Tuesday, September 12,1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three TuesaySeptmbe 12 197 TH MICIGA DALY Pge hre THE BLIND PIG A WINE, CHEESE, and BLUES CAFE Coco Taylor & The Boogey Brothers Tuesday & Wednesday Foul-up in loan program Cover $1.00 769-1849 Dial 662-6264 Corner State & Liberty Sts. Every Wed. is Bargain Day Adults 75c 1-5 p.m. Wed. Open Daily 12:45 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. delays tuiion payments By The Associated Press ground rules for those loans and outstanding at the end of A foul-up in the federal guar- led to what one college financial 1971. antee loan program has left thou- aid officer called "the infamous "Frankly, we came to a sands of college students return- interlude." stop in processing loans," ing to campuses across the coun- Tuition loans were previously Carol Wennerdahl, director' o try this month without money to pay tuition.t tgranted to any student whose ad- student loan program in Ill Some students may be turned justed family income was less "The number of loans we away, others will have to come up than $15,000. The new law re- through was pathetically low+ with the money from other sourc- quired schools to confirm the pared to previous years. es, but most schools have hastily "demonstrated financial need" of The Office of Education arranged deferred payment plans all students seeking the low-cost sponded with a proposal tha for students whose loans have loans, new rules be dropped until M been delayed. Regulations implementing the 1 of next year and the old The Office of Education of the new law were not published by the reinstated. A joint resolution Department of Health, Education Office of Education until July 18, passed by Congress in three and Welfare for five years has and immediately created confu- and signed by the Presiden operated a program under which sion for students, schools and lend- Aug. 19. it insured tuition loans from banks ing institutions. At the end of Though colleges and to individual students. The Edu- July, the number of loans granted could now scrap the compli cation Act Amendment that be- under the new regulations was "actual need" requirement came law June 21 changed the less than 10 per cent the number delay created a tremendous1 July "A BRASH, BRAWLING, JOY OF A MOYE" -National Observer dead said of the inois. got: com- * re- at the March rules n was days nt on banks cated , the back- s + +I, .sGoing down his own road... Tell 'em Junior sent you" Directed by SAM PECKINPAH ANN ARBOR. FREE UNIVERSITY STEERING COMMITTEE Anyone interested in working or teaching at Free U. U.S. veto halts UN censure of Israel From Wire Service Reports I The United States vetoed Sun- day a call on Israel to stop re- prisal raids in the Middle East. The vote was the second U. S. veto in Security Council history. Ambassador George Bush said he vetoed the move because it did not carry a simultaneous UN con- demnation of terrorism such as, the Arab massacre of Israeli ath- letes. s The fighters patrolled the sky for two hours but found nothing, and the final ceremonies of the tragedy- marred Olympics came off without interruption. Intensified security was put into effect at West German airports over the weekend as Olympic guests by the thousands were streaming out of the country at the windup of the games. Sixty Arabs who tried to leave Munich Sunday were detained ov- ernight for further security checks and another 57 Arab passengers who tried to land at Munich were refused entry. 'IMore than 500 departing Arab log of loan applications. At the end of August, 25,700 loans to- taling $28.5 million had been ap- proved. At the end of August last year, more than 99,000 loans amounting to $113 million had been granted. "T h e emergency legislation ;eased the crunch considerably, but there are widespread delays in getting applications processed," said Dick Tombaugh, executive di- rector of the National Association of Student Financial Aid Adminis- trators. "The slowdown is fan- tastic. It will be October or No- vember before a lot of students get their money." Most colleges and universities have responded by allowing stu- dents to register and take courses without paying tuition until their loans come through. This will cost the schools money - the interest they would have received by col- lecting the tuition money and banking it. AP Photo $$$0 for McGovern Eleanor McGovern accepts a donation from Marion Kernan, right, in Washington yesterday. Kernan said her son, Lt. Joseph Kernan, a prisoner of war in North Vietnam, wrote asking her to contribute to McGovern's campaign fund. 3 PER CENT MARGIN: Survey shows Griffin, Kelley runnin close i Senate race Contact: SHARON-763-7 107 MEETING: 1:15 p.m. WED., SEPT. 13 UAC offices MICH. UNION -! INTERESTED IN CHANGE ? Join THE PROJECT COMMUNITY 2210 SAB - 763-3548 MASS MEETING WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, Modern Language Bldg. Room 1 -7:00 P.M. - PROJECTS '72--73 - ous checkso Sunday and yesterday. ale t l simply won't be Control measures also were in force at other West German Air- payment, said William Simmons ports, including Frankfurt, the Jr., director of the division of in- .largest in central Europe. sured loans in the Office of Edu- ::.. cation. A47ya-l Arab was teor arily held because his name was In some cases, he reported, stu- said to be the same as one ap- dents are being asked to sign . pearing on a piece of paper found short-term promisory notes or their in the pocket of one of five dead parents requested to take out regu- terrorists. They were killed last lar bank loans. Tuesday in a shootout following the attack on the Olympic Village. p The death toll included 11 Israelis H ouse un t C and a Munich policeman. The suspect was released after! police said they determined he DOD budoet was not linked to the terrorists. West German and Belgian po- lice were believed in contact about WASHINGTON RP) - Rejecting the shooting Sunday of an Israeli a four-month money cutoff dead- mbsBush diplomat in Brussels in an effort line to Indochina war operations, to determine whether it was re- I the House Appropriations Com- As he cast his vote Bush said lated to last Tuesday's Arab ter- mittee approved a $74.6-billion de- "We seek for a world where ath- rorist attack on the Israeli Olym- fense bill yesterday, the biggest pic team..- defense bill since World War II. C I C i In a copyrighted story the News said that its first poll of the 1972 Michigon U.S. Senate campaign in- dicated only a three per cent From Wire Service Reports Republican Sen. Robert Griffin and his Democratic challenger Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley are neck and neck in their cam- paign for the November election, according to a Detroit News poll published yesterday. okays largest since WW II bbo said. But he made no pre- dicition of victory. His amendment, identical to the one being pressed by Sen. Ed- ward Brooke (R-Mass.), would cut off all money for the Indo- hiharnfnt fr w ithd raw- margin between Griffin and Kel- would break the tie in my favor," ley. Kelley added. According to the News, the pollI The poll, conducted between showed a 42 per cent of a sam- Aug. 28 and Sept. 1 by Market pling of 800 voters surveyed favor- Opinion Research, asked the ques- ed Griffin while 39 per cent pre- tion: "If you had to decide today, ferred Kelley. how would you vote .. . , However, an expected samplingC ly mean that either candidate's cording to the News, showed that standing in the poll could be that Nixon "shows a gain in Michigan many points higher - or lower -. from a (news) poll of one year than the voters' responses, the ago." News said. This claim was disputed by Griffin issued a statement from Michigan McGovern-Shriver Cam- his Washington office responding paign Chairman Carl Wagner, to the poll in which he said, I'm who said Sunday, "Sen. McGovern encouraged - the movement is in has cut' President Nixon's lead in the right direction - but I'm also half in the last three weeks." realistic. We won't be satisfied Wagner cited the resuls of a until we can win the poll that real- W.Y. ied-te results o ly conts n No. 7.N.Y. Times-Time Magazine poll "In this campaign the real issue done by Daniel Yankelovich, Inc., 'is h cabetterpand threa f- between July 24 and Aug 11 in is who can better and more effec- several states which showed Nixon tively serve Michigan during the getting 57 per cent of the Mich- second four years of the, Nixon ignvtopre oM~vr' administration. igan vote compared to McGovern's adm~straion.25 per cent. "With experience, seniority and 25 pe cent. Senate leadership working for In the more recent News poll, them now, I'm confident the peo- Nixon received 54 per cent and ple will not want to start all over McGovern was picked by 38 per with a rookie," the statement cent of the sample. read tread."t"Nixon lost ground rather than Kelley; contacted yesterday at ie"sadWgr.Nxo' his Lansing office, reacted enthu- gained," said Wagner. "Nixon's siastically: decline is especially significant, "I'm delighted. Any time an in- since it comes during the time he cumbent U.S. Senator is being might have been expected to gain challenged head-to-head at this popularity because of the Repub- stage of the game, it means his lican National Convention occur- challenger is doing very well in- deed. ring at the start of his campaign." It's clear this is one of the rea- sons Senator Griffin is afraid to The Michigan Daily, edited and man- debate me, since such a debate Iagedbgastudents at the University od Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second " Innovative Tutorial Experience. * Child Care Program. * Halfway House -- Ypsilanti State Hospital Tutoring. * Project Community Course. " Solstis Free School. * Willow Run Counseling Project. " Maxey Boys Training School. ' Washtenaw Community College Tutoring " Income Tax Assistance. " Washtenaw County Jail. " Matrix (Resource Center). letes need not fear assassins and passengers on planes need not fear hijackings." Olympic officials reported a hoaxer threatened to bomb closing ceremonies of the Olympic Games last night and two fighter planes streaked aloft after an off-course airliner appeared on radar screens to be headed in the direction of the stadium. The Israeli diplomat was iden- tified as Zadok Ophir, 42. He was seriously wounded by a man be- lieved to be an Arab. The gunman had lured him to a cafe with the promise of disclosing information on a planned attack against the embassy. Jerusalem officials said the Brussels attack indicated Pales- tinian commandos had decided "on a wave of terror" against Is- raelis in Europe. i i f 1 I E 1 It includes 1.8 billion extra for aninfor monts irurn fo intensified war operations and al, in four months in return for is $1.8 billion larger than t h e release of American prisoners. funding for the last fiscal year The committee rejected a 11 fundifoteasinsca4.3lle. $297 million for a Saftguard anti- The bl rcontains$4. ire on missile site to proatect Washing- lessNixo n including a $450-million ton, D.C. It scrubbed military cut of his request for extra war plans to relieve GIs of KP duty, cute. hcalling such chores wholesome money. and character building." The bill is scheduled for House action Thursday, and Rep. Jos- It also cut back Air Force eph Addabbo (D.-N.Y.), whose programs for the swing-wing F 5 antiwar amendment was reject- Jetfighter and for the t h r e e ed by the committee, said he will Boeing 747 command posts from take the fight to the House floor, which the President would oper- "We never give up hope," Adda- ate in a nuclear crisis. E i c i SHOP THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. UNTIL 9:00 P.M. Sleepwear Sale $6 and $8 Originally $9 to $13 Wide-owake savings in sleepwear softies. The long and the short of it in ocetote/buttersoft -brushed nylon. Both gowns in a variety of delicate pastels. P,S,M,L sizes. Short gowns. $6 long styles. $8 LINGERIE - STREET FLOOR .... _ ..... a..... ...Y .. r " 7 I Give The Bear a break You're the only one who can. Because all Smokey can do is ask you to help prevent forest fires. He can't break your matches. Or douse your campfires. Or snuff out your cigarets. Only you can. So, please, lend Smokey a hand. And maybe while you're at it, lend him your voice too: tell people to give the bear a break. He deserves it. So does America.4 Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT Dir. INGMAR BERGMAN (1955). S w e d ish, sub- titles. "Boudoir f a r c e becomes lyric poetry." -Pauline Kael 0 THURSDAY AMERICAN UNDERGROUND I I RETROSPECTIVE PROGRAM Rhythmus 21 and 23, Hans Richter, Le Sang d'un Poete, Jean Cocteau, Gr- nr l-o DR na C inir lr f'/':! '1F:3. yi.f; ; ": ' : ' rwfY' :3$; f:;f ?7:y.Yt'-R .( d ?f s',:%.e:z%:>:"'": "'+ i ii ll Ydi'eel's, r;' r!:% fl;':"'.{:; :......,.._..... i:' '<--- r'r Y VIIINMEMENIMENEEM I I I I