN stands by a school bus that was turned upside down at a McComb elementary school after a tornado struck yesterday. Officials said that four persons died and more than 100 injured as a result of the twister. BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149 Minister: Orval L. E. Willimann 10:00 a.m. - Worship Service and Church School. * * * ANN ARBOR CHURCH CAMPUS CHAPEL Pastor: Don Postema 10:00 a.m.-Morning Service. * * * FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Ministers: Robert E. Sanders, John R. Waser, Brewster H. Gere, Jr. "Where Christ, Campus and Community meet" Worship Services at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Other programs for young adults: Sunday, 12:00--Brunch. Wednesday, 5:15-Holy Com- munion. Wednesday, 6:00-Supper. Friday, 12:00-Luncheon and Bible Study. * * * LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (ALC-LCA) (Formerly Lutheran Student Chapel) 801 S. Forest Ave. at Hill St. Donald G. Zill, Pastor Sunday Service at 10.30 a.n. * * * UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH, 1001 E. Huron CalvinsMalefyt, Alan Rice, Ministers 9:30 a.m.-Church School. 10:30 a.m.-Morning Worship. 5:30 p.m.-Student Supper. ST. ANDREW'S EPSICOPAL CHURCH, 306 N. Division 8:00 a.m.-Holy Eucharist. 10:00 a.m. - Morning Prayer and Sermon. * * * UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 409 S. Division M. Robert Fraser, Pastor Church School-9:45 a.m. Mornin Worship-11:00 a.m. Evenin Worship-7:00 p.m. Read and Use Daily Classifieds ornad( Mi*ss., hi McCOMB, Miss. (R) - A tor- nado ripped a two-mile swath! through McComb yesterday, leveling businesses and homes, shredding trees and injuring more than 100 persons. Officials said four persons died in McComb and three oth- ers in a nearby rural area. They originally said 10 persons had died in the most fierce of a series of tornadoes which lash- ed the state between 8 and 10 a. m. yesterday. THREE PERSONS were re- ported dead on arrival at a local medical center, and another at1 a McComb funeral home. Offic- ials said an elderly man and a other and her daughter were illed near the small Ruth com- munity north of McComb. Hospital officials said 101 of cComb's 12,000 residents were treated for injuries, with 10 ad- mitted for continuing treatment' ere and seven sent to other hospitals. Two of those admit- ted here were listed in cri'ical ondition. THE STORM system w h i c h pawned the McComb tornado sent another twister thundering past the nearby Summit com- munity. There, the North Pike Elementary School was severe- ly damaged as 350 studetns hud- dled in the hallways, carrying out a tornado drill that saved most of them from injury. OTHER TORNADOES struck in an elbow-shaped path extend- ing north from McComb to Jack- son, 90 miles to the south, then across to Columbus in north- east Mississippi. Considerable [ws tear through indreds injured property damage was reported in several areas. "The tornado made a path all the way through the city . . about two miles," said William Hewitt, assistant administrator for the Southwest Mississippi Regional Medical Center in Mc- Comb. "IT STARTED at about t h e southwest portion and went out through the northeast. I heard the wind. A man came runnng and said a tornado is coming. The lights went out and it pass- ed about 100 yards to th3 east of us." THE FUNNEL missed the hospital, but dipped into the Southwest Mall shopping center across the street as its stores were preparing to open. One end of the center vas demolish- ed. The tornado flattened the city's National Guard armom y, then rumbled through thi fash- ionable residential section on McComb's north side. "I SAW it coming down the street and it looked like a big funnel," said Kathy Dunagin, 16, a McComb High School stu- dent. "You could see fire when it hit those electrical wires." UTILITY LINES were down- ed, and the medical center had to use an emergency power gen- erator. Telephone communica- tions were stilled. Ambulances were sent from Marion, Franklin and Waltball counties to help carry out the inj ured. The tornadoes sprang from a general weather system that re- leased other twisters in Texas and Louisiana.r IN LOUISIANA, a Lotal of' nine persons were hospi~altzedr with injuries and there was atj least one weather-related death.1 Officials had earlier reported at least two dead. One teen-age boy on hi way to school in the Baton Rouge' area was killed when a power line fell on him. And one crew- man was missing fram a tug which capsized on Lako Pon+- chartrain. IN SUMMIT, Miss., the super- intendent of the North Pike -Ele mentary School said three stu- dents and four adults were in- jured, none seriously, when the storm "demolished aboat 90 per cent of the building. "I was standing in the win- dow watching it," said J. B. Pray. "We lost three school buses that were demolished, and1 a half dozen autos turned over." Pray said the calm respcrs e by the teachers 'literally saved a lot of lives . . . tha are to be commended." THREE OTHER schools -one in Summit, one near the dam- aged shoping center in McComb and another in the Plantersville community in Lee County --suf- fered wind damage, but there were no injuries reported. A funnel cloud was sighted over Columbus Air Force Base at Columbus in nortfleastern Mississippi, and high winds downer power lines and knocked two radio stations ofl the air in Columbia, in the state's southcentral sector. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Saturday, January 11 to $4900; write: Dir. of Grad. Stu- a adies, Conn. Col., New London, CT Day Calendar 06320. MA in Public Policy, 2 termsI WUOM: From the Midway, "Pro-I & internship: write Claremont fessors & Witches," M. Eliade, U. of Grad. Sch., Claremont, CA 91711.' Chicago, 10 am; The Consequences Geol. grad. TA's $3150 stipend. OkIa- of No-Growth Policies, John Platt, I homa State U., Stillwater, OK 74074. physics prof., "New Belief Systems U. of Arizona offers financial aid for the world Ahead," 12:50 pm. to grad. students in 16 depts; write Gymnastics: Big Ten Invitational, Dean of Grad. Coll., Tucson, AZ Crisier Arena, 10 am, 2:30 pm. 85721; also openings for residence Planetarium: Astronomy slides/ hail Heads, stipend $1650-$3000 plus lectures / discussion, Exhibit Mu- apt. Glamour Mag.'s Top Ten Ci-' seum, 3 pm. lege Women Contest, 1975: winners Music School: Beth Lindberg, so- receive media recognition, trip tof prano, Recital Hall 4:30 pm.; Anne N.Y. in June $500 cash prize, & gift; Gajda, piano, Recital Hall, 8 pm. entry blank available at CP&P; Wrestling: UM vs. Northwestern, Crisler Arena, 5:30 pm. appi. deadline 2/15/75. Musical Society: Marceau, panto-~ Summer Placement mimist, Power, 8 pm; Detroit Sym- phony, Aldo Ceccato, conductor, Hill 3200 SAB, 763-4117 Aud., 8:30 pm. ,.n mr o Pe S t s 1 * *Donald B. Strobe. FIRST CHURCH. OF CIIRIST, 10:30-11:00 a.m. - Fellowship SCIENTIST Hour in Wesley Lounge. 1833 Washtenaw Worship Service is broadcast Sunday Service and Sunday on WNRS (1290) AM and WNRZ School-10:30 a.m. (103) FM from 11:00 to noon Wednesday Testimony Meet- each Sunday. ing-8:00 p.m. WESLEY FOUNDATION: Child Care-Sunday, under 2 Sunday, Dec. 8: years; Wednesday, through 6 6:00 p.m. - Supper, Pine years. Room. Reading Room - 306 E. Lib- 6:45 p.m. - Tree-trimming erty, 10-9 Mon., 10-5 Tues.-Sat. Party and Celebration, Wesley "The Truth That Heals" -- Lounge. General Notices Residence Hall Staff Aplication:G Application for in-residence housing; staff for the 1975-76 academic yearj are available in 1500 S. A. B., Mon- day - Friday, 8:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. and 1:30 to 5:00 p.m. Positions in-} clude resident director, assistant< resident director, resident advisor, resident fellow, graduate student teaching assistant and head lib-! rarian. Present staff and other in-' dividuals who have an application on file must come to the HousingI office to update their application. Deadline for applying in January 16, 1975. Career Plannings & Placement 3200 SAB, 764-7460 Interviews on Campus: Jan. 16, 17, 1975 - Harvard JFK Sch. of Govt. (Public Policy Program); phone: 4-7456 appt. Polar Region Research on Cosmic Ray 1 yr. with Swarthmore Coll. prog.; need strong background in physics, as- tron., or elect. eng. as part of BA; begins August 1975; aply: Dir., Bar- tol Research Foundation, Swarth- more, PA 19081. Conn Col,. offers grad, fellowships up to $3500 in 13 depts & research asst. In psych. up Camp Tamarac , Letov r o s Air Society: interview Fri. Jan. 17 9-5; variety of positions open; reg- ister by phone or in person. Summer Fed. Serv. Exam: final exam in Feb; appl. deadline, Jan. 17; for applying thru Gradepoint I, a i Average, Feb. 28. Brookhaven Natl. Lab., New York: student training prog. for under- grads in apps. math, physical & life sciences & eng. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXV, No. 84 Saturday, January 11, 1975 JOHN CASSAVETTES 1971 MINNIE AND MOSKOWITZ Minnie, rebounding from an affair with a married man, meets Seymour Moskowitz, a long hair who parks cars for a living. The contrasts are vivid in this bittersweet rendition of what transpires between two people who are attracted to each other. Cassovettes emerges as one of the stronger Ameri- can filmmakers with his human and funny film. Genea Rowlands, Seymour Cossel. SUN.: Capra's IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE Tonight at 7:00 and 9:00 AUD. A CINtEMA ickets onsale ANGELL HALL at 6:00 p.m. adm. $1 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage 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); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area) ; $6.00 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- ' South Vietnam's Thieu orders' C 'troops to SAIGON, South Vietnam (A)- President Nguyen Van Thieu said last night he will order South Vietnamese troops to re- capture Phuoc Long Province. The U.S. Air Force chief is due in Saigon today and it seems certain he will discuss South Vietnam's military needs. Phuoc Long Province, on the Cambodian border about 75 miles north of Saigon, fell Tues- day. It was the first one lost to Communist-led forces in near- ly three years. "WE WILL come back to Phuoc Long as we did in An Dien, Rach Bap and Kien Duc," Thieu said in a nationwide radio- television broadcast. These were towns the South Vietnamese lost, then recaptured, but at the cost of heavy casualties. Thieu said he has been meet- ing with South Vietnamese mili- recapture, tary planners and his National Security Council to provide maximum support for the Phuoc Long operation ever since the province fell. He did not say when the counteroffensive would begin. IN OTHER Indochina develop- ments: --Gen. David Jones, the U.S. Air Force chief of staff, sched- uled conferences with South Vietnamese officials in Saigon today. A U.S. Embassy spokes- person said Jones is on a fa- miliarization tour of Southeast Asian countries and this would be his first trip to Saigon since taking over as chief of staff last year. But other sources said he almost certainly would dis- cuss the current North Viet- namese and Viet Cong offensive, the capabilities of the South Vietnamese air force and what province additional military aid might be sought from the United States. -North Vietnam charged that U.S. reconnaissance planes guided South Vietnamese air- craft in "savage" bombing raids on Loc Ninh, Viet Cong head- quarters 75 miles north of Sai- gon, ever since the fall of Phuoc Long. It said it "sternly condemns these criminal acts of war in brazen sabotage of the Paris agreement on Vietnam by the United States and the Thieu junta." Most of South Vietnam's 1.1 million-man armed forces are tied up in fighting or in garri- son duty defending air bases and other strategic .positions. But it is known that there are at least three ranger groups-- about 4,500 men-being held in BURSLEY HALL ENTERPRISES presents WALKING TALL BURSLEY W. CAFE SAT., JAN. 11 9:00 P.M. ADM. $1.00 Must present U-M I.D. for admission 1j IHUGE BOOK SALE &Q Centicore Announces its once a year 30%0 OFF ALL HA LACEN 4 64 0%OFF ALL PAPERBACKS LIMITED TIME LIMITED QUANTITIES EVERY BOOK IN THE STORE IS ON SALE If you had your eye on an art, cook, photography, poetry, craft, travel, Indian, psychology, sociology, philosophy, children's ref- C erence, drama, dance, comic, oriental philosophy, fiction, non- fiction, history, puzzle, mystery, sci-fi book or any other kind of book, and didn't get it for Christmas-you can now buy it at Centicore for less than ever. t.1 1 1 rh 1M f %%. t _"Y .t . . _ ... .. _ 01)f I reserve. ROUND RIVER ADVENTURES Walloon Lake X-Country Weekends $45.00 per person buys: . Lodqinq: Walloon Lake Inn near Petoskey; for couples, singles, families " Two meals( breakfast and lunch) daily . Transportation by Round River Bus to and from the Ski Rentals $10 extra per person ($5 refundable depost) throuqh BIVOUAC of Ann Arbor SESSION A: JANUARY 17-19 SESSION B: FEBRUARY 7-9 SESSION C: FEBRUARY 14-16 SESSION D: FEBRUARY 21-23 Sign up now either by mail or at Bivouac S. State at Nickels Arcade Bus will pick you up at Ann Arbor Huron High at 6 p.m. (call us if you need directions) MAIL.T.O ROUNDRIE--------- MAIL TO: ROUND RIVER ADVENTURES