I FREON HAZARD See Editorial Page Y 46U Da itH INIPPY High--48-53 Lowv-33-38 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 49 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, October 30, 1 Ten Cents Eight Pages ALL JOBS AFFECTED t SE &S iPPD4 CLF jy We need you! Would you like to see your name in print? Like to attend the cream of happenings in and around Ann Arbor, and meet a wide range of fascinating personalities? If you're interested in film, music, art, theater or dance, we at the Daily's Arts Page would like you to join us. Come to our mass meet- ing tonight at 7:30 in our offices on the second floor of the Student Publications Building at 420 Maynard St., just behind the LSA building. Or if you can't make it then, sop by our offices any afternoon from 2-5:00 p.m. or call 764-0552 or 764-0553. Out-state tuition blues, Your budge may be courting disaster if you're an out-of-state student who's been counting on a last- minute loosening of the residency requirements for in-state tuition. The Michigan Supreme Court has upheld a State Court of Appeals decision that -the University Board of Regents have the right to decide who qualifies as a resident for tuition pur- poses and who doesn't. The appeal was brought by local attorney Arthur Carpenter, who had filed the original class action suit on behalf of students denied resident status. Carpenter said yesterday the effort to change the residency rules is "fin- ished." Happenings.. .. . . . begin with the Hopwood Tea and Coffee Hour in the Hopwood Room (1006 Angel Hall) from 3 p.m. until 5 p.m. . . . A poetry reading with Ellen Zweig from her own works at the Guild House, 802 Monroe, will begin at 7:30 p.m. . . . "Men in a Sexist Society: Responsibility vs. Blame" will be the discussion topic for Men's Raps in Rm. 26 of Tyler House, East Quad, at 7:30 p.m. . . . The Smoking Withdrawal Clinic will hold a free public meeting tonight at the Student Health Service, 207 Fletcher, in Rm. 5. The clinic, sponsored by the Michigan Lung Association and the University Student Health Service, is to help people "kick the habit." . . . Dan Burden, a National Geographic magazine filmmaker and organizer of the "Bikecentennial," will show slides of his Alaska-to-South America voyage-"Hemis- tour" and discuss plans for a coast-to-coast bike show. The presentation will be held in Aud. C, Angell Hall, at 7:30 p.m. . . . Janet Cederman and Julian Silverman, co-directors of the Esalen Institute, will present "What is Esalen?" a free program on gestalt and sensory awareness at the Union Ballroom beginning at 8 this evening . . . The High Point Organization, which serves the needs of the severely mentally handicapped, is seeking volunteers to assist with their physical development programs, which include help in the swimming pool. Their offices are located in the Washtenaw Intermediate School District at 1819 South Wagner Rd. Stop by'today or call 769-6522. 0 'Higher Kingdom' "The Two," mysterious espousers of a "Higher Kingdom," which can only be reached with the help of flying saucers, will relive Christ's cruci- fixion and resurrection when their mission on earth is ended, or so say two of their more prom- inent disciples. A young man and woman who say they are followers of "The Two," have turned up in Minneapolis to preach the new life. The couple said "The Two" came here from the "next king- dom, incarnate as humans, awakened, to hear the truth, and will soon demonstrate the same proof of overcoming death that Jesus did. You don't have to die to make this trip, but the body has to be changed . . . go through a metamorphosis." The great escape Residents of Beirut, Lebanon, have apparently turned to sex and downers as a relief from the day-to-day toll of violence and death in that city. Beirut druggists, at least those who are still open, agree: the hottest-selling items are contraceptives and ranquilizers. "In a way, it's the same thing," said a salesman from the St. Charles Pharmacy. "Keeps people's minds off what's happening." The pharmacist said dozens of customers who had nevercome in before were asking for tranquilizers. "First they try two milligrams. Then they are back asking if it comes in 10 milligram tablets," he said. It is understandable. The rocket blasts keep them awake at night and scare them all day when they have to stay cooped up in the house. The pill has always been a big seller, he said of the contraceptives, but "now it is bigger than ever." On the inside .. . . . Aris Page features an interview with Rob Thompson, the screenwriter of the "Hearts of the West" movie that's currently playing in town . . . On Sports Page, Bill Stieg writes about the Detroit Pistons' first 'home game of the year . . . and Editorial Page includes an article by Catheryn Adisman who analyzes reasons for the ineffective- ness of NOW's one-day strike. S -. . -" 'U announces hiring freeze Milliken asks new funding cut By BILL TURQUE University administrators yesterday ordered an immediate freeze on all hiring shortly after Governor Milliken proposed a $1.6 million cut in state funding for this fiscal year. "The freeze applies to all openings, in all job groups, ex- cept for those vacancies that will cause irreparable damage to our operation," said Vice President for Academic Affairs Frank Rhodes, in a statement issued yesterday. RHODES INDICATED THAT to positions being offered for next President Fleming was out of comment, but Rhodes was clearly him. THE year town acting FREEZE will apply also. and unavailable for in consultation with This is the second such job freeze within the last year. Reductions in state funding forced a similar freeze last Feb- ruary 25. It expired on June 30. THE PROPOSED REDUCTION, which comes to about 1.5 per cent of the University's $99.8 million state approporation, is part of a long-awaited executive order that would pare $150 Rhodes million from a deficit-riddled statewide budget. The plan now goes to appro- priations committees in both houses, where legislators are expected to flatly reject it, and send the proposal back to the Governor for redrafting. Late last August, lawmakers lopped a last-minute 1.5 per cent from the University's state appropriation, necessitating se- lective cuts in programs and services camous-wide, with the excen~tion of funding for student financial aid and utilities. ETIWARD DOUGHE'RTY, an assistant to Rhodes, said the freeze wonld be reviewed on December 15, when the state's fiscal states is clearer, and a determination can be made of how much extra revenue is ac- tially is bein oroduced by the free-e. At that time, personnel Invoffs and severe nrogrnm cut- ba-kq mv hb considered. "Tf thp le-islatllre comes back hard on is aeain. or if the Gov- ernor asks for additional reduc- tions,w wL ,niht have to talk 'See MILLKEN'S, Page 8 Ford promises veto for any New York 'bail-out' legislation WASHINGTON P)-President Ford announced yesterday that he will veto any bail-out legis- lation aimed at keeping New York City solvent, but he asked Congress to help ensure police and fire protection if the city defaults on its debts. However, House Democratic leaders said later they are going ahead with legislation to aid the nation's largest city,, irclud- ing federal guarantees for the city's debts, which Ford spe- cifically opposed. "WITHOUT some loan guar- antee authority, the city of New York can't get through the next few months," said Rep. Henry Reuss (D-Wis.) following a closed-door meeting with House Speaker Carl Albert. Reuss, chairman of the House Banking Committee, announced the de- cision to proceed with legisla- tion. Ford maintained, however, that New York City has caused its own problems, and said its "financial management is unique among municipalities throughout the United States." "Why . .. should all the work- ing people of this country be forced to rescue those who bank- rolled New York City's policies See FORD, Page 2 AP Photo IT WAS "ALICE Doesn't Day" to women yesterday and "Alice Can't" to the male workers at Detroit's Fischer building. Among the 200 demonstrators who observed the NOW organized strike is Reva Guich, 75 (above center), who said feminism was nothing new to her. A 0e e o two cities: Alce Doesn't' strike contrasted Greer in Detroit By ELAINE FLETCHER Noted feminist Germaine Greer alerted Detroit women yesterday to the cultural gap between them and their Third World sisters in an appear- ance that highlighted downtown observances of "Alice Doesn't Day." Greer apologized to the 1000 women assembled at Fisher Theatre for "doing" on the national strike date called by the National Organization of Women (NOW). "But no woman poured my cof- fee, or worked for me this morning-a very nice man did it all," she said. ABOUT 200 women picketed outside the theatre with signs supporting "Alice Doesn't Day." See DETROIT, Page 8 MOSLEMS A DVANCE: Gty women gather By MAUREEN NOLAN A group of 150 Ann Arbor women celebrated "Alice Doesn't" Day with a party instead of the demonstration called for by the National Organi- zation of Women (NOW). Anne Locksley, a member of the group which calls themselves the Organizing Committee, said, "We felt that most women were in a position that made it impossible for them to strike. "I TALKED to a lot of women whose husbands said they'd beat them if they didn't wash the dishes," Locksley said. Locksley criticized NOW as "too elitist" but said she did not directly oppose the group. See WOMEN, Page 8 Daily Photo by E. SUSAN SHEINER Tourists flee By AP and Reuter BEIRUT, Lebanon - Security forces in armored cars evacu- ated a dozen foreigners trapped in two luxury hotels yesterday as advancing private armies of Moslems fought to take the ho- tel district from Christian con- trol. Shortly before midnight, Pre- mier Rashid Karami announced a new cease-fire in the civil war. Whether it would take hold was uncertain. THE LEFTIST Moslems, us- ing machine guns and rockets, moved earlier yesterday to with- in 100 yards of the 500-room Beirut Holiday Inn, where gunmen of the right-wing Christian Pha- lange Party were shooting back from the roof. Frequent shootings and explo- sions were reported at dusk last night inthearea around the Holidy Inn and Phoenicia ho- tels and the Murr Building sky- scraper-an unfinished concrete structure now occupied by left- ists. The few remaining guests and staff in the Holidy Inn were evacuated by armored cars as a huge cloud of black smoke fromga nearby explosion en- veloped the building. Shadows The diffuse light of autumn created these giant shadows crossing all of Huron street in front of, the First United Methodist Church Monday afternoon. Nwsman, shot in Beirut, tells of bloody confrontation Interns discussio action' against 'U' By JAMES NICOLL 'Ples Tn;%.i- -- n o fF- , --. +- - T ---,. BEIRUT, Lebanon (iP)-"All of a suddent he came running up to about 30 feet of me and just opened up with his AK47. He was aiming wildly and all the bullets splattered along. the curbside. I just turned around and said, 'Stop shooting, you bastard.' " The account by Phil Canuto. a Chicago Tri- I teas thrown up against the wall and I was yelling at hin again to stop shoot- 11n a n d fouAmI . " L. I