Page 2-Wednesday, June 7, 1978-The Michigan Daily Italian terrorists kill guard in raid ROME (AP) - A terrorist assassination team shot and killed a prison guard at point-blank range in northeastern Italy yesterday and anonymous callers -claimed respon- sibility for the attack in the name of two groups - one of them the Red Brigades. In Rome, meanwhile, authorities charged three more persons - two of them still at large - with the Red Brigades' kidnapping and slaying of former Premier Aldo Moro. Six other suspects had been charged Monday. ONE OF THE anonymous callers to the news media said the Red Brigades, Italy's most feared urban guerrilla group, had carried out the ambush of Sgt. Antonio Santoro, 52, chief of guards at Udine Prison. Suspected members of the Red Brigades had beet held at the prison last year. Another caller said the killing was the work of the leftist radical Armed Proletariat Group. Udine police said they had no clues yet to the identity of Santoro's assailan- ts. They said two men and a woman ap- proached him as he left home to walk to the nearby jail, shot him and escaped in two waiting cars. He was the 10th per- son killed by terrorists in Italy this year. NINE PERSONS have been charged so far in the Moro case, but in- vestigators said they lack the identities of many more they believe were ac- tively involved. They estimate that about 30 persons planned and carried out the abduction and slaying. A dozen terrorists seized Moro March 16 in a Rome street ambush in which they killed his five bodyguards. Moro's bullet-riddled body was found in a car in downtown Rome 54 days later. Of those charged, three men described as among the most dangerous members of Red Brigades are at large - Mario Moretti, Prospero Gallinari and Corrado Alunni. Accor- ding to some reports, they have fled the country. The other six, including two women, are in jail under special guard. CHARGED yesterday were Gallinari, Alunni and Fiora Pirri Ardiz- zone, a woman professor at Catanzaro University in the south of Italy. She is in jail, having been arrested along with three young men April 6 near Naples when police raided a beachhouse. She was described as belonging to Forefront, a group held responsible for a series of bombings. All except the Ardizzone woman have been linked to the Red Brigades, one of several Marxist guerrilla groups engaged in bombings, killings, shooting people in the legs and industrial sabotage. The other five in jail were arrested in Rome a few days after Moro was found. The long list of charges against the nine included the kidnapping and premeditated murder of Moro, multiple murder for the death of Moro's five police bodyguards, illegal possession of war materiel, and larceny for allegedly having stolen five cars used in the Moro kidnapping. Consumers tackle meat-y prices (Continued from Page]1) think there's a strong possibility that if prices go up the way it's expected to, that people will start buying less meat. You hope it does, at least," said George Robinson, owner of White Market. RICHARD Posthumus, executive vice-president of the Michigan Beef In- dustry Commission, a group which provides information on the state beef industry, claims prices will not rise much higher in the next several mon- ths. But Posthumus said he believes the recent price upswing is just another Sadat tells troops to read or possible war (Continued from Page]) over Arab land," Sadat told the troops part of a never-ending cycle. "We operate on a ten-year cycle in the supply and demand fashion. As demand increases, more people enter the industry which then expands the supply. When people start demanding less, suppliers leave the industry, for- cing supplies to go down and prices to increase," he said. At one local store, prices listed for hotdogs were $1.59 a pound, cooked salami $1.78 a pound and large bologna $1.69 'a pound. Consumers, however, still keep buying the usual amounts of meat. "Look, everyone has to eat and everything is expensive these days," said Majid Kamifiroozie. ONE LOCAL store owner said he fully agreed with the increase in meat prices. He said he sympathized with the plight of the farmer who have always been the "victim of the price crunch." "I think meat prices are finally at the level near where they should be. While other commodities have continued to increase prices, meat has remained the same until the last several weeks," said Ray Knight, manager of Knight's Markets. Postlumus said beef prices avoided the nationwide inflationary spiral because of more efficient production methods developed by cattle raisers, which tend to drive prices down. He said so many cattle raisers have left the industry that production has sharply decreased causing a low supply and high prices. HE MAINTAINS prices will start to level off within several months and avoid any signs of large scale consumer resistance. Posthumus, however, warned prices would not drop substantially for at least three or four years. He attributes his pessimistic estimate to the sufficient number of cattle raisers in the country. "Right now, cattle raisers have to keep female calves for two years before they give birth, and then have to wait another two years before her calf can be slaughtered. Therefore, we won't see the kind of low beef prices we've ex- perienced in the last three years for at least another four years," said Posthumus. .A spokesman for the Livestock Market News, a federal-state cooperative which also gives infor- mation on beef prices, revealed yester- day that the total amount of cattle in the nation decreased by more than ning per cent in the last two years. "You can't expect cattle raisers to consistently raise livestock when they keep losing money," said the spokesman. achieve my goals and the objectives of the battle of liberation which means the return of our land through peaceful means and without shedding a drop of blood of any of my sons, soldiers and of- ficers, I won't hesitate to act accor- dingly," Sadat said. "But if there is anything that affects my territory or the sovereignty of Egypt, I will give you the order as I did in October," he said, referring to the October 1973 war in which Egyptian troops crossed the Suez Canal and overran frontline positions. "We offer Israel peace. We offer Israel security. But Israel will not have Arab land and will not have sovereignty in Ismailia. WHEN HE visited Israel in Novem- ber, Sadat offered to make peace in return for the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Arab lands and the creation of a homeland for the three million Palestinians dispersed with the birth of the Jewish state in 1948. It was the first offer for permanent peace in the 30 years of Israel's existence. To placate Israeli fears that a Palestinian state on its borders could be used as a launching pad for more guerrilla attacks, Sadat has suggested the Palestinian homeland could be federated with Jordan. 3 ARMY SURPLUS, Levi Straight Legs and Bell Bottoms Reg. $14.98 SALE $12.98 All Air Mattresses in Stock 15% OFF Regular Price Two-Man Nylon Backpackers Tent Reg. $28.98-NOW 9 1 7. 70 -Warryleo A SLEEPING BAGS 210 E. WASHINGTON-994-35721 'OPEN MONDAY-SATYURDAY9: 3d-6 FPI AYEENI0GSTIL 8t3 ' ; I Tax proposal headed for victory in Calif. (Continued froml'age1) property currently is valued at $60,000, and the Jarvis plan would reduce the property tax from an average of $1,400 to an average $600 a year. The measure also calls for rolling back assessments to 1975 levels and limiting future increases to 2 per cent annually, except when property is sold. Assessments in some areas recen- tly have doubled. Jarvis had said California gover- nment could survive the revenue loss his measure would cause without damaging essential services. he called the initiative more than just a tax cut, THE MICHIGAN DAILY lume LXXXVIII, No. 5-S Wednesday,June 7,1978 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class potge is aid at Aaa Arbar, Michigaa 4a1a9. Published daily Tueaday through Suaday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street. Aaa Arbar, Mihigaa 4ata0.s.ubscription rates. $172 September throagh April f2 aemestera); $13 by mailoutside. nnArbor. Sumaier session published'Tuesday throbgh Satbr- ' day morning Subscriptionrates -a$6.50 inAarp Arhprr - $7.50 by mail outside AnnArbor, saying it was a declaration that voters are tired of government "of the bureaucrats, by the bureaucrats and for the bureaucrats." Opponents had said approval of the measure would destroy the school system, result in cutbacks in police and fire protection and cause a recession in the state by throwing rup to 400,000 government workers out of their jobs. WASHINGTON (AP)-A trash plant operated by the Bureau of Mines in suburban Maryland consumes five tons of garbage a week and transforms it in- to reusable aluminium, glass, steel and tin, reports National Geographic. The bureau's plant, constructed from off-the-shelf mineral processing equipment, was made to show city governments and private industry that trash can be an untapped resource that can be recycled economically. In most cities, it costs an average of $6 a ton to dispose of a ton of trash, but certain cities have tighter pollution - contr'ols' arid 'fewer landfill areas, 'esuti'ng inhdlsposal costs'ofup-to $20 a