Tuesday, April 15, 1975 TH E M 1 C; ! ""_71A ' : ^A ! L - Y rage Three i ,. _.!A~ %IL ae he News Briefs From Wire Service Reports Sadat selects aide CAIRO (Reuter)-Egyptian President Anwar Sadat yesterday. chose his 55-year-old interior minister, Mamdouh Salem, as Egypt's new prime minister and promised drastic changes to improve the country's economic situation. But in a much publicized address to the Egyptian people, he rave no details of the steps he would take. Sadat, who is planning a major shake-up of his cabinet this week in consultation with Salem, said, "I do not want a change of faces but a change of attitude and policies." The'new team is expected to be announced tomorrow. Salem, a former policeman and a staunch Sadat loyalist, was brought into the government as interior minister in 1971 following an unsuccessful coup against President Sadat, he has been deputy premier since 1973. Connally denies taking bribe WASHINGTON (MP)-Former Treasury Secretary John- Con- nally denied emphatically and categorically yesterday that he ever took a payoff for helping get an increase in milk price supports. "It did not," said Connally to the question of whether such a bribe ever took place. Connally's chief accuser, Jake Jacobsen, has testified that the three-time Texas governor asked him for money in return for help in getting the price supports hiked in 1971. Asked by defense lawyer Edward Bennett Williams if he had ever asked for money, Connally said: "I did not." The defense opened its case, after being denied a directed, verdict of acquittal, by presenting a stellar cast of character1 witnesses including the Rev. Billy Graham and former First Lady Lady Bird Johnson.. The character witnesses also included two Cabinet members from the Kennedy and Johnson administrations and Rep. Barbara Jordan, a black congresswoman from Houston where Connally now lives. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 'CJs V V,...i. .i:. .. w v vi :"";:.":{7".{;:"'?:::"':"Y:":" .;o.;. Govt. predicts few summer -ob openings for students AP Photo KAREN GALLOWAY and Jerry Paul, Joann e Little's attorneys, appear at the Beaufort County Courthouse in North Carolina yesterday t o argue that nurder charges against Little be, dropped. By The Associated Press Finding a summer job will be' tougher than ever this year for the millions of high school and college students seeking extra money from vacation employ- ment. Government and private an- alysts predict more than five million persons between the ages of 14 and 21 will be look- ing for work this summer. No one knows how many jobs will be available. ESTIMATES of the situation range from "not particularly good" to "real grim." There are opportunities avail-I able, but many of the jobs have strings attached: would-be em- ployes need particular skills; they must be willing to start work early; they should be ready to accept low-paying posi- tions performing manual labor. The always-tight summer job market has been further con- stricted this year by the prob- lems of the economy. HIGH unemployment means adult workers will be competing with youngsters for many jobs; so will retired people who need extra income. At the same time, inflation has boosted the cost of education, meaning more stu- dents will be' trying to add to college funds. Also, recession has caused industry to cut back and get along with fewer em- ployes. The New York City office of the State Employment Services found camp jobs for 150 to 200 youngsters last year. Asked how ~many the agency would be able to place this year, a spokesman said: "I'd hate to guess." The spokesman said many camps have gone out of business because of the recession, al- though he was unable to give specifics. He said students with specialized experience-in the arts and crafts field or sports, for example-will stand the best chance of getting jobs. THE COLORADO State Em- ployment Service said the com- petition for resort and park jobs has been increasing for the past two years and 1975 is even worse. Recruiters who usually contact the office in February or March have not called. Re- sort operators don't know wheth- er the tourists will core this ty I+I il1I year. "It's real grim," a spokesman said, adding that applicants should be ready to accept menial-type jobs like cabin maid or bus boy. Similar work is available in the resorts around Cape Cod, but a Chamber of Commerce spokesman said the competition is tough this year. Retired people on fixed incomes are taking some of the jobs, the spokesman said, adding that students who want work will have to be prepared to start early and continue well into the fall. MANY placement officers are advising students to settle for less than they would have a few years ago. "Job hunting is going to be extremely difficult this summer," said Bradlee Howe, director of the Harvard Student Employment Office. "Kids are going to find jobs, but there's going to be less money and a lot fewer interesting op- portunities." a I Edward Esse of the Roches- ter, N.Y., office of the State Labor Department, is more pes- simistic. "It's going to be pa- thetic for the kids this year," he said. Figuring out how many stu- dents will not be able to find jobs this summer is impossible. ANYONE who is over 16, out of work and looking for a job is counted among the nation's unemployed for the purpose of computing Labor Department statistics. These figures are seasonally adjusted so that the large number of youngsters en- tering the work force each spring and dropping out again in the fall won't distort the over-all picture. Even after the adjustments, however, the unemployment rate among teen-agers is much high- er than that among the general population. Last July, for ex- ample, the over-all unemploy- ment rate was 5.3 per cent; the unemployment rate among teen- agers was 16.2 per cent. Lawy ers for Little move to block trial Tuesday, April 15 Day Calendar WUOM: Wm. Buckley, Perry Bul- lard, & Zolton Ferency debatelocal & nat'l issues Ronald Trowbridge, moderator, ed., Michigan Academi- clan, 9:40 am. Medical Ctr. Commission for Wo- men: 03086 Outpatient, noon. Maternal, Child Health Films: What Are Doing to Our Children?1 M1112 SPH II, noon. Baseball: UM vs. Bowling Green (2), Fisher Field, 2 pm. Women's Tennis: UM vs. Hillsdale, Varsity Court, 3 pm. Environmental Studies: "Popula- tion in the Less Developed Coun- tries: Societal Solutions," 4001 CC Little, 3 pm. Great Lakes Research: Kent Fan- ning, U. S. Fla., "Deep-sea Sedi- ments and the Chemical Stabiltiy of the Oceans," White Aud., Cooley Lab, 4 -pm. Low Energy Colloquium: Mark Slutsky, "Some Interesting Direc- tions in Light-Beaming Spectro- scopy," 2038 Randall Lab, 4 pm. Theoretical Seminar : D. 0. Riska, MSU, "Field Theoretical Calculation of the Nucleon-Nucleon Interae- tion," 1041 Randall Lab, 4 pm. Statistics: Kong-Gee Chong, "On Sufficiency and the Likelihood Principle," 3033 Angel, 4 pm. *English, Ext. Service: Donald Hall, poetry reading, Aud. 3, MLB, 4:10 pm. Residential College: Mary Ed- wards, ,Contemporary Feminist Fic- tion," Greene Lounge, E. Quad, 7 pm. Psychiatry: B. H. Snyder, Johns Hopkins U., "Dgs. Neurotranmit- ters, and Schizophrenia,"' Aud., CPH, 8 pm. THE MICHIGAN DAILY volume LXXXV, No. 156 Tuesday, April 15, 1975 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 I I8 Tuesdaythrougb 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); $8.00 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- local mail (Other states and foreign). "personalized and distinctive" JERRY ERICKSON BILL STEVE DUR1S r4 ad-an iur BARBER SHOP HOURS: Tues.-Sat.: 8-30-5:30 Wed.: 11:00-8:00 806 South State Street Ann Arbor, Michigan Phone: 668-8669 Music School: Wind dpt. student recital -- Recital Hall, 12:30 pm; Philharmonia, Hill Aud., 8 pm; de- gree recitals - Tony Cecere, french horn, Recital Hall, 8 pm; Chas. Brown, bass, Cady Music Rm., Staerns, 8 pm. Art Museum Week: Piano cham- ber music, Art Museum, 8 pm. Summer Placement 3200 SAB, 763-4117 Register in person or by Phone. Camp Tangua, MI. Coed: Inter- view Fri., Apr, 18 1-5; openings ic. specialists in water ski, riding e/w, arts & crafts, doctor-couple accept- able; further details available. S.G.F. Vacation Camp, PA Boys: Interview Mon. Apr. 21, part of morning & afternoon; waterfront dir.; further details available. Camp Ararat, MI Coed: openings, waterfront (21, m/f), cook, gen. counselors 21, riflery, health direc- tor and/or nurse, details available- send resume. Watervliet, MI. Coed: opening, sailing inst. (19 up); details avail- able. Camp Ma-H -Ya-MI Coed; Jew- ish~omin. Ctr. of Toledo: Interview Thurs., April 17, 9-5, openings incl. nurse, maintenance help (m; 18 up), asst. waterfront, sr. counselors (20 up), asst. cook (20 up); regis- ter in person or by phone, 763-4117. MEXICO VACATION Less than $2.50 each per day! Special Student summer rates, May 1 thru Oct. 30. Share completely furnished Pacific Beach front houses. Pool, fish- ing, diving ,etc. Write NOW- AIR MAIL for info. or reser- vations. English spoken. BUNGALOS LAS PALMAS, BARRA De NAVIDAD, JALIS- CO, MEXICO. Phone No. 17. WASHINGTON, N.C. (R) -At- torneys for Joanne Littlea black woman inmate accused of killing a white jailer she said was trying to rape her, argued for dismissal of charges yester- day on grounds that the juryj selection process in Beaufort County excludes blacks. Little's attorneys said at a pretrial hearing that the grand jury which indicted her for first- degree murder was defective because blacks are excluded from serving in this eastern North Carolina county where whites are in the majority. LITTLE. 20, is accused of kill- ing Clarence Alligood, 62, last, Au. 27 while she was an inmate at the Beaufort County Jail. She maintains that Alligood was try- ing to rave her and that she killd him in self-defense. She fled the iail after thej slaving bit turned herself in to authorities eight, days later. Ciidlrights and women's: riehts orgeninations have called attention to Little's case as one in which a woman's right to de- fend herself against attackers may be tested. THE SUPERTOR Court cham- ber was virtually empty yester- day as the pretrial hearing be-s ban, bUt a number of black snectators appeared later in the session, and during midday re- cess some 150 demonstrators gathered on the steps of the courthouse. "One, two, three. Joanne must be set free," they chanted. Larry Little, no relation to Little, who said he is political affairs coordinator for the Win- ston-Salem chapter of the Black Panther party, served as spokes- man for the demonstrators. "We realize that if Joanne Little had been a white woman, she would never have been in- dicted. She would have been given a medal of honor if she had killed a black man," he said. LITTLE was not present for the hearing or the demonstra- tion. Released on bond more than a month ago, she has been in seclusion except for a brief appearance in Winston-Salem at a Black Panther rally on April 3. Defense attorneys Jerry Paul and Karen Galloway have sub- mitted 18 motions to presiding Judge Henry McKinnon, includ- ing one calling for a change of site for the trial. McKinnon met for more than an hour in his chambers yesterday with Paul, Galloway and prosecutor Wil- liam Griffin to establish priori- ties for hearing the motions,. Mc- Kinnon indicated the hearing would take several days. Carolyn Taylor, secretary of the Beaufort County Board of Elections, was the first witness called by Paul, who questioned her about the ratio of blacks and whites among the county's regis- tered voters. The registration lists are used in the selection of names for prospective grand jurors. Taylor testified that Beaufort has 12,695 whites and 2,950 blacks registered to vote. Un- official sources say the white- black ratio for the county's population is approximately 60- 40. ATTENTION! AEP~i KOSHER CO-ED FRAT STILL HAS SPACE FOR 5 MORE WOMEN or MEN "check out AEPi" 1620 CAMBRIDGE Call Sue, Ron or Dave 665-7668 I I I r J PRE-MEDS "Everything you've always wanted to know about medical school admis- sions, but didn't know who to ask" Speaker-DR. ROBERT GREEN Assoc. Dean of the U of M Medical School WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16 -8:00 P.M. at HILLEL --1429 Hill Street this Summer Trinity College/Rome Campus $895: ncludes Tuition, room & board. excursions, + ~all books, art mater als t ,4 June 14 -"July 21 Anthropology * Renaissance Art Paintinaing, and Design Italian Language " Roman Art and Archeology TRINITY COLLEGE/ROME CAMPUS Hartford, Conn. 06106 (203)527-3153 ext. 221 TUES.-THURS. at I Y p.m. WED. at 1-3-5-7-9 p.m. 9th HIT WEEK -From the deep dark re- cesses of the mind of Mel Brooks comes YOUNG PG FRAN KENSTEI N TUES.-THUR. at 7 & 9 p.m. WED. at 1-3-5-7-9 p.m. "Ivory's first American film displays a sheer pre- cocious I o ye for what movies can say' that I haven't se e on since the early New Wave ..- --Rolling Stone "A strange and beautiful film - surreal 'G r e a t Gatsby:'" -San.Franci'sco Examiner "Lyrical direction . . lush and delicate photog- raphy." --The New York Times I [ Looking for an Educational Summer Experience Working with HandicappedChildren? THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN FRESH AIR CAMP Still has Counselor openings Applications are available in Room 2010M School of Education Bldg. or call for informa- tion: 764-6364. Also a Truck Driver Position is Available WED. at 1a-3-5-7-9 p.m. PG Roted R """"""""'" FM I The/VVisual Library Unique paperbound books identical in every way to theirhardcover originals. Handm1aelHou ses " A Guide to the Woodbutcher'sArt Art Boericke/ Barry Shapiro Inspiring graphic and> textual homage to the. people who got it all together-time, energy,. land, and materials-to build something of their very own. "Perhaps the most beauti- S ful architecture book in --Boston Sunday Globe 113 color photographs $5.95 D < *:; A&W Visual Library 95 Madison Avenue New York, N.Y.10016s Probably the most beautiful paperbacks you've ever seen. I SHERRY HOUR LONDON SUMMER PROGRAM April 17 at 5:00 p.m. MARC Lounge (Law Quad N-Cook Room) For information on the Michigan-Sarah Lawrence Summer Program in London, July 4 to August 15. Courses on theatre, novel, and history for Michigan credit. Anyone interested in meeting with faculty members and past students in this program-is invited to attend. If you cannot attend and are in- terested, stop by the: )FFICE OF STUDY ABROAD OR contact: 1413 Mason Hall Prof. N. Steneck Phone: 763-2053 Phone: 769-1760 I TENSION ANXIETY WORKSHOP A workshop teachinq self-control of tension and anxiety such as associated with "nervousness," muscle cramps, excess smokinq, and eatinq, insomnia, tension headaches, fears, phobias, and social uneasiness. Led by Behavior Science Service Staff including a member of the University faculty. PROGRESSIVE RELAXATION TRAINING: a self-contained training package in deep muscle relaxation. ELECTRONIC BIOFEEDBACK: Use of EMG monitor to actually hear and see signals from your muscles. ASSERTION TRAINING: Behavior techniques designed to lend greater control over one's self and the environment. A COMPARISON of these techniques with methods from RATIONAL EMOTIVE THER- APY and TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS. SUNDAY. APRIL 20-1-5 D.m. 0 UNIVERSITE de PARIS-SORBONNE-COURS de CIVILISATION FRANCAISE SORBONNE SUMMER SESSION for FOREIGN TEACHERS and STUDENTS The LS&A Student Government wishes to express its great dissatisaction with recent policy decisions concerning INDEPENDENT STUDY/ DIRECTED READING and EXPERIENTIAL WORK ap- proved by the LS&A curriculum committee. We urge all students and faculty interested in inde- DATES: JULY Requirement: 2 years college French I. ALL LEVELS (Junior to Graduate) Grammar-Phonetics- Composition 111. GRADUATE COURSES Styl istics-Linguistics-Creative Writing-Literature (17th-20th century) -Contemporary French Drama-French Art- Contemporary History 3 - AUGUST 13 Courses: 30 hrs. each (=2 credits) 11. SENIOR COURSES French Literature (17th-20th) French Art (17th-present) French Civilization (revolution- present) IV. GRADUATE SEMINARS on: Contemporary Literature, Politics, History, etc. ("L'univers des choses dans le theatre de I'absurde", "Role de la France dans les relations .....-". ..n n rD n cnrlh U II II I