Wednesday, March 16, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three DAILY DIGEST MARCH 16, 1977 "At this stage of the game if Hi*acker seeks a o Internationl things don't work out it will be iN no great problem for the U.S.,"dac he _ _______ I he said. But he added, from --i---- 7 , 7 ~our national interest I certain- UI NIayt},-A a- F +ate of MIAs ,y would like to see stability UIN, Ita A eta ug r imp rs iSoutheast Asia, and I hope ian hijacker whohatkea -we can contribute to it. Spanish jetliner on an odyssey CLARK AIR BASE, The Phis.- a otiut oi.o oethn600mlsi WASHINGTON ( ') - Presi-' Th hadofth of more than 6,000} miles in ippines - The head of the search of two daughters order- dent Carter is being urged by U. S. Presidential commission ekaed the plane to Moscow on yes- his chief farm adviser to de- traveliing to Hanoi to seek the "'i "terday night after failing to get cide quickly to reduce sugar fate of missing Americans saidIni_ possession of his 5-year-old imports, a move that some re- yesterday that unless the Viet- GAURIGANJ, India (P) i finers say could cost each namese "break out of the ster- Prime Minister Indira Gand- cl. American family an additional ile negotiating mold of the hi's son Sanjay said yesterday Airport sources in Vienna said $16 a year in higher costs for past," the mission will fail. that an attempt to ssssinate the jet commandeered by the food and sugar. ' sallowed Lo drag on for ti n e- tire 60 days, it might be too State late to help many sugar beet! farmers who are preparing this year's crop. - ed m l Sugar refiners, who have pro- Feed mill tested cutting quotas, say that if Carter follows the comfnis- CADILLAC (UP sion recommendation, it would contaminated fes "have a potential" to increase ordered closed by retail sugar prices for the av- erage family by at least $16 Department of A 1975 but remained a year. Warm Bureau Se The refiners yesterday urged intervened. closes ?I) - A state' terday a PBB ed mill was the .Michigan Agriculture in open after a rvices official ichigan's first ld Wester, an tment inspec- y, said traces nical are still McBain Plant in Missaukee County. Wester 'was the fifth witness called to testify in farmer Roy Tacoma's $1 million damage suit against Farm Bureau Services and Michigan' Chemi- cal Co. The lawsuit blames the two firms for the contamination of tons of livestock feed with the rfire retardent chemical polybrominated biphenyl PBB. As a result of the contamina- tion thousands of farm animals died or were destroyed and some meat and dairy products in the state were contaminated., THE MICHiGAN DA1LY Volume LXXXVII, No. 130 Wednesday, March 1$, 1977 Is edited and managed by students st the University of Michigan, News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a i ly 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 dlay throughx Saturday morning. Gubscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 y mail outside Ann Arbor. °. ;o nSln rrnd to ri«nrr nn f"n« 4 in nn_ w r..____s___ e- _____.__ The five - member commis- sion headed by Leonard Wood- cock, president of the United Auto Workers, arrives in Ha- noi today hoping the talks on American MIAs may also lead to - normalizing relations with Vietnam, "There are very few negotia- tions I've been in with as little leverage on.our side," the labor leader said in an interview aboard the presidential jet fly- ing the groupto this American air base. He said the United States had advised the Vietnamese of the seriousness of its intention through third parties such as the'Soviet Union. "I'll tell you what we don't want to hear, and that is con- tinuing talk by them about the linkage of issues," Woodcock said. He was referring to Viet- nam's past insistence that those articles of the 1973 Paris agreements dealing with the return of missing personnel and American economic aid be tied together. "If we get mired down in talking about that situation,: then. we know we have failed," he said. him was "eirher inept or not serious." The opposition in In- dia's national elections said it was faked. "Whoever it was didn't go about it very efficiently," Gand- hi told The Associated Press in his first interview since the al- leged assassination attempt; here Monday night. Five shots were fired at; Gandhi's campaign jeep and' one of the three that hit it nar- rowly missed Gandhi in the; front passenger seat, accord- ing to the account by India's national news agency. His se- curity guard returned fire but" the attackers escaped in the dark, the agency said. The prime minister's 30- year-old son is running here for a parliament seat that would be his first elected job. National elections, delayed a' year by his mother's now-end- ed 19-month suspension of many civil liberties, start to- day and the attack came as a largely peaceful campaign sea- son \was drawing to a close in much of India. gunman was over Poland head- ed for Russia. One daughter, a 3-year-old handed over Monday by his for- mer mistress in the Ivory Coast, was among 21 passeng- ers aboard the Iberia Airlines Boeing 727 along with the hi- jacker, 36-year-old Luciano Porcari. Porcari's estranged wife in Turin, Bella Zavoli, refused to let their 5 -year - old daughter go because, she said, the one- time mechanic was dangerous. Records in the Abidjan, the Ivory Coast capital, said Por- cari shot and wounded two sold- iers and his wife was hit in the face by a bullet when she tried to leave with the child in 1972. After shuttling from Spain to the West African capital, back to Spain, Italy, Switzerland and again to Italy, the jetliner had been circling Turin under or- ders from Porcari not to land until he heard the voice of the 5-year-old daughter. Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland wants imports of cheaper foreign sugar reduced to help drive up prices for, American producers. He says without higher prices the do- mestic industry is sunk. Sources in the Agriculture Depai ment said yesterday that Bergland's proposal also includes government price sup- ports for American growers and that he has "continued to press" for it. The U. S. International Trade Commission recommended Mon- day that the current sugar im- port quota of seven million tons be cut to about 4.3 million tons annually over the next five years to help protect the do- mestic industry. Carter has 60 days in which to approve, reject or change the commission's recommendation. If he does nothing, it will take effect automatically. One USDA source said Berg- land fears that if the decision Carter to ask Congress for hear- ings on possible sugar legisla- tion. They also said that "re-1 strictive quotas on importedt sugar will be the most expen-t sive way" of aiding U. S. farm-t ers. Supplies to Zaire WASHINGTON IP) -- The Cartertadministration has de- c ided to speed about $1 million. Testifying in M PBB trial, Haro Agriculture Depar tor from Lake Cit of the toxic chen turning up at the Join The Daily Staft DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .. . . .. .....mim mara aam em m aasms An Evening of BLUES with M YWATERS in military and medical sup-i plies to Zaire after the central African country's urgent re- I quest for aid to repel intruders! from Angola. The U. S. budget for fiscal year 1978 calls for $32.5 million in military security assistance for Zaire. U. S. officials said " , the emergency aid would re- quire no new funding and that the administration consulted with members of Congress be- fore deciding to accede to the 'r request to speed up the aid.. "We are confident their re- quest is based on legitimate need," S t a t e Department spokesman Frederick Brown said yesterday in describing the airlift from Dover Air Fo ce Base in Delaware to Kinshasha, the capital of Zaire. Zaire's official news agency said yesterday that the intrud- ers, about 5,000 strong, were led by Cubans and supported' by "a third power for ideologi- cal reasons." It was the first! time the agency accused Cub-! ans of leading the intruders, al- though it had hinted at it be- fore. Belgian radio, said Zaire had asked for American help not because of the size of the in- -.- vading force, but because it was armed with such modern weapons as missiles and long- distance rockets. White House Press Secretary Jody Powell said Tuesday that approval for the shipment to Zaire came from President Car- ter. Powell said no arms were in- volved. Nor, he said, were any American personnel involved in the activities in Zaire. Yoaur last 2 years at UofM can be your first 2 years of management. Why wait until y o u ' r e out of college to get practical manage- ment training? Army ROTC is a possibility for anyone having two years of undergraduatte or graduate work remaining. And leads you to an Army officer's coinmmission upon graduationi. New Army offi c e r s take on instanit leadership responsibility. They have to mnanage people and handle money and equipment. They have to make mnore important plan- Wing decisions than most youn executives. So whent Army ROTC students r e C e i v e their undergraduate or graduate degree, they enter active or reserve duty fully prepared for these management challenges. If you'd like to be getting man- agement experience after college,. while others are getting manage- ment training, apply for the Army ROTC 2-year program by April 1. ARMY ROtC. LEARN W1 HAT IT TAKESTO LEAD. Make an appointment with the CAREER PLANNING & PLACE- MENT OFFICE, Room 3529, Stu- dent Activities Bldg., or call 764- Wednesday, March 16,19'77 DAY CALENDAR Psychiatry: D. Offer, U. of Chi- cago, "Four Psychological Types of Juvgnile Delinquents,"' CPH Aud., 8:30 a.m. WUOM: National Town Meeting, "The Equal Rights Amendment: What Next?" 10:30 a.m. Commission for Women: Women's Film Festival, 3205 Union, li a.m. Ctr. Afro-American, African Stud- ies: H. Cruse, "Black Politics: Re- assessment of the Sixties," CAAS f. Rm., noon. . Int'l. Gtr.: "Getting Around Over-. seas: Trains, Railpasses, Ships, Cars, Flights," Int'l. Ctr., noon. ISMRD:, W. Cruickshank, "Learn- tng Disability: Adolescent & Young Adult,". 130 8. First St., 3 p.m. Math Club: M. Nashed, "Episodes in the Development of Generalized Inverses," Rmn. 229, W. Eng., 4 p.m. Ristory/Judatc Studies: E. Sivaa, Hebrew U., "The Sanctity of the Holy Land in Islamic Tradition," 451 Mason Hall, 4 p.m. Psychology: i. Luce, Harvard, "The Psychophyatsi Homrunculus as Sta- tistician," Rm. 121, Perry Bldg., 4 p.m. Industrial & Op. Engrg.: ! . Loup, R. Ament, OPHA, 'Development of Hospital Case Mix Indices," 229 W. Eng., 4 p.m. Studio Theatre: O'Neill's "The Long Voyage Home,'" Arena Theatre, 4:10 p.m. TV Ctr.: Preview, "Worlds of Wom- en Series," 400 4th St., 7 p.m. Alliance Francaise: D. Arajou, pi- ano recital, Rackham Assembly, 8 p.m. Max Kade Deutsches Haus: '"Der Verlorence," Deutsches Haus, 8 p.m. Music Sch.: E. Derr, M. Derr, D. Boylan, "Elaboration, of Vocal Mu- sic in the Late 18th Century," Cady Rm., Stearns Bldg., 8 p.m. History/Judaic Studies: A. Halkin, U. of Cal., "The Sanctity of Israel in Jewish Tradition," Hillel, 1429 Hill, 8 p.m. Int'l. Otr.: Middle East Series, "Israeli Perspective," Int'l. Ctr., 8 p.m. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB - 763-4117 Camp Tamarack, MI, Coed. Will interview Thurs., March 17, 9-12 and Mon., March 21, 9-5. Register by phone or in person. Camp Niobe, MI. Coed. Will inter- view Fri., March 18, 1-5 p.m. Reg- ister by phone or in person. Camp Westminister, MI. Coed. Will interview Mon., March 21, 9-5. Open- ings include waterfront director, program director, counselors, busi- ness mgr., arts and crafts director, scuba instructor. Register by phone or in person. Murray Hotel, Mackinac, MI. Con- tact 769-4222 for applications. Open- ings include person to play piano music during dinner hour and evening, cooks, sec'y, maintenance, food service, housekeeping. t h0 4 24002401. R' S'at M arch 19 8pm Bowen Field Hmouse Eastern Michigan Unriversity M S A ELECTION APRIL 4, 5 and 6 9 FULL-YEAR SEATS Candidates May Register in MSAOFFICES: Rm. 3909 Michigan Union BY MONDAY, MARCH 21-5 P.M. r TICKETS: $6.50 reserved, $5.50 general admission Available at Wherehouse Records (Ypsilanti), Mr. Music (Briarwood), Schoolkids Records(Ann Arbor), and the McKenny Union (E.M.U.) A B LMN3 Production Open Thursday and Friday Evenings Until 9:00 P.M. "" ..' f Improve Your Professional Skills Leern to Use and Teach Effective Decision-Making Techniques WHERE: Marrott Inn, Ann Arbor, Michigan WHEN: Saturday, March 26, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. nui Making decisions Is never easy. And the more important the decision, the more difficult it' is to make. Do you help others learn how to decide? Are you a businessman or woman, an e d u c a t or , career-development specialist or school counselor? Or, are you a person inter- ested in learning how to make choices? Then, your chances of achieving your objectives for yourself or for others can be improved if you take the time to learn more about decision- making. flW This one-day workshop in decision-making will ayshelp you learn to use and teach a decision- making method that reduces the anxiety of making choices and increases chances for good results. It consists of mini-lectures and dem- onstrations of how the decision-making process works with particular emphasis on participant practice and the application of principles to real life situations. Decision-making skills to be covered include: learning what is important to you and how im- 'portant it is; clarifying what you want in life; expanding your alterantives and developing new ones; confronting the obstacles that keep you from deciding; assessing and understanding your personal risk-taking characteristics; learn- ing to take action; and becoming an assertive and responsible decision-maker, Workshop tuition ($30) includes coffee, lunch and decision-making materials. To register, complete coupon or call Decision-Making Pro- gram (212) 582-6210. COUPON I will be attending your workshop, Improve Your Professional Skills, on March 26 In Ann Arbor. Enclosed is my check for $30.00. { Y/ ! jF S V V. f ; j fJ/qf r : J' t JY s ' ,Sy/) 4 i 8 J2l take the Pacific Trail into spring jacketed in the shine of nylon cire. . just the right weight to ward off early season. breezes. Navy with kelly green, or rust with navy sleeve stripe for a bright change of pace. Sizes S-M-L-XL. $30 FnRaM A MR. .t HOP mrmr.c± r4AME: ....... ... .... TTE................ i~.