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May 08, 1975 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1975-05-08

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PageTwo

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Thursday, May 8 ,1975

Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, May 8, 1975

TV
t onght
6:00 2 4 7 11 13 News
9 Bewitched
20 It Takes a Thief
24 ABC News-Smith/
Reasoner
30 57 Electric Company
30 Star Trek
6:30 4 13 NBC News--John
Chancellor
7 ABC News-Smith/
Reasoner
9 I Dream of Jeannie
C1 CBS News-Walter
Cronkite
24 Mod Squad
30 57 Zoom-Children
7:00 7 CBS News-Walter Cronkite
4 7 News
9 Beverly Hillbillies
it Family Affair
13 What's My Lint?
20 To Tell the Trsth
30 Ohio This Week
50 Hogan's Heroes
57 Dig It
7:30 2 13 Trth or Consequences
4 Jeopardy-Game
7 Let's Make A Desl
9 News
11 Wild Kingdom
20 Voyage to the Bottom of
The lea
24 Ohio Lottery Buckeye 300
30 57 Consumer Survival
Kit-Rteport
50 Hogan's Heroes
Play-offs
If CDC offers the Stanley Cup
Play-offs, Ch. 9 will pre-empt
regular programming tonieht
to telecast the hocksey game.
8:00 2 11 The Waltens
4 13 Sunshine
7 24 Bamney Miller
9 To Be Annossced
30 57 Bill Moyers' Journal:
International Report
50 Dealer's Choice
5teAuction Continues
8:30 4 13 Bob Crane
7 24 Karen
20 Happy Though Married
50 Merv Griffin
9:00 2 11 Movie "Generation"
4 13 Mac Davis
7 24 Streets of San Francisco
20 Wrestling
30 57 In Performance at Wolf
Trap-Music
10:00 4 13 Movn' On
7 24 Harry O
20 700 Club
50 Dinah!
56 Auction Continues
10:30 30 57 Sam Francis: These
are My Footsteps-Profile
11:00 2 4 7 11 13 24 News
9 CBC News-Lloyd Robertson
30 Janaki-Exercise
51 Arab and Israelis
-Documentary
11:20 9 News
11:30 2 Movie
"The Snoop Sisters."
4 13 JohnnyCarson

In the ne
National
HAVANA, CUBA - Sen. G e o r g e
McGovern said yesterday that Prime
Minister Fidel Castro feels "inevitably
a change will come" ... and trade and
diplomatic relations with the Un i t e d
States will be restored. The South Da-
kota Democrat, reported on a meeting
until midnight with Castro, Vice Prime
Minister Carlos Rodriquez and Foreign
Minister Raul Roa, said his primary in-
terest was "to get on with" finding
ways to remove the U.S. trade embargo
imposed in 1%2. McGovern, only t he
third U.S. Senator to visit Cuba since
the United States broke off relations in
1961, said he expected to meet Castro
again and would go into specifics on how
to end the blockade.
OMAHA, NEB. -- National Guardsmen
patrolled shattered neighborhoods in
southwest and west Omaha yesterday
following tornadoes that killed at least
three persons, injured 132 and caused
millions of dollars in damage. Three
tornades swept across the area late in
the afternoon Tuesday. About a dozen
twisters in all hit widespread areas in
the northeastern part of the state. No
deaths were reported outside of Omaha.
Gov. J. J. Exon surveyed the damage
from a helicopter and said at a news
conference Wednesday in Lincoln that
at least 500 homes were destroyed and
more than 1,000 severely damaged.
Exon said the damage would be $500
million, and the total could well be in
the neighborhood of $1 billion. Earlier
in the day, Omaha mayor Edward Zorin-
sky said he felt the damage estimated
would be well in excess of $100 million.
WASHINGTON, D.C. - President Ford
assured the prime ministers of Aus-
tralia and New Zealand yesterday that

ws today.
the fall of South iVetnam "has in no way in a row for the smallest of the "Big
weakened the U.S. resolve to stand Four" auto companies and completed a
by its Allies and friends in Asia and series of January-March financial state-
everywhere." Press secretary R on ments that were the worst for the in-
Nessen expanded on Ford's declaration dustry since the 1930's Great Depression.
at his Tuesday night news conference The loss, in the second quarter of AMC's
saying that the United States will firm- fiscal year that begins in October, cotn-
ly support commitments with South pared with a profit of $6.9 million in the
Korea and Taiwan. He added that the same three months last year. The loss,
support of Taiwan in now way alters the equal to $1.60 a share, was even bigger
U.S. goal to seek normalization of rela- than the $27.8 million AMC lost in the
tions with mainland China. Later, t h e July-September quarter of 1967. Com-
President arranged to meet with British pany officials said much of the loss was
Prime Minister Harold Wilson for a dis- attributable to the industry downturn and
cussion of prospects for the NATO sum- substantial costs incurred in introducing
mit meeting which both will attend in its new small Pacer. Sales in the quarter
Brussels May 29 and 30. dropped only slightly, from $490 million
last year to $482 in this year's quarter.
CYPRESS, FLA. - State and federal EAST LANSING, Mich. - Three homo-
game agents raided a large animal sexuals have filed a civil rights coin-
compound in this Jackson County toWl- plaint with the East Lansing Human
ship Tuesday and arrested the operator Relations Commission claiming they
on charges of illegal trading in alligators were ushered out of a nightclub f o r
and other protected Florida wildlife. Lt. dancing together. Rob Bolett, Ted
Cal. Brantley Goodson, enforcement Kleickdoll and Kristine Alfredson, all of
chief of the Game and Freshwater Fish East Lansing, said they and 11 other
Commission, said a dozen live alligators members of the local Gay Liberation
and one alligator skin were found around Movement were asked to leave the down-
a compound where Romulus Scalf was stairs night club portion of Dooley's Res-
arrested. Also found were a federally taurant Apri 16 after other patrons com-
protected green heron along with several plained they were dancing together. The
hawks and an owl in a deep freeze, plus complaint said that restaurant's action
several poisonous snakes and some lions. colat lai tht strns action
Scal faes p t fie yers n piso if violated the civil rights sections of the
Scalf faces up to five years in prison if city code prohibiting discriminaton bas-
convicted on -the Itate charges of P0s- ed on sexual preference.
sessing, buying and selling alligators.
0
Weather
More balmy weather comes our way
DETROIT - American Motors Corp. as today should be sunny with the tem-
yesterday reported a loss of $47.8 million peranight we going upartlycloudy the mid-s. To-
nihiilbeprlnlod ih Thehigh
in the first three months of 1975, the around 45. Friday will be partly sunny
biggest loss in the company's 21-year and a little bit warmer as temperatures
history. It was the third quarterly loss should shoot up into the 70's.

- / :

7 24 Wide World Special
11 Madigan
20 Happy Hunters-Religion
50 Movie-BW
"The Desert Fox"

BElT MIRASH
PROGRAM IN JUDAIC AND
HEBRAIC STUDIES
COURSE OFFERINGS-SPRING 1975
INTERMEDIATE HEBREW--
Tuesday 7-9 p.m.
BASIC JUDAISMB -
Wednesday 7-8:30 p.m.
Thursday 7-10 p.m.
BASIC JUDAISM 1-1
Wednesday 8:30 p.m.
HASSIDISM-
Wednesday 7 p.m.
MODERN HEBREW LITERATURE
IN TRANSLATION-
Thursday 8:30-10 p.m.
REGISTRATION
Wed.-Thur., May 7-8-9 a.m.-5 p.m., 7 p.m.-9 p.m.
Fri., May 9-9 a.m.-2 p.m.
Mon., Fay 12-9 a.m.-5 p.m., 7 p.m.-9 p.m.
REGISTRATION FEE-$7.50
at HILLEL-1429 Hill St.-663-3336
Sponsored by Bnoi Brith Hittel Foundation and the
Midrash College of Jewish Studies of Metropolitian
Detroit
Hille! Foundation
1429 Hill St. 663-3336

THE MICHIGAN DAILY Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription
Volume LXXXV, No. 2-S rates: $10 by carrier (campus area);
ThursdaX, May ., 1-75 $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio);
Thursday, May S, 5525 $12 non-local mail (other states and
is edited and managed by students foreign).
at the University of Michigan. News Summer session published Tues-
phone 764-0562. Second class postage day through Saturday morning.
paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier
Published d a1 y Tuesday through (campus area); $6.00 local mail
Sunday morning during the Univer- (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non-
sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann local mail (other states and foreign).
O FLOWERS ARE NICE ...
BUT PLANTS KEEP ON GROWING
PLANTS GALORE
Remember MOTHER'S DAY on SUNDAY
Plants Galore Locations:
1202 Packard and in Ypsi.
(at Wells) 616 W. Cross
994-4942 485-0174
SPENCER TRACY in
THE POWER AND THE GLORY
This powerful film with a script by Preston
Sturges recounts the life of a railroad magnate
through flashbacks at his funeral. A Cinema
landmark in itself, it is also known as being the
ancestor of CITIZEN KANE. With a Newsreel
short.
FRI.: Bogart in THE MALTESE FALCON
SAT.: MarxBros. A NIGHT AT THE OPERA
CINEMA GUILD TONiGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD.
9:30 ADM. ONLY $1

Daily Official Bulletin
Thursday, May 3
Day Calendar
WUOM: Panel discussion, "Educa-
tion in Michigan: Learning from
Crestwood," with Harrison Black-
mond, MI Educ. Assoc; Dan Hoe-
kenta, atty. representing Crestwood
teachers; Geo. Paron, member, Bd.
Crestwood School District; & Gene
Caesar, legisative analyst, Oft.,
Spkr. of MI Hae. or Reps.; modera-
tsr, Eliz.. tummer, pasprtsidentt
Amer. Assoc. Univ. Women. 9:55 am.
MHI~:Bonns Lomov, Leningrad
U., USSR, "Development of Psychol-
ogy in the tSSi" 1057 MIM, 3:45
pm.
Atmospheric Oceanic Seminar: S.
Roland Drayson, "Satelite Measure-
ments of Minor Constituents in the
Stratosphere by Solar Occultation,"
147 Aerospace, 4 pm.
Intl Night: San Francisco Menu,
League Cafeteria, 5-7:5 pm.
SPRING TERM SPECIAL
BILLIARDS
at Reduced Rates
$1.00/hour
May 12, 13, 14
Michigan Union
RENT IT.!
TV's
Stereos
Air Conditioners
HI-F1 STUDIO
215 ASHLEY-668-7942

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