Friday, April 8,197-; THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Friday, April 8, 197'~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY , MMM DAILY DIGEST APRIL 8, 1977 DOWN JACKET f t _ ! From Wire Service Rteports - e International Lebanese battle SIDON, Lebanon - Palestin- ian guerrillas claimed capture of a Christian stronghold near the Israeli border yesterday and said they were drawing fire from Israeli tanks and artillery across the border. At the same- time Lebanon's rightist Christian leaders sent an urgent appeal to Arab states to intervene against the advanc- ing leftist Palestinian forces in southern Lebanon to prevent the battle there from rekindling the country's civil war. They urged Arab peacekeep- ers to save the "life of a sis- terly nation." In Israel the military com- mand declined to comment di- rectly on reports of tank move- ments and flights over Lebanon. It would only say there was no unusual activity in the region. Israel is known to be worried that a Palestinian victory in southernaLebanon would once again allow guerrillas to con duct raids and harass the Is- raeli border area. National Carter appoints ambassadors WASHINGTON - President Carter's first major ambassa- dorial appointments are going to the governor of Wisconsin, former Sen. Mike Mansfield, two educators, some career Foreign Dil ffMicialBultiny Daily Official Bulletin official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent In TYEWRITTEN 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. Friday, April 8, 1977 DAY CALENDAR WUOM: James L. Buckley, William Rusher, and Pat Buchannan, Con- servative Political Action Confer- ence, held February 3-7, sponsored by American Conservative union and Young Americans for Freedom, 10 a.m. Physics/Astronomy: L. Susskind, Yeshiva and Tel Aviv universities, "Lattics Gauge Theories II," 2038 Randall Lab., noon. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 S.A.B. - 763-4117 Camp Oakland, MI. Handicapped: Will interview Monday April 11 from 9 to . Openings include gn. oun- 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. Gfood money - be outdoors all day. Opportunities In-other cities also - Chicago, Baltimore, Pitts- burgh, and others. Register in per- son or by phone. Camp Mapiehust, 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, drama. Register by phone or in person. GENERAL NOTICE STUDENT ACCOUNTS: Your at- tention is called to the following rules passed by the Regents at their meeting on February 2, 1936: "Stu- dents shall pay all accounts due the University not later than the last day of classes of each semester or summer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are sub- ject to this regulation; however, student loans not yet due are exempt. Any unpaid accounts at the close of business on the last day of classes will be reported to the Cashier of the University and "(a) All academic credits will be with- held, the grades for the semester or summer session just completed will not be released, and no tran- script of credits will be issued. "(b) All students owing such accounts will not be allowed to register in any subsequent semester or summer session until payment has been made." Service officers and two Georg- in economic benefits that it will more fuel than it consumes. ians. produce in inflation. The statement issued by Car- Carter announced yesterday ter said the United States will that he had picked Wisconsin study "alternative designs of Gov. Patrick Lucey to be the the breeder" but postpone their U.S. envoy to Mexico, Yale Uni- adoptinfor commercial use.Iree . versity President Kingman a tot me n the proj- Batl C k : Brewser asthe abassaor toWithout mentioningthpr-, New park site Brewster as the ambassador to UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - ect by name, the statement ap- the United Kingdom and for- U.S. Aibassador Andrew Young peared to spell the end of the BATTLE CREEK - The city mer Princeton President Robert said yesterday he has apologized proposed Clinch River breeder of Battle Creek has purchased Goheen to be ambassador to In- for telling a British interview- reactor, a $2 billion, demonstra- 392 acres of land from the fed- dia. er that he sometimes thought tion plant planned near Oak eral government for the devel- Mansfield, a former senator Britain had "almost invented Ridge, Tenn. opment of a Cedar Point Amuse- from Montana, was named am- racism." Carter said he would also de- ment Park. bassador to Japan. "I was quite wrong, so I call- fer indefinitely the commercial The purchase clears a major The 10 nominees named yes- ed British Ambassador Ivor reprocessing and recycling of obstacle in planning for the $30 terday were the first appoint- Richard and apologized and ac- plutonium produced by U.S. nu- ments based-on the recommen- cepted his reprimand," Young clear power programs. THE MIIGAN DAILY dations of Carter's new advisory told ,The Associated Press. A reprocessing plant planned' volume LXXXvII, No. 150 board on ambassadorial ap- Young, the first black Ameri- by industry at Barnwell, S.C., Friday, April 8, 1977 pointments. can ambassador to the United but now seeking federal support, is edited and managed by students The others chosen6were:2.University of Michigan. News. The others chosen were: Nations, told a British Broad- "will receive neither federal en- pho 7ys52 e ap Ne Philip Alston Jr., an Atlanta casting Corp. - BBC - inter- couragement nor funding for its paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. lawyer, ambassador to Austral- viewer that Britain had insti- completion as a reprocessing fa- Published d a i 1 y Tuesday through la; nne OX Cambes, cair- undtYy morning during the Univer- ia; Anne Cox Chambers, chair- tutionalized racism "more than cility."r 4y A 1 1 1 l i woman of the Atlanta Newspa- pers, ambassador to Belgium; Wilbert Le Melle, a Ford Foun- dation executive, ambassador to Kenya and the Seychelles; Sam- uel Lewis, a former assistant secretary of state, ambassador to Israel; William Sullivan, now U.S. ambassador to the Philip- pines, ambassador toIran, and George Vest,- a State Depart- ment official, ambassador to Pakistan. Wholesale prices rise W A S HINGTON - Higher prices for coffee and other foods boosted wholesale inflation 1.1' per cent in March to the worst rate in 17 months, the Labor' Department reported yesterday. The surge in prices is new fuel for critics of the adminis-1 tration's proposed economic stimulus. Conservatives have complained $50 rebates for individuals and $4 billion for public works will provide less, anybody else on the face of the earth." He 'also accused Britain of be- ing "a little chicken" in hand- ling racial matters at home and in (southern Africa. Young said Richard told him that "you should know that you are no longer a congressman or a preacher." Nuclear breeder WASHINGTON - President Carter announced yesterday that he is deferring U.S. development of nuclear breeder reactors, the power plants that produce addi- tional fuel but could help in- crease the spread of atomic weaponry in the world. Carter said the risk of spread- ing; nuclear weapons "would be vastly increased by the further spread of sensitive technologies which entail direct access to plutonium, highly enriched uranium or other weapons-use- able material." The breeder is powered by plutonium and is so named because it produces The diode radio tube was de- veloped in 1904 by Sir John Am- brose Fleming. y A...MarabtreetAn Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters f; $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 IArbor. More tea is grown on north side of the equator. the M H T P Presents: SWASHBUCKLERS! SATURDAY 9 APRI L, 1977 Old Architecture Auditorium 7 p m.-SCARAMOUCHE (Stewart Granger, Janet Leigh) ANN A ucIZ ILM[ACCOCU I Tonight in the Modern Languages Building THE PRODUCERS (Mel Brooks, 1968) 7 &r 10:30-MLB 3 Zero Mostel plays the producer. When his accountant (Gene Wilder) shows him how producing a Broadway flop can make more money than a hit, he buys a horriblefi hilarious musical called "Springtime for Hitler." One of the fun lest movies in recent years, it was Mel Brooks' first movie and he still hasn't topped it. "Pure lunacy .. . uproariously funny!"-Time. Academy Award-Best Original Screenplay. THE TWELVE CHAIRS (Mel Brooks, 1971) 8:45 ONLY-MLB 3 Mel Brooks has directed this classic Russian comedy in his usual zany, fast-paced fashion. A dying woman confesses separatedly to her son-in-law and the village priest that she sewed valuable jewelry into one of the twelve dining room chairs before fleeing from the palace during the Revolution. This sets 'off an out- rageous chase as one person after another learns the secret and dashes across Mother Russia in search of treasure. "THE TWELVE CHAIRS is a completejoy! Mel Brooks is a major delight in a hilarious role."-Judith Crist. With Ron Moody, Dom DeLuise, Frank Langella, and Mel "Fun" Brooks. NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (George Romero, 1968) 7 & 10:30-MLB 4 A group of people trapped in a farm house are surrounded by radioactive ghouls who have come out of their grave, murdering, mutilation, and eating human flesh raw. More frightening than THE BIRDS, more shocking than HOUSE OF PSYCHOTIC WO- MEN, more grotesque than FREAKS, more menacing than THE INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS; this movie is as horrify- ing a nightmare vision as one could hope to see on film. THE 1000 EYES OF DR. MABUSE (Fritz Lana, 1960) 8:45 ONLY-MLB 4 The last film of the late Fritz Lang is a shattering work and Lang's third film to center around the power-hungry master criminal, Dr. Mabuse. When a series of sinister crimes occur, all resembling ones committed years before by the infamous Dr. Mabuse, the clues lead to a mysterious hotel where all actions are monitored by telivision cameras (the "1000 eyes"). The skill with which we are told who is "watching" and why proves that Lang was no less a powerful director at 70 than at 30. Peter van Eyck, Dawn Addams, Gert Probe. Admission $1.25 single feature $2.00 double feature Saturday, April 9 in MLB "On The Waterfront," "A Streetcar Named Desire" and "Theatre of Blood" million recreation area, sched- uled to open in the summer of 1979.E 1960/40 Smooth-Shelled The city earlier bought 350{Doan Parka W/Hood by acres of land from the General Coorado Comfort. Re- Services Administration. The due ro .0 t 99 land was part of the U.S. duced from 90.00 to 59.95 Army's Ft. Custer, which has 0 RIPSTOP VESTS been adandoned for some time. our regular 32.00 19.95 ~"'~ w DOWN JACKETS by In buying the land, the city W MILLER. Regularly is acting as an intermediary 50.00 NOW 29.95 between the federal govern- ment and private developers to whom the city plans to resell the property. Interesting facts WE'RE OPEN Michael Faraday developed the electric dynamo in 1831. 10 til 5:30 p.m. Atmospheric nudzear tests Z13S. MAIN ST.-665-3888 were resumed by the Soviet Union on Aug, 5, 1962. . FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT'S 1973 DAY FOR NIGHT Truffaut's love poem to cinema is a film within a film which results in endless hilarious complications, While making MEET PAMELA, cast and crew interact and get involved with e a c h other. Starring Jacqueline Bisset, Jean-Piere Leaud, Valentina Cortese with Truffaut as the director. SAT.: ADAM'S RIB CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. 7:00 & 9:05 Adrhission $1.25 JEAN COCTEAU'S 1946 BEAUTY &THE BEAST A visually stunning rendition of the proverbial story of . beauty taming-and eventually loving-the beast. Display- ed With Costeau's unique blend of fantasy and. surrealism, this film remains one of the masterpieces of modern cinema. With Jean Marais and Josette Day. In French, with subtitles. CORRECTION: Next Fri. we will show Truffaut's SMALL CHANGE and not THE THIRD MAN. CINEMA II TONIGHT AT: ANGELL HALLAUD.2A 7& d- 12 I 9:15 p.m.-COURT JESTER (Danny Kaye) Only $1.00 per film-$1.75 for both 11 # i I I I I HELD OVER AGAIN! NETWORK Shown TONIGHT at 7:00 & 9:05 Open 6:45 'if FOUR ACADEMY AWARDS BEST ACTOR-Peter Finch BEST ACTRESS-Faye Dunaway BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS-Beatrice Straight BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY-Paddy Chayefsky K eMGM s NETWORK /MGM TUnmied 'si A , Se A Transamenca Company ___________t HELD OVER-- 3rd Terrific Week M IC H I N Shows Tonigh at S6656290 7:00 & 9:05 Open 6:45 STUNNING WORLD WAR II ACTION From the Director of "THE GREAT ESCAPE" MICHAEL CAINE, ROBERT DUVALL and DONALD SUTHERLAND Bring the International No. 1 Bestsellers to the screen S TARTS TONIGHT- .4 2 ACADEMY ONE SHOW ONLY AWARDS TONIGHT at Best Cinematograph 8:00 OPEN 7:45 Best Music Adaptation " Research, Writing, Editing " Professional, Fast . Any Topic, All Fields Send $1 for Mail Order Catalog or Write for free information Our services are sold for Research and Reterence purposes ouiy. THE ACADEMIC RESEARCH GROUP, Inc. 240 Park Avenue Rutherford, New Jersey 07070 Phone (201) 939-0189 In three days they almost v the W ~ \t41 &aL Most of all... u-uu if i