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March 18, 1977 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1977-03-18

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Friday, .March 1 S,

THE 1v11CHIGAN DAISY

Page Three

Friday, March 18, THE MICHIGAN DAILY

DAILY DIGEST MARCH 18, 1977

h

f

i

i

HELD OVE-
5th Epic Weelk!
TONIGHT AT
7:00-8:25-9:50
OPEN 6:45

International
U.S. aid
rejected
SAN SALVADOR, El Salva-
dor - El Salvador has announc-
ed it will reject all further U.S.
military aid in a spreading back-
lash to U.S. investigations of
human rights violations in Latin
America.
President Arturo Armando Mo-
lina, an army colonel who su-
spended constiutional rights by
declaring a state of siege Feb.
28, announced the decisionon
Wednesday miight after meeting
with his armed forces chiefs and.
top cabinet ministers.
Molina said the current U.S.
congressional hearings on hu-
man rights in El Salvador had
been passed on its sovereignty.
He said accepting aid would
be tantamount to accepting U.S.
interference in Salvadorean af-
fairs.
Uruguay, Argentina, and Br a-
zil had already decided to with-
draw from the U.S. military aid
program. Brazil, once Wash-
ington's strongest ally in t h e
hemisphere, also has ended its
bilateral defense agreement
with the United States.
.Vietnam talks
constructive
HANOI, Vietnam - Talks be-
tween a U.S. presidential com-
mission and the Vietnamese gov-
ernment are going well and
could result in a "constructive I

Revenge
in urde rs
MUKHTARA, Lebanon- More
than 150 people were killed in
Lebanon after Wednesday's as-
sassination of leftist leader Ka-
mal Junblatt as his- outraged
supporters took their revenge,
well-informed sources said to-

1
,a
g
1

and having utilities finance in- icals at the plant,
stallation of home insulation. nesium oxide, a
"I'm willing to give up some Touzeau said
of my popularity to make were barely de
the American people face t h e could have reflec
brutal facts," Carter told a testing equipmer
White House sponsored energy is convinced no
conference. In spelling out his chemicals were
comprehensive energy policy on * *
April 20, he said he would tell
the country:'Oaklan
"tTIi s er n rn e.- r t a.

including mag-
feed additive.
the amounts
tectable and
ted an error in
nt. He said he
contaminated
sold.
*
d child

a ,.....:::day . . .
Tens of thousands of people.
flocked to this mountain village
", " ***'*.*., ...,; \ for the funeral of Junblait, one , '
-4 of Lebanon's best-known puliti-.
clans, who was shot in his car1
by unknown attackers. ,
Amid outrage and rifle volleys r
of grief, leftist leaders in Beir Lt]rter
Woodcoc proclaimd a general strke Conn., chairman of the .ommit-
report" for President C a r t e r, which closed mostshops and tee working on Carter's propos-
commission leader Leonard West Beirut ed energy department, also said
Woodcock said yesterday. Sectarian killers seeking r e - there was no chance that t h e
He did not reveal what was venge struck quickly in the wake Senate could complete action on
said during the four-hour meet- of his deatth, murdering people the new department before the
ing, but the comment was tak- in the mountains and in Beirut President subalits his longrange
en to indicate the Vietnamese before the Syrian troops of the energy proposals on April 20.
may have agreed to the Amer- Arab League peace force could ; It's going to be a very tugh
mcay reus o h ean finrvn fight," for Carter to get his en-
ican request for the remainls df intervene. ergy proposals throuzgh 'va-
12 American pilots. This was un- _egyprsastro__gh_____my
derstood to be one of the topics gress, said Ribicroff. "I i y
in the first round of talks on N tio ii 1,oinio" i's' goi to be the
the American GIs still listed as ai biggest fight of his pesidency-
missing in Indochina. He will have to go to- the pub-
lic "

is is what we've get to " 0
face. Those are the steps we've: nISSing
got to take. BIRMINGHAM - A 10-year-
old boy was reported missing
yesterday .in this Detroit sub-
State u-rb, raising fears he might have
been another victim in a series
of recent child abductions and
PBB in salt killings in the. area.
Timothy King was last see- by
CADILLAC -The manager of his sister late Wednesday at his
a plant making PBB testiied home. He left to walk several
yesterday that traces of the blocks to a drug store and van-
toxic fire retardant were found ished. It was not known if he
in salt products even before it reached the store.
was learned the chemical had "This sounds very ominous,"
been mixed with large amounts said Oakland County Prosecutor
of livestock feed. L. Brooks Patterson. "The dis-
Charles Touzeau, manager of appearance is totally inconsist-
the Michigan Chemical Co. plant ent with his past behavior."
in St. Louis, said officers :if the "He is a good student and gets
firm were told in March, 1974, along with his family and
that small amounts of PBB were friends. That's what makes this
discovered in a number of chem- that much more frightening."
ANN ALIi3CI [ELM CCU-Cl)
Tonight in Modern Languages Bldg.
BEATLEMAN IA-MAGICAL.
MYSTERY TOUR
(The Beatles, 1964-1967) 7 & 10:30--MLB 4
See John, Paul, George, and Ringo sing "FOOL ON THE HILL,"
"I AM THE WALRUS," "YOUR MOTHER SHOULD KNOW," and
more in this extraordinarily entertaining and funny film. "Come
with us now to that special place, where the eyes of man have.
never set foot!" With the Bonzo Dog Dooa Dah Band and other
assorted freaks and oddities. Also, rare early footage of the
foursome in Liverpool, recording sessions with zany interviewers,
and the pandemonium that was Beatlemania.

'V
RXLPHBAKSH.FIL
C . b I)
\ " 197? T zwe t e th etr o

After the talks, the five-nem-
ber American commission and
staff aides were received by
Premier Pham Van Dong at his
palace.-
"You come here with g o o d+
will. President Carter oovnouslyj
wants to solve the problems be-
tween us in a new spirit," Dong
said after he personally seated!
the Americans around him.

Ener t ih ht
for grer?
WASHINGTON - A key Sen-
ate chairman predicted yested-'
day that President Carter may
face "the biggest fig'mt of his
presidency," one that might re-
quire him going directly to the
people, when he unveils his en-
ergy proposals next month.
Sen. Abraham Ribicroff, D-

He predicted Carter will be
up against every spedial inter-
est group in the counry ' when!
he brings his energy poicy to
congress.
Yesterday, in Char1.3rnto, W.
Va., Carter vowed o tell Amer-
icans "the brutal facts'' about
the energy crunch even if they
like him less for it.

,

.- . . ..v a .,..c au y run

"- -

He also
age could.
coal king

suggested 'he short-
be eased 5by making
again in Appalachia#

HELD OVER-I
6th Stunning Week!
TONIGHT AT
7:00&9:05
OPEN 6:45

Sg&5&W.&%.WIgflfl* S'At. W *Ag '.4immtfgl lmgesgggmi3;S vg#iw~iw:.w. is%
DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
rggg i $8 S; : ," r.}v sy;.rrt s'{.}:"$ ::Cv,";:"}?$:tif:;"iiti } i:C:::? "::=? $::$$>'r:$:{ti!!gsiligi

Friday, March 18, 1977
DAY CALENDAR
WUOM: Teach-In on Detroit: Past,
Present & Future, panel discussion,
panel entitled "Crime: Its Causes
and Cures," panelists James Bannon,
deputy chief of the Detroit Police
Dept., Norm Goldner, prof. Sociology,
U. of Detroit, Virgil Pickney Direc-
tor of Institutions, Dept. of Social
Services, State of Michigan, 10 a.m.
Guild House: Home-made soup &
Sandwich luncheon, 50 cents, 802
Monroe, noon.
Education: Valerie Suransky, "The
erosion of Childhood: A Social-
Phenomenological Study of Early
Institutionalization: Dean's Conf.
Rm., SEB, 1:30 p.m.
Music School: Stanley Boormann,
prof., Cambrcdge U., "Concepts of
Source Lfrticism and Filiation Ap-
plied to Renaissance Music," Cady
Rm., Stearns, 4 p.m.
CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT
3200 s.A.B.=- 764-7456
RECRUITING ON-CAMPUS
March 21-25;
March 21: Intermetrics, In.
March 22: AtIon/Peace
Corps/VIsta'
March 23: Action/Peace
Corps/Vista. KMart Apparel,
and ROTCI
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.
Independent study programs in
17 countries around the world!
COLLEGE
SEMESTER
ABROAD

FRI.-SAT.
JOE
H ICKERSC

$3.00 '
N4

A perennial favorite of Ark
audiences, Joe's vast, unusual
and clever repertoire is due to
his being the head of the Folk
Music Division of the Library
of Congress. This is his seventh
year at the Ark.

R EEFER MADNESS
at 8:45 only
Admission $1.25 s-nqle feature
$2.00 double feature
Saturday, Mar. 19 in MLB-
"TH E GRADUATE" and
"CARNAL KNOWLEDGE"
Sunday, Mar. 20 in MLB-
"THE SUN SHINES BRIGHT"
and "THE QUIET MAN"

}^.

INCLUDING

.

r

Sun:

DAVID BROMBERG

2 SHOWS: 8 p.m. and 10:30 p.m.
Each show $4.00. Advance tickets on sale Fri.
and Sat. nite for customers only. Open sale
Sun. nite at concert.

I

UI

. .

BEST PICTURE
BEST DIRECTOR-Sidney Lumet
BEST ACTOR-Peter Finch
BEST ACTOR-William Holden
BEST ACTRESS-Faye Dunaway
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR-,-Ned Beatty
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS-Beatrice Straight
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY-Paddy Chayefsky
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
BEST FILM EDITING

U

1421 Hill

8:30t

761-1451

Unique program for adding
dimension to your educa-
tion ;and developing per-
sonal initiative: orienta-
tion, languages, in-country
homestay, contemporary
culture seminar, indepen-
dent study project. Apply
now!
The Expenment's
School far International Training
BRATTLEBORO, VERMONT05301
Inquiries Office 4

CE LEB R ATE
YOUR BIRTHDAY
WITH US
PRETZEL BELL

ELL OTT
GOULD

_

METHI-iULIJWYN-MAYER p~
FATE WILLIAM PE'TER ROBSR
DIINHAWAY HOLDIEN FUIIH DUVALLAn
ByTWR
MUM OUWEFSHY
y EA Rnn, ,-r,,rC mrnr

V' 1l

"asbr'yH ELD OVER-
6tr Hit Week!
TONIGHT AT 7 & 9 .
'e Phe '65429OPEN 6:45
SEE GEORGE. SEE JANE. LAUGH TILL YOU HURT.

COlLlt UBA P[CT , P,etent,
A [ED KYTCNEFE F, '\BART'PAL EVSKr' Podau.o

IL

SATURDAY, March 26
RACKHAM AUD.

CEORCE
s1CM.

7:30 p.m.
$3.50

J4NE
FOND4O

.:

- TON lGHT!

TONIGHT!
An Evening of BLU ES with
JOhNNY WINTER
MUDDY WATERS
JAES COION

3+ ',- s l 7 cea7 h 7 s>s
-; ks.
A' 1 ,,w,, v/e
/for

I.

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STUDENT PUBLICATIONS
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SUNDA MARCH 28PM

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