Sunday, April 3, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page THree DAILY DIGEST APRIL 3,1977 I f From Wire Service Reports International Supersonic Concorde PARIS - French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing yes- terday stepped up his campaign to persuade the Carter Admin- istration that it must allow the supersonic airliner. Concorde a fair landing trial in New York. Discard Birth control I EW in India NEW DELHI, India - In the wake of a political furor over compulsory sterilization, India's new government pledged yes- terday to curb the nation's birth rate through traditional, volun- tary contraceptive methods. But Health Minister Raj Na- rain emphasized that lowering India's annual birth rate, esti- mated at 14 million, remains a top priority of the government of Prime Minister Morarji De- sai. India's population of 620 mil- lion, nearly three times that of the United States, lives in a area less than a third the size of the 50 American states. "We are totally against, fun- damentally against compulsory sterilization," Narain told re- porters. He said the government will increase distribution of free contraceptives and encourage Indians to have small families for their economic well being. Narain also said the govern- ment was ending the 20-year policy of paying cash to those who undergo sterilization. "This is a bribe," he said. Former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi began the sterilization campaign shortly after she sus- pended civil liberties in June 1975. But it generated bitter op- positton in a culture that vene- rates large familieshand was a major reason for her govern- ment's defeat at the polls last month. During the campaign, federal and state administrations de- vised elaborate incentives and penalties to convince Indians to undergo sterilizationafter hav- ing two or three children. They included denying free medical care, subsidized hous- ing, and pay raises to couples' who refused to submit to sterili- zation after three children. Rebels dead in Zaire KINSHASA, Zaire - The chief of staff of Zaire's armed forces said yesterday that his troops have killed Russians, Cubans and Portuguese among the rebel force that invaded Shaba Prov- ince on March 8. "We have not taken any of them prisoner," said Lt. Gen.- Bumba Moasso, expressing re- gret - with a broad grin -j that he could not display the bodies in the Zaire capital which He emphasized the political importance of the Concorde is- sue in a 90-minute discussion with Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, who stopped over here on his way home from abortive armslimitation talks in Moscow. Vance later left for Washing- ton. "President Giscard d'Estaing raised the question with respect to the Concorde and I said I would discuss the matter with President Carter on my return," Vance told reporters after the meeting at the Elysee presiden- tial palace. "It's not just a technical prob- lem," President Giscard d'Es- taing's spokesman said after the ~meeting. "It is a political prob- lem which will have inevitable political consequences if New York refuses Concorde landing rights." The Anglo-French airliner is undergoing a 16-month landing trial at Washington's Dulles air- port but has not been allowed to begin a similar trial period at New York's Kennedy airport. Other topics raised during the meeting were Vance's Kremlin talks, the dangers of the nuclear proliferation and the rapidly changing situation in Africa. lies 1,200 miles from the fight- ing near the key copper mining center of Kolwezi. He said the whites killed gen- erally fought bare to the waist in the rear of the rebel infan- try. He said most of them were instructors or technicians em- ployed to fire sophisticated ground to ground missiles of Soviet origin. Bumba declined to estimate how many whites had been killed. Asked to ex- plain how he could be certain that they were Russian, Cuban or Portuguese, he replied: "They support Angolan Presi- dent Agostinho Neto, don't they?" He declined to elaborate, but reporters assumed it was a' reference to Russian and Cuban support for the Marxist-oriented regime in, neighboring Angola which has given the rebels cru- cial material and moral back- ing. Bumba, who was protected by an eight-man bodyguard carry- ing submachine guns, pledged that government forces would soon launch an all-out offensive to drive the invaders out of the country. He did not ex- plain how they would overcome the handicaps of shortage of fuel and spare parts and hos- tility from the local population in western Shaba Province. Most of the invaders are Lun- da tribesmen of Shaba origin who have lived in Angolan exile since the collapse of the late Moise Tshombe's Shaba Katan- ga secession in 1963. Tshombe Was the paramount chief of the Lunda tribe. Egypt to ask for U.S. arms WASHINGTQN - Egyptian President Anwar Sadat is ex- pected to ask for U. S. arms and for a detailed explanation of the administration's Middle East peace plans in his talks this week with Carter since his inauguration, Sadat is known to be determined to probe Carter's concept of a "homeland" for' Palestinian refugees as well- as "defensible borders" for Israel. Sadat also wants American weapons -"lots" of Northrop F5 fighter planes and TOW antitank missiles, he said re- cently. Deliverycould begin a "retooling" of Egyptian forces 'along U. S. lines..~ Sadat is scheduled to meet Carter tomorrow and Tuesday. Egypt already receives French fighter - bombers and French and British helicopters and technology. According to Israeli sources, the Soviets have con- tinued to supply M1G21 fight- ers, anti-aircraft missiles and tanks despite a general impres- sion that they were caught off in a rift growing out of the 1973 Middle East war. The Israels contend the equip- ment is "laundered" through East Germany, Czechoslovakia, North Korea and other Com- munist countries. All Egypt is known to have In 1935, the Soil Conservation Service was established as a permanent unit of the Depart- ment of Agriculture for the con- trol and prevention of soil ero- sion. Russian casualties in World War I totaled 9,250,000 between 1914 and 1917. 1214 S. Uniiersity Theatre hone 668-6416 COMPLETE SHOWSTODAY PONTIAC, Michigan - tentially fatal botulism Po- food State Sadat received from the United States are three C130 military transports. The Egyptian mili- tary and Sadat would like to begin a transition to U. S. arms with the sort of subsonic planes and anti-tank missiles already supplied by Washington to other moderate Arab states. He was preceded here by Is- raeli Prime Minister Yitzak Rabin and will be followed in late April by King' Hussein of Jordan. Carter plans to see Sy- rian President Hafez Assad in Europe in early May and will receive Prince Fahd of Saudi Arabia here toward the end of the month. poisoning has been confirmed in 21 Pontiac residents at four hospitals in what health author- ities were calling one of the worst botulism out-breaks ever in the United States. Four of the victims were in critical but stable condition, the rest were listed as fair, and at least a dozen other persons were being held in hospital for observation, according to the Oakland County Department' of Health. Fourteen suspected cases of botulism poisoning had been re- ported by Friday afternoon and the malady was confirmed and the figure rose to 21 by yester- day, according to Ralph Miller of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, The contamination has been traced to canned jalapeno pep- pers used by a small, but popu- lar Mexican restaurant in Pon- tiac. Special serum to treat the victims of botulin toxin has been flown here by the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta. A CHOICE FOR A CHANGE! RENT CONTROL NOW AFFIRMATIVE ACTION FOR JOBS SUPPORT A.F.S.C.M.E. and GEO CONTROL THE POLICE - - Botulism cases rise THE MICH1GAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 146 Sunday, April 3, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone ?64-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a ii y Tesday 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. There are more sheep than people in Australia and the country produces about a third of the world's wool. JOIN THE DAILY STAFF YASUJIRO OZU's 1960 LATE AUTUMN "I'm happy as I am," says a young woman to her mother, refusing to marry in this vatuation on Ozu's theme of parent-child rela- tionships as they go through small, undramatic but significant cruises. The girl marries, of course, and her mother is left to live alone. Full of soft affectionate humor. Japanese with subtitles. CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. 7:00 & 9:15 Admission $1.25 JEAN-LUC GODARD's 1966 TWO OR THREE THI NGS A tuy fI KNOW ABOUT HER. A study of prostitution, both on a personal, industrial, and political level. Often exhibiting Godard's own special brand of humor, this film ranges from the adventures of a young French housewife prostitute, to the contem- plation of the universe within a coffee cup. Sometimes maddening, but bl- togther, an important film by one of the world's most intriguing film- makers. TONIGHT AT ANGELL HALL-AUD. "A" E7 & 8:30 Adm. $125 Diana Leigh Slaughter for Mayor William D. Wilcox 1st Ward 4 9 SOCIALIST HUMAN RkGHTS PARTY Pd. Pol. Ad DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (v;!,.":Mmrm " .J'Sem rr"!"l "ti s. ,.pG lq;s a ,." -r : rm;Je'Sm . ".tp+."A :{.i ?:}{ r ? " ";:S:"":i"" %r.?r 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. Sunday, April 3, 1977 DAY CALENDAR WUOM: Options in Education, "Life as an Educational Process," 1 p.m. Music School4 Jazz Band, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 S.A.B. - 763-4117 Camp Sequots, MI. Coed. Will in- terview Wednesday, April & from 9:30 to 3. Openings include water- front (WSI), riding (western), arch- ery, riflery, camp craft, arts/craft. Register by phone or in person. Silverman Village, Det. Fresh Air Society, Handicapped camp. Will in- terview Monday./Thursday; April 4/7 from 11 to 4. Openings include general counselors, waterfront (WSI), Arts/Crafts, maintenance. Register in person or by phone. Camp Oakland, MI. Handicapped. Will interview Monday, April 11 from 9 to 5. Openings include gen. counselor, arts/craft, waterfront (WSI), nurse, program dir. Register by phone or in person. Good Humor 'Corp. Det.: Will in- terview Monday, April 11 from 9 to 5. Good money - be outdoors all day. Opportunities in other cities also - Chicago, Baltimore, Phila., Pittsburgh, and others. Register by phone or in person. Camp Maplehurst, MI. Coed: Will interview Tuesday, April 12 fror0 1 to 5. Must be 20 or older. Openings include riding (eastern/western), nurse, tennis, sports, sailing, scuba, photography, drama. Register inper- son or by phone. Monday, April 4, 1977 DAY CALENDAR WUOM: Anthony Downes, "Cities in the Year 2000," 10 a.m. Physics/Astronomy: E. H. Levy, "The Generation of Astrophysical Magnetic Fields," 2038 Randall Lab., noon; M. Cohen, California Institute of Technology, "Non-linear Trans- port in Pinned Charge Density Wave System," 1041 Randall Lab.; L. Suss- kind, Yeshiva and Tel Aviv Univer- sities, "Breakdown of Bjorken Scal- ing, 2038 Randall Lab., 4 p.m. Ctr. Human Growth/Development: "Human Sexuality," Herbert Leider- man, Stanford Medical School, "Sex- ual Disorders and their Treatment." Aud. 4, MLB, 4 p.m. Music School: Opera - chamber performance, Mozart's "Cosi fan tutte," SM Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Fol8L a j Pd. Pol. Adv. I ANN ALIA0U FILM CC-CI Tonight in the Modern Languages Building Sunday, April 3 DESIGN FOR LIVING 1 X3 005 OW19 -q- O oili April 4-11 1. All Applications Taken from April 4 Through April 11, 1977 Will Receive Equal Consideration With Applications Taken June 6-13 for FALL BOOK RUSH. A Lot- tery System will be used for these applications to determine hiring order. II. The Cellar Will take applications at later times than indicated in (1); however, subsequent applications will be placed in hiring order by Date of Application, and they will receive priority after those taken in (1) Ill. Former Rush Employees in good standing Need Not Reapply for FALL RUSH and will receive top priority over all other applicants. IV. All applicants hired for FALL RUSH will be notified by phone or mail later in the summer. Rush employees hired to work in August should expect to work through and beyond registration. HOWEVER, all rush jobs are, unfortunately, only temporary. Starting pay is $2.70 per hour. V. Permanent positions which may open up after Rush will be filled by employees who worked FALL RUSH. Post-Rush hiring is done departmentally, on the basis of the employee's Rush performance and their availability for the unified hours. VI. After SEPTEMEBER 30, 1977, all unused applications will be thrown away. iTherefore, applicants must reapply for each future rush that they wish to work. ABSOLUTELY NO APPLICATIONS WILL BE UPDATED OR KEPT ON FILE FOR FUTURE RUSHES. I l (Ernst Lubitsch, 1933) 7 & 10:30-MLB 4 Discussions of Ernst Lubitsch are all too often inclined to pay lip service to his famous and delightful "touch," which generally obscures the fact that he was a director of considerable scope and depth. Happily, Lubitsch was at his best in this adult comedy about a woman who, unable to decide which of two men she loves the more, decides to live with them both. The witty screenplay was written by Ben Hecht. "Lubitsch was a giant . . his talent and originality were stupefying!" Orson Welles, Frederic March, Gary Cooper, Miriam Hopkins. AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY I GREENSH IELDS OUTSPOKEN AND TO THE POINT SOMETHING DIFFERENT-NOT THE SAME OLD CONSERVATIVE POLITICS I (Joseph von Sternberq, 1931) 8:45 ONLY-MLB 4 Dreiser's monumental novel, adapted by von Sternberg, is a similarly monumental film. Clyde Griffiths Is an unsure young man in love with a rich girl, but unable to Creak away from the factory girl he seduced. Von Sternberg's deft treatment of a tense murder trial causes this film to leave its mark on American cinema. Truly a classic. Philip Homes, Sylvia Sydney. Admission: $1.25 single feature $2.00 double feature An.ar%%, . A....I A :- lAu * University d or ms are a holdover from 19th Century Victorianism (in loco paren- tis ) * Building codes are based in many cases on conditions and construction methods of 50. years ago. " Feminist studies show that government controlleddand/or funded schools and day-care centers tend to f a s t e r the same sexist values that we have been fighting. DEMOCRAT: The University should be m a de to provide more housing. DEMOCRAT: Hire more in- spectors and e n f a r c e the building codes. DEMOCRAT: People can start their own day-care centers but t h e y should be government funded. TODAY at 1-3-5-7:05-9:10 FOUR ACADEMY AWARDS RFBT ACTOR-Pet-r Finch UNFORTUNATELY, WE HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO JOBS AVAILABLE CURRENTLY OR FOR THE SUMMER. SORRY, THESE ARE RUSH JOB OPENINGS ONLY. I I ._ ... . .. _ ,_ ...... 1 0 I