Wednesday, February 9, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednesday, February 9, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three DAILY International Rhodesian violence SALISBURY, Rhodesia - Black guerrillas burned and looted offices of a second Chris- tian mission, the government said yesterday, while security forces searched rain - soaked bush for raiders who killed sev- en white missionaries Sunday. No casualties were reported in the raid on Nyashanu fnis- sion 125 miles southeast of Sal- isbury near the Mozambique border. The government did not say which church operated the mission or when the attack took place. It said the attackers took about $5,400 and burned a mis- sion workshop and office. Three Jesuits and four Do- minican nuns were lined up and shot Sunday night in an attack on St. Paul's Roman Catholic Mission in the Musami tribal area 26 miles northeast of Sal- isbury and about 150 miles from the Nyashanu mission. Outlawed black guerrilla units said agents of the white govern- ment of Prime Minister Ian Smith were behind the attack, the largest group killing of whites in four years of guer- rilla war aimed at black rule. The country has 270,000 whites and more than 5 million blacks.- There was no official resnonse to the charge, but it was be- lieved the government honed to capturethe attackers alive to refute the claims. DIGEST refrained from commenting on the deaths. The Vatican daily newspaper L'Osservatore Romano said yesterday the killings were a crime that "no _civilized crea- ture could approve." The shootmgb were deplored by Pope Paul on Monday and Archbishop Patrick Chakaipa, first black leader of the Church in Rhodesia, said they "made a mockery" of black nationalist ideals. Dissident appeal MOSCOW - More than 200 Soviet dissidents have appeal- ed for the release, because of ill health, of Alexander Ginz- burg, who disburses the funds supplied by novelist Alexander Solzhenitsyn to aid political prisoners and their families. In Washington, the U. S. State Department said it was "watching with concern" the treatment of the 40-year-old hu- man rights activist and has made the Soviet government aware of its views.'r It was the third time since President Carter took office Tan. 20 that the United States had warned a Soviet .Bloc gov- ernment about. human rights. Ginzburg's Soviet supporters made their plea in a statement addressed to the 35 govern- ments that signed the 1975 Hel- sinki Accords. It said he was- released from a hospital shortly before his ar- rest last Thursday, although he, was "still suffering from pneu- monia with a tubercular infec- tion . . . and should be treated at a tuberculosis dispensary." Jail is "certain death for a man in his condition," Valen- tin Turchin, head of the Soviet branch of Amnesty Internation- al, told Western correspondents. Ginzburg is renorted being held in prison in Kahiga, about 100 miles southwest of Moscow. The charges against hint have -ot been announced, but an of- ficial pnblication accused him last week of illegal currency dealings. Sarn inim gjlai FEBRUARY 9, 1977 legislation Monday. President Ford vetoed strip mining legis- lation twice in both 1975 and 1976. Ford said the bills would add to unemployment and drastic- ally raise the price of energy. But Andrus told a Senate sub- committee that the legislation would have little effect on either coal production or unem- ployment. Andrus said he favors extend- ing the proposed coal strip min- ing standards to cover other minerals. But, while Andrus and sev- eral members of a, Senate In- terior subcommittee were in general agreement on extend- ing the standards, the emphasis at the subcommittee hearing was on swift passage of the ba- sic coal strip mining control legislation. S nhmmittI e Chairman Sen workers laid off due to cold-I ,related problems, and surveys, for Feb. 3-6, tabulated Monday, showed no change. Sindlinger said his firm has conducted daily unemployment surveys by telephonehin all 48 contiguous states at the rate of 110 calls per week for the past 20 years. President Carter's Cabinet was told Monday that the wea- ther caused 1.8 million layoffs. The Labor Department bases its monthly reports on a sam- ple week adjusted seasonally, according to historical data from the past five years. Sindlinger does not use sea- sonally adjusted figures and claims the adjusted figures in the government's reports can be artificially low. State Win terization aid LANSING-Gov. William Mil- liken said yesterday that $184,- 000 in federal funds has been allocated on an emergency bas- is to continue home winteriza- tion projects conducted by eight community action agencies. Milliken said the money, made available under the Comprehen- sive Employment and Training Act, will be used to hire 42 per- an~e t re~lk i relah d" r- doldrums, said yesterday it is resuming a $600 million expan- sion program that includes the building of two new generating plants. The company predicted the projects will be an economic boon, providing jobs for 3,000 workers at peak construction times. Resumption of work on the utility's Greenwpod facility northwest of Port Huron and Fermi plant No. 2 near Monroe was made possible by a new rate increase and investments in the Fermi plant by two North- ern Michigan electricity cooper- atives, Edison said. ahead with the plants a $22.9 million rate proved last month by thanks to hike ap- the state. State protection LANSING - The Michigan League for Human Services called yesterday for prompt state action to prevent utility cutoffs to the poor. "State government has within its power the means to avert these cut-offs for welfare recipi- ents and other low-income citi- zens," said league President Al- bert Dunmore. As part of its recommended action, the league suggested that the state Department of Social Services make the best use of available federal dollars. It also urged the state Public Service Commission to review its rules (regarding service cut- offs. The league, a statewide non- partisan group funded through the United Way, asked state lawmakers to place "high pri- ority" on increasing grants to the poor for the fiscal years through a .supplemental appro- priation to the social services department. 0ICUMmTLe e ~sa OT. Tegvrmnts aur Lee Metcalf, (D-Mont.), said he The government's January woild resist attemnts to add labor report, based on the week anything to the basic package. including Jan. 12, reported- sea- Metcalf said his s'ibcommit- sonally adjusted unemployment tee would seek to expand the of 7.3 per cent, down one - half controls, once they are signed of 1 per cent from December. into law, to anplyvto reclaiming all manner of abandoned omen- Rotten weather nit onerations, from copper pits to marble quarries. WASHINGTON - The cold wave and gas shortage, which Unemnployment have put up to 1,567,000 persons out of work so far, may return figure off in full force next week after a temporary break, according to MEDIA. Pa. - Three million government forecasts. l i 1 a ' sops to cau ,z nsuiae ana re d pair homes for persons with in- Edison Chairman William comes below federal poverty Meese said the construction pro- guidelines. j ects -could not be more time- ly, with the nation in the grip "These funds were sorely of a natural gas shortage. needed to continue winteriza- -"Among the effects of the tion projects at a time when natural gas shortage will be Michigan is experiencing a rec- increased conversion of energy ord cold winter," Milliken said, sources from scarce natural "The funding will enable the gas and oil to electricity, since local agencies to continue pro- we can produce electricity from jects that had been jeopardized coal and uranium, which are in by a shortage of funds avail- more plentiful supply," he said. able for labor." "In fact, we have already In addition, Milliken said seen a marked increase in $84,585 was released to continue residential and commercial critical programs for the aging heating systems that do not re- in several northern Michigan quire gas or oil." communities. The two plants will provide 1.9 million kilowatts of generat- Edison ing capacity. Construction on the- facilities ex panding was halted in 1974, with Edison citing the company's deteriorat- DETROIT - The Detroit Edi- ing financial situation. son Co., recovering from a Meese said the firm is now on three-year period of financial the rebound and can move Save and bundle old newspapers for recycling __________________ More conservative tionalist leaders in black na- Salisbury D+aily Official Bulletin The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only. Student oreanization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone'764-9270. Wednesday, February 9, 1977 DAY CALENDAR WUOM :- Program about Margaret Mitchell, author Gone With the Wind, Ancluding readings from her letters and an interview with Rich- ard Harwell. Author of The Gone With the Wind Letters, 10 a.m. Dept. Ind./Op. Eng.: Ms. Joyce Elam, U. of. Texas. "A Generalized Network Alternating Path Primal Extreme Point Algorithm," 229 W. E., 4 p.m. . Statistics: Christine Waternaux, "Test For Sphericity in the Non- Normal' Case," 3227 Angell Hall, 4 p.m. Global Awareness Series: Rev. Frisco Gilchrist, Friendship Mission. Paraguay, "The U.S. In Latin Ameri- ca," Aud. A, Angell, 4 p.m. Museum of. Anthropology: Jane' Buikstra, Northwestern U., "Wood- land Adaptation: A Bio-Cultural Perspective of the Prehistoric Mid- west," Lee. Rm. II, MLB, 4:10 p.m. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB - 763-4117 Camp Echo Lake, Coed, N.Y. Will interview here Mon.-Tues., Feb. 14- 15 from 1 to 5 each day. Openings include Waterfront (WSI) Director 25 or up. Instrs. for equatic sports, tennis, gymnasts, craft instr. and general staff. Details available. Reg- ister in person or by phone. more Americans lost their jobs in January than were reported by the U. S. Labor Department,, a private research firm says. The Sindlinger & Co. also said true unemployment for last Wednesdaytwas 11.6 per cent, or more than 11 million persons out of work, and that unemployment actually rose 1 per cent from December, while the Labor Department reported January unemployment had dropped one-half of 1 per cent. The government failed to ac- count for those who lost jobs due to the severe cold weather because it used data taken be- fore the harsh weather began, Sindlinger & Co. said in a newsletter. Government calculating meth- ods and the use of incomplete data also contributed to the in- accurate unemployment pic- ture, Sindlinger said. There was no immediate re- 'action from the Labor -Depart- ment.- Sindlinger'-s surveys for Jan.1 12 to Feb. 2 showed 3.3 millionI But the edge of the shortage was being softened this week as 'small additional supplies of na- tural gas began flowing into in- terstate pipelines under provi- sions of the new emergency act that President Carter signed last Wednesday. The Federal Power Commis- sion (FPC) said Monday that some 380 million cubic feet of gas per day already was flow- ing under new emergency ar- rangements and another 175 million, cubic feet a day was authorized and awaiting com- pletion of connecting pipes. The extra gas, transferred from western areas with better supplies or purchased tempor- arily at prices above federally regulated ceilings, represents only about one per cent of the gas required on a cold winter day. But it helps, and so does some 933 million cubic feet already flowing daily under earlier FPC emergency rules. PHILO RECORD'S OWEN McBRIDE FRI.-SAT. I $3.00 Send her the LoveBundem Bouquet for Weekend. He's back again with his usual mixture of rowdy Irish songs, soft ballads, outrageous jokes, rebel y e II s and scurrilous stories. WASHINGTON - Supporters of tough controls on strip min- ing appear to be nearing the end of a six-year effort to get their views enacted into law. Interior secretary Cecil An- drus pledged the support of the Carter administration to the THE MICITlGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 108 Wednesday, February 9, 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. Published d a i I y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept, thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. I LEONARD BERNSTEIN'S MASS ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY by the Howard Hangar Performers Tuesday, Feb. 15-7:30 p.m. ANN ARBOR'S FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH STATE & HURON STS. Ticket donations for non-students are $3, $2 donation for students; ($2 non-students and $1.50 students for groupsĀ°- of 15 or more ordered in advance) from the Wesley Foundation, in person or by mail. 602 E. Huron St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108. Tickets and more information 9-12 & 12:30-3 week- days. 668-6881. THURS., FEB. 10: PETER "MADCAT" RUTH and his magic harp $1.50 8:30 I 1421 HILL 761-1451 } i, AAftSP*.WbWMwA1IwMftWd 0 IL a 11 IF r---- I C I: C "F z C< in fo D1 0 R. C+ In Yc )etroits )riginal enaissance enterĀ° nvitesC oilu ! UAC Wants You! to be a S e n i o r Officer of the Unverstyi Activities Center for the 1977-78 school Probably not. All things considered you do what you do pretty doggone well. After all, no one has taken your job. And you're eating regularly. But... year. Four students are needed to fill the posi- tions of President, Financial Vice-Presi- dent, Public Relations Vice-President, and Thi :em in1c Den } New alleries "ALIAN WING ith EN AISSANCE ASTERS gird largest collection side Europe-I 3th-I 8th nturies newly displayed completely re-designed rmanentgalleries. Co-ordinating Vice-President. Applications are available at the University Activities Center,. But have you ever considered what doing your job just a little better might mean? Money. Cold hard coin of the realm. If each of us cared just a smidge more about what we do for a living, we could actually turn that inflationary spiral around..Better products, better service and better management would mean savings for all of us. Savings of much of the cash and frayed nerves its costing-us now for repairs and inefficiency Point two..By taking more pride in our work we'll more than likely see America regaining its strength inthe competitive world trade arena. When the balance of payments swings our way again we'll all be better off economically. So you see-the only person who canreally do what you do any better is you. 2nd floor, Michigan Union For further information call a.,. Premiere: our Renaissance masterpieces bequeathed by I i i I 1I II