KAr~r,+~ ~R 1 97~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three I * ~ ~ -~ - K.............................................................................lb S.~................................... I .......~ Explosions hit EDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ... . . .. .. .......=. .- - .# . ..----....-.... Cali. c By The Associated Press Bombers struck the San Fran- cisco bay area yesterday, olack- ing out electric power for 5- 000 customers in San Jose and1 causing an estimated $luO,000 damage to the Berkeley bui'd- ing that houses th FB. Authorities had no suspects 1 in either attack and -lid not know if the explosions were linked. THE RED Guerrilla Family, a group previously unknown tc au- thorities, claimed responsibility for the Berkeley bombhg. ~S audsp Friday, March 28 Music School: Woodwind guin- Summer Placement Day Calendar tet, Rackhiam Aud., 8 pm.; David 3200 SAB, 763-4117 Industrial, Operations Eng.: Frank Parsons, baritone, Recital Hall, 8 Register In person or by phone, A communication said tie a1 tern An OptiEmizato Mdel for pInt'l Folk Dance: Barbour Gym, Interviw Mon.w Mar 31m 9-r open takwscridot" oi Long Range Planning of Electric 8:5 m ing~s: specialists in water skiing, darity with the Symbion.e Lib- Power Generation," 220 W. Eng., 9 Career Planning & Placement sailing,. camp craft dir. (21), gen. eration Army and all mther am. 3200 sAB, 764-7456 counselors (18 plus), bus driver, comrdesunde atack ram WUOM: Margaret Mead, at Conf. Interviewing on campus: Apr. 2, Ofc. mgr (21), ofc. clerks, counse- thcoliial polier o att e Amr- on Aging, Amer. Museum of Natur- 1975-IOsCO Intermed. Soh. Dist. lors for adults (21). th oltca oic f h Ae-al History, NYC, 10 am. for Msw's; April 3, 1975-MI Dept. Camp Dunmore, Vermont Coed: ikan capitalist state." CCS: J. Friedman, "Natural Lan- Soc. serv., Genessee Co. Drug Treat- Interview 'rues. Apr. 1 1-5 & Wed. Meanwilein Lo. Ane~esguage Processing," 2050 Friere, 10 ment Prog.. Det. Memorial Hosp., 9-5; openings: sailing, canoeing,, ea hi, nLs.A eesam. Carroilton Pub. Sch. & City of Det. tennis, archery, tripping & pianist; a man claiming to be a :nemi'er Big Ten Gymnastics Champion- Personnel Dept. for Msw's or rel. age 20 up. of a Cuban group said he plant- ships: Crisler Arena, 10 am, 1L 7, & degree; Apr. 4. 1975-Drug Abuse Camp Maplehurst. MI Coed: in- ed ahomemde bomb that 8:30 pm. Treatment Clinic, Centerline, MI. terview Tues. April 1 1-5; fields e a memaEducational Media Ctr.: schizo- Camp Hightield, Inc., Browndale open only for specialists, check with caused minor damage eatly phrenia: The Shattered Mirror, Intern'l, N.E. MI Comm. Mental oft. yesterday to a building hou.. schorling Aud., sEB, noon. Health Servs. Bd., & Dept. of Fain- Walloon Yacht Club, MI: open- Political science: K. subrahman- ily Serv. Agency of St. Clair Co. ing for sailing instructor & exp. ing the Panama G~vernment yan, dir. Inst. for strategic Studies for Msw's. arranging races; details available. Tourist Bureau. India, "Proliferation and the In- Newspaier Reporting Fellowship- Jewish Community Council, Flint dian Nuclear Explosion," E, Cont. one in mnetro government reporting; MI: opening Day Camp director Rm., Rackham, 3-4:30 pm., one in business reporting; open to (21): Must have admin. & pro- ton, volleyball, tennis, jogging, $1500 stipend. appl. deadline April able. Waterman, Barbour Gyms, 7:30-10:30 10; write Personnel Director,Minn, Bedford Valley Country Glub, pm. Star & Tribune Co., 425 Portland .Battle Creek, MI: openings waitress- PTP: GordOne's No Place to Be Ave., Mlnn MN 55415 es & bartenders; good salary. TONIGHT AT 8 PM "A JOY! NEIL SIMON'S BEST PLAY YET." - Cdive Barnes, N.Y. Times EDDIE ARNY BRACKEN FREEMAN NEW COMEDY Professional Theatre Proqram MARCH 28-30, 1975 POWE R CENTER Evea 8 -~. Advance ticket sales & in- formation: PTP ticket office; Mendelssohn lobby, (313) 764-0450. Tic k e ts also available at Hudson's Briar. wood. o sucessr kig . AP Photo Instant destruction Scores of buildings in the Texas panhandle town of Lefors were destroyed by a tornado that swept throughi the town yesterday. Over 40 people were injured and a three-year-old girl was killed when the funnel struck. RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) - Thousands of Saudis paid hom- age yesterday to King Khaled, the new ruler of this oil-rich de- sert nation, underscoring the smooth transition of power that followed the assassination of King Faisal. Vice President Nelson Rocke- feller also met with Khaled and Crown Prince Fahd and said they assured him that the Saudi government would continue its, efforts to expand cooperation with the United States. ROCKEFELLER, here to pay respects to Faisal, a friend of the American government who was assassinated on Tuesday, also met with Egyptian Presi- "dent Anwar Sadat for 75 min- utes and said Sadat expressed dedication to finding a 'rapld so- lution to the Middle East prob- lem. LARGEST EVER: U.S. reports huge Feb. trade surplus ii ..-.-.-...-.----.........-...-......- ..-..-.....-.............-.-...--..-~-...---..--- - ----- ~ 'I WASHINGTON (A') - A sharp drop in oil imports left the na- tion's trade accounts with the biggest mtonthly surplus on re- cord in February, the govern- ment reported yesterday. The Commerce Department figures' showed that total im- ports slipped 18.2 per cent, ove'r- coming by a wide margin a 6.6 per cent drop in exports. THE RESULT was a $917 million trade surplus. The fig- ure marked a shairp reversal in January's $210.5 milli'rn de- ficit. January's sharp rise in oil imports to a record 285 mnillion bares atibtd timoters' eagenes to b eat ateb r1 in- crease in import tariffs by $1 a barrel, was the primary factor in that deficit. The drop in February imports to 156 million barrels was an apparent response to the build- of 1965. By the old method, imports were computed on the basis of their declared customs value. The new method bases tha com- putation on a so-called trans- action value. THE MIChIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXV, No. 141 - Friday, March 28, 1975 is edited and managed by students I at the University of Michigan. News paiea A4nn Arbr Michigan48106 Published d a I I y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor. Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: .$l0 by carrIer (campus area); $11 local mal (Michigan and Ohio); $12 nn-local mail (Other states and sumnmer session published 'rues- Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.00 local mal (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- local mall (other states and foreign). day through Saturday morning. _ I I, S' the ENSAN Order one from our friendly Michiganension persons. Call Us ati 764-0561 mon's The Sunshine Boys, Power, Ivr Mime: "Good Friday Per- formance," E. Lounge, Bursley, 8 Art History: Lecture/demonstra- tion, "Eighteenth Century Dance," Baroque Dance Ensemble, Bes. Coll.. Aud., 8 pm. $2.50$4 Rounder Record's H ighwoods Strigband double fiddles, guitar, banjo, bass "explosive energy" -N.Y. Times Thank God it's Friday Today and every Frdday 12-5 P.M. WHILE THEY LAST Ski Movies every Mon. & Tues. Nites Live Entertainment Every Sunday night 8-11 P.M. NO COVE 310 MAYNARD A P~o W*SE1Ib ~pWI TluM~w~W~D~A up of stocks in January. ~ p ***e* ** THE TRADE balance s u r- f g j plus was some of the best news ~ Th r -I in months for tbe beleaguered : difference! * U..dollar, which had b e e n PREPARE FOR: eroding steadily in foreign mar- . Over 35 years kets. Speculation that trade per- : M CAT ofexprinc formance figures would show * and success jmprovement yesterday lx a d : DAT .:. : pushed the dollar up on some * ml lse international markets Wednes- @ ~ I volumious home 0 day. * g!DC stuymate'.rIa's : A trade surplus means more UEi. 0 money is being spent on the: ITS ouse taae: 0 nation's domestic goods and thus uo cnsanl upae means less money is being sip- * NCAT Taefcliisfr : honed out of its recession-plag- 0 reviews of class * ued economy overseas. 0 PAT lssandoruse: Despite February's improve- . LE materials ment, the balance for the first : L X two months of the year s t i11e Make-ups for lags behind the same period last : ECFMG misdlsos - year when the surplus was e9 ' $855.1 million. ATL ME DO * THE NATION concluded last THOUSANDS HAVE year with its second worst trade RAISED THEIR SCORES * deficit on record and a worse * write or caii deficit is expected by the end : (313) 354-0085 0 of this year. * 21711 W. Ten Mile Rd. The February surplus was * Southfield, Mi. 48015 : computed on a new basis l1il- * tiated last month. Comnar able 0 figures go back for one year 1 But Commerce said even f gur- * ing the surplus on its old bas s, *,EDUCATIONAL CENTER * ofth centry, the $8s79.3 million total surpasses the previous '- -.-- high of $878 million in M'irch Branches In Maor U s Oites or corme to 420 Maynard. IL Joi the third. big We are endinq our unique, no lonqer economically feas- 'new'-book discount. We don',t enjoy doinq this, so we're Iextendinq it throuqh March U31st to qive customers a may wnta 5 % dison / from 's; itanate"ta o better d e a I than anyone else's - and of course we* will match any other store's chane toth Ttose "wh~o ae n supported us, atnd to DAVID & STAFF Imagine an order of 22,000 priests and brothers in , 73 countries around the world. (That's a pretty big family.) But that's what the Salesians of St. John Bosco are all about - a large family , of community-minded men.. dedicated to the service of' youth. (And no one gets lost.) In Italy in the 1800's a chance meeting between a poor priest and a street urchin served to create a movement of such success that it is still growing today. Don Bosco became the priest who brought youth back from the streets - and back to God. make useful ctizens of the world. He crowded out evila whd reason, religion and kindness in a (what was then unheard of) The ideals of St. John Bosco are still with us today. His work goes on in boys clubs, technical and academic schools, guidance centers, summer camps and missions. And his very human approach is very evident in the family spirit of the Salesians. This is the way he wanted it. This is the way it is. The Salesian experience isn't learned - it's lived. IFor more information about Salesian Priests and SBrothers, mail this coupon to: FahrJsp afi ...Room A- 2191 -- OF ST. JOHN BOscO Box 639, New Rochelle, N.Y. 10802 Probably not..All things considered you do what you do pretty doggone well. After all, no one has taken your job. Adyour eaigregulal. But.-.- But have you ever considered what doing your job just a little better might mean? Money. Cold hard coinof the realm. If each of us cared just a smidge more about what we do for a living, we could actually turn that inflationary spiral around. Better products, better service and better management would mean savings for all of us. Savings of much of the cash and frayed nerves it's costing us now for repairs and inefficiency. Point two..By taking more pride in our work we'll more than likely see America regaining its strength in the competitive world trade arena. When the balance of payments swings our way again we'll all be better off economically. So you see-the only person who can really say that we're only at the do for oiur customers. Onlys 4 days left! Ph _______ __ U I U I I MR PZZZ VALUABLE COUPON g