The Michigan gaily-Tuesday, November 1, 1977-Page 3 " O SEE W S AWPM C, LLZ->LY Chomp In the old days, Dracula used to sneak into your bedchamber by. night and bite your neck. Now it's all done by machine, and not a par- ticularly flashy or romantic machine at that. But you can still be part of another Halloween legend-the Red Cross blood drive-today through Friday. Today the drive will be centered in the South Pit of Markley from, 3-9 p.m.; tomorrow through Friday the mechanical vampires move to the Union ballroom from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Britai: LONDON-(AP)-Britain freed the pound sterling from its weakening dollar anchor yesterday and let it float up to its own value on world money markets. The move immediately raised living- costs for Americans and other " foreigners in Britain, but it promised less inflation for Britons. The value of the British currency quickly rose by about 3.5 per cent against the dollar, from Friday's rate of $1.77 for one pound to $1.84. THE RISING POUND reflected growing international optimism about Britain's economic future. A year ago, while the pound hovered below $1.60 the outlook appeared extremely bleak. Many in the financial world had con- sidered the pound undervalued. This sets pound afloat belief grew stronger in recent months as revenues from North Sea oil and gas began flowing in and the British balan- ce of payments improved. For the first time in years Britain was earning more abroad than it was spending. The strengthening pound does not necessarily mean abrupt changes in prices for goods or services. But it will mean that an American tourist, for example, is getting fewer pounds for his dollars. A HOTEL ROOM that cost 20 pounds a night last week may still cost 20 poun- ds, but the American will be paying $36.80, instead of $35.40 at the bank ex- change rate. Tourists exchanging small amounts of currency usually find that they have to pay slightly more than the official exchange rates. This revaluation brightened the outlook for the average British family, though it may take months for the ef- fect to filter down to the neighborhood shop. The cost of imports, whether raw materials or consumer goods, will fall because a stronger pound will buy more. One business group predicted that a 5 per cent rise in the pound would mean a one per cent price decline over six to nine months. ABOUT THE only Britons benefitting immediately were vacationers abroad who suddenly found their pounds worth more in the local currency. But British industry could be hurt because British exports wi-Il be more expensive, and therefore less com- petitive, on the world market. "The further loss in competitiveness of a rising pound will not be welcome to industry," said John Methven, head of the Confederation of British Industry. BECAUSE OF these fears, prices of some leading British firms tumbled on the London stockmawket. Companies with a big stake in the export market lost millions of pounds on paper because dealers foresaw a tougher fight for orders against Germany, Japanese and U.S.competitors. The upward revaluation was the result of a decision, reportedly made only. reluctantly by Prime Minister James Callaghan's Labor government, to stop intervening in money markets to hold down the pound's value. The Bank of England had accomplished this by mass selling of pounds and buying of other currencies. The pound has long been allied to the dollar because of the close trade'ties of the two countries. As the dollar declined in value against most major currencies in recent months, the Bank of England bought heavily into the American currency. Government officials said the bank simply could not continue to sustain this dollar buying, believed to amount to more than $15 billion this year. They said Britain also had to act against a looming inflationary "money exc- plosion" resulting from an influx of foreign funds attracted by the cheap pound. Besides rising against the. dollar, the pound hit 12-month highs against other European currencies. To avoid a destabilizing runaway rise, the Bank of England moved in to buy some less- wanted currencies. Hitler's son alive but ill, historian claims Happenings.. . ... get down to brass attacks with a brass quintet concert at noon in the Union's Pendleton Center... Gerald Rosberg speaks on "U.S. Immigration Law and the Right of the Aliens" in the International Center, 603 E. Madison, at noon ... Donald Griffin of Rockefeller University speaks on "Prospects for a Cognitive Ethology" in 1057 MHRI at 12:30... vegetables annoving you? Chickens insult you at the dinner table? Buddy, you _got "Food Problems". Environ- mental Studies Prof. B. Burkhalter will speak on that very topic in 1528 C.C. Little at 3 p.m.... Chuck Volverton of the Michigan bNR speaks on "Great Lakes Wetland Values" at 4 in 165 Chrysler Center... Radcliffe Squires (no relation to Harvard Squares) will give a poetry reading in the Pendleton Room of the Union at 4:10.. .Fran Willis, assistant legal advisor to the State Dept., will speak on "Recent Ad- vances in Negotiations With Cuba" in the Law Club Lounge at 7 p.m.... a two-day conference on energy conservation kicks off at 7 in the Residential College... the MSA steering committee meets at 7 in room 3909 of the Union ... following which, the rest of the MSA (the steered) enter the room for a regular MSA meeting at 7:30. . . if you think you've been maldistributed, or just have something relevant to say about LSA distribution requirements, show up at an open hearing on the subject at 7:30 in 2203 Angell ... a program on "The Class Nature of the Soviet Union" will be presented at 7:30 in 220 Tyler, East Quad. . . the Domestic Violence Project will show Battered Women: Behind Closed Doors in 2013 Angell at 8 p.m... . be chic at a free showing of the Rudolph Valentino film Son of the Sheik at 8 in the Old Architeoture Aud... . and Peter Starka's frantic fingers will fondle the frets of a guitar "around 9:30" in East Quad's Halfway Inn. , On the outside.;.. The best that can be said of today is that it won't snow. It'll be cloudy, with southeast winds and light rain all day. The high will con- tinue at 600; the overnight low will dip to 470. The showers will continue through the night and end tomorrow, when the high will be in the 50's. LONDON (AP)-A German historian claims he has found a son of Adolph Hitler living in the north of France, the London Sunday Times reports. . The newspaper quoted Dr. Werner Maser, 55, a respected historian of the Nazi era, saying that Hitler's son is a 59-year-old Frenchman named Jean Lorret. MASER CLAIMS to have known for 12 years that Hitler had a son, the paper said. He was quoted as saying he located the son two years ago and has been working to authenticate the claim since. The paper said Lorret is desperately ill and willing to talk about his paren- tage. The Sunday Times gave the following account: Hitler. is supposed to have met Lorret's mother in 1918 while serving in World War I. The boy was born and Daily Official Bulletin The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan. Notices should he sent in TYPFWRITT N FORM to 409 E;. Jefferson, be- fore Sp.m. of the day preceeding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday. Sunday, and Monday. Items appear once only. Stutlent organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more informa- tion, phone 764-9270. November Iu 1977 given his mother's name. He was not told of his father's identity until 1952, when his mother, on her deathbed, told him his father was Hitler. Maser cites a number of sources to support his claim, among them a trip said to have been taken by Hitler and his valet, Heinz Linge, to look for a house in northern France in 1941. They found the house, but not the mother or child. !i(" ('CAINDAR C Starting Your Own Business. 328-330 Thompson, 9a m. rWUOM: Crossroads, "Future of Affirmative Ac- tion,"in depth look at affirmative action policies and implications of Allen Bakke Supreme Court Case, 10:0)0 am. Physics/Astronomy: . Yalsoviev, Lebedev Insti- tute, "Properties of Cosmic Ray Interactions Above I0 TeV from TienShan," 2 pm.; J. Rose Cornell .U' ,'The Born Approximation, Ultrasound, and Non-De structive Testing," 2038 Randall Lab., 4 p.m. Evnironmental Studies: B. Burkhalter, "Food Problems," 1528 CCLittle, 3 p.m. 'a THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVIII, No.47 Tuesday, November 1. 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Pub- lished daily Tuesday through Sunday morning dur-. ing the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session.published Tuesday through Satur- day morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. . STEVE'S LUNCH 1313 SO. UNIVERSITY HOME COOKING IS OUR SPECIAL TY Breakfast All Day 3 Eggs, Hash Browns, Toast & Jelly-$1.55 Ham or Bacon or Sausage with 3 Eggs, Hash Browns, Toast & Jelly-$2.15 3 Eggs, Rib Eye Steak, Hash Browns, Toast & Jelly-$2.45 Egg Rolls W SA EVERYDAY SPECIALS Home-made Soups, Beef Barley, Clam, Chowder, etc. Home-made Chill Vegetable Tempuro (served after-2 pm) Hamburger Steak Dinner Fresh Sauteed Vegetables with Brown Rice Baked Flounder Dinner Delicious Korean Bar-b-q Beef (Bul-ko-gee) on Kaiser Roll Fried Fresh Bean Sprouts Kim)Chee TUESDAY-FRIDAY 8-7 SATURDAY 9-7 SUNDAY 10-7 MONDAY 8-3 769-2288 1313 So. University t