0 Page 6 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 30, 1983 Hello, Ann Arbor... NobodyHas Checking Accounts Like Mutual Savings! Open a checking 3. Descriptive- account with a Statement deposit of $300 or 1 Atotal accounting. more and get 50 FREE of all transactions checks! And Mutual Savings will PAY YOU A Automatic NICKEL-A-CHECK (up ' Check 6. Bill Paying to $10) for your leftover SafekeepingThe easy way to handle checks from your old Tees a ohnl bank (Limit 200 checks). We keep and " recurring bills without protect all ever handling them When you switch cancelled to Mutual Savings checks you 'l also get: Dail Telephone 1. Interest. ecin No minimum balance, Pay bills by phone - any yet your money earns time, any day E interest all the time of the week Emergency - toll-free 24 Hour nationwide Cash Get to your money nationwide with Banking your Mutual Savings card 2. Statewide Cash access thru our Mutual Money Ma- f L.ne chines and over 1,600l Magic Line locations Plus, during this get-acquainted period register to win valuable prizes. 4 arrested at Walled Lake demonstration 4 WALLED LAKE, Mich. (UPI) - Four more demonstrators were arrested at a defense contractor's plant yesterday, bringing to 13 the number of protesters facing charges for trying to block the entrance to the Williams In- ternational Corp. The plant, which produces engines for cruise missiles, was picketed on the third day of six days of planned protests. YESTERDAY'S crowd of 35 to 50 was the smallest since the protest began Sunday, when over 1,000 showed up. Three men and a woman were arrested after they lay down with arms linked and shouted "Don't open the gates of death." While deputies in Oakland County removed the four, the other demonostrators began singing "Give Peace a Chance," and then prayed. On Monday, nine persons were arrested. Arrested yesterday were Anthony Raffenaud, 37, of Holland, Mich., Robert Posta, 33, of Cleveland, Ohio; Carol Atkins, 27, of East Lansing, Mich.; and Robert Braun, 48, or Ann Arbor, Mich. The four face charges of trespassing and conspiracy to commit a misdemeanor, which are punishable by as much as 90 days and a year in jail; respectively. 4 Protesters continue army base blockade BONN, West Germany (UPI) - Police arrested protesters blocking a U.S. base yesterday for the fourth straight day, hauling demonstrators from the path of a heavily guarded truck convoy believed to be carrying parts for nuclear missiles. The arrests came as West German military experts told a parliamentary committee the nuclear arms race was dangerous and threatened to run out of control. A POLICE spokesman said 27 por- testers sat and lay in a road leading to the main gate at 3 a.m. in freezing tem- peratures as a military convoy of 14 huge truck transports escorted by 10 police cars tried to enter the base. Four of the 27 protesters were arrested, bringing to 46 the number arrested at the U.S. artillery base at Mutlangen, near Stuttgart, since Saturday. The protesters said the vehicles carried components for new Pershing II rockets arriving for storage before being made operational by the end of the year. THE PENTAGON has confirmed: Pershing-II parts arrived in West Ger- many but neither Washington nor Bonn have said where the weapons would be stored while being prepared for deploymen. The protesters said demonstrations would continue until the weekend. As West German officials sought to calm tensions increased by the arrival of the U.S. missiles in the country, scientists and military experts testifying to the parliamentary Defense Committee said the rearmament policy had to be rethought. West German Army Gen. Lothar Domroese; former head of NATO's planning section in Europe, told the committee a nuclear war was no longer .'wageable." Under the current NATO plan, 108 Pershing-II missiles will be stationed in: West Germany and 464 cruise missiles in Britain, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium and West Germany during the next five years. Reagan signs dairy bill WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan, bowing to heavy pressure from Capitol, Hill, yesterday signed a bill to aid dairy and tobacco farmers just hours after voicing concern about its cost. Reagan signed legislation that will provide a direct payment to farmers of $10 for every 100 pounds of milk they do not produce in an effort to restrain production. THE PROPOSAL, which the ad- ministration opposed, is the latest ef- THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 fort by Congress to grapple with the cost of the dairy program, estimated to be $2.7 billion this year. The signing followed a mid-afternoon meeting between Reagan and congressional backers of the bill, which also freezes tobacco price support levels and authorizes additional assistance to drought areas. The White House session began with Reagan outlining his reservations to the bill, linked directly to the $600 million cost of the dairy farmer payment program over thernext two years. Administration officials said budget director David Stockman and Agriculture Secretary John Block both argued against the bill, but stopped short of specifically recommending a veto. Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) was a primary force behind the bill. Helms is a longtime champion of the tobacco in- dustry and faces the prospect of a tough fight for reelection next year. 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