Tower sounds School of Music graduate Kathleen Beck lets fly some tunes from the carillon at the top of Burton Tower. Senate passes cuts in WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate, handing President Reagan another budget victory, approved 73 to 23 yesterday a $12.6-billion package of spending cuts that slaps a 4 percent cap on annual cost-of-living increases for federal retirees through 1985. The measure also calls for $2.5 billion in food stamp cuts and trims $1.5 billion for dairy price supports over the next three years. The bill now goes to the Democratic-controlled House, which already has rejected some of the key provisions, including the cap on in- flation increases for federal retirees. WHILE THE final vote was not in doubt, the bill was amended to put the Senate on record in favor of liberalized unemployment benefits, a step Republicans took after prodding from Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, (D-Ohio). The 84-13 vote did not actually provide for the increase in benefits. But it asked Senate negotiators on a related tax bill to seek an extension of 10 to 13 weeks of the current maximum of 39 weeks of jobless benefits. The vote also put the Senate on record in favor of restoring certain unem- ployment cuts approved a year ago, and scheduled to take effect next mon- th. ' GOP OFFICIALS said they agreed to the provision when Metzenbaum ap- peared to have enough votes to win ap proval for a proposal actually making the changes. The Reagan administration has been involved in private negotiations to reach agreement on specific changes in unemployment compensation even though publicly it opposes any exten- spending sion of existing benefits. The bill to cut spending over the next three fiscal years is the second in- stallment of a deficit-reducing plan that Republicans hope will lead to lower in- terest rates and swift economic recovery. Nearly half of the $12.2 billion in savings - slightly more than $5 billion - would come from the provision to limit cost of living increases to 4 percent a year for federal retirees. Congressional budget experts estimate that without the cap, inflation increases would amount to 6.6 percent in 1983; 7.2 percent in 1984 and 6.6 per- cent in 1985. The limitation would apply to about three million civil service and military retirees, as well as former Coast Guard, Public Health Service and foreign service personnel. Ann Arbor anti-nuke groups mark Hiroshima (Continued from Page 3) "SHE'S A symbol of people's desire that people shouldn't die from nuclear bombs," he said. The Interfaith Council will wind up its activities with an "interfaith celebration of hope for peace" on Sun- day at 12:30 p.m. The Michigan Nuclear Weapons Freeze organization will join the coun- cil's activities tomorrow. The organization currently is working for passage of a proposal calling for a mutual agreement between the United States and the Soviet Union to stop the testing, production, and deployment of nuclear weapons. THE FREEZE group has constructed a large picture of a mushroom cloud. Tomorrow, participants will dip their hands in paint and cover the cloud with handprints. "It's a kind of visual commitment to the motto of the freeze, 'the future in our hands,' " Hayes said. The anti-nuclear groups receive a great deal of support from the Ann Ar- bor community, according to Hayes, who said he expects up to 200 people to participate in this weekend's events. "You have a lot of people who are concerned about peace, but there's no specific issue that excites people," Hayes said. He added, however, "the nuclear weapons freeze is something that excites people." It makespeople realize how close this country is to nuclear war, he added. U.S. calls for Israeli withdrawal (Continued from Page 1) pression the president was not necessarily asking Israel to surrender any territory gained in fighting Wed- nesday when its forces launched a fier- ce new assault. Reagan's message to Begin made no reference to a date for an Israeli with- drawal, leaving the impression the president was not necessarily asking Israel to surrender any territory gained in fighting Wednesday when its forces launched a fierce new assault. But State Department spokesman Alan Romberg said yesterday that Reagan's call for a cease-fire in place referred to cease-fire lines that had been in effect since Sunday. Although Israeli tanks moved back in the northern harbor area of Beirut, they dug in near the Palestinian camps in the south. The Palestine Liberation Organization accused Israel of reinfor- cing its positions at the entrance to the Lebanese capital's Moslem sector for a final assault into the city. PLO and Israeli gunners exchnged sporadic sniper fire and occasional shells near the mid-city horse racetrack and around the besieged Bourj el-Barajneb camp in the southern end of the capital during the day. 4 4 4 4 4 4 nh 4 On the Patio at the Michigan Union Cover 75c beginning after 9:30 LDIES D ES -* 4 4 Records donated by Make Waves