The Michigan Daily-Friday, December 8, 1978-Page 3 is::v.:+v','i. ',"ov.".: :r':'t'f .ir:"R7S+i:?r'"K 'sx ** '7: rF F * s ' STREET VALUE $400,000: p y1 1 IfYO 5E t'-v.S RV~fPN CALL~ DAJIY Correction Due to misinformation supplied by the Office of the Registrar, the Daily incorrectly reported the status of a former student's degree. In last Saturday's article concerning Bob Higgins, who is suing the University because of a grade he received, it was stated that there was no record of his graduation. However, it has now been confirmed by the Office of the Registrar that Higgins did indeed receive his degree on August 21, 1977. In explaining why the Daily was given inaccurate information, a spokesperson said that "the files sometimes get mixed up. Jesse, not Jessie It seems that Democratic mayoral orimary candidate Jesse Thomas was misnamed in yesterday's Daily. His first name is spelled Jesse, not Jessie. Also, in an earlier article, his age was incorrectly given as 38. Actually, Thomas is 27. MSA resignation Michigan Student assembly (MSA) member Sean Foley, chairman of the Budget Priorities Committee since April, plans to announce his resignation at MSA's meeting Tuesday night. Claiming his "class load is too heavy," Foley said his grades have "suffered substantially because of a dual focus on MSA and schoolwork." Foley was appointed to MSA last January to fill an open Arts School position, and was elected last April in the campus-wide election. Seventh heaven December 7 is definitely Melvin Coleman's lucky day. Coleman, a furnace installer from Pontiac, Mich., won the top $100,000 prize yesterday in the Michigan Lottery's weekly Michigame dfawing. And 37 years ago yesterday on December 7, 1941, he witnessed the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. "I got out of it alive, so I guess I was pretty lucky, then, too," Coleman said. He also got married to his wife Ethel on December 7 - making the date special in three ways. he said he planned to go into an early retirement with his lottery winnings. We would suggest, however, that with his luck with the sevens, he should try the tables at Las Vegas for awhile. Hazards of the trade? A suit has been filed against the San Diego police vice squad asking that the officers stop engaging in alleged sex acts paid for by taxpayer's money while investigating prostitution. ;Aself-proclaimed civil libertarian, George Haverstock, filed the suit using the police department's own reports and affidavits as the basis for his complaint. The suit says police reports show several vice squad officers who infiltrated massage parlors engaged in sexual activity while gathering evidence. Haverstick said an officer "goes in there, and both he and the woman engage in sexual acts, and after it's over, he gets paid, and she gets arrested." A police spokesperson said they usually ask unpaid reserve officers to go in and attempt to get solicitations and then get out. He added that sometimes "they stay too long and sex ensues." Just another example of facing danger in the line of duty. Happenings FILMS A-V Services - The Salt Marsh: A Question of Values, 12:10 p.m., Aud., SPH H. Cinema II- A Boy and His Dog, 7, 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Mediatrics - Oh, God!, 7, 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Cinema Guild - Sleeping Car Murder, 7, 9:05 p.m., Old A&D. Ann Arbor Film Co-op - A History of the Blue Movies, 7, 10:30 p.m., What's Up Tiger Lily, 8:40 p.m., Aud. 3, MLB. SPEAKERS Phillippine-American Lecture Series - wrap-up session, 3 p.m., Commons Rm., Lane Hall. Career Planning and Placement - panel discussion, "Attitudes Towards Hiring the Advanced Degree Holder," 3 p.m., 3200 SAB. 1978 Zweit Lectures - Enrico Bombieri, "Ordinary Differential Equations and Irrational Numbers," 4 p.m., 1035 Angell. Engineering College- Dr. A. B. Smith, "Nuclear Data for Practical Applications," 3:45 p.m., White Aud., Cooley Bldg. PERFORMANCES University Dance Company -8 p.m., Power Center. Back Alley Players - 2 one act plays; poetry reading, 8 p.m., 332 state. Soph Show - Pippin, 8 p.m., Mendelssohn. Music School - Symphony Orchestra, 8 p.m., Hill. Ark - Paul Geremia, 9:30 p.m., 1421 Hill. MISCELLANEOUS Adolescent Unit, NPI U Hosp-Benefit Plant Sale, 11 a.m. to 5:3Q p.m., 5th Floor Lobby, U Hosp. University Activities Ctr. - Student Farewell Reception for President Fleming, 2-3 p.m., Pendleton Rm., Union. International Ctr. - Tree Trimming Party, 3-5 p.m., League. Raekham Student Government - Social Gathering for Grad. students, 2:30-6 p.m., Hussey rm., 2nd floor, Michigan League. Ski Racing Club -Annual Ski Swap, 4-10 p.m., Sports Coliseum: Hillel - Orthodox Minyan, 4:45 p.m., Conservative Minyan, 8 p.m., Panel discussion, "Jewish Medical Ethics," 9 p.m., 1429 Hill. International Student Reception -6 to 8 p.m., Sports Coliseum. Hi, Mom! For some of us, Mommy always keeps a watchful eye - even if you happen to be a United States Congressman. Rep. Charles Wilson, a Democrat from Texas, was planning a personal visit to Mexico, despite threats he received from terrorists while in Nic,.ragua. His mother objected to this trip, And phoned Speaker of the Hruse Thomas "Tip" O'Neill to stop her son. O'Neill spoke to Mrs. %ilson for 30 minutes, then called Wilson to inform him that he could not go to Mexico. "You dowant to be re-appointed to the Appropriations 1300 lbs. of pot stolen NEW YORK (AP) - The theft of 1,300 pounds of marijuana worth $400,000 on the street and being held as trial evidence in a heavily guarded, government-leased warehouse may have been an inside job, authorities said yesterday. "We've narrowed down quite substantially the field of suspects," said Michael Costello, deputy chief of intelligence for the federal Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). THE THEFT recalled the famous 1972 "French Connection" case in which 81 pounds of heroin worth $73 million was stolen from the New York City Police Department's property clerk's office. The Brooklyn building, leased by several federal agencies, had scontrolled access and the DEA said people entering the facility had to sign in whenever they entered. Once inside, "a bonded employee would take you around until you've finished your business," Costello explained. EVEN THE DEA agents who went into the warehouse to imvestigate the theft had difficulty gaining entrance because their names were not on a limited list of those authorized to go inside, he said. He identified the building as the Eagle Warehouse at 28 Cadman Plaza West, near Brooklyn's civic center. The break-in was discovered by a warehouseman on Tuesday. COSTELLO SAID that only the DEA had keys to its storage room. However, the thieves entered through an upper level of the building Monday night or Tuesday morning, then smashed their way through an innerwall into the locked storage room leased by DEA where 25 bales of marijuana, weighing 50 pounds each, were stored. No one reported seeing any suspicious vehicles outside the building or hearing any noise, according to the DEA. Each poundtof marijuana is enough to make about 30 cigarettes, or joints, Costello said, making the total for the haul a possible 390,000 joints worthabout $400,000 in street sales. OTHER SECURITY arrangements about the building were not disclosed. It was not known whether an alarm system protected the windows or any outside doors on the upper floors. In the "French Connection" case, the drugs also had been seized as evidence, but the case differed from this week's burglary in that they were pilfered over a long period of time. COSTELLO SAID the pot in the warehouse was being held as evidence but that the theft "will not affect the integrity of the trial" because about two pounds also are taken from contraband dope for use as courtroom exhibits. Costello would not disclose where the marijuana originally was seized or for which trial it was being held. Daily Official Bulletin n~i,,'.,e da Daily Calendar: Career Planning, Placement: Panel discussion, "Attitudes Towards Hiring the Advanced Degge, Holder," 3200 SAB, 3 p.m. Music School: Symphony Orchestra, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. General Notices: Recreational Sports: Advisory Committee meeting, Bell Pool Conference Room, open to the public, Monday, December 11, 1978,4p.m. In 1875, Lugi D'Albertis became the- first European explorer to penetrate. the interior of New Guinea when he- sailed a 9-ton steam launch the full, navigable length of the Fly River. Great Plac es Travel Consultants 216 S. 4th Ave. Ann Arbor, MI AMTRAK ln evLA $169 No at r Rose Bowl Package Tours Available SpaCe & D fron $263 Detroit £0'lou YO~rre. to Los Angeles Round Trip American Airlines Scheduled Flights Most Direct Nonstops Last Year Hundreds Went On Our Great Places Group Flights ... None Were Cancelled! DEC. 25-JAN. 1, 3,7 DEC. 26-JAN. 1. 2, 3 DEC. 27-J AN. 2, 3 DEC. 28-JAN. 2 DEC. 30-JAN. 2 CALL 769-1776 L V . 1 SING IN THE N ROCK IN Tl - 4~) 1.1 Ev {unn otlk rdo t cekyu 'l fill - ff J ZV 4 DO ^r I you're a little bored 4© '", that comes to you live with every New Years tS- from New Orleans. By Eve turning out like II radio. Just check your avrv sntho aur VAnr r' e 1 1, ti1tlocal listineg fnr the time