Pace TWo THE MICHIGAN DAILY WmAmaeolrii A-".*I IA 1CMA I i vveanesuuy, rApri 1't, l 9 f 5 -----, Canon in D Major by Johann Pachelbel to be performed live by an eight-piece string ensemble FRIDAY, April 16, 1976-12:30 p.m. On The DIAG In front of the graduate library (in case of rain or cold weather, Pendleton room, second floor of the Union at 12:45 p.m.) sponsored by six campus ministries Judges freeze gun control restrictions STEERING COMMITTEE SELECTED: MSA installs new members (Continued from Page 1) lice use of firearms to situa- tions when a criminal has used deadly force in the commission of a major felony and the of- ficer has either witnessed the act or has "probable cause" to believe that the' suspect is armed. THE POA also objects that the{ new policy was passed without consulting them, a procedure which they claim violates the city's contract with the offic- ers.I Police Chief Walter Krasny said he "had no idea" what would happen to the restric- tions. "I can't speak for the Council," he maintained. "And I'm not going to try and sec- and - guess them." Sun Valley, Idaho is famous for its year-round sports resorts and attracts many tourists. Huey Long was elected gov- ernor of Louisiana in 1928 and was assassinated in 1935. Federal forces occupied Jack- sonville, Fla., March 12, 1862. an s 0m thiu Classified (Continued from Page 1) said he was'unconcerned by the attack. "There've been so many of them," he said, "that is just doesn't bother me anymore." Defeated Responsible Alterna- tive Party (RAP) candidate Bob Matthews, whom witnesses have accused of participation in earlier smear attacks on SOC, bitterly denied all involve- ment in the propaganda cam- paign. He called accounts of the eyewitness testimony "typical Daily b - - - - -,, Confronted with the statement of former SGC member Don Daniels, who claims to have seen Matthews passing out an- ti-SOC literature in Alice Lloyd ,Hall early last Tuesday, Mat- thews said, "It's a lie. It's ei- ther a lie or a mistake." FELLOW RAP candidate Jean Nuechterlein and Mat- thews associate David Schaper claim that they can account for the rotund ROTC student's whereabouts at the time in question. Schaper added that he had spoken "to somebody who knows what he's talking about" who had assured him that there was no way of proving that the same typewriter was responsi- ble for Matthews' campaign literature and the smear leaf- lets. Schaper, a non-student, spoke at a meeting of the CSJ last night to support Matthews' de- mand for a recount of the elec- tion ballots. The demand was denied. Earlier in the evening CSJ members had attempted to eject Schaper from the meet- ing, but he refused to leave. CSJ also declined to consider three other election challenges, one of them from Matthews, one from defeated candidate Irving Freeman (also repre- sented by Schaper) and another by Tim O'Neal, who also failed in his MSA bid. At their final regular meet- ing of the year, MSA approved resolutions opposing the pro- posed LSA grading policy and supporting GEO in its bargain- ing efforts with the University. Assembly member David Good- man (SOC) called for the "vig- orous opposition" to the pro- posed addition of course-wide grade averages to LSA tran- scripts. In other action, elections di- rectors ElliotChikof sky and Mark Berstein informed the Assembly that the election had cost $2764.34, not including campaign subsidies. This made the election under a dollar per voter. They also suggested that the next elections directors be given five weeks to prepare. Bernstein added that if they had had the extra time that they I make MSA succeed. could have administered the The VP slot was taken by election $200 cheaper. Amy Blumenthal (SOC). SOC also picked up. the Academic IN ADDITION MSA allocat- Programs Co-ordinator spot ed $100 to the Association of with Wendy Goodman and the Students in Bilingual Education, Communications Co-ordinator $125 to the Michiganensian, $325 with David Goodman giving to the Michigan Rowing Club, SOC the four of the eight seats $150 to the Students Against S-1, on the committee. and $175 to the Peoples Bicen- School and 'College represen- tennial Committee. tatives took two seats. Ken SOC - dominated the special Berneis (Medical School) be- steering committee election came Parliamentarian and Walt meeting following MSA's regu- Borland (Business School) took lar meeting. Calvin Luker the Budget Priorities Co-ordina- (SOC) defeated Bob Garber tor's Post. F. ,Scott Kellman (Screw MSA) for the presi- (MOVE) was elected Student dency. F. Scott Kellman (MO- Organizations Co-ordinator and VE) declined the nomination G. J. "Jasper" DiGiuseppe (In- for the office calling the latest dependent) was elected Person- anti-SOC smear sheet an "ob- nel Co-ordinator. Kellman, the vious attempt to keep SOC only non-SOC party member on from gaining seats on the steer- the committee expressed disap- ing committee." He' also called pointment that the powerful for the members of the Assem- steering committee had such bly toaput aside their differ- heavy representation from one ences and to work together to party. Syrian intervention praised f Ready for living ... each home includes: " Wall-to-wall carpeting " Self cleaning oven " In-Sinkerator disposal " Frost free refrigerator " Central air conditioning " Full size washer and dryer G.E. dishwasher " Double wall construction " Carport, private patio and yard " Full basement Special Limited Offer... The next ten purchasers of a Roundtree condominium may choose one of the following at no additional charge: ' Man or woman's ten speed bicycle Pair of Wilson T2000 tennis rackets " Fenced-in patio - Extra patio landscaping or lawn furniture " Half price on upgrade carpeting Nestled among stately oaks just off Ellsworth Road between Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti, a limited number of two bedroom ranches and town- houses priced from $29,000 to $31,950 are available for immediate occupancy with just $1500 down. A "Down Payment Savings Plan" is available for purchasers without the down payment whose income is $15,000 or more. Ann Arbor a . Is d 8rrsrwod Ctr N1 c :'~ C a( M ;D ;!# a. N) O NO Professional Hair Care services & products UM Stylists at the UNION LQy03r at te U ION BEIRUT, Labanon (,')-Leban- on's two top Christian leaders yesterday hailed Syrian military intervention in Lebanon as a decisive step to end the year- old civil war. But Leftist Moslem leader Ka- mal Jumblatt accused Syria of planning a large-scale invasion and called for help from Arab powers to check it. SYRIAN TROOPS have occu- pied a strip of Lebanese border to control key access roads and prevent resupply of arms to the warring Lebanese. Syrian Pres- ident Hafez Assad warned Mon- day night he is "ready to move into Lebanon to protect any vic- tims of aggression." President Suleiman Franjieh: wired Assad an expression of "gratitude for Syria's action to safeguard Lebanon," Franjieh's pirate radio station reported. Right-wing Christian leader Pierre Gemayel, whose Pha- lange party fields the largest Christian militia in Lebanon's civil war, said: "Assad has act- ed to resolve the tragic situa- tion, after a year of bloodshed and warmongering by the false left." THE CHRISTIAN leaders' statements reflected the role of Syria in restraining Lebanon's leftist Moslem coalition, which seeks radical changes in the political system that gives the upper hand to a 40 per cent Christian minority. Jumblatt leads the Moslem- leftist-Palestinian alliance advo- cating military action to depose Franjieh and score political and economic g a i n s against the Christians. 4PRESIDENT Assad's growing glance s e e m s contradictory, coming from the leader of a militant pan-Arab regime run by his Arab Baath Socialist party. Below the surface it makes sense for several rea- sons: 0 Assad has committed his personal prestige for the last nine months to getting a settle- ment. With stakes that high, a setback would damage his claim to leadership in the struggle against Israel, a claim contested by President Anwar Sadat of Egypt. 0 Assad fears an uncontrolled leftist regime in Lebanon, com- mitted to an active role against Israel, could raise new prob- lems in his plans for' dealing with Israel and, the Palestinians. Some sources suggest Assad's own regime-Alawite Moslems ruling a Sunni Moslem majority -also would come under dan- gerous questioning at home if Lebanon's Christianity minority were crushed. Ann Arbor Three Way A Masters Ihesis Dance Concert April 16, 17 Schorling Aud.-8 p.m. School of Ed. Building i -i 0 I The Oaks of Roundtree CONDOMINIUnS Model Hours: 1-6 pm daily Closed Tuesday. Phone 434-4475 or 763-6796 for further information. SALES BY PETER T. ALLEN, BROKER In cooperation with ANN ARP3ORTRUST COMPANY I $1.50 I sonmetimes Pror Can Hurt... I I IF YOU WONDER WHERE YOUR MONEY IS SPENT get on the following committees: Budget priorities U-Cellar Board League Board of Directors Union Board of Directors If you think the administration isn't doing WHAT YOU WWANT, you better tell it what you want, so get on: Student Relations Program Evaluation Office of Student Services Policy Board Long-Range Planning Academic Planning Analysis Committee Steering Committee intervention in Lebanon at first{ were crushed. I for a change of pace next fall ... ANNOUNCING TWO NEW SPECIAL SEMESTER PROGRAMS AT DREW UNIVERSITY The Brussels Semester on the European Economic Community (for economics, political science, history majors)-now in the fall as well as the spring. A unique and challenging.opportunity to study and experience the movement towards European political and economic integration. The Theatre Semester Internship with the New Jersey Shakespeare Festival, a professional (Actors' Equity) repertory company in residence on Drew's beautifully forested campus one hour west of New York City. Students from your college have participated in Drew's other semester programs'in the past (for full transferable credit): The Art Semester in New York City, The Semester in London on comparative political science, and The United Nations Semester. Consult your art or political science departments for information about these, or write these departments at Drew for information and application. SUMMER SCHOOL TOO! june 7 to July 2, July 6 to August 3 anthropology, art, astronomy, botany, chemistry, economics, English, film, history, languages, mathematics, music, philosophy, political science, psychology, religion, sociology, theatre, zoology. professional theatre on campus every night' ... New York City (and Democratic convention) just an hour away ... the Jersey Shore. Bicentennial landmarks, recreation on camtpurs for information or application to any program, write Dean Robert Ackerman -Drew University Madison, New Jersey 07940 More information and applications are available at the MSA offices 3909 Michigan Union Interviews ending soon You might say Janie is getting an injection of taxes...and it hurts. Her father is dead and her mother works to support Janie and an older brother. They can't afford a private pediatrician, so she's being immunized against childhood diseases in a clinic run by the neighborhood hospital. The serum is paid for by a combination of local, state and federal funds. Money that comes from taxes. All kinds of taxes, including taxes on profits, on wages, on dividends. In 1974, for example, the federal government collected $291 billion in taxes. Of this, business contributed about 40%. State and local governments collected even more from business-over $125 billion, about 60% of their revenues. Taxes on business profits supply revenues for all kindso f niblic nrnrams-mrndial But business can return tax money to the people only if it earns a fair profit. Then, reinvestment of these earnings will mean more profits to tax and more funds for all types of governmental programs. However, business today is earning a profit Qf only about 5% on sales, less than the rate of 10 years ago. When profits and expansion dry up, everyone in our society suffers. At Allied Chemical we believe that by helping to build a healthy, vital economic and social environment, we can insure survival of the American way of life. Janie's good health means a better future for everyone's children. And profits may turn out to be a girl's best friend. Sa .. ...... .. I PF4 F, U John Simon Drama Critic The Hudson Review The New Leader Film Critic New York Magazine Author of SINGULARITIES: The Hopwood Awards for 1976 .''