Page Two. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, February 25, 1'9 I' l DAILY DIGEST FEBRUARY 26, 1977 I 1 24 ferry vehicle despite t h e poor weather and found both International men feeling fine, Tass said. Western analysts here expres-' sed surprise that the men did not stay in space longer. TheI Cosnonauts mission was the second short- est of the six which have been made to orbital space labora- MOSCOW - Two Soviet cos- tories since the Ealyut program monauts landed safely yester- began in 1971. 'day on the freezing plains of One theory is that the menj Soviet Central Asia after an were simply sent to completei unexpectedly short stint of just unfinished work left by Salyut- 16 days in an orbiting Salyut-5 5's two previous occupants. space station. They had spent 48 days in the Mission . Commander Viktor space laboratory last summer, Gorbaatko and Flight Engineer but returned to earth amid Yuri Glazko'v landed amkd strong signs that their program h a d' winds, low clouds and sub-zero been hastily ended. temperatures 22 miles (36 kilo- A two-week mission would meters) northeast of Arkalyk in give the crew little time to northern Kazakhstan, Tass news adapt to weightlessness, a n d agency said. would yield little data on the' A recovery team reached the effects of prolonged space liv- descent capsule of the Soyuz ; ing.! National Woodcock heads c ,s COlfll SOl 1, 11 Woodcock / PETITIONS FOR- STUDENT PRESIDENT OF THE MICHIGAN, UNION NOW AVAILABLE AT THE MICHIGAN UNION / LSA INFO DESK OFFICES FOR STUDENT SERVICES J t i - - CELE BR ATE YOUR BIRTHDAY WITPH USL PRETZEL BELL /_ WASHINGTON - President Carter yesterday named UAW' president Leonard Woodcock to; head a five-member commission to go to Hanoi in mid-March1 and seek information about Americans still missing in, Southeast Asia, according to a State Department announce- 3ment. The department said, in al written statement, "The govern-' ment of the Socialist Reputic-l of Vietnam has agreed to ac-cept] the commission's visit." The de- partment is also trying to ar- range a similar visit to Laos. 1 CLIP AND SAVE --f- I I I U E , tPhone Numbers Culation "E 764-0558 E t SClassified Adv., t a 764-0557 r Dis -lay Adv. 1 E 764-0554 t t I I New Phn Nmer 'I 764-0562 t I I Z-nI CLiAN A -- 'U According to State Depart- ment officials, there are no con- ditions or assurances on either side about the visit. The Unit- ed States still lists 2,550 Amer- icans as missing in action, but a House committee concluded, after an exhaustive investiga- tion, that there is no evidence that any American prisoners or woundeli are left alive in South- east Asia. The State Department beiev- es that Vietnam has consider- able information which could clear up the final doubts about the missing Americans and give information on how and when they died. Student violence WASHINGTON - The prim- ary task for a growing number of students and teachers is self- preservation rather than educa- tion, a Senate subcommittee re- port on school violence said yes- terday. Sen. Birch Bayh,(D-Ind.) said in releasing the report that an estimated $60 million is spent each year as a result of van- dalism in the schools. This is more money than was spent for textbooks in 1972, he said, and is enough to hire 50,000 in o r e teachers. "Even more shocking, how- ever, is the 70,000 serious physi- cal assaults on teachers and the literally hundreds of thousands of assaults on students perpe- trated in our schools annually," he said. i Bayh spoke at a conference sponsored by the National Edu- cation Association on violence in the schools. He is chairman of the Senate subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency. The report said the subcam- mittee's study has established that school violence and vandal- ism Ehave become serious and at times -critical problems in American education. "While certainly not every school in the country is faced, with serious crime problems it is clear that for a growing num- ber of students and teachers the primary task is no longer edu- cation, but preservation," it said. The report is a summation ofj three years of hearings and is based on a nationwide survey of 757 school systems enrolling ap-_ proximately one half of the pub- lic elementary and seondary students in the nation. Dissident meetsI labor leader MIAMI BEACH - Soviet dis- sident Vladimir Bukovsky, meeting yesterday with Amer- ica's labor leaders, urged thej unions to question U.S. crpor-' ate invstment in the Soviet Un- ion to insure that profit is not made at the expense of human rights. Bukovsky said capital invest- ment "calculated on the exploit- ' Presidential platelets Jimmy Carter took time out yesterday from his chores to lend some Presidential blood in Washington. ation of cheap labor" in Rus-! sia harms the interest of work- ers both in the Soviet Union and1 Western countries. Reading in halting English at a meeting of the AFL-CIO Exe- cutive Council, the exited Rvs- sian also praised President Car- ter's stand for human rights. Bukovsky is scheduled to meet! with Carter next week. AFL-CIO president G e o r g e Meany said later at a news conference with Bukovsky tha tI he was "delighted"with Car, ter's stand. He promised lab- or's strong support. Meany, a hard-line aiti-C)m-, inunist, said there is no reason the United States cannot do bus- iness with the Soviets withoutl adandoning its values on hu- man freedom.J "The idea that we mig'lt im- prove their conditions tho Son- iec people's by being n'ice ... is completely ridiculous," Meany: said. "It's like saying that you can improve the condi-ions of the inmates of A jail by drinking champagne with the jailers.' After Bukovsky's talk, he ; labor chiefs adopted a call for continued funding of -he A i r' Force's new B- bomber. Sourc- es said Meany was visi lv angry said Bell added. If we cameIup due to a cash flow pinch. when five of the 35 council to the conclusion ne was making Last month, treasury officials members dissented in the voice a clean breast, then we'd see said they would hoid back half vote. about consideration." the February-March school aid Ray, serving a 99-year Ten- payment, half the February pay- COrtstider'Gtt tnessee state prison term. refus- ment to colleges and universi- ed to talk to a Justice Depart- ties and the entire state income for Ray ment task force which recently tax revenue sharing payment to reviewed the FBI's original in- local governmen:s for the last WASHINGTON-A t t r n e y vestigation of King's murder in quarter of 1976. General Griffin Bell says he 1968. They said those, payments would be willing to give James might not be made until July. Earl Ray some form of theon-eIlasannounced Tho sdayThat sideration" if he will clear up the delayed school aid payment unanswered questions about the - $106 million - will be in the murder of Martin Luther King. mail next week. It was die Feb. Marvin Wall, Justice Depart-. WASHINGTON - House Dem- 1. ment public information direct- ocratic Leader Jim Wright said Chief Deputy Treasurer Car- or, said Bell told a group of re- yesterday that he had told the roll Newton said yesterday pay- porters Thursday ne would like chairman and chief inve;*gator ments to colleges and universi- to get the answers from Ray of the Select Assassinations ties totalling $23.6 million - himself. Committee to agree to a shot- which were due Feb. 15- will "I don't think we're going to gun-wedding truce if they hope be made May 16. A $23,1 mil- find out unless we talk to Ray." to save the committee. lion income tax revenue shar- Wall quoted Bail as saying. But the committee's ouiic ins' ing payments to local govern- "I'd either want to speak to formation officer sail t h a t ments which was due Feb. 28 Ray myself or send one of my chief investigator Richard Spra- will be made M-ir'h 15, Newton skilled people who know how gue had not agreed to the con-. said. to negotiate and interrogate." promise ordered by Wright. Newton said future payments Wall said Bell was then asked + Wright said in an inwerview to schools. colleges and I o c a 1 if he would be willing to give! that he told Sprague to work governments should be made Ray some form of co-asiderazien with Chairman Henry Goaizaes' more or less on time. as an inducement to :taik. nestfdicoradocuthl Bell replied, Wail said, e tf drcoIndt u h asB I rep rnentto ak. sI, stasffsGonzales earlier order- mi " 'Yes,' he would be willing to ed In return, he said, Gonras Daily Official Bulletin -. -- - ed.rIn1returnnhe said,...-zai-s AP Photo U 12 Systems" Prograbmmers Manufacturing Data Systems Inc., a rapidly growing Ann Arbor firm involved in the de- velopment, production, and marketing of high, technology computer, products and services for manufacturing applications, is looking for Sys- tems Programmers to work on the following projects: p PASCAL COMPILER " DATA MANAGEMENT SYSTEM * INTERACTIVE GRAPHICS DESIGN SYSTEM * N/C APPLICATIONS SYSTEM * MRP SYSTEM * PROCESS PLANNING SYSTEM Applicants should have a 3.0 G.P.A. or better, programming experience, CCS 573, CCS 575, CCS 476 or equivalent. Those qualified and interested in a challenging growth oriented opportunity should sign up for a Monday, March 2 interview at the Engineering Place- ment Center. I I nth FR I.-SAT. $ 3.00 ADELPHI RECORD'S PAUL GEREMIA /f S enitertain such;ianWi 1Ue.. Hte rs._.t.:: ....:::: .:..:. .............. ...... _._._ ._ - An excellent song- writer and blu e s singer and a guitar- ist of such technical proficiency (not to mention his'b l u e s , harp) that he makes everything ap p e a r deceptively simple. And, as Ann Arbor's own madcat said: "His harp playing and his guitar playing are great! I kid you not. Don't' miss him." WED.-HOOT (Amateur Nite) 75c THURS.-DICK SIEGAL $1.50" 1421 HILL 8:30 761-1451 RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE PLAYER present MIDDLETON 6 ROWLEY'S THE CHANGELING As it was Acted (with great Applause) in 1623 was told he must quit his at- . tempts to fire Sprague. The Daily Official. Bulletin is an But the committee spokeswo- official publication of the Univer- man said Sprague had not sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to agreed to either of the provis- 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m -of ions outlined by Wright and said the day preceding publication and any story' indiating that such by 2 p.m Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only. agreement had been reached Student organization notices are would be incorrect, not accepted for publication. For.- more information, phone 764-9270. Wright said: "In this instaneF I'm 'Marrying Sam' co iducing -Saturday, February 26, 1977 a shotgun wed-ding but naitherI DAY CALENDAR- party wants to get married. It's a little hard when you havito WUOM: "They All Talked Rag- hold the shotgun on both off time," discussion with Rudi mBesh, "authority on "Ragtime" music; WII- tham. Bolcom Hazen / Schumacher, _ _ _ _ _ _ host, "Jazz Revisited.' 12:55 p.m. FEBRUARY 24,25,26 8 O'clock PM EAST QUAD AUDITORIUM 4 i State Schools to get money LANSING - State officials say an improving economic pic- ture will allow them to release nearly $160 million in payments to schools, colleges and 1 o c a 1 governments which were held A Public Service of this newspaper & The Advertising Councill t t I I- Admission $1.25 Sun peal 4pmto9pm Sunday, February 27, 197-7 DAY CALENDAR - WUOM: Options in Education: "Community and Junior Colleges," I p.m.- Music School: Faculty Chamber Concert, Rackham Aud., 4 p.m. Monday, February 28, 1977 DAY CALENDAR - WUOM: James Horton reviews Alex Haley's Roots, 10 a.m. Ctr. Human Growth/Development: Richard Gordan, National Cancer Institute, "Computer Modeling of Neural Tube Closur in Amphibians," W. 'Conf, Rm., Rackham, 4 p.m. Music School: Composers Forum, SM Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Musical Society: Yamimi Krishna- murti, South Indian Dance, Rack- ham Aud., 8:30 p.m. TUE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 123 Saturday, February 26, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the. University of Michigan. News phone 164-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigap 48109. Published d a iil y Tuesday through Sunday norning during the Univer- sity year at 42, Maynard Street,Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $3 by mail outside Anti Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 'hy, mail outside Ann Arbor. rt( /if t t . tj Courageous people to work for no pay. Frequently the hours and conditions are inconvenient or difficult. Occasionally even dan- gerous. No reward, beyond the gratitude of the people you help. Apply at your local Red Cross Chapter. 1/21 l -R( Chickeni mch Frie Saladj AVf r771