Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, August 10, 197 PogeTen THE MICI-UGAN &ARY Tisesduy, Au~i*st 10, 1976 swees r0.s Hto 1t.6 per cent Hurricane Belle DE loIT ne(UII)-Michigan's crawling out of its two-year- ing July because they have been uine mployment rate swelled to long recession, unable to find seasonal work. sls E a t Cst 10.6 per cent in July - the Nationally, unemployment rose These persons are no longer second straight monthly increase to 7.8 per cent in July. listed on unemployment rolls. -with state officials blaming In releasing the latest state- Statewide employment de- oCobtinsed f Page t) Perhaps the best view of t model changeover shutdowns in wide figures yesterday, the clined in July from 3,513,900 to cAse of beer, said Pete Adis, storm's approach was afford the auto industry. Michigan Employment Security 3,467900. owner of a houseboat.tied up at revelers in the 107th floor b A total of 410,001 orker, Commission said the increase Detroit's jobless rate rose attadson River marina in Man- of the World Trade Center were idle, 12,900 nore than the in unemployment was caused from 10.5 per cent in June to hattan. Ie was one of many d o w a t o w n Manhattan. S 397,500 off the job in June when solely by model changeover 11.1 per cent last month, with partying boaters among about Dianne Legro, a 20-year-old s the unemployment rate stood at shutdowns. Without that factor, 202,000 workers idle - an in- 100 who stayed behind. Fifty . er-actress, sipping scotch 10.2' per cent. said MFSC Director Martin crease of 7,700. o h ps ser aterst Taylir, there would have been Uemploymetawas still below Among ships secured against e came up here to see MAY WAS the unlv month this a significant decline in 'he job- the levels of Juty 1975 when never pat to se' She was 'h hurricane. I really hate heigh year that the state's jobless less rate. Michigan's jobless rate stood $75,000 steamboat "Cotton Blos-I m scared to death. But th rate dipped below double-digit at 12.9 per cent - with more som," a prop in Gay 'Lobar- was something about today, a levels. Officials pointed to the AT TIlE SAME time, Tsylor tha a half-million workers idle do's Jones Beach a I had to come here." decrense at the time as a sign said, a number of summer job - and Detroit had 13.4 per cent on Long Island of "Show Boat." BELLE LOST none of th:t Michigan was finally seekers left the labor force dur- of its labor force out of work. Bare-footed residents of Long strength while skirting Not he Jed, bar in aid in- he ts. ere nd its rt House passes registration bill WASII1N;TON (' - The House rushed through a post- card voter registration bill at Jimmy Carter's request yester- day but knocked out a provision for mailing the postcards to every American household. The bill was passed on a 239- 14' vote. THE BILL'S floor manager, House Administration Chairman Frank Thompson (D-N.J.) said a deletion of the provision for mailing postcards to some 150 million voting-age Americans would "destroy the legislation." But backers of the move said it would save $25 million in mail- ing costs. Distribution of the postcards for registering to vote will be left up to the states. The provision was defeated 255 to 1,0. Democratic presidential nom- inee Jimmy Carter asked the [touse two weeks ago to act quickly so people could register to vote by postcard for the No- vember election. hOUSE Speaker Carl Albert estimated Democrats would get 75 per cent of the new voters signing up. - Republicans and some Demo- crats denounced the bill as an election-year dirty trick and said it would open the way to vast voter fraud through filing of postcards for nonexistent voters.' Thompson told newsmen the bill will help people in states that already have postcard regis- tration by automatically regis~ tering them for November's election. HE SAID that postcards also will be available for distribution by voting organizations for reg- istering voters for this election. Thompson said this includes organized labor, which is more likely to use the postcards to sign up Democrats-which some Republicans had charged was the primary purpose of the bill in the-,first place, Thompson said the- provision that called for mailing the -Vst- * - In Spain they call the Best, Most Relaxing part of the day, A siesta. IM4WAL BICYCLE HOUR af Bicycle Jim's 3-6 Monday ~thru friday BICYCLE JIM'S Corner of S. University and S. Forest cards to every American house- hold, which the House knocked out, had been essential to the bill to prevent the charge that it was aimed at such special interest groups. "THE ORGANIZED labor people who wanted this bill so badly never had the nerve to ask that the postcards not be mailed to everybody," Thomp- son said. Thompson said the bill could allow millions of people to regis- ter for the November election unless President Ford vetoes it, which, he said, is likely. Thompson said the Senate plans to move quickly on the bill late this month after Con- gress returns from the Republi-- can National Convention next week, 'THE POST cards would have to get to potential voters in time for them to have them back in the mail by October 4, a month before the November election. The University of -Chicago' was the birthplace of atomic energy in 1942 when scientists first wrolled nuclear chain reaction. For every SM9 feet above sea level, the boiling point of water is lower by about 4 degree Fahrenheit. STUJDEHT Your attention is called to the following rules possed by the Regents at their meeting on February 28, 1936: "Stu- dents shall pay all accounts due- the University not later than the lost day of classes of each semester or summer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are subject to this regulation; however, student loans not vet due are exempt. Any unoid accounts at the close of business on the lost day of classes will be reported to the Cashier of the University' and "(a) All academic credits will be withheld, the grades for the semester or summer session just completed will not be released, and no transcript of credits will be issued. "Ib) All students owing such accounts will not be allowed to register in any subseuent semester or sum- mer session until payment has been made,' Island's south shore flocked to beaches to gave in awe at a sea whipped to fury by the ten- tacles of the oncoming storni. However, most summer visitors had fled the area. AT LEAST half the residents of Narragansett, R.I, refused to leave bayside homes and po- lice withdrew emergency serv- ice from the area. In South Jersey, 12,000 per- sons were evacuated from Long Beach Island and Barnegat Pe- ninsula, leaving only police in the area. Said Civil Defense cs- ordinator Bill Hays: "Don't try to go aboard the islands, be- cause you'll be staring down a double barrel shotgun. I'm not kidding." Twenty National Guard medi- cal corpsmen were assigned to spend the night at a Connecticut facility for 220 retarded chil- dren. On Staton Island, N.Y., 225 patients, were transferred from one state hospital to a sec- ond on higher ground. CONNECTICUT N a t i o n a l Guard Maj. Gen. John Freund said 52 helicopters and 100 pilots were on standby for possible re- lief missions. Correction In Saturday's Daily we in- correctly reported that the SAT's for the incoming fresh class were lower than previous year's. The story should have said SAT scores for the past year's fresh class had dropped. Also the median GPA of the class did not fall, tut only the medial high school rank. Carolina's outer banks earlier in the day. The Red Cross said it housed 6,200 persons there Sunday night, by mid-afternoon the sun peeked out there, and winds subsided. As Belle passed Virginia, its core was close enough to be felt on land, although most of its fury was spent at sea. The storm began hitting South Jer- sey with torrential rains at the evening rush hour. W h il e retaining hurricane strength over o p e n water, Belle's winds were expected to drop as low as 40 m.p.h. with the storm's anticipated mid-eve- ning landfall in central or east ern Long Island. Gusts, how- ever, were forecast in excess of the hurricane minimum of 74 m.p.h. HOWEVER, from the point of view of high tides and potential flooding the weather service saw it was potentially the most dangerous hurricane in the met- ropolitian area in 16 years. With a full moon adding its pull, Belle was expected to gen- erate tides at the Battery on- the tip of Manhattan equalling or exceeling the record 10.5 feet above mean low water set in 190 by Hurricane Donna, which claimed 14 lives. Police offered free sandbags to New Yorkers who live in low- lying areas. City 1lall suggested that as many as 500,000 would be in the path of threatened flood waters. National Guard a rm o r ie s and some public schools were opened to eva- cuees. "We're as ready as we can be," Carey declared. "We don't have cause to worry if people- stay on the alert." Union o receive final refurbishing (Continued from Page 3) person's office will be relocated Johnson established his office to more accessible first floor there. Since then, the building quarters. has seen sporadic construction ALL CONSTRUCTION will not designed to make it more con- begin until plans are drawn and ducive to a student center. bids are taken from interested On the first floor, a large firms. Wells pinpoints Christ- gameroom is slated to be con- mastime as a probable starting verted into four separate meet- date, and expects all work to be ing rooms for "students and completed by next summer. anybody else eligible for meet- Wells, however, does not be- ing space in the building," ac- lieve the construction will have cording to Wells, a debilitating effect on the Uni- In addition, the Student Busi- versity community. ness Services will be moved "I don't think it will hardly from the second floor to the be noticed as far as students third floor while the Ombuds- are concerned," he said. TONIGHT! BRUCE LEE ENTER THE DRAGON (Robert Clouse, 19741 Aud. A, 7 & 9 This is the finest of alt Bruce Lee 'Epics. 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