4 A Dage 10-Wednesday, December 7, 1977-The Michigan Doily 1978 U. 5 1978 Calendar Smorgasbord Abstract Art Albrecht Durer Alte Stiche American Vision Ancient Icons Anglund Date Book Antiques Magazine Engagement Austria Baby Animals Backroads of America Ballet Beatrix Potter Beautiful America Bless the Beasts Botticelli Cape Dorset Cat (kilban) Circle Astrological Crafts Engagement Dance Dancing Time Diane Dawson Cat Don't Call Me Sweetheart Eat and Run Engagement Egon Schiele Folk Quilts Eliot Porter Forest Friends Eric Sloane Frank Frazetta Frank Herbert's Dune From Milady to Ms Fussball Gay Engagement Giant Riddle Girls Great Calendar of Art Great Lakes Country Guiness Records Gustav Klimist J Hu idertwasser High West 1Ching Diary Hobbit Desk Impressionism Horse-Bo-Tree Impressionists Impressionists Weekly In the Company of Cats In Detail ' In Praise of Women Artists Intermezzo James Herriot Jewish Engagement' Jewish Folk Art J.R.R. Tolkien Kate Greenaway Kibi in China Kids Say the Darndest Things Leonardo Les Blacklock Little House on the Prairie . Ilewellyns Astrological Macmillan Children Mad Jubeliee Michaelangelo Mickey Mouse Monet Mother Goose Mountains of the World Movie Fans Mystery & Suspense Native Voices Engagement Nature 78 Power Boats Needlepoint Pre-Raphaelites No Fault Tennis Pride of Cats Norman Rockwell Pumping Iron Oxford Almanacs Purple Thumb Photographert Quilt Engagement Regatta Rembrandt Roger Dean Romance Sailing San Francisco Scottish Clans Sea Shalom Young People Sherlock Holmes Sierra Club Engagement Sierra Club Little Creatures Sierra Club Trail Sierra Club Wilderness Sierra Club Wildlife Skiers Snoopy Star Trek Star Wars Super Disasters Swiss Photo Album 4Tall Ships Tarzan Tennis Thai Art Thony Toulouse Lautrec, Treasures of Islam Tribute to Elvis Undersea Life Van Gogh Vanity Fair Waltons Watership Down Woman's Engagement Yachting (Over 100 others) QUANTITIES LIMITED SERVED 9:30-8:30 Daily 12-6 SUNDAY NO RESERVATIONS NECESSARY ia i House panel rules out mandatory retirement i LANSING (UPI) - The House Civil Rights Committee has unani- mously approved legislation banning mandatory retirement policies in public and private jobs. The landmark bill, reported to the' House floor yesterday, states that employers cannot dismissemployes solely on the basis of age. SENIOR CITIZENS' rights advo- cates say forced retirement at 65 consigns many competent workers to unwanted idleness, robbing society of their talents and robbing them of their dignity. Others, however, have warned that eliminating mandatory retirement may mean fewer new jobs will be created for unemployed young per- sons. The bill's sponsor, Rep. Perry Bullard, (D-Ann Arbor), said dis- crimination against the elderly in the name of increasing job opportunities is no more justified than discriminat- ing against women to make more jobs for men. THE MEASURE is not expected to have a dramatic impact on the job market since it is believed that most elderly workers will voluntarily choose early or normal retirements -especially if adequate benefits are provided. "Even those strongly in favor don't believe this is going to be a large number of people who will decide to keep working after 65," said Rep. Wilbur Brotherton, (R-Farmington). Links to fashion. For bracelets, fashion always embraces the eternal, universal chain, expressed in equally eternal, universal 14 karat yellow gold. For every occasion, every style, every taste. From our very complete collection of chain bracelets: A.$40. B. $100. C. $60. D.$65. E. $30. Come see them all. Something Beautiful for Everyone., Kaffeeklatsch AP Photo These Bloomington, Minn., ducks can pursue their favorite pastime, quacking, anywhere-even on thin ice. Their favorite pond shrank this week as the freezing weather turned much of the ducks' home into ice. CLASHES ;WIT H CAR TER STAND: House votes for B-1 Fine Jewelers Since 1861 Briarwood Mall - Ann Arbor Also Detroit - Saginaw, WASHINGTON (AP) - The House voted yesterday to keep B-1 bomber production alive despite President Car- ter's bid to kill the program. By a vote of 191-166, the House ap- INTRODUCING: JUNIOR and JEFF OLIVER and LLOYD at DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State REDKEN-IMAGE proved $462 million for building the fifth and sixth B-1 aircraft, going along with arguments that limited production of the manned bomber should continue if only as a bargaining chip in disarma- ment talks with the Russians. CONGRESS had appropriated the money for the two aircraft before de- ciding to scrub production money for future B-1s. Four research and devel- opment models have been built. Carter and opponents had argued that to build the two aircraft would be a waste of money. "Everyone agrees you cannot fight a war with six B-1s," said Rep. Joseph Addabbo, (D-N.Y.) But Rep. Robert Dornam, (R-Calif.), who represents/the district where the North American Rockwell aircraft are assembled, said that building two more aircraft would keep the assembly line and the country's strategic defense op- tions open., 1 t r t ' ° '"'' ,., .^ . 5 07-a 9a -w9(~ e I number five and six until we get author- ization from the Air Force." THE SENATE had rejected the production money, which is part of a $7.8 billion appropriations bill. Now the Senate must take a second vote on the issue. By a vote of 182-181, the House ap- proved some $200 million to help the poor pay their utility bills this winter.) The fuel bill program is identical to the emergency measure passed to aid the poor last winter. It has already been approved by the Senate in its version of the appropriations bill. OPPONENTS SAID state govern- ments and private groups should aid the poor, while supporters said the aid was a stopgap, humanitarian measure. Rep., Robert Giamo, (D-Cann,), the chairman of the House Budget Commit- tee, said the nation could not add new social service programs indefinitely while cutting taxes, as Congress will likely do next year. Rep. Robert Michel, (R-Ill.), said many states failed to spend the utility bill money they received last year. He complained that the availability of the fuel bill money had to be advertised i his hometown of Peoria. "This doesn't sound like an emergency program to me," he said. The appropriations bill also included some'$80 million to keep the nation's nuclear breeder reactor program roughly on schedule despite President carter's attempts to kill it. I . ; ' :. ? t1S, . " ..':.: . , 4'_. r "IF WE ARE going to err, let us err on the side of strength," Dornan told the House. In California, a spokesman for Rock- well said the company would continue to approach the B1 project cautiously. He said until the issue is settled. the company would not rehire any of the 1,500 persons it let go when the program was abandoned by the Carter admini- stration. "We don't know what further steps are going to have to be taken by Con- gress," said the spokesman, David Wright. "No matter what happens in Congress, we can't start up on (planes) Vj Carter urban policy _.. -''" ,' , 1 ! ' .W/ I' 6louac. d ilt F' . > ' r [ ' ;: B 1- : Soft toppings. . ready for holida festivities. Easy .blousons with ai ly 'modest.' ii SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The head of the nation's largest union of public employees said yesterday the still- evolving White House urban policy is "a modest battle plan in a crisis that calls for an all-out assault." He called for city leaders to join with labor in seeking a bolder program. Jerry Wurf, head of the American Federation of State, County and Mu- nicipal Employees (AFSCME), spoke to members of the National League of Cities. Minutes later, several influ- ential Democratic mayors praised Car- ter's urban record. THE MAYORS signaled that' they were not yet ready to join the chorus of skepticism concerning the urban plan when Henry Maier of Milwaukee said, "I don't think that with the kinds of things on his desk, we can expect a lot more." In praising Carter, Richard Hatcher of Gary, Ind., head of the Conference of Democratic Mayors, nevertheless call- ed for more emphasis on job programs. Outgoing New York Mayor Abraham Beame agreed. Janet Hayes of San Jose, Calif., was more skeptical, telling reporters, "The president can't understand the nayors say preliminary draft of a Carter urban plan. Wurf told the city officials, "We must be allies in a war on a common enemy; a war on the deterioration of public ser- vices, on the multi-headed monster of urban decay." ALWAYS BLUNT, he said the well- publicized Carter urban policy, now in a "semi-final" stage according to one federal official, "is a half-hearted ges- ture in a situation that calls for full- scale com'mitment." The Carter plan currently revolves around creation of a urban develop- ment bank as well as an infusion of cash into programs that already serve city interest - mainly job programs, special revenue-sharing and funds for economic development projects such as public works. The strategy was drafted by a Cabinet-level group, and it is commonly understood in Washington that the White House probably will make sharp cutbacks in the proposed level of new urban funding. ROBERT EMBRY, assistant secre- tary of Housing and Urban Develop- ment, and a chief architect of the urban strategy. said the current urban nolicv n open weave, hand crocheted look by Organically Grown. They're made in a machine washable acrylic/nylon blend, light to touch and wear. A. 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