Page fx . rc M iu-ilUAN DAILY Try 'U emergency Locals oppose townhouse (continued from Page 3) graphic charts show that the income and minority residents area has less than five per cent moving into the area," the of its residences . listed as rriaay, May 27, 197) development (Continued from Page 3) loan request and have the form approved at the financial aid office in the Student Activities Building. The money can be picked up the next day at the cashier's office in the LSA Building lohhy. Emergency loans are granted in amounts ranging from $25- $100 and must be used for edu- cationally - related expenses. Loans must be repaid within three months at a three per cent interest rate. IF $100 isn't sufficient, the University also offers short- term loans of up to $500. Stu- dents requesting these loans must make an appointment with a financial aid counselor. Short- term loans are repayable with- in 12 months with three per. cent interest. Should any problems arise with repayment of an emergen- cy loan, the student will re- ceive a hold credit, jeopardiz- ing future registration, grades and transcripts. Because such loans are grant- ed with the understanding that the money must be paid back within three months, the Uni- versity will not take into ac- count any extenuating circum- stances. Apparently there are quite a few students in need of extra cash. A financial aid spokes- person reports the office re- ceives about five emergency loan requests and 20 short-term loan inquiries each day. sourcesasid. -It's just a gut feel- ing that I have." In order for MSHDA to grant subsidies, with money obtained for the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen\ at least 15 per cent of the residents must make less than 80 per cent of the area's median income. An income census tract for the area shows that current resi- dents make at least 90 per cent of the median income of all Ann Arbor residents. Other demo- "assisted housing units." The area's population is less than seven per cent black and less than live per cent elderly. BALANCED against the resi- *dents. claims is an argument of- fered by Dayton Benjamin, the, executive director of the Wash- tenaw County Council on Aging. Benjamin says Ann Arbor has an acute shortage of housing fa- cilities for the elderly. "We have an information desk Havin' A Wild Weekend? south state HELD OVER- STA E x+ 2nd HIT. WEEK SHOWS TONIGHT AT The'atre Ph - 4 7:00 & 9:00 OPEN 6:45 FLOAT LIKE A BUTTERFLY, STING LIKE A BEE IF YOU LIKED ROCKY, YOU'LL LOVE ALI! Loudmouth ...THE, MAN Tb 4r> P A COLUMBIA/EMI eawe S c (Continued from Page 5) Beauties. Both these are in the MLB auditoriums at, 7 and 9. Cinema 2 is showing Kurosa- wa's Dodes' Ka Den in Angell Aud A., 7:30 and 10. Saturday, Cinema Guild is offering a rare chance to see the uncut version of the 1933 King Kong. The Ann Arbor film co-op presents the second night of the Roger Carmen festival, with showings of Gasss, Wild Angels, and Von Richtoffen and Brown. Like all Corman efforts, they promise to be cheesey, but entertaining (MLB 4). The film co-op is also screening Blazing Saddles, starring Mel "subtlety" Brooks. Cinema 2 offers Alain Tanner's Middle of the World Aud. A, 7:30 %nd 9:30. Sunday night, it's Renoir's classic Grande Illusion at the old A & D building, with no ad- mission charge. The Ann Arbor film co-op features two Hitch- cock classics, Spellbound, and Under Capricorn, MLB 3, 7 and 9 respectively. ,.ON OUR lET. diAgONA[ COLOR T.VY.SCREEN set up at the Social Security of. fice," said Benjamin, "and the problem mentioned most fre- quently is the lack of housing for the elderly." Benjamin said that Lurie Ter- race, a senior citizens' apart- ment complex on East Huron was taking names of prospec- tive tenants seven years in ad- vance of their retirement. Final action on the proposed rezoning is scheduled for June 6 but may be postponed pending the compilation of figures on the need for housing for the elderly and low income groups in An Arbor. Doctor affirms VA druggings (Continued from Page ) Hill then told the jury how she reversed the drug's effects on the three patients, Bennie Blaine,John McCrery, and Wil- liam Loesch u s i n g antidote drugs. Hill first performed the re- versal procedure on Blane, the 46-year-old veteran who was the first patient to stop breathing. Using the drugs, Hill said Blaine "was alert in about ten minutes" When she got to McCrery, a heart patient who stopped breathing during 'efforts to re- vive Blaine, Hill found his con- dition "exactly the same," and was able to revive him using the same technique she had ue/nBlane. The third patient, William Loesch, a 29-year-old Vietnam veteran, had stopped breathing during efforts to revive Mc- Crery. Dr. Hill described Loesch as "very well paralyzed" when she reached him, and said that it was too early to administer reversal drugs at thattime. Hill says she sat down in the lounge while w a i t i n g until Loesch's paralysis could be re- versed. "I was very shaken," she said. 'I was very upset." After about ten minutes Hill reversedtLoesch indthe same manner that she had reversed Blaine and McCrery. Hill said she was called to help still a fourth patient that night, but was then told the patient was already dead. That patient was Joseph Brown. Hill told the jury she was so shaken by the events of last summer that she had-requested as early as August 13 that a committee be convened to in- quire about the rash of poison- ings. After August 15, Hill said it was too late for a committee. "An investigation had to be launched," she said. The FBI was called in on Asigust 15. Also testifying yesterday was FBI SpecialAgent Roger Aaron, a chemist and toxicologist who was able to find Pavulon in the exhumed body of Joseph Brown a year after the patient was dead. Just a few days after Brown died, the Poison Laboratory of Denver, Colorado had been un- able to detect any Pavulon in his body. After explaining to the jury his unique and complex method of finding Pavulon in human tissue, Aaron told the jury "(Pavu.lon is definitely present in Mr. Brown's tissue." I I i II it r t HELD OVER- 2nd BIG WEEK TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:00 OPEN 6:45 HELD OVER- 3rd DELIGHTFUL WEEK SHOWS TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:00 OPEN 6:45 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE! BEST FOREIGN FILM BEST ACTRESS MARIE-CHRISTINE BARRAULT BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY - v ALBERT SCHWARTa 0M E. JROSENTHAL PRE ~oJ NT lrssaes A FILM BY !EAN CHAART ES TACCt C. LA Sr ARRIG MAF . RI i BARU T TOP LANG IX - MA RE f'rANCF PSIf GUY MARCHAND OGamo e siP mpoe a-Noriti Film Dsot Lid " ~ fU f a~t='am# Est George C. Scott A Frnklin J. Schoffner Fikn "Islands in the Strea m"f A Bort/Polevsky Production David Hemvnings GIlbert Roland and Claire Bloom tiErnest erningwoy a.ooDennwBDort Petitderf Peter Bort and Max Polevsky o,.,aFronklInJ. .dcoffner