The Michigan Daily-Sunday, September 30, 1979-Page 3 ADVISORY GROUP INCLUDES KISSINGER, RUSK: Carter with big-name Cuba panel ~INEMA II PRESENTS LA CAZA (The Hunt) (CARLOS SAURA, 1967) The story of 3 veterans of the Spanish Civil War who meet years later to hunt rabbits in the same hills in which they fought. Outwardly friendly, each man struggles to hide the suspicions and hatreds he feels for his comrades..A political allegory of fascist Spain by the director of CRIA! Spanish, with subtitles. (93 mm) MLB $1.50 7:00 & 9:00 Tues: SOME LIKE IT HOT, THE MISFITS Applications being taken for new members r From UPI and Reuter President Carter yesterday consulted with his top foreign policy advisers, three former secretaries of state, and other big-name specialists on the stan- doff with Russia over the Soviet troops in Cuba. White House spokesman Jerry Schec- ter said the group did not have a formal report to give the president, but was called in for an exchange of views. AMONG THOSE AT the session were Henry Kissinger, Dean Rusk and William Rogers-who served as secretaries of state under presidents Gerald Ford, Richard Nixon, Lyndon Johnson and John Kennedy. The consultations lasted about 90 minutes, and afterwards long-time presidential adviser Clark Clifford said there was an "understanding" among participants not to comment publicly. Carter has asked for television time at 9 p.m. tomorrow to explain the troops controversy to the nation. THE UNITED STATES has told the Kremlin U.S. intelligence discovered some 3,000 Soviet combat troops in Cuba recently. Soviet leaders denied there were any combat troops in Cuba, saying it has had only military advisers in Cuba sin- cethe 1962 missile crisis. In Havana, Cuban President Fidel Castro said he may go to the United Nations in an attempt to defuse the growing crisis between the super- powers over Soviet troops in Cuba. CASTRO, WHO TOLD a news con- ference Friday there was no Soviet combat unit in Cuba, has not set foot on United States soil since his last trip to the United Nations in 1960 and a visit to New York would add a dramatic new dimension to the dispute. Asked Friday if he would consider going to the United Nations, he said: "I have not yet reached a decision on the trip, but it cannot be excluded." Castro Friday accused President Carter of seeking to use an old situation to create a problem in the hope of boosting his political standing. CARTER SUMMONED his newly formed group of advisers to the White House because discussions with the Russians broke off Thursday. The last meeting was between Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko in New York and it ended with "inconclusive" results. Senate Democratic Leader Robert Byrd, meanwhile, said yesterday Soviet troops.in Cuba are not a threat to U.S. security and their presence should not be used to try to block Senate ap- proval of the SALT II treaty. Byrd said at his regular weekend news conference that President Carter should make clear the troops and the treaty are two separate issues when he goes on television tomorrow night to speak to the nation on the Cuban issue. BYRD WENT ON to say that the presence of 2,000 to 3,000 Soviet troops in Cuba did not threaten U.S. national security and was "not relevant" to a treaty dealing with strategic weapons. "I don't think it behooves a great and mature nation to get a case of nervous deliriums over somewhere between 2,000 and 3,000 troops in Cuba that may have been there for years .. . and pose no military threat to the United States," he said. Byrd also noted that the United States has a military presence in Cuba in the Navy base-at Guantanamo. r DoilyPhoto by JIM KRUZ The four organizers of yesterday's 100 mile "Run-A-Thon" relay pose in front of the finish line here in Ann Arbor.. Over 100 runners participated in the relay from the front door of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house at Western r Michigan University in Kalamazoo to the front door of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house in Ann Arbor. The marathon, which lasted from4 a.m. until 7 p.m. yesterday, raised approximately $6,000 for the Amnerican Lung Asso- ciation. The organizers were (left to right) Jill Guilstorf of the Alpha Phi sorority at Western Michigan, Bill Hartman {of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity at the University of Michigan, Andi Poch of the Alpha Phi sorority at the University of Michigan, and Tim Rosowski of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity at Western Michigan. Safaton se lfestee mkeyst women s choics study says NOW! BEER BY MAIL COMBAT HIGH Enjoy the rich full flavor of Light, Amber, or Dark home brewed beer. Only $4.60! case. U-BREW-IT Home BrewingUEquipment Kits and Ingredient Paks are shipped with equipment, in- structions, recipes and pre- measured, all-natural ngre- dients for perfect results from your very first batch It's quick, easy and econom- ical. You supply only. the water, bottles and a few minutes of your time. Start home brewing today. Send check, m.o. or charge card name, acct. *, bank # and exp. date to: PRICES. By MARION HALBERG Satisfaction and self-esteem are the basis for women's career choices, ac- ording to a recent University of Michigan study conducted by the Cen-, ter for the Continuing Education of Wome (CEW). In the study, which was released Friday, researchers Jean Manis and University Psychology Professor Hazel Markus said women who are working full time at high salaries are the most satisfied with their lives at this point while women who are not working are least satisfied. "BUT'.AMONG the women who say Sthey are doing what they want from day t day, working or not working does not seem to be relevant," reported Manis and Markus. "The more important issue is to have made a choice that is s'atisfying to themselves." The study was made possible through a three-year general support grant the CEW received from the Ford Foun- dation. Part of this $100,000 grant was used to have CEW research associate, Jean Manis, and staff member, Hazel Markus (also a psychology professor here at the University), undertake a study about women and career decisions. The study began last Oc- tober.. Manis and Markus sent question- naires to women who had come to CEW during the period between 1968 and 1973 for career and educational counseling. Of the 1,145 respondents, about one- third are under 35, one-third are bet- ween the ages of 35-44, and the other third are 45 or older. "THEY WERE indeed non-tradition- al students," said Manis and Markus in the study. "Forty-six per cent received their highest degree when they were past 30 and 20 per cent when they were past 40. Three-fourths of the responden- ts are married, and the majority have two or more children." Ix SUNDAY Cinema I1-La Caza (The Hunt), 7, 9p.m., Aud. 4, MLB. Cinema Guild-Independent Filmmakers, Films from Millenium Film/ Workshop, 7, 9:05 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. El Cine Politico-Brando's Burn, 8 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. The results of the survey showed that "Three-fourths of the women who are over 45 say that at the age of 25, the homemaker role was most important to them; in the 35-44 age group, only 60 per cent say this, and among those age 22- 35, less than 30 per cent," according to the report. "Looking Ahead to ages 45 and 55, most of the younger women say they will be interested in both roles or secondly that career will take precedence over homemaking," the report said. MANIS AND Markus observed that, "Whatever the problems of establishing a career at a later age, the process may be less difficult than it is now for younger women who are trying to nurture families and careers simultaneously." Although Manis was unavailable for comment, in a telephone interview yesterday Professor Markus further explained the study's results. "There is a change in women and attitudes toward women to have an identity other than that gained vicariously through the husband or the family and that, for most women, is activity outside the home," Markus said. Markus said working is central to the thinking of women today. "For some it's essential, for others it's society's way of saying you're impor- tant .. . getting a paycheck, having a salary, is another form of evaluation of yourself and that helps you feel better about yourself," she said. THE STUDY focuses on the self- esteem women have achieved and will achieve in their family and career plans, but it doesn't stop there, Markus said. "We have a rich data set. We have plenty of information we haven't even begun to look at. Employment patterns. We don't understand women's patterns and why they're different from men's. We don't know enough yet how women's marriage and family responsibilities effect their labor forcesparticipation," added Markus. Markus said she is pleased the women who took part in the survey gave the researchers important infor- mation they didn't have and which they now plan to explore. Markus said the psychological meaning of work, a woman's identity and her feelings about herself, and how a woman's feelings may be "importantly different from those of men" are issues that will be examined in further studies. U-BREW-IT, 870 Colony Drive, Dept. 108, W. Bloomfield, Mi 48033 Name -- Address City/State/Zip r,. R ' V (r M ti b Y° 19 Y} th v r Y' 4 j Y" 'fir yI r BREW YOUR OWN. " U-BREW-IT EQUIPMENT KITS ..Brewing Quality Beer at Home by Leigh Beadle, 60 pages of recipes and brewing tips Brewing Vat with air-tight lid A Fermentation Lock " Priming Vessel " Syphon Assembly " Flow Control Valve Bottle Capper U-BREW-IT INGREDIENT PAKS (pre-measured to brew 5 gals., or 53, 12-oz, bottles) " Your choice of Light, Amber or Dark Munton & Fison pure Malt Extract . Hallertauer Hops (Ger- many's finest) " Burton Brewing Saits . Superbrau Brewers Yeast ' Malted Barley " Dextrose (brewing sugar) . 55 bottle caps Risk-Free Money Back Offer - P/ease rush: Equipment Kits@ $34.95 Ingredient Paks _ Light Amber __ Dark @ S10 Ale @ $12 -_ Stout @ $16 I want to know more. Send L. Beadle's vrsA home brewing book only. $1.95 Total _____ * . We pay Mich. res. add 4% sales tax all shipping Total enclosed (or charged) MEETINGS Hiking Club-1:30 p.m., Rackham N.W. entry on Huron. AIESEC Introduction-9 a.m. to noon, Hale Aud., Business School. PERFORMANCES New Jerusalem-local Christian music group, 11 a.m., University Church of the Nazarene, 409S. Division. SPEAKERS day Discussion Group-Rev. Ted Richmond, past of Ann Arbor Metropolitan Community Church, 6 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. EXHIBITS Mich. Museum of Art-Canadian Inuit (Eskimo) art, 1-5 p.m., State at S. University. Union Gallery-Lithographs by Paul Stewart and ceramics by Kathy Dambach, noon to 5 p.m., Union. MISCELLANEOUS Mich. Media Resources Center-Poets Talking (T.V. broadcast), 6:30 a.m., WJBK-TV. Mich. Media Resources Center-The Dickens World; Martin Chuzzlewit (T.V. broadcast), 7p.m., WDIV-TV. Eclipse Jazz-Ann Arbor Jazz Festival 1979, Joseph Jarman and Don Moye, 2 and. 4 p.m., Residential College Auditorium; McCoy Tyner and Oscar Peterson, 8 p.m:, Hill Auditorium. Hillel-Yom Kippur services; Conservative service, 6:55 p.m., Men- delssohn; Orthodox service, 6:55 p.m., Hillel; Reform service, 6:55 p.m., Hillel. Israeli dancing-Open dancing and instruction, 1 to 3 p.m., Hillel. Voter Registration-9:45 a.m. to noon, St. Mary's Church Student Chapel, 331 Thompson. Fraternity Open Rush-today from 2 to 10 p.m.; October 1-4 from 7 to 10 Go Ape wthYour Caer 4 1st Prize: $25 gift certificates from BIG GEORGE'S PHOTO DEPT. 2nd Prize: $15 gift certificate from PURCHASE CAMERA 3rd Prize: $10 gift certificate from PURCHASE CAMERA RULES 1. Photographs must be black and white only, no smaller than 5" x 7" and no larger than 11" x 14". Mats and mounts are acceptable. Entries will be judged on content and overall technical quality. 2. Individuals can submit as many photographs as they wish. Photographs will be judged on an individual basis. Name, address and phbne number must accompany each photo. 3. Entries must be received by THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard St., no later than 5 p.m., Tuesday, October 2.