The Michigan Daily-Saturday, September 16, 1978-Page Carter's trip cost $106,000 1 - ~ IrYOJu SEE tNEW~S I{PkPPCALL Z-DA Ly Join the Daily Sharpen your pencils and get ready for the Daily's mass meeting for prospective staff members next week. On Tuesday we'll have representatives from our news, business, sports and arts staffs at Bursley's East Lounge at 7:30. Wednesday night we'll invade Markley's Piano Lounge at 8. Or you can get the scoop Thursday night at 7:30 at the Daily offices, 420 Maynard. Corrections In an article about a planned recall drive against the Ann Arbor Board of Education, the Daily said that the action was triggered by earlier starting times for city elementary schools. Actually, the recall was started over later school starting times. Reporter Marianne Egri was inadvertently not credited as writer of part of our lead story on University President Robben Fleming's retirement. Take me to your leader You've got to give those Washington bureaucrats some credit - they're well trained. We received a letter at our offices yesterday addressed to the "President" of the Michigan Daily. Looks like they've been taught just who's boss. Ten years ago today.. .. A state legislator asked Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley to rule on the legality of the use of Student Government Council funds as bail money for students and members of the community arrested in recent city welfare demonstrations. The student government had appropriated $1,500 to be used as bail money for demonstrations which led to 241 arrests. - Happenings .. . ... kick off at 10 this football Saturday with a trip to Dearborn's Greenfield Village, sponsored by the International Center. Transportation will be provided free of charge on a first-come, first- served basis, but the Village does charge an admission fee. Expect to return around 3 o'clock ... take a gander at the works available for purchase at the Starving Artists Sale at Canterbury Loft, 332S. State. The sale runs from noon until 6. . . celebrate the first football victory with cider and doughnuts, compliments of the Union Programming Committee. That will be outside the Union right after the game ... Also, Musket auditions for "Man of La Moncha" continue at the Pendleton Room, second floor, Michigan Union, and if interested call 763-1107 for details (and bring a song!). Hog wild Roy Holding says his racing -pigs are the fastest in the world. In fact, as far as he knows, they're the world's only porcine racers. Twice a day, he herds his porkers onto a five-pig chute at one end of his Galva, Ill., barn, then rings the bell, opens the gates and releases them to run head-long toward their feed. One of the pigs can now run the equivalent of a five-minute mile. But Holding isn't hogging all of the credit. "A pig is really a very smart animal, probably the smartest of all barnyard animals,' he explained. Holding's crew has developed a keen competitive spirit, so he's been able to cut out one of their daily workouts. "Don't want to peak too soon," he said. "They're just like any athlete. They reach a point where they get stale." He'll spend more than a month this year preparing the pigs to race professionally, a promotional idea he hit upon last year. Who knows? The venture " may turn out to be profitable and the pigs may really bring home the bacon. Cover-up Next time public discussion gets too hot, Ann Arbor's City Council members might do well to take a tip from their New Orleans counterparts. Noting citizens were "becoming increasingly beligerent and hostile toward elected officials," the council there passed a resolution requiring councilmembers to wear helmets during council meetings. The helmits are intended as protection from disgruntled voters and flying barbs, aspersions and villifications, the tongue-i- n-cheek resolution said. After Councilman Frank Friedler read his resolution, the seven councilmembers solemnly donned hard hats. Guess there's nothing like going under cover. Bare facts Milwaukee's Assistant District Attorney George Prietz isn't going to file charges against a man who claimed his date left him in a park with only his shoes and socks. "His story is so weird that there has to be some truth to it," Prietz said. A 29-year-old Milwaukee woman complained to police last week that a scantily-clad man was following her car in his car even after she yelled at his to stop. Officers found the man sitting in his car outside the police station after the woman fdrove there to file a complaint. He was wearing only shoes and socks. Police said the man claimed he and his woman friend had gone to a local park and he had taken off his clothes. But an argument ensued and she drove off in her car, which somehow contained said precious garments. He said he chased the complaining woman's car because he thought it was his friend's car. He had to retrieve his belongings, he explained, because he didn't want his wife to ask what happened to his clothes. That explanation apparently satisfied Prietz. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter's 12-day vacation to Plains, Ga., the Teton Mountains and the Salmon River last month cost taxpayers at least $106,000 and probably much more. The President's own out-of-pocket expenses for the family's Western holiday from Aug. 18-30 were at least $2,232.82. THE ESTIMATE of the taxpayers' cost, compiled by The Associated Press, is extremely conservative because many expenses were not available from the government or private businesses involved. The figure of $106,298.39 was obtained by totaling readily identifiable expenses such as hotels, costs of local police departments, the U.S. Forest Service, the outfitters who took Carter on a raft trip down the river, and the transportation of the first family. It does not include any expenses of reporters who covered the trip. Their news organizations pay their way. THE PRESIDENT himself will pay $1,800 to outfitters who took the first family on a three-day raft trip down the Middle Fork of the Salmon River in Idaho; $336 to stay in Brinkerhoff Lodge for six nights in the Grand Teton National Park, and $96.82 for a suite and an extra room at the Rodeway Inn in Boise, Idaho, the night before the raft trip. The tally shows it cost at least $35,498.83 to put up White House aides and Secret Service agents at six hotels used during the trip. A seventh hotel refused to reveal what it charged the government. It cost $37,777.20 for the first family's transportation, including operating Air Force One for 9 hours, and operating two helicopters for almost seven hours. IT COST $20842.36 for local police protection in Georgia, Idaho and Wyoming. That includes costs incurred by the U.S. Forest Service during Carter's raft trip and during his stay in the Tetons. It also includes money spent by the Georgia State Patrol during Carter's three-day trip to Plains, and by three Idaho police agencies during his overnight stay in Boise. The estimate also includes these costs for White House aides and agents: $7,680 for meals, and $4,500 for 12 aides who accompanied Carter on the raft trip. COSTS OF vacation trips of previous Presidents were unavailable, so no comparison could be made. However, a congressional committee estimated in 1974 that the government spent $17 million on three homes used by former President Richard Nixon when he traveled from the White House. Aside from Carter's transportation, most of the money was spent on room and board for government employees That included at least 25 Secret Servic agents, members of the White Hous communications agency that provide: communications for Carter wheneve: he travels, several Carter aides advancemen and at least 10 member of the White House press office. "It would suit the President fine if h could go on a vacation without securit and communications personnel an without a press office staff to respond t the needs of the large pres contingent," said Rex Granum, deput press secretary, when given a copy o The AP figures. "Since the nature of th modern presidency makes tha impossible, there will always be extr costs associated with his vacations, a with his other travel. "I WOULD suggest to you that all thi does not mean he should not be able t take a vacation," Granum said in written statement. Estimates were unavailable for suci costs as transporting presioentia automobiles from Washington 'to tht West, two receptions Carter and wif< Rosalynn gave in the Tetons, setting u] the elaborate communications systen that enabled Carter to keep in touci with the world and flying agents an White House aides in and out of Carter' vacation sites on commercial airlines. Childless couple begs for test tube research I WASHINGTON (AP) - A childless Tennessee couple appealed to the government yesterday to resume funding of test-tube fertilization research, while critics charged that it would lead to the laboratory slaughter of embryonic human lives. The arguments were aired as an Ethics Advisory Board in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW( began sifting through the evidence on both the science and morality of the still uncertain techniques that produced a healthy baby in England. DESPITE THE success of 'Will this research lead to selective breeding, to attempts to control the genetic makeup of off- spring or to the use of surrogate parents'?' -HEW Secretary Joseph Califano researchers who aided the parents of Louise Joy Brown, "our knowledge of precisely what they did is very limited," said James Gaither, a San Francisco lawyer who is chairman of the panel. Gaither told reporters that the 14- member panel of doctors, lawyers, laymen, academics and a priest is unlikely to take any stand on the issue before January or February at the earliest. HEW Secretary Joseph Califano must decide after getting the panel's advice whether to allow taxpayers' dollars to be spent on this research for the first time since 1975. CALIFANO, IN A memo read to the 100 persons at the meeting in the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in suburban Bethesday, Md., said test- tube fertilization holds out "enormous promise" to infertile couples, but also raises serious questions about possible damage to the fetus that could lead to abnormal children. "Will this research lead to selective breeding, to attempts to control the genetic makeup of offspring or to the use of 'surrogate parents' where. . . rich women might pay poor women to carry their children?" Califano asked in the memo. He instructed the board to hold public hearings in 10 regions of the country "to stimulate a national debate." In addition to the broader issues, the board also must decide on an application from Dr. Pierre Soupart of Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn., who wants to do laboratory experiments on fertilized human eggs to search for genetic defects. But Dennis and Dianne Grills of Hendersonville, Tenn., are hoping that ultimately their own doctor at Vanderbilt and Woupart will help them have a baby through in vitro fertilization. "In vitro" is Latin for "in a glass." Grills, a 32-year-old chemical engineer, and his 31-year-old wife have been married for five years. She had one ectopic pregnancy and last October underwent unsuccessful surgery to unblock her Fallopian tubes. GRILLS TOLD the panel he does not feel there are- ethical problems with research on the fertilized eggs that in their earliest stage are called "blastocysts." His wife said opponents of the research are being "irrational." But Princeton University religion professor Paul Ramsey said the "government should stop emphasis on manipulation as a form of human genesis. "MILLIONS OF U.S. citizens who oppose abortion will bring the same moral objection against in vitro fertilization because of the numerous 'discards' the procedure requires," declared Ramsey. But LeRoy Walters, director of Georgetown University's Center for Bioethics, who traced the ethical debate for the panel, said he is inclined to feel that "in early stages of embryonic development ... you are not dealing with a human subject in the full sense of the term." By BETH ROSENBERG The fastest wheels in town Sunday will belong to students participating in the first annual 'U' Tricycle Race on Palmer Field near the Hill dorms. The Ben Hur style race, sponsored by the University Activities Committee (UAC), Michigan Student Assembly, and the Office of Student Services, begins at 1 p.m. with six teams of four from every dorm. "OUR IDEA IS to get you back in the 'U'," said senior Larry Pulkownik,' UAC race coordinator. "The purpose is to help students meet people from other dorms." Pulkownik, who has been planning the event since July 1, said the race is geared toward dorm residents who too often associate only with people who live on their hall. "We're doing it to hell students meet more people." The double-elimination tricycle rac< begins with separate heats at 1:00 an 2:00 pitting four teams on the 110-yar (1/16th of a mile) course. Prizes includ stereo speakers and gift certificates. Besides the tricycle race, other con tests are'planned including an Egg ant Water Balloon Toss, the Coed Carry three-legged race, Tug of War; Huma; Pyramid, and the Giant Earth Ba] Shove. Pulkownik said 100 kegs of beer, poa potato chips, and ' frisbees are als available to all students. Continuous music will be provided b various local bands. Festivities will b broadcast live by WCBN. Trot out your In lies, for Sunday's race BLOCK PARTY BEER BLAST to celebrate the opening of Rep. PERRY* BULLARD'$ CAMPAIGN OFFICE SATURDAY, September 16-7:30 p.m. NORTH UNIVERSITY between Thayer & State LIVE MUSIC 668-1767 $5 donation $3 students and senior citizens paid for by Students for Bullard, Greg Roberts, treasurer ALL YOU CAN DRINK students and senior citizens VW Rabbit tops in fuel economy, study shows UPPER DIVISION WRITING COURSES being offered through the English Composition Board SAny LSA Student is Eligible to Elect These Courses JOURNALISM 302 "Writing for Mass Media" Marion Marzolf HISTORY OF ART 305/MARC 323 "Themes and Symbols of Western Art" Christin Bornstein WASHINGTON (AP) - With a top performance of 41 miles per gallon (mpg), the diesel-powered Volkswagen Rabbit provides the best fuel economy of any automobile sold in the United States, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced yesterday. The No. 1-ranked German-made Rabbit, equipped with a five-speed manual transmission, was followed by, a diesel-powered Volkswagen Rabbit with a four-speed manual transmission, which gets an estimated 40 mpg. Placing third was the diesel-fueled Volkswagen Dasher, which gets 36 mpg. "CONSISTENT with the trend in past years, the average miles per gallon for all 1979 models thus far tested is slightly higher than last year's," EPA administrator Douglas Costle said of the agency's annual fuel economy ratings. Costle said the 1979 models are averaging 19.9 miles per gallon com- pared to 19.6 on 1978 models. The VW Rabbit also won top honors last year when the EPA estimated its fuel economy at 40 mpg. THE AVERAGE annual fuel cost for the top-rated 1979 Rabbit was estimated at $220, a figure based on a car driven 15,000 miles and an average diesel fuel cost of 60 cents per gallon. For gasoline- powered cars, the cost is based on a 70- cent per gallon fuel price. The Datsun 210, a Japanese-made car, ranked No. 4 with 35 mpg - the highest ranking for a gasoline-powered car. At the bottom of the list was the Aston Martin V-8, which the EPA said gets only 8 mpg. Just above that were four cars listed as getting 10 mpg. They are the Cadillac limousine, the Cadillac with the commercial chassis, Jaguar XJ and Jaguar XJS. ALL OF THE top 10 cars are classified as cubcompacts and were either of foreign make or largely manufactured abroad by subsidiaries of U.S. automakers, the EPA said. RUSSIAN 451 "Survey of Russian Literature" Irvin Titunik On the outside... It should be partly sunny and pleasant at game time with a temperature around 70. Things may cloud up toward the evening, however, with a chance of thundershowers.J Daily Official Bulletin :::::: :::::.:...:..:::::........::::::............. WOMENS STUDIES 360 "Women's identity" Sue Weisskopf ENGLISH 432 "The American Novel" Bob Weisbuck CLASSICAL STUDIES 371 "Greek & Roman Sports and Recreation" Wally Sweet "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 Sunday, September 17, 1978 GENERALNOTICES: To augment existing University computing courses, Computing Center offers a series of three introductory lectures on MTS. Edward J. Fronczak, systems research programmer at the Computing Center, will present the lectures. The evening lectures will be held on September 18, 25. and October 2, from 7to 9p.m. These noncredit lectures are open to all interested students, faculty and staff; registration not required. No previous computing experience necessary nor is a background in engineering or mathematics expected. For more info, call Edward Fronczak, 764- 2121. Sunday, Sept. 17, 7:30 p.m.-Rm. 25 Angell Hal 1 WOO LLOOMOOLOO T HE PEOPLE AGAINST THE PLOONMERS Green Bands Forever "AND LET US NOT BE WEARY IN WELL DOING: FOR IN DUE SEASON WE SHALL REAP, IF WE FAINT NOT." Galations 6:9. The writer Is thinking of quite a number of correspondents who have written telling of evil and corrup- tion they know of in high and low places, of things all decent and God Fearing men and women should be ashamed. In the 9th chapter of the Book of Ezekiel, God orders a mark put upon all those crying and troubled concerning society's corruptions and man with the "slaughter weapon" sent forth by The Almighty for judgement and vengeance. "Woe unto them that call evil good." Manv cnnsider fine and o.k. thinas the Bible calls The testimony of this Column, whether any hear or forbear to hear, is to beware of all those who set the New Testament against The Old Testament! One of the early Christian martyrs, Polycarp, said such were the "first born of the devill"The first recorded words of Christ after His baptism were approval of "every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God," which means all Scripture - read Mat- thew and Luke 4:4. And later Christ said: "Ye do err, not not knowing the Scriptures, and the power of God!" So we say at the close of this paragraph, as at the beginning: "AND LET US NOT BE WEARY IN WELL DOING: FOR IN DUE SEASON WE WILL REAP, IF WE FAINT NOT!" Wedo well to worry and warn of evil and disobedience to God's i