_ Ir"Y Il irfrfIII I I I II I II/ Ar IrrYft }f tF YU SEE tN&YS WnPE C&L Z5DNfLY Consumer Action Center Moves The Washtenaw County Consumer Action Center has moved from its old office in the County Building to a building at Fourth Avenue and Catherine. Director John Knapp said the move was made to give the Center more office space and because the district court administrator took over the old office space in the County Building. The center han- dles individual complaints and tries to mediate disputes as well as handling criminal actions. It also doubles as a better business bureau, since no such agency exists in the Ann Arbor area. Knapp says he tries to promote consumer awareness through lectures, written media presentations and circulating literature. The dentet employs 15 University students every semester through Project Outreach. f Happenings . . The Mad Hatter's Tea Party (HTP) is sponsoring an exhibition and sale of fine art prints for the benefit of the Child Care Action Center of the School of Education. The sale will take place in the Fishbowl and the Union Lobby'from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.... Dr. Ralph Wells of Crucible Steel will. speak on "Rare Earths: Sources and Industrial Applica- tions" at 11 a.m. in Room 3201 of East Engineering ... Robert Lackey of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute will speak on the "Future Direc- tions in Fisheries Research and Management-Competition for the Public Dollar" at 4 p.m. in room 1528 of C. C. Little. .. Dr. Bruce Runnegan of the University of New England, Australia will be speaking on "Bio-Geography and the Permian World at 4 p.m. in ' Room 1042 of East Engineering (refreshments will be served) . PIRGIM and the Ann Arbor Tenants Union will be registering voters from now until the end of the term. Interested persons can stop by the office on the fourth floor on the Union between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. i Caskets pile up in the Vietnamese village of Tam Lap, filled with the bodies of villagers slain in a Cambodian attack. Vietnam and Cambodia have been conduc- THAI SOURCES DENY REPOR TS: Cambodia claims border vietor BANGKOK, Thailand (AP)-Cam- B claimed yesterday to have dealt militarily superior Vietnamese Union politically and the Cambodians interesting primarily as the first case o Vietnam a defeat in the border war probably have gone as far into Cam- are supported politically and perhaps a proxy war between China and th& between the two Communist neighbors bodia as they intend to and now are militarily by the Chinese. I find it very Soviet Union." betwee the.t m n, consolidating their gains. Cambodia but Thai intelligence sources said Viet- h k 1ambdia has acknowledged setbacks but claims ' 0 Bells for Olga namese troops were entrenched well inside Cambodia. Much of the new fighting in the con- flict appeared to consist of propaganda barrages via state radio. PRESIDENT CARTER'S security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinsli, mean- while, described the conflict as a 'proxy war' between the Soviet Union and China, with the Soviets backing Vietnam and China backing Cambodia. The official Soviet news agency Tass brushed off the suggestion yesterday and said the statement demonstrates a Western desire "to see that Soviet- Chinese relations remain spoiled.. . In the propaganda warfare, Cam- bodian radio accused Vietnam of waging an invasion aimed at over- throwing the Cambodian leadership. HANOI'S OFFICIAL Voice of Viet- nam attacked the charge as "brazen slanderous allegations" and said the fighting was over Cambodian incur- sions into Vietnamese territory. The Vietnamese rejected as "fabricated" Cambodian claims to have retaken the Parrot's Beak area of Cambodia, which juts into southern Vietnam. The Thai sources said Vietnam may have had minor,'losses in the Ha Tien area, at the southern tip of the border, and around the Cambodian town of Snoul about 13 miles from the frontier. They regard Cambodian claims of "great historic victories" as grossly exaggerated. THE THAI SOURCES say the they are temporary. Radio Phnom broadcast a letter at- tributed to former Cambodian head of state Prince Norodom Sihanouk that blasted the Vietnamese as "aggressor forces" and "lackeys." Sihanouk, said by some observers to be a virtual prisoner of the radical Communist Phnom Penh regime, has emerged briefly in recent days. as a critic of Vietnam. WHILE IN EXILE in China, he headed a government that opposed Lon Nol's U.S.-backed regime. But he was not included by the Communists in the government after their victory in April 1975. Brzezinsli, in a CBS television inter- view Sunday, said, "The Vietnamese are clearly supported by the Soviet " "SUPER QUALITY" SXEROX 9200 Copes Specialists For Dissertations and Resumes COLOR COPIES Faculty: We Will Do Course Packs and Other Material b DOLLAR BILL COPYING 6 1 CHURCH CALL Above Blue Frogg ANN ARBOR 665-9200 EXPIRES 1/15 WE COPY EVERYTHING BUT DOLLAR BILLS e FORMER Soviet Olympic star Olga Korbut tied the knot Sunday in Minsk-the matrimonial knot, that is. In the white wedding dress she pcj rsed at J.C. Penny's during her U.S. tour this summer, little Olga narried Leonid Bortkevich, a singer with the Soviet group. "Pesniary." Happy gymnastics, kids. On the outside .. . It seems our present climate is fit for neither lnan nor beast. (The Daily has received unconfirmed reports that polar bears have been seen migrating south). Well, things are getting worse, because on the outside tomorrow it is going to be C-0-L-D! The mercury will reach a high of 12 degrees and a low of -3. The wind chill index is hovering around -25 to -30 degrees. Tomorrow's forecast calls for partly cloudy skies and strong winds. Hold on to your hats. I Pancake Supperw EVER YTUESDAYNIH /I 5 8pm THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVIII, No.82 Tuesday, January 10, 1978 is edited and managed by students at the Univers of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second cis postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 4811 Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morn during the University year at 420 Maynard Stre Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rat $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Sat day morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arb $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. University of Michigan Gilbert & Sullivan Sciefy i MASS MEETING for the April 12-15th production of "THE GONDOLIERS" 2ty I ass I SUNDAY, JANUARY 15, 1978 I ing ;8:00 p.m. MICHIGAN UNION et, *I es: Sign up for both cost & orchestra auditions by: a Persons interested in technical crew, costumes, lights, pro- a or; I grams and publicity 'are invited to attend. Refreshments provided. iili mmi mm mm mm ssmmssmmWmmmssmmssmmsmmlisimm Who are, you telling us how { to run our business? It takes a lot of confidence to come fresh out of school and begin telling us how to do things. On the other hand, it takes an un- usual company to provide the kind of ' environment where that can happen, but that is exactly the environment you'll find at Scott Paper. We constantly search for people who have the ability to respond to chal- lenge and think for themselves,, those with the initiative and desire to seek al- ternatives, the skill and courage to con- vinde others that there are better ways and who aren't afraid to express their ideas. ~Htcakes andSausage.', Available oniy at 337 Maynard St. .:. Seconds on .> ;.. hot cake s are free! 44, ' 62 o "AI " . Yt~l' ,r.y~6" ]p4 n ''4! ". n I.