Page 4-Wednesday, July 8, 1981-The Michigan Daily Financial aid awards still up In the air 4 (Continued from Page 3) Both houses have decided to impose an initial fee to cover processing expen- ses as well as part of the subsidized in- terest rate, said Zimmerman. The Senate has recommended a 5 percent fee while the House has recommended a 4 percent fee. The hills are presently in conference committee to have the differences ironed out, said Zimmer- man. The goal of the Reagan ad- ministration and Congress is to restrain the "runaway costs" of the program, said Zimmerman, as well as an attempt to cut down on the number of ap- plications. THE UNIVERSITY is currently receiving between 700 and 900 ap- plications for a GSL each week, said Zimmerman. There have been 9,000 applications received so far, he said. Last year about $45 million was borrowed by students to attend this university alone, he added. Because of the huge volume of ap- plications, Zimmerman cautioned against applying too late for a GSL. "Students submitting applications after the first of August will probably have to meet the new needs test," he said. That is because the state guarantee agency "has a four-week backlog as of July 1, and is predicting an eight-week delay at the end of the month," Zim- merman said. The Office of Financial Aid at the University wilfalso probably have a delay of several weeks, and with an effective date of October 1, as Congress has agreed on, applications not processed by then will fall under the new criteria, he said. THE NATIONAL Direct Student Loan Program has been reduced by $100 million since many award notices went out, so many of them will have to be reduced by a few hundred dollars, he said. Since the Office has not been notified as to the amount of money to be given out, it is impossible to guarantee a student a specific amount. "We will likely notify students already awarded that they will get less than their award notice states," he said. There will probably be a flat cut off the top of all loans awarded, said Zim- merman. "We hope it doesn't affect anybody's educational plans," he said. The cut-off amount will probably not be determined before the end of July or August, said Zimmerman, who men- tioned a possible reduction of near $300 on each loan, probably of the Winter Term allotment. THE WORK-STUDY program and the Supplement Education Opportunity Grant will probably "be funded at com- parable levels" to the present year, Zimmerman said. Zimmerman had some advice for bewildered students, as well as some good news. "We are ahead of last year" in processing the forms. Still, he said, "students should be prepared to meet initial start-up costs during the first few days of the Fall Term" because the halt in the allotment of money may force a delay in distribution of awards. He ad- ded that students are notified about progress of their applications as soon as the financial aid office has the infor- mation. Court choice angers right-wing extremists (Continued from Page) to amend the Constitution to outlaw abortions; and in 1974 she voted against a bill to forbid abrtions at the Univer- sity of Arizons Hospitl in Tucson. IN ADDITION, Badger said, O'Con- nor introduced legislation which would have provided family planning infor- mation, contraceptives and "surgical procedures" to minors without their parents' knowledge or consent and in 1974, as a member of the Tucson Hospital bard of directors, she voted to permit the use of Blue Cross funds to pay for elective abrtions. "Sandra O'Connor had a consistent and strong pro-abortion voting record whilesa senator in Arizona," said Dr. J. C. Wilkie of Cincinnati, president of the National Right-to-Life Committee. Specifically, five actions by O'Connor when she was a stte sentor were cited in calling her "pro-abrtion." Born in El Paso, Texas, and raised on a cattle ranch in southern Arizona, she is married to Phoenix, attorney ,John . O'Connor. They Have three sons.- In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Peres admits Begin leading TEL AVIV, Israel-Israel's Labor Party acknowledged yesterday that Prime Minister Menachem Begin's Likud Bloc has the inside track in the fight to lead the next Israeli government. The Likud leads Labor by 48 seats to 47 in unofficial vote counts for the 120- member Israeli parliament, and Likud has the advantage in winning support from the religious and small right-wing factions that may give it a majority of 61 coalition members. Labor leader Shimon Peres told Israel Radio he was asked to consider joining a national unity gpvernment with Likud and the National Religious Party. Peres said his party had ruled out the idea. "That's the decision, we said it and will say it again in the clearest way," he said, continuing, "we have to try to form a government, the Likud has to try. The Likud has the advantage, we do not deny it." Poles threaten more strikes WARSAW, Poland-Baltic port dockworkers and airline employees an- nounced strike alertsyesterday and coal miners threatened to cut produc- tion in half unless the government meets their demands. If the workers carry out their threats, the strikes would be the first major outbreaks of labor unrest in more than two months and would come just as the Soviet Union's concern about events in Poland is especially intense because of the special Communist Party congress opening July 14. Officials of the independent labor union Solidarity said talks between dockworkers and the government would begin here late Tuesday at the behest of the Roman Catholic Church. A strike of any length in Poland's ports could stall vital shipnents of food and other goods and further crimp exports of coal, an essential had curren- cy earner. Meanwhile, the Vatican announced yesterday that Bishop Jozef Glemp of the Warmia diocese had been named as Polish primate. Glemp, 52, succeeds Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski who as leader of the powerful church had played a major moderating role in settling union-government confrontations. s , . Food prices boost inflation WASHINGTON-Boosted by rising food prices, inflation ast the wholesale level picked up in.June but still remained well below last year's pace, the government reported yesterday. "It's generally good news on inflation," said private economist Allen Sinai. "It confirms that we are clearly into single-digit territory-probably permanently." But Sinai and other analysts warned that rising food prices could force up inflation during the rest of the year. Much of the relief consumers will get from inflation this year has already occurred, said Edward Yardeni, chief economist and vice president of the brokerage firm of E.F. Hutton & Co. Inc. Food prices, after showing virtually no net.change from November through May, increased 0.5 percent in'June for products ready for retail sale. Beef and veal prices shot up 2.4 percent last month, after a 0.3 percent rise in May. Also climbing were prices for pork, eggs, refined sugar, fresh and dried vegetables, bakery products and dairy products. Declines were reported for processed poultry, fresh fruits and roasted coffee. Artist spoofs Reagan image CHICAGO-John Sefick is at it again. The sculptor with a satiric streak is now taking on Nancy Reagan and her White House redecoration campaign. Sefick, a federal probation officer who specializes in political spoofing, has set up plaster caricatures of President and Mrs. Reagan on a rattan loveseat in the lobby of the Kluczynski Federal Building. The life-size work, entitled, "Nancy Redecorating the Kluczynski Building," was unveiled Monday. It features a recorded imitation of Mrs. Reagan's voice, exclaiming that the decor of the building "just won't do." She dislikes the color scheme-charcoal and gray-and the tall columns and high ceilings. She observes that the stark walls would look better papered with something pretty, but the president remains silent. "She's almost overwhelming him," said Sefick. Heavy snows hit Oregon SALEM-Oregon ski slopes bypassed by winter got 8 inches of July snow yesterday as summer skiers raced down Mt. Hood. To the East, thunder- storms rumbled across the water-logged Plains, while the Palmer ski area above Timberline Lodge on Oregon's Mount Hood got one of its heaviest snowfalls of the year-slightly more than 8 inches in about 5 hours. All winter long ski resorts took a beating for lack of snow, but it took a July storm to dump two-thirds of a foot of snow on the upper area of Oregon's tallest mountain, setting up the possibility of good skiing at the year-round ski resort. Temperatures in parts of eastern Oregon dropped to the 20s early yester- day. The cool weather pushed over the Rockies behind a line of thunderstorms, ending Monday's 100-degree highs in the northern Plains. Thunderstorms reached from the Texas coast into Arkansas and Oklahoma. Palacios, Texas, got more than 3 inches of rain. 4 4