Soturdov May 8, t976' THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three I Saturday, May 8, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Quake toll rises past 600 VENICE, Italy (A'} - Italian national police announced figures last night more than doubling the death toll from north- eastern Italy's disastrous earthquake - from fewer than 300 to 628. There were unconfirmed reports of more than 1,000 dead and police put the number of injured at about 2,000. Of- ficials said more than 110,000 were left homeless. RESCUE WORKERS, including U.S. Army medics, dug through the rubble of northeast Italian towns and villages, searching for bodies. "We keep finding bodies in every ruin," said a police official in charge of rescue operations after the Thursday quake. "We will not know the total until we get to the basements." The quake demolished or severely damaged more than a score of towns in the Alpine foothills 40 miles northeast of Venice. The villages, strung out in a valley, were hit by aftershocks yester- day afternoon. The tremors caused no serious damage. TENS OF thousands, fearing more tremors, spent the night in tents, in their cars and under makeshift shelter in the open. Late evening rainstorms increased their misery. The state radio reported just before midnight that the death toll could exceed 1, 00 but there was no official confirma- tion. There were unconfirmed reports in Udine, the provincial capital in the center of the worst-hit area, that 1,000 caskets had been ordered. Aid arrived from throughout Italy and from abroad. The U.S. military flew in medicine and water from the Army base at Vicenza and supplied ten medics. Two hundred Canadian troops were rushed to the area from a NATO base in West Germany. PRESIDENT Giovanni Leone, some- times sobbing emotionally, toured the quake area for an hour by helicopter, then returned to Rome. The quake was felt in half of Italy and at least eight other countries, including Yugoslavia, Austria, Czechoslovakia, West Germany, Switzerland, Belgium, the Netherlands and western Poland. There were no reports of major damage outside of Italy. In Venice, only a few chimneys were knocked down. Engineers checked key buildings in- the canal city and reported no damage to foundations. In Western Italy, the famous Leaning Tower of Pisa was shaken but suffered no damage Nine state legislators pledge Udall support By LANI JORDAN who I hid fur Stute Representative Perry Itullard (D.-Ann Arbor) and "I W eight other legislators cam- troith paigned for Presidential Candi- came dote Rep. Morris Udall (I) Iird. Ar,.) in Ann Arhor yesterday to get Membecr', of the group en- .s'cii dorsed Udall at the candidate's When -ito headquarters on Detroit St. d 1st in the morning vnd discussed (fsjj the issuesith a soa itt gather- 1)dwi ing of s;pp)rters. tm p st. I JLARI') woo;cs tiously op- think u oistic shoot tUdott's -tmnces (ottv for victory in the May 18 Michi- remin gin presidential primary. the en "I see it as possible for Ud- 'adden al to win,' le said last night. te.I is is ttte l:ist chance to stop 'thtys I 'rtmer G esrgta Governoc tho-D G rmty) Carter. If Carter is 5ser. stoipped it doesn't mean Udall Udlla is going to win it (the nominia- er's M' tion), but at least the progres- Peop sie parts of the party will be and fa strengthened." showed Bullard expressed disappoint- campai ment in other state Democrats ' ri I / That's a lot of lies, George For those looking for a chance to pig- ot, Charlevoix may bekthe place. In honor of Michigan Week, May 15-May 22, and the Bicentennial, the town plans to make a 10 ton, 14 feet in diameter cherry pie. The pie will require 2,000 pounos of flour for the crust and lots of cherries from the surrounding grow- ing area. It will bake for 3 hours in the oven of a local cement company. Happenings . begin today with a "Town Meet- tag' being held in honor of the bicen- tennial all day long at Huron High .-. also running all day is an open house sponsored by the U-M Sailing Club at Baseline Lake . . . at 2:30 and 8:00, Mimetroupe will perform at the Men- delasohn Theater . . . also at 8:00, the Tumbleweed dance group will perform at Schorling Auditorium. Weather -or not Today's forecast calls for clear skies throughout southern lower Michigan. It will be sunny with highs in the upper 50's. There is a chance of frost with tem- peratures dipping down into the 30's by tonight. have endorsed Carter's the nomination. AS surprised when (De- ilyor) Coleman Young out for Carter," he de- "I think it's an attempt on a winning ticket, to ?e before it's too late. all is said and done you .et that many rewards ipig on a winning Wgan.) The patronage i hretty much in the don't know what they they'll accomplish " twii of the 1itwmakers Ie in Ann Arbor after dorsement - Rep. Jeff '(D-Wyandotte) and Rty Hood (D-Detroit). stationed themselves on ag tid urged occasional by to attend today's ippearance at the Farm- grket. le on the IDiag were few }r l sl between, though most ,',Vi) STA E v r 'oFm~'lv 'L.-A'I i'r_ hs interest in the Uddall Ecampaig' literature to a passerby on the tn literature which Diag yesterday. The Arizona Congressman stumps the hustings this morning in preparation tee NINE, Page 4 for tht May 18 Michigan primary. NATIONAL FIGURE HOLDS STEADY: State jobless rate plummets By UPI Michigan's unemployment rate dipped to a 17-month low of 10.2 per cent in April, but remained considerably higher than the national average, the Michigan Employment Security Commission (MESC) reported yesterday. The 1.2 per cent decline from March translated into 45,600 fewer persons out of work. At this time a year ago, the state's jobless rate stood at 13.5 per cent. IN REPORTING the downward trend the MESC citedhthe upturn in the auto industry, which has resulted in job gains, throughout the manufacturing sector. Nationally the number of employed Americansrset a record in April, caused by an increase in persons looking for work, keeping the unemployment rate stubbornly at 7.5 per cent, the Labor Department reported yesterday. It was the third straight month the nation has set a new employment rec- ord - a development that helped prompt director Julius Shiskin of the Bureau of Labor Statistics to conclude the economy has gone from recovery to real growth. TOTAL JOBS rose by 710,000 in April to a record 87.4 million, capping an un- precedented rise of 3.3 million over the past 13 months. Employment first ex- ceeded the pre-recession peak of 86.3 million in- February and has gone 1.3 per cent beyond it. But the impact of employment expan- sion in April was blunted by an in- crease in the total number of persons available for work, now totaling 94.4 million and comprising a record 61.6 per cent of the population. Unemployment thus held steady at 7.5 per, cent or 7 million persons, virtually unchanged over the past three months. IT WAS THE FIRST time since 1973 that unemployment has gone seven straight months without an increase, and the rate compared to a recession peak of 8.9 per cent in May, 1975. Men accounted for more than half of April's increased employment -- a drastic change from previous months when women took most new jobs. The proportion of available male workers rose-reversing a long downward trend -and male joblessness declined to 5.4 per cent. Senate subcommittee calls PBC a 'tool for political e m s' WASHINGTON (iP)-The Senate's sub.- committee on i n t e r n a I security has accused the People's Bicentennial Com- mission (PBC) of trying to steal the na- tion's bicentennial celebration, but at least one senator and staff aides are disavowing the report. Sen. Birch Bayh (D-Ind.), a member of the subcommittee, sent a letter to Jeremy Rifkin, director of the PBC, say- ing the report and the methods by which it was produced were "unacceptable to me." THE REPORT issued this week calls the PBC "a propaganda and organizing tool for a small group of New Left po- litical extremists." It was based on two days of hearings in March which fea- tured only two witnesses. The witnesses were Frank Watson, a retired Army officer from Dun Loring, Va., who was identified as a specialist in media and propaganda analysis, and Mary Walton, a Chicago housewife who, a release accompany the report said, "has made an intensive study of student revolutionary movements" and served on the Illinois Advisory Council on Student Radicalism. Sen. James Eastland (D-Miss.), sub- committee chairman, was not available See SENATE, Page 4