Wednesday, April 6, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three _ __ DAILY DIGEST APRIL 6,1977 NOW SHOWING COMPLETE SHOWINGS TODAY at 1:00-5:30-7:20 All seats $1.25 tilt 5:00 IAE G CEN IUS OF LIK/ ERMU LL.ER From Wire Service Reports National , International --- Sadat Battles continue WASHINGTON - Egyptian President Anwar Sadat today in Lebanon asked President Carter for arms BEIRUT, Lebanon - Artillery aid, and the White House said battles raged in southern Leb- the request would be considered anon yesterday as Christian in consultation with congression- rightists expressed growing con- al leaders. cern over Syria's apparent White House, press secretary friendliness toward Palestinian Jody Powell said Sadat present- guerrillas. ed his case for Egypt's defense Witnesses said rightist forces needs but did not ask for an im- heavily pounded Rub Tallateen, mediate commitment from Car- a key hill from which they were ter. driven the day before, but Pal- Earlier in the day, the Egypt-' estinian guerrillas and their left- ian leader told reporters he ask- ist Moslem allies held their ed for F-SE and F-5F fighter ground. aircraft. at a morning meeting1 Palestinian artillery shelled with Defense Secretary Harold! Christian-held villages in the Brown. southern hills. A guerrilla cap- Powell said the Egyptian re- tain told reporters his battery quest would be examined in the was also* shelling Israeli terri- overall framework of a current tory three miles away to block study into the future scope of supplies allegedly crossing ,4he American arms sales overseas. border for the Christian right- Carter recently expressed con- ists. cern about overseas weapons In Tel Aviv, Israeli authori- sales totalling billions of dollars ties acknowledged they had fir- and has called on Britain, ed artillery into southern Leb- France, and the Soviet Union to anon Monday night. But they join the United States in re- aid fhev d firs l aft- ! straining them. 'Food stamps WASHINGTON - President Carter asked Congress yester- day to stop charging food stamp recipients for the stamps. But about $450 million in food stamp aid to families with in- comes above the poverty lines would be taken away under Carter's proposal. The President promised to veto any congressional changes in his proposal that would in- crease by more than $100 mil- lion a year the program's cur- rent projected budget of about $5.5 billion annually. The authorizing legislation for the program, which now helps about 5.44 million families buy groceries each month, ex- pires Sept. 30. Two congression- al committees have until MayI 15 to decide what kind of new program to approve. Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland told the House Agri- culture Committee that Carter's two-year proposal is fiscally re- sponsible, would benefit the truly needy, help reduce fraud and curtail paperwork for re- cipients and local welfare of- fices. After two years, he said, re- form of all federal welfare pro- grams should be on its way "and that will be the end of the food stamp program as we now know it." State Tax levy LANSING - Legislation has been introduced in the state House to give local school.dis- tricts the option of levying an income tax in exchange for property tax relief. The measure, sponsored by House R e p u b 1 i c a n Lead- er Dennis Cawthorne of Mus- kegon, was offered to the House yesterday. It would allow a local school district; by a vote of the people, to levy a one per cent personal income tax and a .8 per cent increase in the Single Business Tax in exchange for a redaction of nine mills in the property tax. Anne Hathaway was the wife of William Shakespeare. Midwest's Largest Selection of Euro ean Chrtrs Canadian and U S from $289 CALL 769-1776 . Great Places #; " TRAVEL CONSULTANTS 216 S. 4th Ave, Ann Arbor tAGADEMI AWAPTIS sewmII p L LI "Swept Away. 1." £ . ," ENDS SOON SHOWS TODAY AT 1:00-3:00-5:05-7:10-9:15 OPEN 12:45 All seats $1.25 till 5:00 3 4 Academy Awards Best Actor-Peter Finch Best Actress-Faye Dunaway Best Supporting Actress- Beatrice Straight B'.s, S-,een--ay-Paddy Chayefsky blLuy peneu lre nily ai er an Arab shell landed on their side. The Palestinians and their left- ist allies have repeatedly claim- ed that Israel is overtly sup- porting the Christian rightists in the south, a former base for Palestinian guerrilla raids into Israel. Israel has denied direct involv- ment in the conflict, although it has permitted wounded Arab villagers to cross into Israel for treatment. Christian leaders in Beirut ex- pressed bewilderment over offic- ial Syrian newspaper comments which suggested a change in Sy- ria's attitude toward curbing the Palestinian guerrilla movement in Lebanon. Sir Charles Swinton is credited with having developed the mili- tary tank. In reporting on the third and, final meeting between Sadat and Carter, Powell said the two leaders had a wide-ranging dis- cussion of the Palestinian prob- lem, which President Sadat de- scribed yesterday as the crux of the Middle East conflict. Minimum wage WASHINGTON - As Presi- dent Carter and organized labor push their opposing views on how high the minimum wage shouldbe raised, House Speak-' er Thomas O'Neill predicted yesterday there will be a com- promise "somewhere in the1 middle." The minimum wage currently is $2.30 an hour. The AFL-CIO had advocated raising this to $3 an hour this year. The Carter administration has endorsed a $2.50 minimum. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ; :sK.GS': :t :{,+,---- --: r.".t" "a.":i::7;" };:yy.}{:::: ;..tr~,v'; %i,:s±5::^ :.::'? 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. Wednesday, April 6, 1977 DAY CALENDAR WUOM: National Town Meeting, live coverage discussion, "Our El- derly: Today and Tomorrow," guests Dr. Robert Butler, Dir. National In- stitute on Aging, and Senator Frank Church, Idaho; Moderator, Nancy Hicks, New York Times, 10:30 a.m. Ind.Oper. Eng.: Richard C. Schwing, General Motors Corp., Research Lab., "Societal Analysis at the General Motors Research Laboratories," 229 W. E., 4 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: L. Susskind, Yeshiva and Tel Aviv Universities, "The Confinement of Quarks," Den- nison Colloquium Rm., 4 p.m. Music School: American Trio, Rack- ham Aud., 8 p.m. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 S.A.B. - 763-4117 Camp Oakland, MI. Handicapped: Will interview Monday, April 11 from 9 to 5. Openings include gen. coun- selors, arts/crafts, waterfront (WSI), nurse, program dir., register by phone or in person. Good Humor Corp., Detroit, MI. Will interview Monday, April 11 from 9 to 5. Good money - be outdoors all day. Opportunities in other cities also - Chicago, Baltimore, Pitts- burgh, and others. Register in per- son or by phone. Camp Maplehurst, MI. Coed.: Will' Interview Tuesday, April 12 from 1 to 5. Must be 20 or over. Open- ings include riding (eastern, West- ern), nurse, tennis, sports, sailing. scuba, photography, dramW. Register by phone or in person. THE MICIIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 148 Wednesday, April 6, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. NewsI phone 764-0562. Second class postage! paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a iil y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 42r. Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arnor. &Immer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. AP Photo' A frightened three-year-old child is comforted by a friend shortly after a tornado touched down yesterday in Section, a small northeastern Alabama community. A spring storm packing funnel clouds, torrential rains and tornado-level winds drove across the Mississippi Gulf to the Northeast, killing at least 26 people and leaving scores injured or miss- ing and thousands others homeless. High winds and hail spawned by the storm are believed to have contributed to the crash of a Southern Airways DC-9 jet in New Hope, Georgia. URBAN wPLANNING- AT HUTER 'The Department of Urban Affairs at Hunter College of the City University of New York offers a two-year, 60-credit program leading to a MASTER OF URBAN PLANNING degree. Action oriented, Hunter's program grapples with social and economic problems and explores the areas of housing, transportation, environmental and health care planning. Fieldwork opportunities abound-in city and suburban planning agencies, in neighborhood groups, in community development organizations. Requirements are flexible and an able, diverse, and ex- perienced faculty is ready to odd quidance and direction to student goals. Extensive financial aid is available. Current costs ore $750 a semester for City residents and $1,000 for non-City residents, plus actiyity fees. F mo iire inforiluatonO' lu a 'uimtorni/frlicatiotrs write. Director, Graduate P r o g r a mt in Urban Planning, Hunfer College. C.L.N.Y., 790 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10021, (212 360-5594 LAST DAYS OF POMPEII Interesting historical melodrama which follows the life of a Roman blacksmith-turned-gladia- tor-turned hoodjum and his son who was once healed by a strange man from Galilee. Basil Rathbone gives a compelling portrayel of Pontis Pilot. By the director of KING KONG, Ernest Schoedsock. Thurs.: TWO-FACE WOMAN CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD., 7:00,-& 9:05 Admission $1.25 .1 1111: :s>- PmPW A C*O Pi has Rdi fpw ! I - , . More rousing action from the creator of "The Great Escape" Second Big Week TODAY AT 1:00-3:05- 5:15-7:15-9:20 OPEN 12:45 All seats $1.25 till 5:00 ANN AUE0U F/LA 00-0U Tonight in Auditorium A, Angell Hall Wednesday, April 6 "Swept Away. (Lina Wertmuller, 1975) 7 & 9--AUD. A Raffaella (Marijangela Melato), a rich, beautiful, acid-tongued Milanese who has chartered a yacht and Gennarino (Giancarlo Glannini), a swarthy Sicilian deckhand, are marooned on an isolated island in the Mediterranean. She is a capitalist for whom the system has paid off; he is a dedicated communist. SWEPT AWAY is the story of their tumultuous courtship. "Lina Wert- muller's newest foray into the class struggle explodes into a fierce battle of the sexes that is as witty as It is wise, as ferocious as it is funny."-Judith Crist. Italian with English subtitles. Showtimes are 7 & 9 Admission $1.25 : ' Thursday, April 7 in Aud. A "JAMES DEAN: FIRST Accounting Architecture Biology Black Studies Chemistry Communications Criminal Justice Economics Engineering Education English Finance History Management Science Marketing Mathematics Philosophy Psychology Physics Political Science Religion Social Work ... and many other subject areas This year take an interest- ing change of pace from your usual summers. Try the summer alternative at U of D. It's study, sure. But in a way you've probably never experienced before. Study that is oriented to the human side of knowl- edge, with the unique, Jesuit approach. Summer alternative courses offer a rich Don't miss out! Phone Dave Underwood (313) 927-1245 or, clip this coupon and mail today - -- - - mmmm m - == m SDaveJnnderwood nr -Denot. 200- Admissions Office, University of Detroit -= I