Page-T'ern THE MiCHiGAN DAILY Friday, May 9, 1975- Pia~e Ten THE MICHIGAN OAILY 1rid~y, Moy 9. 1975 a} $2.50 FRi.-SAT. THE Sloth Band quitar, trumpet, .a 6 r , clarinet, mandolin, tenor & 5 strina banio, armonice, etc. PLAYING New Orleans iaxz, bq band, I 0e songs of 20's & 30's, iuq band music, etc., etc., Read and Use Daily Classifieds Congress to consider refugee aid WASHINGTON P)-President Ford's emergency aid request for Indochina refugees was cleared for House action next week by one committee yester- day night and cut to $405 mil- lion by another congressional panel. The House foreign operations appropriations subcommittee cot the Presidents $57 million aid request for 150,000 refugees down to $405 million, generally basing its action on figures showing the actual number of refugees involved now totals about 114,00. LATER, THE House Judiciary Committee approved an author- ization for emergency refugee program, 30 to 4, and Chairman Peter W. Rodino (-N.J.) said he hopes to put it to a House vote next Wednesday. The authorization bill contains no money figures. The separate $405 million appropriation is ex- pected to follow the authoriza- tion bill to a House vote quickly. Meanwhile, the Senate passed 91 to 1 a resolution welcoming Vietnamese and Cambodian ref- ugees to the United States. Sen. William Scott (R-Va.) cast the only dissenting vote against the resolution, introduced by Sens. Alan Cranston (D-Calif) and James Allen (D-Ala.). AN AMENDMENT by Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman (D-N.Y.) to write a $507 million limit into the House authorization bill was rejected 18 to 16. She said she wanted to make sure that if more than the Pres- is needed, the extar funds would ident's estimate of $507 million require approval by Congress. "I think we've learned that controlling the purse strings brings responsive administra- tion, she said. REP. JACK Brooks (D-Tex.) said during the Judiciary Com- mittee debate that he was con- cerned about the job burden the refugees may cause, coming to this country at a time of nearly 9 per cent unemployment. "I think our first responsibil- ity is to give jobs to people in this country who want to work and w h o a r e Americans,' Brooks said. But Rep. Paul Sarbanes (D- Md.) said Congress already has made jobs for Americans a leg islative priority and added that the Indochina refugees should not be seen as interfering with that effort. MEMBERS of the foreign op- erations subcommittee, in set- ting the $405 million figure, said they probably will have to make another appropriation when the administration knows exactly Khmer Rouge plan agricultural society FLOWERS ARE NICE. . BUT PLANTS KEEP ON GROWING PLANTS GALORE Remember MOHER'S DAY on SUNDAY Plants Galore Locations: 1202 Packard and in Ypsi. (at Wells) 616 W. Cross 994-4942 485-0174 C t~~t' <-t <- c - t '<- "> tt' aC -m-o (Continued from Page l) PHNOM PENH WAS describ- ed by many of the returnees as a "dead city," littered with bodies and abandoned house- hold goods and populated by a few pets and a few Khmer Rouge soldiers. One Frenchman said that last Thursday the Khmer Rouge had come to his house and ordered him to leave or be shot. He re- called: "On the way to the embassy I saw several dead bodies rot- ting in the street. Some of them apparently had been shot, but some had their heads crushed and appeared to have been beaten to death." A SWEDISH journalist, Olle Tolgraven of Swedish Broad- casting, said he did not believe there had been wholesale execu- tions. But he said there was evidence the Khmer Rouge had shot people who refused to leave their homes in a mass evacua- tion ordered the first day of the takeover. This was corroborated by others. Douglas Saypper, one of the evacuated Americans, said that when the Khmer Rouge first marched into Phnom Penh they were met with cheering and white flags. "It built up into a crescendo, with people dashing around and embracing the Khmer Rouge soldiers in a car- nival atmosphere.'' But soon the Khmer Rouge began systematically emptying out houses and stores of every- thing inside and "it became ob- vious that there was a forced exodus out of the city," Sapper said. "YOU'D LOOK down the street and there'd be some pa- per swirling, a lone dog trot- ting across, a shutter blowing in the breeze - nothing stirring. It is likely that the depopula- tion of the country's metropoli- tan areas, and even villages, were the first dramatic steps toward the new Cambodia. The foreign returnees speculate the mass exoduses were measures to control populations, to get the many fallow rice fields planted again, as well as to uproot "bourgeois" urban dwellers. how many refugees there are and precisely how much pro- grams for them will cost. "Let's give them something and then monitor the programs and see what the needs are," said Rep. George Mahon (ID- Tex.), chairman of the fuR House Appropriations Commit- tee. The subcommittee appreved $155 million for refugee centers and daily maintenance of refu- gees, $65 million for airllf them, $70 million for resettle- ment, $100 million for subse- quent welfare and medical' care and $15 million for airlifts to other countries. THE $507 million Ford re- quested included $185 million for daily maintenance. $9 mil- lion for airlifts, $78 million for resettlement, $125 million for welfare and medical care and $20 million for airlifts to other countries. Meantime, the Senate quickly passed by voice vote a bill to let President Ford use previous- ly appropriated military aid funds to assist Vietnamese and Cambodian refugees. Sen. Mark Hatfield (R-Ore.) said the measure could make as much as $147 million available while Congress debates Fords major aid request. THE BILL was passed and sent to the House 24 minutes after Hatfield introduced it. No immediate House action appear ed likely, however. The administration has said it will run out of funds this weekend to care for the refu- gees unless Congress votes ad ditional money by then. if you see nrews happen call 76-DAILY --------------- 342 E. Liberty at Division FREE DELIVERY-769-8030 Small Med. 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PIZZA VALUABLE COUPON 5s VALUABLE COUPON a ! VALUABLE COUPON s 2ScOffH St cOff $1-Of a ANYMA : * ANY LARGE OR a ANY SMAI. PIZZA ANY MEDIUM PIZZA a a X-LARGE PIZZA U Offer Exoires , - Offer Expires Offer Expires : Mov3l * May31 a May31 ------------------- *-----------------Li -al ll - -----------------ll A M~i/l ai This Mothers Day before you give herarything, gie heraodnner sh will remmber- well give herrose 113-11:0 RESTAURANT 215 NORTH MAIN 663-7758