Applications Now Being Taken for the Position of Treasurer of MSA DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION IS DEC. 12, 1979 There are also openings for positions on the U-Cel-. lar Board. Pick up Application at MSA Office, 3909 Michigan Union (763-3241). DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION IS DEC. 7, 1979 abortion? i Free Pregnancy Testing Immediate Results Confidential Counseling Complete Birth Control Clinic , Medicaid " Blue Cross (313) 941-1810 Ann Arbor and Downriver area A (313) 559-0590 Southfield area -, Northland Family Planning Clinic, Inc. N",-M w Page 2-Tuesday, December 11, 1979-The Michigan Daily NOBEL WINNER CONDEMNS ABOR TION: Mothe From Reuter and AP OSLO - Mother Teresa, a Roman Catholic nun who ministers to the hopeless in the slums of Calcutta, yesterday received the 1979 Nobel Peace Prize and condemned abortion as the greatest destroyer of man in the world today. The 69-year-old Albanian-born nun said she accepted the prize on behalf of the unwanted, poorest of the poorand the unhappy people of the world. IN HER SPEECH, made before Nor- way's King Olav and invited guests to the Nobel ceremony, Mother Teresa said: "To me the nations who have legalized abortion are the poorest nations. They are afraid of the unborn child and the child must die." She called on the king and the audien- ce to pray for and to stand by the un- born child. Mother Teresa began ministering to orphans, and the hungry, poor, sick and dying in Calcutta 30 years ago. SINCE THEN she has set up an organization, Missionaries of Charity, which now feeds and cares for millions in the United States, Venezuela, Tan- Teresa accepts zania, Italy, Australia and Britain, among other nations. Prof. John Sannes, chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee presented Mother Teresa with a check, a Nobel gold medal and diploma in the after- noon ceremony at the great frescoed hall of the University of Oslo. She declined the traditional Nobel dinner party, held for some 100 invited guests and costing about 6,000 dollars. She asked that the money be given in- stead to the poor, saying that that amount could fee some 400 people in Calcutta for a year. PRAISING HER three decades of selfless service to the poor, Sanness urged that rich nations, in assisting poorer nations, emulate Mother Teresa's spirit and respect for in- dividual human dignity. "Mother Teresa has personally suc- ceeded in bridging the gulf that exists between the rich nations and the poor nations. Her view of the dignity of man has built a bridge," Sanness said. "All aid given by the rich countries must be given in the spirit of Mother Teresa." Mother Teresa told the audience, "Our poor people are great people, a very lovable people. They don't need s award our pity and sympathy, they need our understanding love and they need our respect. "WE NEED TO tell the poor 'that they are somebody to us, that they too, have been created by the same loving hand of God, to love and be loved,' " she' said. The tiny nun, clad in the traditional sari of India, stood beneath the hall's,2 biblical murals, beamed her radiant smile and led her listeners in St. Fran- cis of Assisi's prayer for peace. Mother Teresa's award closed a decade of controversial and highly political peace prizes, on a unifying, religious note. FIVE OF THE ten Nobel Prizes han- ded out here yesterday went to Americans. Winners also included the first black to receive the economics award and the first Moslem honored in physics. At the banquet, the winner of the Nobel Prize in literature, Greek poet Odysseus Elytis, 68, gave the principal speech of gratitude for the laureates. meet & Heritage®; f oR pee demonszRazlons Mother Teresa ... .condemns abortion Hostage, intervtiewed on television, says 'V' embassy captives homesick but treated well December 13. P11 PRESENTED BY T5R Hobbies, Inc. at on) -adventuRe- I JURC POMIfltflg figuRe painzin n au~Taphed copies of sung eonl witt be available fo , pvvctldse (Continued from Page 1) the all-important broadcast station, but it was unclear whether the soldiers - many of them local Azaris - were loyal to the regional cause or to Khomeini. For the first time, American officials indicated they had reason to believe that some of the hostages may have been moved from the embassy to other, TIM'S and CHRISTINE'S TAILOR SHOP 20 Yrs. at the same location We specialize in fitting clothing for the whole family. " NEW ZIPPERS " REASONABLE PRICES Hours: Mon. and Fri. 8am-7pm Tue., Wed., Thurs., Sat. 8am-6pm 663-6228 213' S. Main Street HAPPY HOLIDAYS TO ALL STUDENTS AND TO ALL AMERICANS unknown locations, it was revealed yesterday. THAT DISCLOSURE came at a hearing of the International Court of Justice in The Hague, where Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti appealed for the court to act speedily to end Iran's "barbaric" holding, of the hostages "and save human lives." The cour cannot enforce its orders, THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume LXXXX, No.79 Tuesday, December 11, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesda ythrough Sunday morn- ings duringthe University year at 420 Maynard Street= Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters); $13by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer sessionupublished Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postage aid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. but U.S. representatives were hopeful a decision in favor of the United States would increase international pressure on Iran. Also, Iran's revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini yester- day said Jimmy Carter was incapable of being president of the United States, and should not be re-elected. IN THE LATEST of a string of at- tacks on President Carter, the Ayatollah said in a broadcast speech that Mr. Carter had mobilized the Moslem world against the United States, and was a traitor to his country. Khomeini virtually dared the "brainless" United States to try to organize an international economic embargo against Iran. The clergyman-revolutionary delivered his blistering attack on Car- ter as the 50 U.S. Embassy hostages spent their 37th day in captivity. New diplomatic intermediaries were arriving in Tehran, but there was no sign the Iranians were budging from their hard-line stand - the shah for the hostages. IN PARIS, the United States accused Japan yesterday of sending "am- biguous signals" to Iran by buying boycotted oil and easing the effects of a- freeze on Iranian assets. The sudden blast against Japan came as Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance sought support from U.S. allies for strong and united economic retaliation against Iran if spy trials of the U.S. hostages begin. ALWAYS THIRSTY for oil, Japanese companies stepped in to buy up the' shipments spurned by the United) States, at $40 a barrel on the volatile spot market, and japanese bankers; helped Iran ease the effect of the freeze of assets in American banks. Richard Cooper, undersecretary of- state for economic affairs, and then' Vance, took up the U.S. complaint with' Japanese Foreign Minister Subaro Okita, who was here for an Inter- national Energy Agency meeting. U.S. spokesman Hodding Carter described the talks as "candid." (.RIAV1() %KS MIH., ROCILSFER. %1(If16A \. INS completes 'U interview; 8 Iranian students'deportable '. 4 r VICTORY WISHES FOR THE GATORBOWL From Your Friends at Big Daddy's Join the party people at Big Daddy's Lounge for pre- and post- Gator Bowl celebrations. It's the place to be in Jacksonville, Florida. Big Daddy's features multi-levels, a custom built sound and light system, plus disco and live entertainment. * (Continued from Page 1) students not interviewed in Ann Arbor must report to INS headquarters in Detroit for their interviews by this Friday. ling Lee Year End Sale CANNED and DRY GOODS 10% off on $5 plus Purchase 20% off on $10 plus Purchase 407 N. FIFTH-KERRYTOWN "They have until the 14th," said Wagus, and added that if the remaining students don't report for interviews they "will be classified deportable" without exception. According to University Foreign Student Advisor Charlene Schmult, 250 was the original estimate given to INS, but the actual number of Iranian University students may be closer to 225. Though they provided INS with the original estimate of 250 Iranian studen- . Ippy idays ts, University officials refused to provide INS with a list of Iranians students on campus, because theyt didn't want the University to be, associated with the interviews, and wanted to emphasize their concern for the students. A TEAM OF INS officers, currently in Lansing, has spent the last few weeks traveling to state colleges and univer- sities conducting interviews. Beforej coming to Ann Arbor, the team found 10:, of 129 Iranian Eastern Michigan University students deportable and 39, to require further investigation. According to Schmult, the proportion; of University students interviewed and. found to be violating their visas is much lower than the proportion at other schools visited so far Pam"er Some one Ulrich's carries a complete selection of OF Ilol I