Page T er THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, July 2, 1976 P ; elrH _HGA AL rdyJl ,17 .. . Carter narrows Veep Lebanese fighting continues as contest to WASHINGTON (/t' - One of Jimmy Carter's closest politi- cal advisers is beginning to. narrow the list of possible vice- presidential running mates in a series of informal Capitol con- versations. One senator who is familiar with the sifting process said he believes the leading prospects are now Democratic Sens. Frank Church of Idaho, John Glenn of Ohio, and Walter Mon- dale of Minnesota to run with Carter, the apparent Democra- tic presidential nominee. "THE FINAL choice will al- most certainly be a member of the Senate," he said. The preliminary evaluation of the possible candidates is being conducted by Charles Kirbo, an Atlanta attorney who has been associated with the for- mer Georgia govetrnor for sev- eral years. In addition ta' Church, Glenn and Mondale, Kirbo is talking with Democratic Sens. Henry Jackson, of Washington, Ed- 3 senators mand Moskie of Maine, and Ad- lai Stevenson of Illinois. THOSE senators are said to be possible but somewhat less likely choices. When he was in Washington on Wednesday, Carter said he will narrow his choice to two or three names by this weekend and then interview the finalists sometime next week. One senator, who has been consulted by Kirbo but it not himself a contender for the job, said it is important to remem- ber that Carter does not know any of the candidates person- ally. "HE'S fortunate to have this extra time to appraise them and size them up," the senator said. The senator, who asked that his name not be used, said he believes everything points to the eventual selection going to a member of the Senate. new appeal for truce BEIRUT, Lebanon (A-Leba- non's three-way war raged on heedless of an Arab League truce appeal and arrival of ad- ditional peace - keeping troops yesterday from Saudi Arabia and Sudan. Right-wing Christian forces pounded the beleaguered Pales- tinian refugee camp of Tal Zaa- tar in what Palestinians called the heaviest shelling of a 10-day assault. "DOZENS of people are being killed," said Farouk Kaddoumi, chief of the Palestine Libetation Organization's political depart- ment. "Most of the homes in Tal Zaatar are burning." Kaddoumi told a news confer- ence a concerted five-front as- sault was pushed back in fierce fighting before noon, only to re- sume in the late afternoon and continue into the evening. "The seige of the camp is tightening," said a communique from the joint central command of Palestinian guerrillas and their leftist Lebanese allies. "Large numbers of tanks climb- ed onto overlooking hills and shelled us to avenge earlier losses." KADDOUMI vowed the camp in southeastern Beirut would hold out indefinitely. Moslem and Palestinian gun- ners launched a number of heavy Katyusha rockets from Beirut's southern outskirts, aim- ed at Christian artillery posi- tions firing at the Tal Zaatar defenders. Striking back, C h r i s t i a n 155mm and 122mm howitzers OPEN 1 P.M. on 4th of July Weekend M-PIN BOWLING WIN A FREE GAME ! MICHIGAN UNION Billiards, Bowling and Pinball blasted M o a I e m residential neighborhoods housing Palestin- ian guerrilla offices, setting a number of fires. The boom of incoming shells jarred the build- ing where Kaddoumi spoke. TIlE FIRES burned as a I p.m. deadline passed for a cease-fire arranged by Arab League foreign ministers meet- ing in Cairo. Neither side gave any indication it was willing to hold its fire until the battle over Tal Zaatar ended one way or the other "We want a cease-fire agree- ment but not a ridiculous one," said Pierre Gemayel, head of the right-wing Phalange party that fields the largest Christian militia. "Fifty failed cease- fires are enough for us." Happei Ciontinued from Pace 7 matched sets of identical twins and their subsequent adult mis- adventures at the height of the French Revolution. Gene Wilder stands out as a snobish, psy- chotically paranoid aristocrat Sunday CINEMA Nothing scheduled. Monday CINFMA Nothing scheduled. Tuesday CINEMA Death in Venice - (Ann Ar- bor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9:15) - Visconti's film of a famous author's doomed pursuit of a young boy in Venice takes Baker ends bike bid for Senate (Contnued from Page 3) REGARDED as the most con- servative of the Regents, Baker recently received the endorse- ment of Regent David Larm, Re- publican Party chairman for the Flint area. Several Michigan congressmen recently endorsed Esch, but Baker scoffed at the support. "It (the group's endorsement) clearly shows the buddy system at work," Baker said. "'You scratch my back, I'll scratch yours.' I don't think it's any big deal." Baker will do conventional campaigning at party functions from now until the primary. is ignored About 1500 Saudi Arabian and Sudanese peace-keeping troops wearing w h i t e helmets and camouflage uniforms drove into southern Beirut and camped at the idle airport. About 800 Sy- rian and Libyan peacekeepers already are there, but they have done nothing to halt the Ti Zaatar battle. Kaddoumi said there was no agreement for their immediate deployment in battle zones. The Saudi and Sudanese govern ments h a v e specified their troops were dispatched only io police a cease-fire once it is in effect. The alluvial Mississippi Vai ley is one of the nation's great- est sources of hardwood lum- her. fings.. too many liberties with the Thomas Mann original. Wh' emerges is a kind of overripe pornography study that is ir- revelant to Mann's theme of the tragic inadequacy of the pro tagonist's life-long principles Dick Bogarde is only fair in the role of Gustav Aschenbachi ^^ Wednesday CINEMA The Billion Dollar Brain (Ann Arbor Film Co-p, Ang And. A, 7 only) - Te final in stallment of the Harry Palmer spy series featuring Michael Caine as the slightly bedrag gled agent who became the pro totype for many subsequent imi tations, including TV's Colum- bo. This segment involves the attempt by an evil billionaire to touch off an atomic war, and is one of the first feature filim directed by Ken Russell which may or may not be a recommendation. From Russia With Love - (Ants Arbor Film Co-op, Ang Aud. A, 9 only) - one of the earliest of the James Bond films and also generally con- sidered the best, so it's inter- esting to take a decade-span ning retrospective look at it The excitement is still there. but the corresponding mass doses of sadism and strident macho ethos seems for more repulsive and infantile now than in those innocent days of the early '60's. Perhaps Viet- nam and its related horrors forced us all to grow up a little. and it's to our credit if the value systems in From Russia With Love seem uncomfort aably out of kilter to toda' audience. ** Thursday CINEMA Jimi Hendrix - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9) -- A recent documentary study of the rock genius. IF YOU MAILED A POSTCARD TO EACH OF THE MICHIGAN DAILY'S READERS Telling them of your business, or your next sale, or your group's latest project, IT WOULD COST YOU $3,150.00 FOR POSTAGE ALONE YOU CAN REACH THE SAME READERS WITH AN AD THIS LARGE FOR JUST $55.86 And we'll deliver it in something they won't throw in the wastebasket . - THE PAGES OF ~Ijr icljI au hIait THE LATEST DEADLINE IN THE STATE 764-0554 *Established by U-M Institute for Social Research MENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH INSTITUTE SEMINARSERIES ISSY FILOWSKY, M.D. Chairman, Department of Psychiatry University of Adelaide Australia Presently Visiting Professor University :f Seattle "PAIN AND DEPRESSION" FRIDAY. JULY 2. 1976 12:00 Noon-Room 1057 MHRI