Saturdcy February 12, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Saturday, February 12, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY - r DAILY International Syrian forces withdrawn TEL AVIV - Israeli state ra- dio reported yesteiday that Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin announced an agreement w i t h Syria for withdrawal of Syrian forces from a Lebanese town eight miles from the Israeli ber- der, but Rabin's office denied any such del. The radio said Rabin had an- nounced the Syrian pullout, but Rabin's spokesman said lie had zonferred with the prime min- ister and there was "no talk of a concrete agreement." Rabin spoke at a political meeting in the Galilee area. Ac- -ording to his spokesman, t h e prime minister expressed his "conviction that political and :iplomatic efforts in re c e n t lays would bring about a pull- out" of Syrian forces. But spokesman Dan Pat'ir stressed, "He didn't announce an agreement>" The radio said the Syrians would move back to their prev- ious positions at the beginning of next week, coinciding with the arrival of Secretary of S t a t e Cyrus Vance on Tuesday. Foreign Ministry sources in Jerusalem said Thursday t h a t Israel's ambassador in Washing- ton, Simcha Dinitz, who h a d been expected to return home in advance of the U.S. Secretary of State's visit, had been told to stay in the United States till the Nabatiyeh question was' settled. Spanish officials rescued DIGEST* FEBRUARY 12, 1977 At about the time police were rescuing the two kidnap victims in Madrid, gunmen believed to be leftists shot and killed a plain-clothes police inspector in Barcelona and wounded another policeman. It raised to 53 the number of persons slain in political v i o- lence in Spain since the death of Gen. Francisco Franco 14 mon- ths ago. Because police seemingly could not crack the case of their hisappearance, there was wide- spread speculation that the kid- nappers really were rightists aided by police opposed to the nolitical liberalization program f the king and Premier Adolfo Suarez. But GRAPO repeatedly denied{ such rumors in its ransom notest and insisted it was a revolution- ary leftist organization that tookc its name from the date it killedf four policemen in Madrid. f N "1ionait I i t i I f f F t a misdemeanor charge in the ketable phosphorus for use as shooting death of her lover, fertilizers. skier Spider Sabich. The panel split 4-1 on t h e Kiritsis faces charges f kid- decision, with commission mem- raping, inflicting injury in com- ber E. M. Laitala opposing the mission of a felony, armed rob- ban. Laitala said phosphate de- bery, obtaining a signature by tergents have "improved t h e :hreat, commission of a felony quality of life" and described while armed, committing a the action as a return to the :rime of violence while armed days of "Fels-Naptha" and oth- and disorderly conduct. T h e er bar-style detergents. armed robbery charge s t a -Is In response, Commission from Kiritsis' commandeering Chairman Joan Wolfe held up of a police car when he took'two boxes of the same brand Hall hostage Tuesday morning. of laundry detergent, one of them phosphate-free - and Farmers haul said. "There's no warning that one water does a bad job and the other does a good job." PEORIA, Ill. - Farm vehicles Commissioner Hilary Snell ab- carrying big; barrel-shaled steel stained from voting on grounds water containers are now com- that his law firm represents a mon in Illinois. Up to 95 per company in the industry, while cent of the state's farmers are 'Commissioner Charles G. hauling water for livestock, of- Younglove declined to vote with- Ficials say, and wells are going out offering an explanation. dry in small towns that never Earlier, representatives of the had water shortages. Soap and Detergent Association Ground moisture throughout accused the DNR of ignoring, the state is extremely low and the consumer impact of the less than normal spring rainfall phosnhate ban and said it :ould spell trouble for farmers would cost the average family, in Illinois, the nation's top corn $5 a year. and soybean producing s t a t e That sum, according to the in- last year. dustry, is far less than thel "I don't think anyone has any cost of improving wastewater idea how serious this draught treatment facilities to remove problem is becoming," Rep. phosphates. Thomas Railsback, (R-Ill.), said Tanner responded that, whilel Thursday. the cost of phosphate-precipitat-' Ira Markwood, head of the En- ing equipment is relatively low., vironmental Protection Agency's costs of other chemicals neededi division of public water supplies, in the treatment process and dis-1 said the driest area extends posal of sludge are very high.E from East St. Louis north to The industry also contended heoria and est of Decatur to that the commission had no au- the Iowa state line. thority to approve the ban and In western Illinois, the last said it must be left up to the six months of 1976 were the legislature, which currenrly isI driest in more than 20 bears,cosdrn tw bil bang and January 1977 was well be- consider n two bills banning alw normal the N tii p had a permit and were told there was no permit, but that the governor's office had been informed of .the protest. The officer took no action. Sgt. Richard Perry of the Cap- =<> .: s< itol detail later said he had no basis for action unless the state Department of Man 'ge- ment and Budget officials com- plained. Appropriate ufficials in that office could not be reached for' comment. The planting of the tree was... intended as a symbolic geszure. . Tanker explodes DETROIT - A Shell Oil Co.v< tandem tanker truck tipped over and exploded on a downtown area freeway yesterday. spilling 16,000 gallons , of gasoline and dis'upting traffic for hours in the second such accident this week.:> The truck driver and anothcr person suffered minor injuries in the mishap, which o.,urred during the noon hour on Inter- state 75 near the exit for the Ambassador Bridge to Windsor, Ont. A two-mile portion of the free- way from the exit north to the heart of downtown was closed, a; . with authorities hoping to clean { 4 up the mess before the evening h rush hour. Traffic also was backed up on the Jeffries Free- ,.f way interchange. The tanker ha dswerved try- ing to avoid a car pulling back onto the freeway from a should- TDX-toit fire fighters hose down er after he had dropped off a caught fire and spilled 16,000 hitchhiker, police said.- It spun around, flipped over on Francis Scott Key, a lawyer its side and exploded. Smoke who authored the "Star- from the blaze could be seen Spangled Banner" ,in 1814, from office buildings in the served as U.S. attorney for the downtown core area, ponce re District of Columbia, 1833-41. Hostage released INDIANAPOLIS - Ant h o n y Kiritsis, who considered himself a free man after releasing the hostage he held during a 63- hotir vendetta, was arraigned yesterday on a list of charges, including kidnaping. The stocky, 44-year-old Kirit- sis was ordered held under X850,000 bond, despite the grant f immunity read to him during the seige. Some authorities said yesterday they never intended to let him go free. "I would have promised you title to Hawaii if I could have .otten that guy out of there." ;aid Marion Co'nty Sheriff Law- renre Broderick. "We had to placate him," In- liananolis Mavor William Hud- 'ut said. "Everybody thought he had the dynamite. I was scared to death that one or both of them were going to lose their lives." During the three-day standoff, Kiritsis said he had rigged dy- niamite in the apartment where he was holding Richard Hall, but none was found after his s"rrender. Pr- - iors so'waht a $1.5 mil- lio- ' ^^ for Kiritsis. but that tvnq re-ted by Municinal Court Judgp Frank Harlor after Kirit- sis' Attorney, Owen Mullin, com- nlained that "even Claudine Lonzet didn't have that kind of bond and that was a death :ase." Longet was convicted on I i r. a G i t i I AP Photo m a tandem tanker on I-75 yesterday. The tanker exploded gallons of gasoline on the highway. -110, 11111 FRI.-SAT. $3.00 PHILO RECORD'S OWEN McBRIDE t A ffe MADRID - Police yesterday rescued two top Spanish offic- als unharmed and arrested four members of the left-wing group presumed responsible for kid- napping the officials. The government said police found and freed Lt. Gen. Emilio Villaecusa, Spain's chief mili- tary judge, and a few minutes lated tracked down royal advis- er Antonio Maria de Oriol on the outskirts of Madrid. A radical leftist organization :alling itself the First of Oc- -tober Anti-Fascist Resistance Group - GRAPO - earlier :laimed responsibility - a n d was blamed by police - for both kidnappings. -- - - - - - a i f E t r t >.:. , w1U11117oeia onaiv ea- her Service said. The northwestern corner of the state in January received )nlv 0.6-inch of moisture, 1.2 inchesbelow normal, and many sarmers are making 40-mile round-trips to towns still willing to sell them water. State Phosphates banned LANSING - The state Natural' Resources Commission, deciding' environmental benefits out- weight the consumer consequen- ces, has approved a ban on phosphates in household laundry detergents. The action still is subject to review by a legislative commit- tee and approval by the attorney general's office, and may be challenged in court by the deter- gent industry. The commission adopted a re- solution yesterday saying Lake Erie, portions of the other Great Lakes and 40 per cent of Mich- igan's inland lakes are showing the effects of phosphorus pol- lutios and that a household ban "will have positive benefits." Natural Resources Director Howard Tanner, who strongly re- commended the ban, described the action as a "significant step" in the state's overall anti- pollution effort and said it would free dwindling supplies of mar- Seafarer protest LANSING - Wielding pickax- es and shovels and singing old protest 3songs. a small groin of demonstrators tore up some sod, near the Capitol steps yesterday and planted a tiny evergreen tree to a protest the N ay ' s Seafarer submarine antenna. The noon demonstration was soonsored by the Great Lakes Life Community which opposes the project on moral grounds, but others attended as well in- cluding persons from the Upper Peninsula area that has been proposed as the site for Seafar- er. An officer from the Stare Po- lice Capitol security detail ask- ed the demonstrators if they r LEONARD BERNSTEIN'S MASS ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY by the Howard Hangar Performers Tuesday, Feb. 15-7:30 p.m. AJNN 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 groups of 15 or more ordered in advan~ce) from the Wesiey 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. He's back again with his usual mixture of rowdy Irish songs, soft ballads, outrageous jokes, rebel y e I Is and scurrilous stories. I THURS., FEB. 10: PETER "MADCAT" I RUTH and his $1.50 8:30 magic harp 761-1451 ,1421 HILL jw U DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN /pw ,'U 'y ! !' .Wy,{{.}s., {" - " es . : -. yC S V"K::JT.le i {{}"tl:. y:.{": a ":::.}:"r":.""S .{"Yf}.S ilc..u"" ...at: sr~ } i,:"._,1.}:'}:":"::{ .................... :. 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 organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. Saturday, February 12, 1977 DAY CALENDAR WUOM: First National Forum on Business Gov't. and Public Interest, Ralph Nader, Center for Study of Responsive Law, "The Public Inter- est's Position on Regulatory Policy," 1:10 p.m. Music School: Faculty Recital, Mary Jane Eckerle, pianist, SM Recital Hall, 8 p.m. CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3200 SAB - 764-7456 RECRUITING ON-CAMPUS Feb. 14 - Carnation and Detroit Plaza Hotel Feb. 15 - IBM, and Chevrolet/ Information Systems Department Feb. 16 - Henry Ford Hospital Feb. 17 - Ohrbach's, Institute of Paralegal Training and Prudential Life Insurance Feb. 18 - Harris Trust and Savings Bank, and Inland Steel Company Phone: 764-7460 for information on the following: Psychodrama Internships and Res- idencies offered at Saint Elizabeth's Hospital, Washington, D.C. This hospital is a federal psychiatric in- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 111 Saturday, February 12, 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 l 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. stitution within the Department of ,Health, Education and Welfare. Continental Grain Company is sponsoring graduate fellowships at selected schools in the U.S. TRANSITION 77 at Oakland Uni- versity, Rochester. Transition is the 3rd annual communications career conference for students and profes- sionals. The conference provides in- formation on career direction and discusses the realities, challenges and opportunities of working in media Saturday, February 26 at 8 a.m. Canadian Library Association schol- arships at anaaccredited library school in Canada or the United States. Must be a Canadian citizen or have landed immigrant status. The Hughes Aircraft Company is offering fellowships in the fields of Electrical, Aerospace and Mechani- cal Engineering, Computer Science Physics and Mathematics for gradu- ates with a 3.0-. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB - 763-4117 Camp Chi, Wisc. Soc. Wk Oriented Camp: Will Interview Weds., Feb. 16 from 9 to 5. General counselors and specialists in tennis, sailing, music, camp craft. Register in per- son or by phone. Camp Tamarack, MI. Coed: Will; interview Thurs., Feb 17 and Mon., Feb. 21. All staff positions open at this time. Genesee County Flint Area, MI.: Opening for Aquatic Supervisor Ex- cellent salary. Details available. National Capitol Planning Commis- sion, Wash., D.C.: A GS-5, 7 sum- mer job (Community Planner) stu- dent assistant opening. Details available. Greenfield Village/Ford Museum, Dearborn: Announces their summer program for Guides and Food Ser- vice openings. Details available. Come in at your convenience. March 23 deadline for Guide openings. Food Services interviews start Feb. 14 Irish Hills. G.S. Council will in- terview Mon., Feb. 21 from 9 to 5. Openings include Program Dir., Unit Leaders and Aides, program special- ists openings on waterfront (WSI) tripping, kitchen, etc. Register in person or by phone Lakeside Farm (Coed), Watervliet- (Girls) Camps: Will interview Weds., Feb. 23 from 10 to 5. Openings in the camps tnclude CIT Dir. (23+), Waterfront (WSI), Ski-Sailing Instr., Music, Nature, backpack, canoeing, campcraft, theater Instr., kitchen aids. Register in person or by phone. .. 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