Poge Six Legislature to consider student loan By DAN BLUGERMAN A central state loan authority for college and university stu- dents would be created under two bills currently in both branches of the Michigan Legis- lature. Bills introduced by State Sen- ator Gilbert Bursley (R-Ann Ar- bor) and State Representative Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) would "establish a central loan authority to isse tax-free bonds and make guaranteed loans to student residents. BULLARD said the state cur- rently has a $30 million student aid deficit. Almost 10,000 stu- dents certified needy by their college financial aid offices were denied aid during the fis- cal year 1973. Only 50 per cent of those needy students denied aid actu- ally enrolled in school com- pared to the 90 per cent -enroll- ment rate for needy students awarded financial aid, Bullard noted. Compared to other major in- dustrial states, Michigan lags far behind in providing student loans under the existing seven federal loan programs. According to Bollard, in New York, Pennsylvania and New SPRING TERM SPECIAL BILLIARDS at Reduced Rates $1.00 hour May 12, 13, 14 Michigan Union authority Jersey $304.8 million was col- lectively available in federally insured and re-insured guaran- teed loans last year, while only $16.1 million was available in Michigan. HE SAID this was because "only 49 per cent of the private commercial lenders potentially eligible to participate in the program actually did so and 64 per cent of these made fewer than 11 loans." After the second year of op- eration, the loan program would be self-supporting as a result of student loan repayment and the special federal interest allow- ance. to lenders according to Bullard. Locally, Huron Valley Na- tional Bank's Assistant Manager Mark Quimet said the student loan situation is "very tight." However, this was not the senti- ment registered at two other city banks. ANN ARBOR Bank and Trust Assistant Vice President Dave Weston said there is money available for students who have been deposit- customers - for three or more years and will continue to be for as many qual- ified students apply. Ry Barsyk, vice president of National Bank and Trust said the volume of applications were greatly in excess of last year, but that "everybody except transient students was taken care of." A concern voiced by Univer- sity Financial Aid Director Thomas Butts was for a bal- ance between loans and grants given students. A SECOND bill introduced by Bullard on Monday will answer this sentiment by providing for a state work-study program. Mndszenty dies Joszef Cardinal Mindszenty, shown here on trial in 1949, died yesterday of heart failure. Minds- zenty, who was 83, spent his last years in what he once termed "complete and absolute exile." He was regarded in the West as a monument of resistance against Communism. Keystone Kops ride again PONTIAC, Mich. (P) - In the tradition of the Keystone Kops, a police car was stolen by a hitchhiker, officers chased each other around rural Oakland County looking for it, and one cop shot his own car. "This kinda stuff just ain't supposed to happen," a perplex- ed officer said in trying to ex- plain the incident in which a de- puty sheriff also shot another police car and two cruisers were wrecked. SGT. DAVID Odett, 29, a six- year veteran on the Pontiac Township police force, said the trouble began when he stopped a hitchhiker Sunday night. Odett put the hitchiker in the back seat of his cruiser while he went to retrieve a paper bag he saw the man throw in some bushes. The hitchhiker leaped over the seat and took off in the police car and left Odett holding the bag-which contained a bot- tle of wine and two bottles of beer, Odett fired a shot and flatten- ed a rear tire on his own police car, but the cruiser kept going. Then, using his portable radio, he called for help. The only oth- er officer patrolling the town- ship sped off to help and a coun- tywide alert was issued for the stolen cruiser. BUT UNKNOWN to authori- ties, it had already been aban- doned in an Oakland University parking lot by the hitchhiker, who fled on foot. As police continued to search for the missing car, two univer- sity policemen patrolling in sep- FICTION COLLECTIVE* *a'non-commercial writers'cooperative "for the protection of an endangered species - innovative, quality fiction." L A. Times 'An idea whose time has come. Newsweek Series I, now in 2nd printing RERUNS by Jonathan Baumbach "Alchemizes fictional 'autobiography' into-the pure gold of comic terror "Newsweek "May prove to be one of the best novels of our time'" American Poetry Review MUSEUM by B. H. Friedman "A well-written love story and a history of a family's involvement in a museum' American Poetry Review "tntellectu,ally stimulating . ." N.Y. 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The hitchhiker who took it had fled, but left behind his driver's license-attached to a clipboard where Sgt. Odette had placed it before going to in- vestigate the mysterious brown bag. A warrant charging a Roches- ter man with car theft was ob- tained by police Monday. Experimental 0. o IN Gestalt & "Here and Now" approaches-to counseling & groups WITH . R IC HA RD K EMPT ER -662-426