Telephone users to get credit on bill LANSING (UPI) - Michigan Bell Telephone Co. customers will see a $3.55 credit on the telephone billing period beginning this week, under a state Public Service Commission ruling yesterday. The three-member PSC ordered Michigan Bell to refund $11.6 million to its approximately 3.6 million customers in Michigan. The refund will show up as a: one-time credit on bills sent out during the billing period beginning today. The refund is the result of a set- tlement agreement between the PSC, Michigan Bell, the state Attorney General and the Association of Business Advocating Tariff Equity, a PSC statement said. Michigan Bell spokesman Len Singer said the refund constitutes costs paid to American Telephone and Telegraph Co. for research and development. When Michigan Bell breaks off from AT&T Jan. 1, Bell will not be able to take ad- vantage of those costs,which already were figured into rates. The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, December 7, 1983-- Page 5 Winter storm blankets state From Staff and Wire Reports Ann Arbor residents were subjected to another dose of winter weather yesterday as the city received its second snowfall in as many days. Mon- day night's storm was responsible for a serious automobile accident yesterday morning. According to Ann Arbor police, a driver travelling east on Fuller Road last control of his car and plunged off a bridge into the Huron River. A police spokesman refused to identify the driver, but said the person was seriously injured. THE ACCIDENT occurred shortly before 10 a.m. when the car skidded in- to the wrong lane and struck another vehicle. After bouncing off the north side of the bridge, the car swerved back onto the road and was struck by a second car before it crashed through the guard rail. Passengers in the other cars were uninjured. The driver was taken to University Hospital. Meanwhile, forecasters said the new storm could drop up to four inches of snow on some parts of Michigan. A travelers advisory covered the nor- thern Lower Peninsula but not the Up- per Peninsula. Icy rain coated southern Michigan roads and a handful of schools, mostly in Oakland and Washtenaw counties,: were closed for the day. Five-hundred; students at Wacousta Elementary School near Grand Ledge were sent home because of a weather-related: power outage. MORE SNOW is expected today with temperatures reaching only into the mid 20s to low 30s in the Lower Peninl- sula and the mid 20s in the Upper Peninsula. The storm was part of a larger one responsible for injuring at least 25 people in the southeastern United States. In Selma, Alabama, a tornado: chewed its way through a housing project, a small university and the Selma business district. At least one person was killed and 18 were injured; The damage estimate was $3.5 million. It was the second deadly twister to hit- Alabama since Saturday, when a tor- nado destroyed an Oxford super- market, killing two people.a Daily Photo by DOUG MCMAHON 'Tsnow joke Jan Wanchook, discovers yesterday's snowfall was no laughing matter. Wanchook, of the Rackham Graduate School administration, knew the stuff was for real when she had to shovel it off her car. U U.S. treasury to modernize bills WASHINGTON (AP) - Picture, if you will,. George Washington winking as you move a dollar bill from side to side. A blue dollar bill, that is. Woven with metal threads carrying information in secret code. Our curren- cy for the 1990s? THE MENTAL picture goes well ,beyond what the government is willing to say about plans to change America's folding money in the next few years. And it's probably wilder than what will actually happen. But changes are indeed coming for familiar old U.S. currency - the first substantial changes in more than half a century. And the possibilities apparen- tly do include colors, coded threads and "optical variables" that change shape when viewed from different angles. Though officials are secretive about proposed alterations, they are open about the cause: a fear, that sophisticated new photocopying machines could soon make counter- feiting much easier than it has been. NEED GROCERIES on the way home from work? Before leaving, just run off some cash on the office copier. Federal officials, studying the problem for several years, don't think that's far- fetched in light of expected technological advances in copiers. Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, who is responsible for guar- ding the credibility of the U.S. monetary system, said recently the threat seemed to be genuine and "the desire to keep ahead of that technology may point to some technical devices" in American currency. Treasury spokesmen say no decisions have been made on how to change paper money. And they play down the possibility of drastic changes, noting that the government wouldn't want to do anything to lower the respect U.S. currency commands. CHANGES being considered, accor- ding to sources in the government and out: " Holograms, which produce three- dimensional pictures, or plastic strips that would show different images when viewed from different directions. A winking George Washington would never be seriously considered, but one possibility is changeable wording on the Federal Reserve seal on the left front of bills. " The tinted backgrounds, though Treasury spokesman Robert Levine says the idea of brighter colors was discarded after being "kicked around." " Coded, metallicrthreads that special machines could read, thus detecting counterfeits. However, that wouldn't be much help to people who casually pay out and accept cash every day. BE OUR GUEST AT A SPECIAL SCREENING' December 8, 1983 8:30 PM THE MOVIES AT BRIARWOOD 462 Briarwood Circle (Between J.C. Penny and Lord & Taylor) Pick up your passes at: COTTAGE INN PIZZA Limited number of seats available "ROUSING AND FUNNY!" - Iinlcent Ciunhr, TilE NE I Yt)RK/TI77LS PLO bombs bus in Jerusalem (Continued from Page ) and headed in the direction of the upper Metn Mountains where Syrian gunners on Sunday shot down two American . fighter-bombers, witnesses said. State-run Radio Beirut and privately owned radio stations said the jets flew reconnaissance missions over Beirut, the hills overlooking the U.S. Marine base and the central Lebanese moun- Syrians re WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Reagan administration said yesterday the Syrian government apparently is not budging from its refusal to release a captured American airman until all U.S. forces leave Lebanon. "We are in contact with the Syrian government and I don't have anything., tains. All stations said no fire was directed at the Tomcats. In Tripoli, PLO loyalists were repor- ted ready to evacuate the Lebanese port city in several days. A senior aide to Yasser Arafat said the PLO chief will soon abandon Tripoli and go to Tunis. Arafat and his men have been trapped in northern Lebanon his position toward Israel. Greek ships were expected in Tripoli "within a few days" to evacuate Arafat and about 4,000 of his fighters to Tunisia and North Yemen, Khalil Wazir, Arafat's top military aide told The Associated Press. momm"MOMMONNOMMMMOMM fuse to release airman .. to tell you about it," said Alan Rom- berg, the State Department's deputy spokesman. U.S. Navy Lt. Robert. Goodman was captured by Syrian troops Sunday when he parachuted from his plane after it was hit by a Syrian ground-to-air missile over central Lebanon. Goodman's Navy aircraft was taking part in a retaliatory strike on Syrian ground positions in Lebanon when it wa hit. Two U.S. planes were downed in the raid conducted in retaliation for Syrian ground fire at unarmed U.S. recon- naissance aircraft. 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