The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 15, 1977-page Mo. flood toll at 20; ICU SEE If w5 HAPEN CALWDGNLY Presidents are always the last to know As John Kennedy said when a U.S. pilot intruded upon Soviet air space during the Cuban missile crisis, "There's always some dumb son of a bitch who doesn't get the word." In this case, it was one of Kennedy's successors, the one who's in the White House now. Witness President Carter's statement to reporters last Saturday that he would hold a news conference this week at which he would respond to all questions about his embattled budget chief, Bert Lance. What the President apparently didn't know at the time was that his senior ad- visers already had discussed the possibility of a news conference and decided it would be best to postpone it until after Lance testified before the Senate Government Affairs Committee later in the week. When Carter finally got the word, he said that was fine with him. Artificial Intelligence When the deluge has come and gone, when historians of the 30th century are trying to reconstruct the world as it, was a millenium before, and when the chapter on education is written, it may include a footnote on what the University of Michigan was like during the 1970s. And if the historians are thorough, they will include the course description of CCS 385, CCS 565, and Psych 747 - it's all one course - ,and they will roll their eyes in wonder. Without doubt, a more com- plicated course description has never been written. Students who came into the class last week, expecting either a CCS (computer and communication science) course or a psychology course, got an as- tounding combination of both. A memo instructed them to do some portion of the following: ' "For the first four weeks, through Oct. 5, Mondays 2-3 are for CCS .565 and Psych 747; Mondays 3-4 and Wednesdays 2-4 are for LISP, which may be taken either as CCS 385, the LISP. minicourse, or as the fourth credit of Psych 747 (or in cases of extreme need, as both). These - LISP sessions may be audited by anyone who already knows LSIP but ;-wants to reviewsi "Psychology students take 747. (a) If you already know LISP, sign up for three credits, and unless you want a LISP review, attend only y the M 2-3 session until Oct. 9. (b) If you don't know.LISP, sign up for four credits, and attend M, W 2-4 throughout. (If your computing is weak or nonexistent, expect to be putting in extra time ... If you want extra credit for the extra work, add to four credits of 747 one credit of CCS 385, or one credit of individual work. Students in 747 will have the option of additional sessions with Hardzinski, Reitman, or both, to ex- plore more deeply the psychological implications of LISP represen- tations and programmed models ... Students who want the CCS course should take 565, for three credits. Note that CCS 565 assumes a working knowledge of LISP. If you know LISP, and don't need review, you need attend only M 2-3 until Oct. 9. If you don't know LISP, take CCS 385, the LISP minicourse, in addition to CCS 565, and attend M, W 2-4 throughout the trimester. LISP, friends; is a computer language. r If you care to attend, don't bother to consult the Time Schedule, as the location has been changed no fewer than four times. In addition td the excerpted concerns of the course, students will learn an ancient orien- tal- board game which is played on several different levels of con- centration and stresses stratety and aesthetics. The course name? What could be more fitting than "Artificial Intelligence"? I. - begin at 8 this morning when $alat-Al-Eid will be held at the In- ternational Muslim House, 407 Ingalls ... a seminar on Michigan En- ergy Supplies and Prospects can be heard at 11 a.m. in Room 3513, East Engineering. James Woodruff of the Michigan Public Service Commission will be speaking ... for all you hackers who want to quit hacking, the Michigan Lung Association is conducting a Smoking, .,Withdrawal Clinic at 7 p.m. in Room 5 of the Health Service on Fletch- er Street ... The University Activities Center (UAC) will hold it annual mass meeting at 7 p.m. in the Pendelton Arts Center of the Union. They're looking for students interested in working on various UAC committees ... likewise, a mass meeting will take place tonight at 7 for the Undergraduate Political Science Association, 6th floor, Mason Hall ... the Starving Players open tonight with "The Zoo Story," by Edward Albee, at the Halfway Inn in East Quad. The play runs through the 24th, admission is 50 cents. On the outside The height of mediocrity, if our forecaster is to be trusted. In- creasing cloudiness during the day today, with a high of 76 degrees. There's a good chance of showers tomorrow and into Friday morn- ing. The low will dip to 50. Daily Official Bulletin ........1.....fw"ff. .Y YYYiwwillw.. ~,w ~~, _.._1 w __. .. _ _! ~ . : .. e Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication ences, physical, biological sciences and engineering. f the University of Michigan. Notices should be sent Requests for $3,000 or less will be considered ap- in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, propriate. Grants may cover equipment, supplies, fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by research assistance, field trips. Phoenix Project will .m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items ap- not pay salary of principal investigator, nor publica- ar only once. Student organization notices are not tion expenses. ;acepted for publication. For more information, Only projects rated "excellent" or "very good" by pone 7644270. Divisional Review Boards likely to be considered for I~flUndina Urinri fnriawardI will bha ivii )U. Lnw $30 millio KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Missouri Gov. Joseph Teasdale esti- mated damages from the Kansas City flood at $30 million yeaterday and said, "From what I can see, it's a blessing that only 19 people died." Even as he spoke, police found another body - the 20th - on the southeast side of the city - and they worried about others listed as miss- ing. I MARK RUDD, a fugitive member of the radical Weather Un- derground since 1970, appeared yesterday at the Manhattan district attorney's office to surrender on charges stemming from anti-war demonstrations in the 1960s. INVOL VED IN COL UMBIA TAKEOVERS: Fugitive Rudd gives up THE COUNT OF persons missing in the flood dwindled yesterday as some previously thought missing were accounted for. At least four persons were believed to be missing in flood-related incidents. Nineteen bodies were found in the Kansas City area itself, another in the flooded area of Leavenworth, Kan., 35 miles to the west. Teasdale said he would ask President Carter for federal disaster assistance, mak- ing the area eligible for low-cost loans and outright grants. "I believe the President will, in my judgment, react quickly to our request," the governor said. "Our main qualification is because of the number of people that are home- less." CITY AND county officials esti- mated that 1,200 persons were still homeless because of the rampaging waters along Brush Creek and the Blue River. The flash flood was the result of 12 inches of rain in a 24-hour period Monday. The water surged into Brush Creek, overflowed its banks ndamage along the fancy Country Club Plazal shopping center, and moved into the Blue - wreaking havoc all the way. The body found yesterday was near Brush Creek, about two miles dowr stream from the Plaza, 35 blocks south of the downtown area. Teas- dale saidhe would ask the disaster designation for five Missouri. Couri- ties near the Kansas border: Jac son, Clay, Platte, Ray and Lafayett. IN THE KANSAS suburbs of tie metropolitan area there also was extensive flood damage, but'Gov. '9. Bennett said it will take time to assess the damage. "It will run into millions aqd millions of dollars," he said. City commissioners issued an emergency declaration yesterday, permitting use of $225,000 in community develop ment funds to help low- and modef- ate-income residents of the flood stricken Kansas City,. Kan., area For farmers, too, jhe flood meanr trouble. "SOME INDIVIDUALS probab will be knocked clear to their knees,4' said Raymond Ritehey, acting Mi$. souri state director of the feder Agricultural Stabilization and Col - servation Service. ' RUDRANANDA ASHRAM is offering techniques in begin ning meditation and kundoline yoga. Mondy-Wdnyesday 5 P.M. 640 Oxford w 993'-43 :.z": . NEW YORK (AP) - Mark Rudd,t silent in custody as he was elusive during a seven-year flight from the law, ended his fugitive years yester- day without saying a word in public about the radical Weather Under- ground.1 Rudd, 30, would not say where he has been or what he has been doing or why he was giving himself up. He' smiled as he pushed his way pastI reporters to surrender at the offices of the Manhattan district attorney. "HE IS not making any statements to the courts, to any government agents, to the press or to anyone else," said his attorney, Gerald Lefcourt. Rudd - a self-proclaimed revolu- tionary who wa quoted in 1969 as saying, "Don't be timid about telling people we're Communists. Don't deny it. Be proud of it." - had been a fugitive since 1970, when he jumped bail and became the object of an intense FBI search. He arrived for his surrender wearing a suede sports coat and an open-collared shirt. He was clean- - shaven. RUDD'S#DRE&SS and appearance provided a close resemblance to his picture on FBI posters, which were Kissinger, Rusk support Panama Canal treaty WASHINGTON (AP) - Former Secretaries of State Henry Kissinger and Dean Rusk said yesterday that the new Panama Canal treaty would give the United States more author- ity to keep the waterway open than the 74-year-old agreement under which the canal was built. FIRMLY SUPPORTING the treaty signed by President Carter last week, Kissinger and Rusk sought to answer critics who say the Panaman- ians might seize early control, close the canal or exclude the United States or other nations from using it. The treaty, which faces a ratifica- tion vote in the Senate early next year, provides for the United States to gradually relinquish control until the year 2000, when the waterway would be turned over to Panama. still displayed in post offices across the country as his planned surrender was announced Tuesday. However; Rudd wore glasses as he entered the district attorney's office and had none on in the poster pictures. Officials said Rudd Would be charged with bail jumping and a variety of misdemeanors in connec- tion with the student takeover of buildings at Columbia University in 1968. TODAY, Rudd is expected to present himself to Cook County authorities in Chicago where he faces charges stemming from a 1969 dem- onstration known as the "Days of Rage." Since he disappeared in 1970, Rudd has reportedly not returned to his family's home in Maplewood, N.J., and has not seen his parents. They were not at the courthouse for Rudd's surrender, a court official said. Rudd appeared calm as he entered the courthouse with Lefcourt, telling one reporter who fired a volley of questions, "Nice weather." A REPORTER asked, "Mark, ho about some of that old thunder'you had at Columbia?" Rudd smiled but said nothing. The Weather Underground was created in 1969 from remnants of Stu- dents for a Democratic Society (SDS) and Rudd was one of the original leaders. It was not known if he remained a leader of the group in recent years. U.. 0, b iYDEMO~U ~2j~j~ Thursday, September 15, 1977 DAY CALENDAR WUOM: National Press Club, Ronald Reagan, for- mer governor of Calif., & presidential candidate ad- dresses gathering of press personalities, 10a.m. GENERAL NOTICES To Members of the University Faculty: During Fall Term, Michigan Memorial-Phoenix Project awards grants to support research in peaceful uses nuclear ernergy. Will include work in social sci- funding.. Priority for awards wi oe given to: i) new faculty, particularly those who need funding in order to seek research support from outside agencies, 2) established faculty who need assistance in opening a new area of research. Applications from faculty who have previously received extensive Phoenix support given lower priority. Applications for grants should be returned to Phoenix Project by Monday, October 3, 1977. Grants will be made by December 1, 1977. Application mate- rials may Pe obtained from office of Phoenix Project at Phoenix Memorial Lab., North Campus or by call- ing 764-6213. * TODAY AT 7.;O0ONLY * PETER SELLERS the RETURN of the Pink Panther * PLUS "THE PINK PANTHER STIESAM( a' Higher Quality Steak N.Y. STRIP juicy OUflCCS of sizzle SIR LOIN thick and tender CL, . ". ' ., < . : ICKOCE) s STEAK & SHRIMP a choice steak with 7 pieces offriedshrimp CNOICE MEDIA TRICS Presents . . TODAY AT7:00and9:00 IQ2 New Foo OCKWOR d Items T3oNew DRPESSING ONIONS GARBANZO BEAN SALAD NS alad Bar nfl A Ll #I I w wv *..I* r.in r