Thursday, Morch' 17, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Thursday, March 17, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY DAILY DIGEST MARCH 17, 1977 From Wire Service Reports International India votes. NEW DELHI, India - With Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's political future at stake, record numbers of voters turned out yesterday for what may be the most crucial elections in In- dia's 30 years of independence. . eports from around the coun- try indicated +that well over 6 per cent of the eligible elector- ate had voted in the 300 parlia- mentary constituencies in the first round of polling. Voting was generally peaceful, though three people were killed and several injured in various incidents. The highest turnout was in Bombay, where 85 per cent of the voters cast ballots. Results will not be announced until Sunday evening, -after vot- ing ends in all 542 parliamentary constituencies. The number of Parliament seats won deter- mines which party controls In- dia's government.I to take part in this week's gen- eral elections, the sixth since independence and the first with a single, united opposition group pitted against the Congress Par- ty. - Congress spokesmen said the were confident of a decisive ma- jority despite acknowledged op- position in many parts of the" country to authoritari'an curbs" imposed by Gandhi under a "state of emergency" proclaim- ed in June 1975.' The elections themselves were delayed a year by Gandhi's em- ergency rule, and curbs on po- litical criticism and press free- doms were eased only after the January announcement that elec- tions would be held. Jumblatt killed BEIRUT Lebanon - Kamal Jumblatt the leader of Leban- on's leftist Moslems was assas- sinated by unknown gunmen yesterday raising immediate fears of renewed Christian-Mos- lem bloodshed. A police spokesperson said Jumblatt and two of his body- guards died instantly when their car was sprayed by machine- gun fire near the town of Baak- line, 21 miles southeast of Bei- rut in the craggy mountains of the Chouf district. The assassins' getaway car was later found abandoned in al nearby village. Police said they found three Soviet-made Kalash- nikov automatic rifles and a pis- tol in it. Theretwas no immediate indi- cation who the killer were or what cause they espoused. The Chouf district is home both to Maronite Christians and to Mos- lem Druzes. Jumblatt, -59, a milionaire- landlord, was the leader of Leb- anon's Progressive Socialist party and the tribal chief of the country's. 175 000 Moslem Dru- zes, a sect of tough mountain warriors who believe firmly in revenge. - He emerged as the over-all leader of the alliance of leftist Lebanese Moslems and Pales-- tinian guerrillas who battled savagely in the 19-month civil war to overcome the traditional domination of the government, army and commerce by right- wino Tharonite Christians The news of the 'assassination was greeted in Beirut with an eruption of gunfire and explo- sions both in Moslem and Chlis- tian sectors. But there were no immediate reuorts of renewed Christian-Moslem fighting. The shooting apneared to be an expression of Christian jubi- lation and Moslem sorrow over Jimblatt's death. Arabs tradi- tionallv mark both events in this manner. Ther government and both Moslem and Christian feaders issued calls for restraint. A government statement broadcast by Beirut radio smd all necessary measures were be- ing taken "to prevent repercus- sions which would only benefit those harboring evil intentions against Lebanon." In Cairo, shaken Palestinian guerrilla leaders whose forces fought alongside Jumblatt's Moslems in Lebanon greeted the news of his death with vows of revenge. Soviet persecution JERUSALEM - I s r a e l ac-' cused the Soviet Union yester- day of opening the worst cam- paign of persecution against So- viet Jews since the days of Stalin. Foreign Minister Yigal Alon said in the Knesset (parliament) that the Soviet government was creating "an atmosphere of hat- red and discrimination aganst Jews throughout the Soviet Un- ion." After discussing the problem of Soviet Jews who want to im- migrate to Israel, the Knesset turned to another pressing prob- lem - Israelis who want to emigrate from the Jewish state. The Knesset adopted a resolu- tion decrying emigration from Israel, and urged Jewish organ- izations abroad not to empley Israeli expatriates. It demanded'that the gwern- ment imlrove its adverising abroad of enticements such as cheap housing and tax exemp- tions to lure back the estimated 300,000 Israelis who have ief for North America, South Afica, Europe and Australia. "It is time that the Soviet Un- ion recognizes that it cannot strangle or absorb the tews of the Soviet Union, nor their cul- tural or national aspiration" Al- lon told the Knesset. He cited charges published in Izvestia the Soviet government newspaper, accusig nine Jew-- ish activists of spying for the United States, and charged that anti-Semitic documentary films were being shown on Soviet tele- vision and in cinemas. Pflkistcini riots LAHORE, Pakistan - At least two people here renorted shot dead yesterday amid reneved demonstrations in major cities by opposition supporters cle- manding the removal of Pakis- tani Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhtto. Reliable reports said two neo- ple were gunned down in Hvcier- abad, one of the most volatile onoosition strongholds during a clash between protest marchrs and the para-military federal senuity force. Another rceort said five or six neonle were killed. There was no official confirmation of the renorts. which said seven nronle were taken to hospital with bul- let wounds. Violence also flared in the country's two biggest cities, Karachi and Lahore. Evewit- nesses said ix peole were shot and wounded in Laore when nolice oened fire on demonstra- trs, while at least 10 people were inured in street fighting in Karachi. The demonstrations, now in their third consecutive day, fol- lowed a weekend call by the on- nosition Pakistan National Al- liance (PNA) for a mass drive to force Bhutto to resign over charges that he rigged general elections held on March 7. TrG WA ficant U.S. plotte del C any the H sinati discu ident "Di any in ate K sinati Sprag Tra bling answ quest const ing ti lege Tra 1 Jack ational store, even if much-needed heavy spring rains come as fore- cast. A blizzard late last week that brought death and destruction to parts of the Midwest proved a mixed blessing to farmers. Oil s pills WASHINGTON President affican te S t I S SHINGTON - Santos Traf- Experts estimate that the :e, sole survivor of three ground may have soaked up sev-1 underworld figures who eral inches of moisture in areast d with the CIA against Fi- where heavy snow fell. But astro, declined to answer where there was no snowfall, the1 questions yesterday from storm's high winds blew away l [ouse Committee on assas- topsoil from parched fields and ons, including whether he grazing land. , ssed plans to murder Pres- Snow turned to rain in many ' John Kennedy. of the hardest-hit states, and' r id you ever discuss ,with ranchers and farmers hope i individual plans to assassin-' spring rains this month and next :ennedy prior to his assas- may help them recover from on?" chief counsel Richard earlier dust storms and lack of I, gue asked. precipitation. , afficante, a former gam- Brief periods of rain or snow; figure in Cuba, refused to alternating with longer dry, er that and the 13 other snells have been characteristic ions put to him, invoking of the drought, according to itutional provisions includ- Fred Ostby, deputy director of he Fifth Amendment privi- the National Severe Storms ' against self-incrimination. Forecast Center. But with the afficante refused to say if recent moisture. "it certainly Ruby, the man who killed looks better than it has for a uorcocr (locr~l '^ nnn lr.-.-. :.ro>> lof~RZ o" Carter is considering toughening standards for oil tankers in American waters to prevent ac- cidental oil spills that foul coast- al waters and beaches, a White House spokesperson said yes- terday. Carter's tentative plans i include barring from U.S. ter- ritorial waters ships that are known to frequently discharge oil into the sea, said press sec- retary Jody Powell. Although final decisions have. not been made, Powell said, the President probably will propose legislation to provide compensa- tion for damages or loss of in- come caused by oil spills and support an international agree- ment on fighting pollution of the world's oceans. A specific plan is expected to be announced Friday, he said. State Highland Park Mayor Jesse' Miller said his city has lost 250 ' businesses in the last five years LANSING - Gov. William a a result of X-rated entertain- Milliken was scheduled yester-- ment dens. i day to begin an unprecedented "These pornography strips , three-day "listening tour" of have all but destroyed cur city's the Upper Peninsula, fulfilling a tax base," he said at a public ?pledge to gather first hand vi- E hearing on the question. ' dence of "We have a lot of empty problems. store fronts. Legitimate busi- The tou nesses cannot survive in that to SaultS kind of atmosphere." Menomin Several spokesmen for home- aba. Hout owners associations agreed that way point establishments offering both li- iken aide quor and hardcore pornographic.meeting. entertainment have affected their neighborhoods as well. "The co Critics of the current stand- are desig ards say they are too vague on ear what what can and cannot be re- esidents vealed. sula." M the region's special r, taking the governor Ste. Marie, Newberry, ed, Marquette, Escan- ghton and several mid- 's, was likened by Mil- es to a protracted town onference and the visits ned to allow me to t is on the minds of the of the Upper Penin- illiken said. Gandhi India's newly united political; opposition claimed the heavy; turnout pointed to victory. The new Janata - Peoples' - par-a ty, an alliance of four important non-Communist parties, is try-l in'g to end 11 years of power by Gandhi and 30 years by her Con-1 gress party. "The response has surpassed our expectations," said L. K. Advani, secretary-general of t'he; Janata party, which is headed by 81-year-old former deputy prime minister Morahai Desai. The Janata party has been; helped by the breakaway Con-; gress for Democracy organiza- tion formed by Agriculture Minister Jagiivan Ram when, he defected from the Gandhi ranks earlier this year. Ram, 68, is the leader of the politically important "untouchable' class, in India and his organization has fielded 40 candidates whose farte could- become important in a tight race.. Heavy polling in previous elec- tions has always been good for Congress opponents. The Con- gress Party suffered its most' serious losses to date in the 1967 general elections, when 61.3p cent of the electorate voted and set the still standing" voter turnout record. An estimated 320 million vo- ters -the world's largest demo-) cratic electorate - were eligible Lee Harvey Oswad, had once nng time, stby sad. strips visited him when he was in pris- MSf $fri"L on in Havana, Cuba. And he'Sq cchcirin fIE1I1 L A N S I N G - Home-owners refused to say if he was involved sin CIA assassination plots WASHINGTON - Legislation and city officials told the Liquor against Castro or whether any giving the Food and Drug Ad- I Control Commission yesterday , federal agency had tried to keep ministration-(FDA) new leeway that "smut strips" are ruining' him from testifying before the 1 in deciding whether to take off their communities and urged , House committee. the market cancer-causing prod-' adootion of a regulation to ban Chairman Louis token(D- ucts was being prepared 'bars from offering X-rated en- hirdecined os d ese w ' Wednesday in Congress as the tertainment. Ohio) declined to desdribe what o~blic otcv over the planned Th ,e lto udrstd y evidence, if any, the committee ;ibi oicvovrteIlne The regltion uinder study bya staff had to support such clues-. ban of saccharin continued, the commission would prohibit tions. The FDA last week announced adult movies and bottomless Stokes was asked if he was its nlan to ban saccharin after dancers in establishments with concerned about jeopardising Canadian researcheirs reported state liquor licenses. Trafficante's life by calling him !that rats fed large amounns of ; to testify.t bg sacharin developed ladder TilE MIsi(;r.A* lnAl VY "I don't know how to answer cancer. volume LXxxvI, No. 131 y o qtin, Sto aid. In a statement yesterday, the Thursdpy, March 17, 1977 "our question," Stakes said.ou aev said it would welcome a i edited ani managed by student I I'm concerned about any mar- ressiona hearing on the tt the University of Michigan. News der in the United States." phone 764-0562. Second class postage Stokes said the committee had laws under which it must oper- naid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 k s htate Published d a i y Tuesday through some idea in advance that Traf-u adit the agency urged Cn nday mrning during the Univer- ficante would refuse to answer'st era 2 anr tet n questions but called him any- ress not to just exempt sac- Arbor. Michigan 48109, subscriptIon way. bdhar nfromdpresent laws say- rates: $12 Sept. thru Apri (2 senes- I I wain r "to do so would be to decide ters1: $Vi by mail outside Ann Asked if the committee plight , Arbor give Trafficante immunity from a comnlex issue of food.safety summer session pubished Tes- prosecution in an effort force isive fat rather than day thronugh Saturday mrning. praSby stientn ancEforvestigation." ~ ittscripti'on aes: $6.50 in Ann! him to testify, Stokes said, MbSientcinves atonrmer FDA Arbor, $7.s4 av mal outsideAnn "That certainly is in the realm 'Meamwhile,_aormrDAj-Aror. of possibility." commissioner also ured Con- areS to re-examine the laws Tl . j ~nder which the FDA must op-4s ete. n3ears I2(w Dr. Hrbert Lev the former corymiqcioner. said nresent law The midwestern drought which iares the anencv "no alternative is costing farmers and ranchers, to baniniig sa charin " the last ' millions of dollars in last crops '; s;labtle lrifi-ial sweetener. Tonght at 7:00-8:25-9:50 and 1ivestack may be near an , Tev. who lust his ,jab as FDA Open :45 end after 18 months. But agri- !TnhmiTssiTaner:se0e82ears59A50 cultural experts warn that the in the contro'ersT over cvcla- effects of the dry spell will hot'-ate. anther artifical sweeten- likely disappear soon. er. onestioned whether the law A shortage of some crops and was consistent with the public higher beef prices may be in;interest 231 o thst I'M IN UAC TAE Tonight at 7:00-9:00 The year's most shat- tering film event. NOMINATED FOR 10 ACADEMY AWARDS "NETWORK" (R ti.:: ..'; . Toniht at 7:00-9:00 :; - - A N D U LO V E I ' C S mtd P~turs nustris. ic 19Y YOU CAN BE TOO. Applications are now being accepted _ for committee coordinators for the 1977-78 school year. Students are needed to produce plays, concerts, travel pro- grams, special evenits, ticket central, speakers, movie series, and assist senior officers. Applications are available at the UAC offices, 2nd floor, Michigan Union. DEADLINE: March 21, 1977. POWERFUL PEOPLE NEEDED Because of graduation and term expiration, Student Govern- ment has student openings on all of the: UNIVERSITY COMMITTEES S.A.C.U.A. COMMITTEES M.S.A. COMMITTEES POWERFUL PEOPLE are needed to fill these vacancies and deal with the administration and faculty members. If you feel that you can handle the challenge and the respon- sibility, apply now at the M.S.A. offices, 3rd floor, Michigan Union. DEADLINE MARCH 30 'here IS a di fference:t PREPARE FOR: ''e MCAT" DATO LSAT@ SAT GRE 0 GMAT "OCAT "VAT fur broad range of programs provides an umbrella of test- ing know-how that enables us to otter the best preparation avartable, no matter which course is taken. Over 38 years of experience and success. Small classes. Voluminous home study materials Courses that are consta'htly up- dated ,Permanent centers open days, evenings & week- ends all year Complete tape facilities for review of class lessons and for use of supplementary materials. Make-ups for missed lessons at our centers ECFMG " FLEX NAT'L MEDICAL & DENTAL BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours Write or colif: 1945 PAULINE BLVD. ANN ARBOR 48103 MP N p -f1 d Stet EDUCATiONAL CENTER CALL~oN Fre 5U LL Cet'ers inMar rU S C't'es and l Lx'o. Switartan" TEST PREPARATION SPECIAISTS SINCE 1838 arc .itiuo a mna.c voa DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN. .. . ; 4 '.5 . . . .'.......... .::::......::e;;: I fihursday, March 17, 1977 DAY CALENDAR WUOM: St. Patrick's Day Special, 10 a.m. ISMRRD: "In Almost Every Fam- ily," video-tape, discussion on legal responsibilities regarding child abuse, 4th fl., Studio, ISMRRD, 3:30 p.m. MHRI: S. Leibowitz, "Neurochemi- cal Control of Appetite," 1057 MHRI, 3:45 p.m. Turner Lecture Series: C. Lang- way, SUNY, "Polar Glaciology - Greenland & Antarctica," 2501 C.C. Little, 4 p.m. Kraus Memorial Lecture: F. Kep- pel, Aspen Inst. for Humanistic Studies, "The Crisis in Schools of Education & Graduate Schools," Rackham Amph., 4 p.m. History/Judaic Studies: A. Halkin, "Jewish Messianic Movements," J. Lassner, "Cross-cultural Currents in Jewish & Islamic Messianism," E. Lec. Rm., Rackham, 4 p.m. Studio Theatre Series: O'Neill's "The Long Voyage Home," Arena Theatre, 4:10 p.m. Prison Teach-In: C. Garry, "The Overview: Prisons as a Means of Social Control," 7:30 p.m.; M. Lane, "The Use of the Judicial System Against the American People," 9 p.m.; P. Thomas, "Imprisonment of the Mind," 10 p.m., Mendelssohn Theatre. Bachmann Lecture: R. Breslow, Columbia U., "Template Directed Reactions in Steroids," 1300 Chem., 8 p.m. Aerospace Engineering: W. Kuhn, "On the Habitability of Mars - An Approach to Planetary Ecosynthesis," Chrysler Ctr., Aud., N. Campus, 8 p.m. Music School: String Dept. pre- sents, SM Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Art School: opening reception, BFA Exhibition, Siusser Gallery, 8 p.m. +t CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3200 S.A.B. - 764-7456 RECRUITING ON-CAMPUS March 21-25: March 21: Intermetrics, Inc. March 22: Action/Peace Corps/Vista March 23: Action/Peace Corps/Vista. K-Mart Apparel, and ROTC For information on the following call 764-7460: The Weyerhaeuser Company is sponsoring a Science/Engineering Intern Program. Selection of in- terns is made in early March with notification no later than April 1. First week is orientation to the com- pany. Permanent employment will be offered to interns whose per- formance standards are high and who evpress an interest in a career with Weyerhaeuser. Send your re- sume to Weyerhaeuser Co., Science & Engineering Summer Intern Pro- gram, Tacoma, WA 98401. Include your present address and phone (and permanent, if different), name of your college or university, copy of transcript, of courses and grades, and description of extra curricular and employment activities. State briefly the types of assignments you feel are most appropriate to further your professional development. Small Northern Michigan Hotel needs: piano player, cooks, secretary, maintenance personnel, and rota- tional workers for food service and housekeeping. Ann Arbor phone: 769-4222 for information. *1 NOON LUNCH K Home Made Soup and Sandwiches 50c FRIDAY, MARCH 18 "HUMAN RIGHTS IN LATIN AMERICA" WITH REPRESENTATIVES FROM THE Committee on Human Rights in Latin Amierica Chinese Dinner 1.8O 6:00 p.m,-Call 662-5189 for Reservations 4' ~..I 4 '., ,,P A Z.. iet f io rtie