Page 6-Wednesday, May 3, 1978-The Michigan Daily A NEWS ROUND-UP: Reg A $61 tuition undergraduat University cla Regents at th and second ye While you were away ... Department of Education needed the crease in administrative spending for tuition figures to compute student the street repair program. e n ts awards in state competitive scholar- i Mayor Louis Belcher, however, says ships for 1978-79. the seven member Republican caucus Tuition hike The Regents also approved wants much more spent for roads. preliminary architectural plans for the See CITY, Page 10 hike for full-time in-state Gerald Ford Presidential Library on C o u n c il U tes attending 1978-79 North Campus. sses was approved by the Plans for the $3.5 million two-story Budget proposed O u sin g eir April meeting. First brick and glass building schedule com- ar students will pay $565 nt ion tilhbe bilt with per term while upperclass students will pay $635, beginning in September. l Tuition rates for other student groups including undergrad and graduate out- of-state students will be decided by the Regents when information is available on the size of the 1978-79 state ap- propriation. THE MINIMUM student fees for resident undergraduates had to be ap- proved before May 1 because the state private gifts and maintained by the federal government. ACCORDING: TO an official Univer- sity statement, former President Ford has said: "I have asked that the Library of my tenure in public office be located on the campus of my alma mater because the University of Michigan has long displayed an exten- sive interest in archival history of the state and of the nation." See REGENTS, Page 10 The Ann Arhor Film Cooperative PRESENTS AT MLS Wed., May 3 THE KING OF HEARTS (Philippe de Groca, 1967) 7T& 9-MLB 3 Our most popular film.A Scottish soldier during WWI is sent to a French town, evacuated except for on asylum. Meanwhile the fleeing Germans hove left a time bomb. The asylum inmates escape. taking up various costumes and roles. A very funny comedy and a powerful onti-wor film-the sonity of insanity and vice-versO. Alan BOtes, Genevieve Bujold. "Delightfully subtle satire-penetrating comedy encased in a most beautiful film."-Judith Grist.In French, with subtitles. Cinemoscope. TOMORROW: Kubrick's "A CLOCKWORK ORANGE" City Administrator Sylvester Murray submitted recommendations to City Council last week for a $37 million budget which, according to Murray, would not substantially change the level of service the city provides. The proposal - which calls for a 7.7 per cent increase in city spending and would take effect July 1 - must be voted on during the second Council meeting of May or it will automatically be accepted. Seven votes from the eleven member Council are needed to overrule Murray's proposals. Council has scheduledseveral working sessions before May 15 to discuss the budget in detail. MURRAY'S proposals reflect a growing concern among city officials that the deterioration of Ann Arbor's streets must be halted. Murray called for $250,000 to be taken from the general fund and put into street repair. This is an increase of $150,000 over this year's .allotments. Murray also asked for a 63 per cent in- Between the end of classes and the end of winter term, South Quad residen- ts must have felt that someone was out to get them besides professors with final exams. A virus infection first noticed Thursday morning, April 20, struck over 100 Mtudents, and a week later, on April 27, hundreds of residents were evacuated as firemen dealt with a series of fires of undetermined cause. Food poisoning has been ruled out as a cause of the fever, vomiting, and other gastrointestinal problems which affected 110 of South Quad's 1,268 residents. "If you have a true food poisoning, it would hit everybody at about the same time, not over a 48-hour period," said John Kowalczk, environmental sanitarian in the University Oc- cupational Safety and Environmental Health office. Findings of tests done in Lansing have shown no bacterial pathogens in the food South Quad residents were eating, and point toward viruses as the See HOUSING Page 10 Our new menu has a few choice words for you. Our exciting new menu is filled with some rather choice words. Like U.S.D.A. Choice New York Strip. U.S.D.A. Choice sirloin sizzler. U.S.D.A. Choice steak, with shrimp. In all, we have four U.S.D.A. Choice meats to choose from. Plus several other new food items, and an expanded salad bar. We believe it's a great new menu. And we'd like you to look it over. And then, we'd like you to eat our words. Police Murder suspect nabbed The Washtenaw County Sheriff's Department is continuing to press its all-out search for a convicted rapist who escaped Sunday from the Washtenaw County Jail. (See story, Page 3.) Meanwhile, two suspects in last Thursday's shotgun slaying of an Yp- silanti grocer were apprehended in Detroit Monday night. JERRY SMITH, 19, and a juvenile accomplice were arrested in connection See POLICE, Page 16 This news round-up was written by staff reporters Rene Becker (Regents), Dan Oberdorfer (City Council), R.J. Smith (Housing), Tom O'Connell (Police), and Mike Arkush (State). DISCO Lessons at DONCE SPOCE 31412 S. State COLL 995-4242 for schedule and reis, r ?7 V1 r f C " 4. } .°.. 035 Wseaw across-4 p t Ie OldsoAnnJA? .. 4611 ilia