Wage Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, September 16, .19l 'age Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY luesdoy, September 16, IYb Wednesday, Sept. 17 KOLBO MOVIES-8:00 p.m. GOODBYE COLUMBUS Philip Roth's satire on American Jewish Life FREE REFRESHMENTS $1.25 Admission H ILLE L-1429 Hill St. 663-3336 Guerillas threaten American captives CDRS Federal gov't. issues credit card guidelines provokes (Continued from Page 1) clashes and random sniper fire shut down several Beirut neigh- borhoods yesterday as northern Lebanon's Moslem - Christian warfare spread to the capital's political factions. Police said the main market place near Mar'tyr's Square and the nearby Riad el-Solh banking street were emptied by snipers firing at passers-by from mov- ing automobiles. -*.. A rocket blast set fire to a fac- tory in northeast Beirut and one policeman was killed during ma- chine-gun and rocket-launched grenade clashes nearby, they added. Firemen were unable to reach the factory because of the fighting and it burned to the ground. TENSION also remained highl in the northern city of Tripoli after Moslem militiamen at- tacked regional government headquarters and kidnapped several policemen, police said. The raid and a similar attack on the Tripoli port authority were believed designed to avenge 12 militiamen killed in an early morning clash with the army just outside the city. I WASHINGTON (P) - The battle Federal Reserve System issued final regulations yesterday de- (Continued from Page 1) signed to help credit card hold- IT PROPOSED moving the ers and other users of commer- entire CDRS monies with pro- cial credit to protect themselves visions made to give certain so- against billing errors and shod- cial services different alloca- dy merchandise. tions. Under the regulations, which Local CRS funds have been become effective.Oct. 28: at the center of a long-standing -CREDIT card users can political controversy, pitting Re- hold their credit card company publicans' against Democrats accountable for the quality and and HRP members. serviceability of the goods users When in control of Council, buy. The new regulations elim- the Republicans designed a ate the "holder in due course" CDRS spending plan that under- doctrine under which customers scored their generally conserva- could be held liable for bills to tive fiscal policies. creditors, even when the credit THE OPPOSITION, however, was used to buy goods which favored funding a wider rangetrned out to be unserviceable. of services - including a num- -Alleged errors in bills for gr of "humanmight otherse credit cards or open-end credit, die for lack of money. such as checking account loans, are subject to specific proce- dures for resolution. S-Credit card companies can- not restrain merchants from of- fering discounts to cash custom- ers. The discount would stem from the fact that credit card companies impose service l charges on merchants, usually from two per cent to five per: cent of the total volume of busi- ness transacted on the cards in a given period. -Credit issuers cannot cancel a customer's account or file an adverse report on the custom- er's credit rating while a dis- pute is in progress. -Credit issuers must notify customers of their rights under the new law. i r i Te = - - - - International Center Returned Traveler's Coffee Hour 3:30-5:30 Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays AT THE International Center (Michigan Union Building) 603 EAST MADISON Discuss your experiences with others coming home from abroad : I ! ' i III If you are interested in learning elementary Yiddish, there is a class being formed. Call H I LLEL 663-3336 Prior to drafting their CDRS budget, the Republicans set up a citizens review panel to make recommendations on the allo- cations. Critics assailed the group for being GOP dominated and lack- ing broad based community rep- resentation. The panel wasI chaired by former Republican councilman William Colburn. Both programs have taken criticism nationally for being an ineffective method of getting funds to those organizations peo- ple most in need. i'' I! I I I ______________________________________________________________________________________ JII i_ IL' Tm o I I p0 Fantastic savings are still available on our entire * line of EPI speakers. * But not for long. Because on September 20 EPI'sĀ® Farewell-to-Fair-Trade Sale comes to a close. This is the sale that offers you savings of $40 on a pair" of EPI Model 60 or Model 110 loudspeakers. And $80 on EPI-180a a pair of EPI 180 or top-of-the-line Model 250 speakers. While the sale lasts, you can buy the EPI 100 for only WAS $199.95a $89.95. (A leading independent consumer testingN magazine has rated it the "most accurate" in a category N5 of speakers up to $120.) And the EPI 90 is yours for only $79.95. No matter which of the six great EPI speakers you buy' during the final days of the Farewell-to-Fair-Trade Sale, you'll be getting what EPI is famous for: Linear Sound. A true and accurate sound that comes as close to the original performance as you can get. With EPI's Linear Sound, there's no artificial boosting of the bass, no added coloring, no drop-off, and no fade-*# outs. Just pure sound. Period.' You've got a few more days to take advantage of greatt savings on EPI's Linear Sound. EPI- 119 Fair enough warning? THE LINEAR SOUND ___Now$99.95 " o*o* 4 *. -De4, PI-250 f ,,.0 " WAS $239.95 EPI-100 1 NOW $199.95 WAS $99.95 N - EPI-90 NOW $89.95 WAS $89.95 EP6 ,r NOW$9.95 WASI69.9 I i c i E i ,I camp aigns at Union (Continued from Page 1) for a job." Asked exactly how he intended Harris campaigns as "just to create so many jobs in such plain folks," but it's not thel a short period of time, the 44- full story. His busy career in- year-old sharecropper's son was cludes a teaching stint at; less than definitive. American University in Wash- ington, eight years in the Sen- "MANY OF the jobs will de- ate, and a stormy tenure as pend on how we spend our pub- Democratic National Chairman.: lic money," he explained. "But His 1972 bid for the nomina- I want to have two million lo- tion collapsed for lack of funds, cally controlled jobs on the and he frankly admits that he shelf. If I am elected President, owes his candidacy to the com- you would be able to walk into plex new federal election laws, any employment office and ask which "cut the rich and friends of the rich down to size." THE LAWS require each can-I TUhere S _S a . didate to raise at least $5,000 difference!!! . in 20 states, through individual " contrib'itions of no more than PREPARE FOR: ",50. Candidates will then be S UMCAT Over35-years lieible for matching federal " z of experience " and success " funds for primaries, and $I0 - DAT . s million for each major party Small classes " nominee. LSAT ol us hm"Without the law," said Har- G study materials * ris, "you'd be begging every st a eri dime you could beg to get the Courses that are * nomination, and once you got ATGB D constantly updated 0 it, there was only one place left CA Taeaitsf to get the kind of money you " reviews of class " needed for the re'ilar election. CPN Tllessons and for use." So, you would hustle up to Wall FLspmaplmentary isSt. and say 'Well gee fellas I : F m didn't really mean all those e Make-ups for things I said during the pri- ECFMG missed lessons maries.' " M DFaced with an admittedly n- NAT MEDB S hall struggle, Harris ended his talk in frontof the Union Sim day with an anecdote that 354-0085 seems to catch the tenor of his " " camnaign. " 313) 354-0085 *cmag- 2 W.Ten Mile Rd. * Oklahoma's first senator, ac- I * Southfield, Mi. 48015 cording to Harris. was a blind- man named Thomas Gore. While * - 0, in the heat of a bitter debate -with Goretanother senator was Sheard to say that if Gore was EDUCATIONAL CENTER-" not blind, he would "thrash him SPE ARAIO NCE 938 within an inch of his life." Unon, *j hearing this Gore replied, "Well. "" . . .blindfold the son of a bitch and Branches mjor U S Cities point him in my direction." - -- -- I ____________________________________________ MICHIGAN UNION BILLIARDS FALL TERM SPECIAL Today & Wednesday Reduced Rates $1.00/Hour Free Instructions THURS.: 3 p.m.-7 p.m. Pocket Billiards EVERYTHING YOU "EVER" WANTED TO KNOW Palestine uerilas flown to Alg9eria (Continued from Page 1) - setin motion the moves that would end the incident without bloodshed. Boumedienne agreed to pro- vide the plane and the ambas- sadors from Iraq and Algeria volunteered to accompany Am- bassador Khaffar and his two aides as hostages. SHORTLY after 3 a.m. (9 p.m. EDT) the terrorists, wear- ing stocking masks, filed out of the embassy with their prison- ers. Spanish police, who had made no effort to storm the em- bassy, provided an escort for the minibus that carried the nine men to Madrid's Barajas airport. It was believed at first that there were five terrorists, but only four were seen by newsmen as they emerged from the embassy. They waved a paper that, they claimed was a "victory" for their exploit. A spokesper- son for the group said it was a declaration signed by six Arab ambassadors, including Ghaf- far, denouncing "the accord agreed by the government of Egypt and the so-called state of Israel" and affirming that the pact was "directed against the will of the Palestinian people." The terrorists originally set a deadline of midnight - 6 p.m. EDT - for their demands to be met, but it passed quietly as the negotiations went on. ISRAELI OFFICIALS, observ- ing the Yom Kippur holiday, de- clined comment. Many Israelis did not know of the drama in Madrid because the govern- ment's radio and television net- works were closed for the hol- iest day of the Jewish year. Scores of Madrid riot police evacuated people from the building housing the Egyptian embassy in the exclusive Sala- manca district. The terrorists said they had placed explosives at the entrance and windows and would nt hesitate to set them off if provoked. Iraqi Ambassador Hassan al- Nakib said the guerillas appear- edto be about 25 years old. He said they refused to allow any of the Arab diplomats into the embassy. THEsEGYPTIAN government dispatched two diplomats to help in the negotiations and set up a special committee in Cairo to deal with the siege. It also asked Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat to helpout and warned it would hold him and his Pales- tine Liberation Organization personally "responsible for the incident and all its consequen- ces." A Soanish ,reorter said one of the guerrillas told him by telephone that the raiders were members of the "Group of the Martyr Abdel Kader el-Hus- sein," presumably an extremist splinter group. Another news- man said the five included an engineer and four students. Dr. Paul C. Uslan OPTOMETRIST Full Contact Lens Service Visual Examinations 548 CHURCH ST. 663-2476 See JIM REMPE-SEPT. 24th-UNION BALLROOM I is Jacobson's Open Thursday and Friday Evenings Until 9:00 P.M. Saturday Until 5:30 P.M. > ; I A /own . WAS $69.95 NOW 49.95 -I $D EA r t _ jrtyla b Miss J pours on the flattery. with Figure. MatesĀ® panty stockings of sheer, quality nylon giving proper fit and comfort. Select with reinforced toe ... or sheer- to-waist styling with sandalfoot. Shades of suntan, deep brown, medium taupe, navy or black. Only-at Jacobson's. One size. $1 .wI wr ,* OPE SY FINANCING AVAILABLE N DAILY: 10p.m. to 7 p.m. s V