I Page 2-Thursday, October 27, 1977-The Michigan Daily CONGRESS PROPOSES SOLAR ENERGY AID: President will veto bill if gas price WASHINGTON (AP) - President would not Carter indicated yesterday he will veto Spokesn the energy bill if it raises natural gas ers they c prices higher than the $1.75 per thou- commitm sand cubic Feet level he originally pro- veto any posed, a delegation of congressmen prices. said. Cartert "The $1.75 figure is as far as we veto the b should go. It should not be amended," was the fi Rep. Andrew Maguire, (D-N.J.), considers quoted Carter as telling the group. CONGI THE CURRENT PRICE is about natural $1.46 per thousand cubic feet. natural gi Earlier in the day House and Senate accept a energy conferees voted to make cubic fee moderate-interest loans of up to $8,000 natural g available to homeowners who install proposed solar energy equipment. thousande The conferees are working to com- owevi promise the non-tax aspects of energy the Hous legislation previously passed by each would se houseof Congress.o natural CONCERNING, Carter's position on the finalg the energy bill, Rep. Anthony Moffett, The H (D-Conn.) said yesterday," "The Presi- while the dent told us that he would veto a bad price of i bill, that he agrees with us that we don'tp need a bill just for the sake of having a ting oil an bill, and if the bill tilts too much toward ,the oil company interests, he certainly :,.. limit too high t support it." men for the group told report- came away feeling they had a ent from Carter that he would measure with higher gas has said previously he would bill if it is not acceptable. This irst time he indicated what he not acceptable. RESSIONAL sources had in- during the Senate debate on gas pricing that Carter would ceiling of $2.03 per thousand t level on federally regulated gas even though he originally raising the price to $1.75 per cubic feet. er, the congressmen said he nyesterday that he supported e version of the energy bill and upport their efforts to hold gas prices to the $1.75 level in energy bill. Ouse agreed to the $1.75 figure Senate voted to deregulate the nterstate natural gas, thus let- nd gas companies set the price level. The final bill must be written by a House-Senate conference committee. IN OTHER ENERGY action yester- day, Senate liberals said they will try to kill a section of a $40 billion energy tax credit bill that would guarantee the oil and natural gas industry profit incen- tives to look for new reserves. The liberals, led by Sen. Henry Jackson, (D-Wash.) chairman of the Senate Energy Committee, were also preparing an effort to cut out $33 billion in energy tax credits for business. The disclosure of Carter's comments came after a meeting in which six House members handed Carter a letter signed by 67 members, some of them Republicans, who declared they could not vote for compromise energy legisla- tion that would significantly boost natural gas prices above the $1.75 level, or that would contain "plowbacks or other tax giveaways to the oil com- panies."' Dress to kill this Halloween By HEATHER MAYSON Whether you're trying to dress up a fairy tale or simply looking for the perfect outfit for Halloween the Theater Department's third annual costume sale may have the answer. "I came ready for anything," Cassandra Trimble said excitedly. "I've found the greatest outfit: the 'Wife of Bath'!" She was wearing a long cotton dress, complete with an apron and extra quilting to pad her front and rear to enormous proportions. "I'll buy this, unless I can find a slinky little 'Guinevere' type thing," she said. The sale, continuing through Thursday and Friday in the Frieze Building, includes several outfits made by the costume department for many of the University's recent the- atrical productions. "We've pulled loads of specialty items from our storage rooms," Elizabeth, Brikowski said. "Most of them cannot be used again." The costumer went on to explain, "Some of the clothes date back to 1900. Everything can be found here, from suits of armor to costumes used in Jesus Christ Superstar." Profits from the sale supplement an equipment budget which finances special purchases such as sewing machines. "This year we'd like to buy some male mannequins," Bri- kowski said. The styles and quality of the; costumes vary from velvety-rich 'period' outfits, to old and well-used accessories. Prices range from 25c to $25, depending on the value of the; fabric.1 Mark Silverman, a graduate stu- dent in geography, clasped a worn; striped vest, and a $5 pair of tweed knickers in hand. He was wearing a; black, pointed court jester's hat,; *I _ r 'obe cites 'mystery' i -. We have 7 quality packages from Skilom, Rossignol, and Trak at pre-season sale prices. Here'sjust an eampleofthe or Package T klin Poles ....... -............. ---- 9.95 Package Price .................. .. .....1.95 Kick Package a ackages frSkilomxls Frssiol,.and8Trak T ralBoats ................. 6 Skimnd ings ........l....get: .9 Tour~ Pakg Tonklin Poles ...................9 5 133.40 Package Price..............19.95 Kic Pakag S8$a$4.00 Plus, greatsavings8on downhill0 packages ... on sale now.9 The Peak Sports Center 3150 Carpenter Rd. " 971-4310 In terroris STUTTGART, West Germany (AP) - State investigators reported yesterday that. some circumstances of the deaths of three imprisoned terrorists last week remained a "mystery," but an. official inquiry upheld an autopsy report calling them suicides. The report said investigators failed to determine how the pistols that killed Andreas Baader and Jan-Carl Raspe got into their cells. It conclud- ed visiting lawyers might have sup- See related story, this page. plied them but acknowledged there was no evidence of this. LEFTISTS claiming the terrorists were murdered held protest marches and bombed West German property throughout Europe last week. A fourth jailed terrorist who officials said stabbed herself denied Tuesday there was any suicide pact. The 40-page report by Baden- t suicides Wuerttemberg state prosecutors and police officials said they found no evidence of murder in their inter- views with 90 persons and deposi- tions by two doctors who took part in the autopsy. The autopsy report said Baader, founder and co-leader of the Baader- Meinhoff gang, and Raspe shot themselves in the head, and Gudrun Ensslin, Baader's mistress, hanged herself with an electrical cord from her cell window. THE THREE were found dead in their cells at the maximum security Stammheim prison here Oct. 18, hours after West German comman- dos in Somalia foiled an air hijacking staged to enforce demands for their release. The inquiry also upheld the initial announcement that Irmgard Moel- ler, another terrorist imprisoned at Stammheim, tried to stab herself with a bread knife the same day. Moeller, recovering in a hospital, denied this through her lawyer Tuesday. She said she became unconscious after hearing shots and awoke with a stab wound in her chest. A SPOKESMAN for the state justice ministry, Helmut Engler, said investigators believed lawyers were able to supply guns to Baader and Raspe because security viola- tions at the prison were widespread. Engler said some lawyers had been caught trying to smuggle "forbidden objects. . . such as ammunition and printed matter" into the prison. He also noted that a wire communica- tion system between cells and a half pound of explosives had been found inside the prison. The inquiry said the barrel of the pistol in Raspe's cell was bought in Basel, Switzerland, along with an American-made carbine later found on another West German anarchist. Roily Photo by CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER Maybe it was a show of allegiance to a namesake character or maybe it was just a premonition, but at any rate, Kate Grace was interested in the gown worn by the character of the same name in "Kiss Me, Kate." which he found beneath a pile of shawls and scarves. "I didn't come looking for anything in particular, but these clothes are really bizarre. I'm planning to =be a sort of clown for Halloween, and my hat is perfect. I'm just not sure that the geography department would approve." Sheradi Cannon, a graduate the- ater student, said the sale is put on by graduate students. Pointing to the room jam-packed with people rifling through the selection of costumes, she said, "They started lining up before nine this morning. "Most of the 'good' costumes were gone within an hour, but we're going to pull new clothes from storage for sale on Thursday and Friday." Not surprised by the large student turnout, Cannon smiled, and said, "I haven't even had the chance to find anything for myself." Our PREPARE FOR: Y a MCAT DAT * LSAT - GRE GMAT OCATY AT "SAT NMB L1, III, ECFMG " FLEX* VQE NAT'L DENTAL BOARDS NURSING BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours There IS a difference!!! EDUCATIONAL CENTER Test Preparation Specialists Since 1938 For Information Please Call: (313) 662-3149 For Locations In Other Cities, Call: TOLL FREE: 800.223-1182 Cent ers in Major US Cities Toronto. Puerto Rico and Lugano. Switzerlan' Extremist groups react violently in the wake of terrorists' deaths By United Press International Italian leftists vowed to send a "suicide commando" to kill the West German ambassador and a rightist bomb shattered a Paris union hall in violence triggered by the prison deaths of three West German terror- ists. Early today, almost simultaneous blasts shook the Siemens, BMW, and Opel auto buildings in Rome, blowing out the shutters and show windows. Other explosions damaged several cars. At Pistoia, near Florence, another BMW showroom was hit by a predawn explosion. THREE MEN at the West German cultural center in Istanbul, Turkey, were injured by a bomb thrown by demonstrators shouting anti-German slogans Tuesday, police said. Two firebombs shattered the windows of a German car showroom in Rome. The Italian news agency, ANSA, in Milan received the second death threat in five days against WestX German Ambassador Hans Arnold. "As regards Arnold, we confirm that within the next 200 hours he will be executed by a suicide comman- do," an anonymous telephone caller said, adding a warning that all German diplomats and their families should leave Italy. IN ISTANBUL, police said the anti-German protestors fled after the bomb explosion and no arrests were made. The Rome firebombings caused some damage but no injuries. Two German schools shut down to prevent possible attacks on students. The Paris explosion smashed the offices of the leftist French Magis- trates Trade Union and handwritten notes left behind indicated the bomb- ing was carried out by rightists. "WE ARE witnessing the emerg- ence of rightist counter-terrorism," one police officer said. "We hope we will stop this." French police in theNancy region near the German border were check- ing out reports from a previously unheard-of "Anti-Terrorist Brigade" that it had killed one of the 16 West Germans wanted for the kidnapping of the slain German industrialist, Hanns-Martin Schleyer. Police said they also had found'a West German man who identified several young persons he met in a chalet in a pine forest in France's Jura Mountain range as being among the 16 suspects in the Schleyer case. Schleyer's body was found in northeastern France shortly after the three terrorists were found dead in their Stuttgart prison cells. 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