Sunday, April 10, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three ..day Aprl 1 , 977THE M HIG N D DAILY DIGEST APRIL 10, 1977 From Wire Service Reports end International Cuba visit Tar time inuddles Easter HAVANA - "When relations WASHINGTON - If you're between the United States and among the 20 million couples or Cuba are re-established, we will individuals who have yet to * all wonder why we acted like file a 1976 federal income tax preparations , that fr 17 years," said Sen. return, you have three options Prelates and pilgrims herald James Abourezk (D-S. Dakota). as Friday's deadline approach- ed the resurrection of Christ in The senator commented as he es. a candle-lit service yesterday at and 100 American tourists - in- Strategy No. 1: Complete the the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusa- cluding a South Dakota all-star whole messy job and join the lem, while in Rome Pope Paul basketball team - ended a five-' day midnight. VI baptized three Koreans and day visit here. three Africans on Easter Eve. He helped arrange this trip STRATEGY NO. 2: Fill in the Following the mournful ser- last year in an effort to extend essential figures and let the vices of Good Friday, the Chris- the hand of friendship to this Internal Revenue Service make tian world prepared for the joy nation of nine million only 90 all the calculations. This option of Easter, the holiest day in the miles from the tip of Florida. is available to most people who church calendar, celebrating the Although the players from the earned $20,000 or less and are risen Christ. University of South Dakota and taking the standard deduction. BLACK-ROBED priests emerg- South Dakota State lost their] Strategy No. 3: Apply for a ed with lighted candles from the games last week - 91-72 Tues- 60-day filing extension - or traditional tomb of Christ un- day night and 88-69 Wednesday stay of execution, if you want to der Jerusalem's Church of the night - the presence of Ameri- look at it that way. You may Holy Sepulchre and lit the can- can visitors here was well re- take this option no matter what dles of pilgrims in the colorful ceived. your income, but you have to Eastern Church ceremony of!It was openly expressed at make a close guess at how the holy fire. the first game by the 15,0o0 much taxes you might owe. "Cmean rcevelihtfrm heople gmebthe 1,0 Come and receive light from people jamming the Coliseum, a Tax-filing is especially con- the eternal light which does not crowd which stood to roar and fusing this year because of nu- set, and embrace the risen cheer as the U.S. team paraded merous changes resulting from Christ," the clergy chanted as onto the ,court carrying a large enactment of the 1976 Tax Re- the flame was passed from' can- U.S fla form Act. dle to candle until the vast cru- It was the first time the Stars Last year, the worst ever for sader - built church glowed and Stripes and the National mistakes, the error rate for brightly. Anthem were seen and heard the standard 1040 tax form The ceremony is traditionally in Cuba since relations between was 10.6 per cent; for the 1040A held on Holy Saturday since in short forms, 12.4 per cent. the two nations were severed earlier times this permitted on Jan. 1, 1961. This year, 9.5 per cent of the swift runners to carry the flame 30.9 million 1040 forms filed by from the tomb to their own dis- April 1 contained mistakes. But tant communities for Easter N to 1 the error rate on the 23:1 mil- Sunday services. Ho la lion 1040A forms had jumped The holy fire ceremony pre- to 13.6 per cent. ceded Easter vigil services by . Roman Catholic and Greek Or- time arter's thodox churches, lasting into the n t earlier hours of today. In trouble energ1vplais Jerusalem, enjoying fresh WASHINGTON - The two WASHINGTON Co spring weather, was crowded congressional leaders most re- is gearing up to tackle Presi- with pilgrims, particularly since sponsible for tax legislation say dent Carter's wide-ranging en- both Western andM Eastern President Carter will have to ergy proposals, with a special churches celebrate Easter at round up the votes if he expects committee planned in the House the same time this year. Nor- Congress to pass his troubled just to deal with the package. mally their differing calendars $50 per person rebate plan. I Carter will announce his pro- keep their Easters on separate "I told him he'd have to talk gram April 20 at a join session Sundays. to the troops," Sen. Russell of Congress, two days after Long, (D-La.), chairman of the Congress returns from its East- Syrians warn Senate Finance Committee, said er recess. But preliminary dis- in an interview last week, closures of some of his propos-r Lebanese ais have already touched off BEIRUT --lively debate on Capitol Hill. BIRUT--Syria has caution- ...s Ther l have hampered consideration de MOHRENSCHILDT, who of energy legislation in the past. died March 29 in an apparent All House committees that suicide, reportedly told ac- have some say over energy quaintances he had prior know- matters will be represented on ledge of a plot to kill Kennedy, the ad hoc panel, O'Neill said. and that he "babysat" Oswald He said at least seven com- in Dallas before the assassina- mittees are involved: Ways and tion. Means, Public Works, Com- A special congressional com- merce, Interior, Armed Serv- mittee that has reopened the ices, Merchant Marine, and Sci- Kennedy assassination p r o b e ence and Technology. reportedly intended to call de, Mohrenschildt as a witness. INITIALLY, parts of the en- ergy package will be farmed B'otuclism* out to these separate commit - s .o tees, which will then have 60 looking back days to make their recommen- dations to the new panel, O'Neill PONTIAC - An intensive disclosed. care patient so sick he could He said the ad hoc commit- barely talk blurted out the miss- tee will then put all the parts ing link that helped doctors together so that the energy solve a medical mystery and program can reach the House prevent deaths in the nation's floor as a single bill. worst botulism outbreak ever. More than 125 House Demo- John Slater, 26, of Pontiac, crats have already asked to be was fighting paralysis at St. on the committee and that de- Joseph Mercy Hospital March ciding its roster will be a hard 30. In the next bed, doctors job, O'Neill said. asked another struggling vic- The Senate does not have the tim, Diane Sprenger, a nurse same jurisdictional problems as at the hospital, where and what the House, largely because of she had eaten recently. an internal reorganization ear- lier this year that established a SHE MENTIONED Trini and new Energy and Natural Re- Carmen's Mexican restaurant sources Committee to handle next door to the hospital. Slater all energy legislation. suddenly slurred that he, too, had been there. The restaurant owners, Trini- dad and Carmen Martinez, already face three damage suits and possible criminal Ford Loes charges because of a state law urban church deacon. The two friends went to the restaurant March 29 for a nacho, a Mexi- can pizza that was a common poisoning source. Victims reported a frighten- ing array of maladies, includ- ing nausea, vomting, diarrhea, headache, difficulty in swal- lowing, breathing trouble, near- blindness and paralysis. "You don't have any pain," Penrod said. "It's a fog roll- ing in on you. Someone is tell- ing you the fog will kill you, but it has no pain." The strengths of acids and al- kalis is measured on the pH scale. The world gress. largest library in the is the Library of Con- 4pm to 9 1/21 (r day Special Chicke n inch Fries home GRAND RAPIDS - Former president Gerald Ford said yes- terday reports linking former CIA operative George de Moh- renschildt to the assassination of President Kennedy are "aj retread" of testimony rejected by the Warren Commission. Ford, a member of the inves- tigating commission that con- cluded Lee Harvey Oswald was Kennedy's lone assassin, said he , believes the commission's 28-volume report still repre-, sents the best evidence avail- able. "The de Mohrenschildt story is a retread," Ford told re- porters. "The commission staff interviewed Mr. de Mohren- schildt in detail and found him to be noncredible." that bans restaurants from serving home - canned food. Until the outbreak, the restau- rant had a better than average sanitation inspection record. The crisis has officially end- ed, but the memories and dev- astation linger. MIKE PENROD, 35, a college counselor from Detroit, is re- cuperating with Slater, a sub- Midwest's Largest Selection of European Charters Canadian and U S. from $289 CALL 769-1776 -iGreat PlaCes TRAVEL CONSULTANTS 216 S. 4th Ave, Ann Arbor Salad $1.95' ~U~a~MM j~Iit~aM S. University near Washtenaw 769-1744 + k 'J IkL 1 ' j { '1 t . ) , ', i, 1.'1 11.'.i ' . ', i'ri ' i ' ', l' Piz3 ed Lebanon's Christian leader- ship to stop its apparent coop- eration with Israel against Pal- estinian guerrillas in southern Lebanon, authoritative Christian sources reported yesterday. The warning provided the first explanation for Syria's re- cent support of guerrilla at- tacks against Christian strong- holds along the border with Is-, rael. THE SOURCES said the Syrian warning was part of the mes- sage carried to Beirut by Sy- rian President Hafez Assad's personal envoy, Col. Mohammed al-Kholy. Kholy, chief of Syrian air force intelligence, wound up a round of talks with President Elias Sarkis and Christian mil- itia leaders and returned to Damascus. Some diplomatic sources sug-I gested that the Syrians, havingI made their point, now are ready to stop the border fighting be- fore it generates danger of Is- raeli intervention. But shelling persisted through the day around the Christian- held garrison town of Marjay-? our), six miles north of the bor- der, and the guerrilla-held mar- ket town of Nabatiyeh, about1 five miles to the west, reports from the area said. Palestinian guerrilla sourcesl said they had orders to holdi back on earlier plans to attack Marjayoun. They described the orders as "a political decision," meaning Syria told the guerril- las to back off. Softball was invented by, George W. Hancock The oldest national anthem is the "Kimigayo" of Japan. THE MIcHIIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 152 Sunday, April 10, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 164-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a ii y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48199. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thria April (2 semes- tersi; $18 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! Arbo-. Long IN A SEPARATE interview, Rep..Al Ullman, (D-Ore.) chair- man of the House Ways and Means Committee, said some inducements must be held out to members inclined to oppose the rebate. Carter's plan to give the econ- omy a quick boost by putting $50 into the pockets of most Americans through tax rebates and direct payments, already behind schedule after being nar- rowly approved in the House, is in deep trouble in the Senate. The test will come soon after the Senate returns April 18 from from the congressional Easter recess. Congressional leaders had hoped to have the tax bill con- taining the payments, along with other major components of Carter's $31.6 billion, two-year stimulus program, on the Pres- ident's desk before the recess. nup psas are expectedto, contain some new taxes. TO HANDLE the many-facet- ed program in the House, Speaker Thomas O'Neill says he will name an "ad hoc ener- gy committee" composed of 25 sDemocrats and 12 Republicans. The proposal is an effort to' ease the jurisdictional rivalries among House committees that aily Official Bulletin 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' notraccepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. DIV CSunday, April 10, 1977 DYCALENDAR WUOM: Options in Education, "Higher Education," 1 p.m. Monday, April 11, 1977 DAY CALENDAR Physics/Astronomy: A. Blaurock,! Calif. Institute of Technology, Den- nison Colloquium Rm., 3 p.m.; B. Sandler, "Helicity Dependence of TOT (p-p)," 2038 Randall Lab., 4 p.m. Music School: Chamber Winds Concert, Pendleton Rm., Union, 7:30 p.m.; Arts Chorale, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. GENERAL NOTICES CEW: Jean W. Campbell, Dir. of the Center will present scholarship awards to 27 women who have re- turned to the U-M for undergradu- ate, graduate and professional de- grees on April 21, 1977, E. Conf. Rm., Rackham, 8 p.m. F FM-103 and Dave Alan presents: TOM WAITS FRIDAY, APRIL 15-MiDNIGHT DOORS OPEN AT 11:30 P.M. Reserved Seats $5.50 & $6.50 Avail, at the Theatre Box Office, Music Mart on State St., Recordland at Briarwood, Bonzo Dog Records, and All Hudsons. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 668-8480 "i y . , 1 414 . .r AT S O Appearing Tonight: TONIGHT Is: PITCHER NIGHT SWEET THUNDER Monday: SONIC'S R EN DEZVOUS & JETT BLACK The SECOND CHANCE Restaurant Announces THE MUSIC & MEAL DEAL Emery Sunday thru Thursday Spend just $3.00 (per person) on food in the restaurant be- tween 4 and 9 and we'll give you free admission to the . nightclub for the evening. That's a Square Deal! 994-5350HOURS- 994-535n.-St.119 516 E. LIBERTY ' + Sunday 4-.9 CH'IANCEl I i I U A FULL MUON PUUUCTIUN ANN AIIJIC4DLF[LM CID-CUi Tonight in the Modern Languages Building MOROCCO (Josef von Sternberq, 1930) 7:00 ONLY-MLB 4 Marlene Dietrich, Gary Cooper, Adolph Menjou. Dietrich, haunted by a love for French Legionaire Cooper, spurns wealthy Menjou's entreaties and follows her beau to the desert wars-with the other women campfollowers. Von Sternberg love stories somehow man- age being both spare and incredibly righ. "An extraordinarily evocative and atmospheric film"-Museum of Modern Art. i See the Final Guest Artist Series Production FREE USHER at The Black Theatre Program's TAMBOURINES TO GLORY Hear the words of LANGSTON HUGES ON-STAGE Sign up at the PTP office-Michigan League For further info: 763-5213 THE SCARLET EMPRESS (Josef von Sternberq, 1934) 9:00 ONLY-MLB 4 Featuring the sensual photography of Bett Glennon and the sumptuous, baroque sets of great art director Hans Drieir, this story of Catherine the Great's use of "sexual politics" and her consequent rise to power is Von Sternberg's most extravagant film. Its erotic implications went right over the heads of 30's audiences. "T HESCARLET EMPRESS, the penultimate film, de- served to be successful by any standard then existing or now prevalent . . . it is a rentless excursion into style, which taken for granted in any work of art, is considered to be unpardonable in this medium."-Josef von Sternberg. Marlene Dietrich, John Lodge, Sam Jaffe, Louis Dresser. Admission $1.25 single feature $2.00 double feature Monday, April 11 in MLB- ORSON WELLES NIGHT THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI (Orson Welles, 1947) 7 & 1O:30-MLB 4 This is Welles' wildest film; the camera work, editing and script show an energy and abandon not found in his more formal works. The story concerns a corrupt lawyer, his associate and his wife, who all dupe a gullible, innocent bystander into a perfect frame- up for a murder. A film full of humorous touches and great scenes (the aquarium scene, the- Crazy House scene, and most famous, the Hall of Mirrors scene), held together by Welles' im- pressionistic direction and relentless exploring of the themes and metaphores that have interested him since KANE. Orson Welles, Rita Hayworth, Everett Sloane. MR. ARKADIN (Confidential Story) \AI-nl W.H.C or\ O.AK nM1Y V A1 A ROBERT BRESSON'S 1969 UNE FEMME DOUCE Adapted from Dostoevsky, this probing film features the star-making performance of Domonique Sanda. A man re- creates the events that led to his young wife's suicide. With Guy Franzin. French with subtitles. TUES.: YANKEE DOODLE DANDY CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. 7:00 & 9:05 Admission $1.25 BERNARDO BERTOLUCCI'S 1963' BEFORE THE REVOLUTION The first feature by the director of LAST TANGO in PARIS, this brilliant study of a wealthy young Parmanese endeavor- ing to commit himself to the demands of Communism-and 4- . t1.- -,.... * _:,. .. , f. . I' L . ..... ... t ,,- . I .,.3 .:, .. : I TODAY AT 1:00-3:05-5:10- 7:15-9:20 OPEN 12:45 TODAY AT 1:00-3:00-5:00- 7:05-9:10 OPEN 12:45 .4, TODAY AT 1:15-3:45- 6:15-8:55 OPEN rMO 2 i tU I k t \P fl I