Page 14-Wednesday. July 16, 1980-The Michigan Daily Carter orders emergency aid for heat wave- afflicted families By United Press International President Carter yesterday ordered almost $7 million in emergency funds be made available to low-income in- dividuals in states sweltering under a relentless heat wave that has claimed almost 700 lives. The heat wave in the Midwest, South and Southwest which has brought 100- degree plus temperatures' to some areas for more than three weeks, was at least partially responsible for 679 deaths in a 16-state "Heat Belt" sweeping from Georgia west to Texas and as far north as Illinois and Indiana. CARTER DIRECTED the Com- munity Services Administration, the federal government's anti-poverty agency, to make available $6.725 million through CSA's network of community action agencies. The money will be used to provide- transportation to local and state operated heat relief centers, purchase or rental of low-cost appliances such as fans and window air conditioning units to reduce heat, payment of utility bills as well as the provision of other suppor- tive services which will reduce the potential hazards to the health of low- income persons resulting from extreme heat. In Dallas, which was in'its 23rd con- secutive day with temperatures above 100 degrees, welfare officials said a summer version of "cabin fever" had caused an increase in child abuse. With children out of school for the summer and often unable to play outside because of the heat, families were un- der great stress. "IN THE LAST two to three weeks my case load has been up substan- tially," said Carole Bowdry, director of Dallas County's child abuse program. "It has the potential of being a terrible problem." The toll of heat-related deaths has slowed in the Southwest in the past week but was jumping in the South and Midwest, especially in Missouri where 189 deaths have been recorded. One of the latest victims was a two- year-old boy who was left locked in a pickup truck two-and-one-half hours because his mother could not find a babysitter while she went to her dish- washing job at a Fort Worth, Texas, hospital. The boy's mother, Patricia Angela Harris, 17, Monday was arrested for in- vestigation of injury to a child. Police said the truck was parked in direct sunlight with the windows rolled up and temperatures inside could have gone as high as 120 degrees. The high in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, in the midst of a record-breaking heat wave, was 107 A box fan provides the only relief from the heat Aurora Garcia gets in her apartment in Kansas City, Kansas, a state in which at least 131 people have died during a three-week long heat wave. A church secretary calls daily on the 82-year-old woman to check her health. Kelley rules for equal, access to- li braries degrees. v LANSING (UPI) - Attorney General Frank Kelley said yesterday state residents are entitled to full use of all public libraries - a ruling library of- ficials said might put their funding on the same level as school aid. Kelley based his ruling on a section of the state constitution that says the legislature must 'establish and fund public libraries for use by all state residents. HOWEVER, the legislature traditionally has refused to fund libraries in districts that do not collect a 0.3 mill tax for their operation. "Clearly ...'the right of state residents to use the facilities of any public library includes not only the right to enter a public library and read books there, but the same right to borrow books.. ." Kelley said. The attorney general said a local library may adopt rules to assure the return of books, but the rules must be uniform with the community and must grant all state residents equal library privileges. Kelley made the ruling at the request of Sen. Thomas Guastello (D-Mount Clemens) Residents of Washington Township in Oakland County, which has no library, wanted to use nearby Avon Township's library in Macomb County but were unable to since the two counties do not have a reciprocal agreement. The executive director of the Michigan Library Association said the ruling could-lead to increased library funding by the legislature. SOFTBALL BEER SPECIAL No cover and half-price draft to teams in uniformSunday thru Thursday. Trivia mformation supplied by Detroit-area libraries (Continued from Page 5) asked have been so offbeat. "Just think Booth said the project was helping to of all the reporters out there trying to promote the city of Detroit. ''This is the dream up different angles for their first time that any convention has had stories," he said. such a service, and it has succeeded Booth said the project was completed beyond all my expectations," he said. about three months after he initiated it. He said he got the idea for the project from two sources, a workshop he atten- K Ws e ded in Texas on working with We can't legislators, and a conference on libraries he attended in Washington, D.C., at which an information service to was made available to conference delegates. a a All you can eat $3.95 Gin & Tonic Pitcher Night Bluesy Rock 'n Roll by SAILCATZ SNAKEBITE WEEKEND Specials on snakebites & no cover with cowboy hat Country-western rock by COLORADUS RCH ST. 996-2747- 0