PageSi THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, April 15, 1977 LOOK AHEAD Order your Summer Daily Nowv Cal 1764-0558 es A eli viits ta gage B-1 views Cartes s Itx rebate ola Do aOer needed I i WtDi B x SECOND ANNWA TRAVEL SUPPLEM Apri 16, 197 DON'T1I ia m Pge a decision on whether to.produce the plane, avoiding such a deci- ;' partmenlt hsSion in an election year. (Contnued lrom Page economy a quick boost. For a administration can reach its ed the production of 244 A major influence on the ac- consumer contidence could be typical family of four, with in- goal of reducing unemployment hibmes eindto fly at typnalfamlynedfuriithintgoayofreduingueeplomen o ceptance or rejection of the undermined if "they are de- come under $20,000, the total re- below 7 per cent this year even l tttd> ar near-sonic bomber is the Strategic Arms prived of tax rebates that they bate would have been $200. without the rebates. speeds and to maneuver quick- Limitation Talks (SALT). Pur have come to anticipate." But Carter said consumer buy- . Congress last year postponed sell said he sensed that because CHAIRMAN Arthur Burns of ing so far this year has been BUT C A R T E R said if the' of the recent breakdown of the Federal Reserve Board, much better than expected, and economy turns sluggish again, SALT, congressional sentiment whose opposition to the rebate indicated he now agreed with the rebate plan can easily be would be that the U.S. now need- as inflationary may have done critics of the plan that additional revived since it will remain ed the B-1 bomber. more than anything else to turn stimulus could add to the na- "alive" in the Senate Finance "I suspect the breakdown will many m e m b e r s of Congress tion's worsening inflation prob-' Committee. The House had ear-j have an effect on a few (repre- against it, praised Carter's de- lem, lier approved the rebate plan.{ sentatives), but not a serious cision. "Except f o r stock prices, number," he said. "This is an act of extraordi- every single economic indicator Schultze appeared to disagree Pursell said a 1 t h o u g h he nary honesty and courage on the has been up in recent weeks," with Carter that the rebates hadn't talked to any manufac- part of the President," said he said. When he first decided in would have added to inflation. turers of the bomber, the strong- Burns, who was appointed to a rebate last December, he said, "I don't believe any of us est lobby is the Department of his post by former President "the economy was dormant and think the rebate itself was in- Defense. Richard Nixon. inflationary pressure was not as flationary," Schultze said. But "You see three star generals, In addition to the rebate, Car- great as it is now," he said. he said there are "important (working) on your tax dollars, ter also said he was withdraw- HE REPEATED his determi- elements in the community who walking d o w n congressional ing his plan for $2 billion in ad- nation to hold down inflation and do." Schultze said these were in halls . I resent military gen- ditional tax credits for business, achieve a balanced budget by the nation's business and finan- erals coming into my office but would continue to work for fiscal 1981. Carter will unveil his lobbying for a weapon." the jobs programs and perma- long-awaited anti-inflation pro- nent t a x adjustments which gram at a news conference to- made up the remainder of the day. $31 - billion two - year economic! Budget Director Bert Lance stimulus program he proposed estimated that scrapping the re- in January. bate and tax credit will reduce THE REBATES would have i the fiscal 1977 budget deficit to put $10 billion in the hands of $36.8 billion, down from the cur- American consumers in hopes rent estimate of nearly $70 bil- theyUwould spend it quickly on lion. A UU HARTER. consumer goods and give the Carter said he believes the ADVANCE BOOKING - - I ~/ t I I r cial community. THE DECISION to scrap the rebate was made Wednesday night and obviously caught some advisers by surprise. Both Treasury Secretary M i c h a e 1 Blumenthal and Marshall had made speeches in recent days arguing for the rebate. Initial reaction in Congress appeared largely favorable to the decision. However, Chairman Al Ullman of the House Ways and Means Committee said he was upset he wasn't notified in advance of the decision and didn't find out until yesterday. "It was a little less than fair to those of us who supported it against our better judgment and worked hard to get it passed," he said. gents court test O *a F_ C . . - : 5- E1'T AIR ONLY FROM DETROIT AMSTERDAM BRUSSEiLS CALIFORNIA FRANKFORT GLASGOW HAWAII ITALY LONDON MUNICH ZURICH From $289 From '349 from 121 S From '309 From '319 From '299 from '399 From 319 From 1379 From 1379 OTHER DEPARTURES AVAILABLE FROM CHICAGO, NEW YORK AND TORONTO EURAIL PASS FIRST CLASS 15 DAYS 17Q 21 DAYS $210 1 MONTH '260 2 MONTH 1350 3 MONTH 1420 STUDENT PASS SECOND CLASS 2 MONTHI '230 t ' Graduate Dance Co leri APRIL 14, 15, 16-8:00 P.M. DANCE BUILDING (behind Central Campus Recreation Building) STUDIO THEATER A $1.00 DONATION INFORMATION: 763-5460 Original Dance and Music by Graduate Students _- -- NEW YORK () - the pro- testors carried no signs and chanted no slogans as they dem- onstrated on the steps of they federal courthouse. Instead of long hair and surplus Army fa- tigues, they had their hair clip- ped short and wore gray flannel suits. In fact, the 300 FBI men who lined up in silent rows yester- day looked more like a graduat- ingg class posing for a yearbook photograph than a group of demonstrators making a point. Theirs was as peaceful a dem- onstration as the city has seen in years-. AGENTS and former agents came from as far away as Buf- falo and Baltimore to mass on the steps of the U.S. Courthouse to show their support for one of their own: former supervising agent John Kearney, who was being arraigned on charges of 141t pg wI Slit AItINE IAMTRAK TICKETIS At NB CHARt to CLIENT REGENCYPTRAVELINC. INDIVIDUAL & C f GROUP TRAVEL 665-.6122 AIR-4EA-LAND hj 601 E. Wtiiam (Corner of Maynard) Ann Arbot, Mich. 48108 , _ . _ _.____ _.., _ _ , a * , m . . illegagl mail interception and wiretapping. He is accused of using impro- per mail interceptions and wire- taps in an investigation of the radical group known as the Wea- ther Underground. Kearney, 55, pleaded innocent to the charges before U.S. Dis- trict Judge Morris Lasker and was released without bail. IF CONVICTED of the charg- eses, Kearney could face up to five years in prison and a $10,- 000 fine. When Kearney arrived at the courthouse and approached the steps, the agents-many gray- or white-haired---broke into loud hand-clapping. Then, as he paused at the foot of the steps, Special Agent Pat- rick Connor read him a state- ment on behalf of the assembled agents: "Your friends and for- mer associates have assembled here this morning to demon- strate their personal loyalty to you and to give testament to your just and moral leadership over a period of many years in the fight against the enemies of our nation, namely anarchy and terrorism," read Connor. "WE ALL REALIZE," he said, "that our assembly here today is without precedent. However, we all felt compelled to express to you our individual support. "This assembly, though im- pressive, is a mere token of the support you enjoy throughout the nation . . . we are confident that when the whole truth is be- fore the American people and their voice is heard, your vindi- dation will be assured." Kearney waved to the crowd and slipped through a revolving door. Only a handful of agents followed him into the courtroom. HE LEFT after standing si- lent while his attorney, Hubert Santos, entered the plea of in- nocent and sitting in a front row seat while Santos filed a motion to extend the period for filing p retrial motions. By the time he left, the crowd of agents had disappeared, and their places had been taken by pickets demonstrating for a Harlem hospital. Kearney, who now lives at Simsbury, Conn., is an assistant vice president of Wells Fargo Armored Service Corp., based in Springfield, Mass. In Washington, Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell told reporters he had been informed of the agents' plans to demonstrate. "I was told they were going to picket and I said they had a right under the First Amend- ment to picket," he said. "These are people on the bottom out there exercising their First Amendment rights as citizens." 1321 South University 769 1744 If Red Cross hadnft trained young Lars Alecksen in lifesaving tech niques,last summer Adam Gauthier just might have ended up on more drowning statistic. (Adams alive and well today, thank you, and in the first grade in Manitowoc, Wisconsin.) We're not asking for medals (Lars is the one who deserves those). But we do need your continued support. H p u Because the things we Play the game that won't quit! BILLIARDS at the UNION t e, ,au} .. 119 fr DANCE SPACE 1,