LADIES NIGHT at Second Chance 995-5350 IN Jerome Kern & Oscar Hammerstein Is Basedon thenovel SHOW OAT by EDNA FERBER OCTOBER 5-7 FRIDAY &ASATURDAY at 8pm SUNDAY at 2 pm and 8 pm PMER CEATER PROFES SONAL THEATRE PROGRAM Tickets available at PTP Ticket Office The. Michigan League Hours: 10-1 and 2-5p.m. 764-0450. Also at all Hudson's Outlets. Page 10-Wednesday, October 3, 1979-The Michigan Daily city OK's HUD low rent plan for elderly apartments By PATRICIA HAGEN A federal rent subsidy was guaranteed for a 200 unit senior citizen apartment building on the city's south side when City Council approved site plans for the project late Monday night. Sunday was officially the deadline for approval of funds from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). But a representative for the developer said HUD had agreed to approve a rent subsidy if Council agreed to a revised building plan for Cranbrook Towers at Monday's meeting. AFTER AN HOUR-LONG discussion on amen- dments, Council gave Cranbrook Venture, the development firm, the go-ahead to begin construction of a seven-story building in the Cranbrook Village subdivision. The building will be constructed on Eisenhower Road between Main and Ann Arbor- Saline Roads. The company plans to begin construction im- mediately and hopes to complete the project within a year, Martin Overhiser, Director of the City Planning Department, said yesterday. Council tabled the plans for the second time last week, despite the warnings of Cranbrook Venture representative Jay Eldridge, that the subsidy would be lost. Republican councilmembers refused to ap- prove the original plans for an 11-story building presented to them at the "last minute." SINCE COUNCIL DID approve the plans for the seven story building, HUD and Cranbrook Venture will probably close the deal within a week, according to HUD spokesman Curtis Coleman. The subsidy is financed by funds that were unex- pectedly available at the end of HUD's fiscal year-September 30. With the federal subsidy, future elderly residents of the building will pay no more than 25 per cent of their adjusted gross income to rent. OVERHISER SAID THE developer would be responsible for extensive improvements on Eisenhower Road, at an estimated cost of between $500,000 to $750,000. There are three other senior citizen housing developments in the city, including Lloyd Terrace, Miller Manor and the John Knox center. Another project for the elderly is under construction at the corner of Packard and Main Street. The Cranbrook Towers development is the only city project currently subsidized by this UD program. DURING THE AUDIENCE participation section of the Council meeting, Ulrich Stoll, a city resident, urged Council to reconsider approval of the Cran- brook Towers project, citing a lack of senior citizen input in the planning. Stoll said the location of the building was unsuitable for senior citizens because of the "general geographic isolation." The "large impersonal development on the edge of town," Stoll explained, did not have the amenities or access to city services the city's other senior citizen buildings had. ...:3. a .... . .... . .............. ...... ... .* .. .. .....*. . .... ..... .*.' *.*.*...*.v. . .:'c:.....:.....*.. *. t. . .'.x.. . . . .*.*..*........*...*...... . . . . . . ....,.r..>:.I...........v....a......Y............. ....: . .. .....:...fie,..{. . . . ..,..{Y.....s.:..,Y...::..:*. ,,:. ..*...........E.*...**...*.*....{;.*............ .........:......Y..:...,.K.s..a. Teen trends By SARA ANSPACH College freshpersons who wonder what their peers are thinking and doing ought to consult Lloyd Johnston. A program director for the Univer- sity's Institute for Social Research (ISR), Johnston'is somewhat of an ex- pert on young people. Every year since 1975 he has surveyed 17,000 high school seniors on topics ranging from drug abuse to attitudes toward sex roles. RECENT FINDINGS from the sur- Researcher looks at high schoolers' ideas PUBLIC NOTICE LIQUIDATION OF PERSIAN AND OTHER ORIENTAL RUGS All to be Sold for Financial Troubled Mona Oriental Rugs of Richmond VA. AUCTION AT Briarwood Hilton State Street & 1-94 Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, Oct. 5th, '1979 View: 7:00 P.M. Auction: 8:00 P.M. Big, small, scatter and large room size rugs includes silk Qum, Esphan, Nain, Tabriz, Kerman, Keshan, Princess Bokhara, Deep pile Bokhara, Tabotaby, Chinese, Romanian and Indian rugs. AMA LIQUIDATORS Consultants-Appralsers-Auctioneers of Massachusetts Terms: Cash or Check vey of 1979 high school seniors - this years' college freshpersons - indicate: " Having a good marriage and family life is the most important goal for today's young people, while being a community leader is least important; * More than two-thirds feel women should be full-time homemakers when their children are young; " Most think things will get worse in the world and worry about the threat of nuclear war more than those surveyed in the last decade. " Use of marijuana and cocaine has increased among young people, while drinking remains steady; and " A majority of the college-bound someday want their own house with a big yard, stylish clothes and their own car. THE EXAMPLES above hardly, touch the surface of Johnston's resear- ch. In addition to surveying students every year, Johnston is conducting longitudinal studies - interviewing the same group year after year. This study, the results of which will be ready in 1981, will help show changes in a per- son's attitudes as he or she matures, Johnston said. It will also help "charac- terize" those who choose to go to college, enter the military, join the labor force or become housewives, he added. Since his research is funded by the National Institute on. Drug Abuse (NIDA) much of Johnston's studies concentrate on trends in substance abuse among high school students. He studies prevalence of current drug usage, trends over the past four years, and attitudes about illegal drugs and their effects. Over the past four years use of marijuana, cocaine and inhalants has increased among young people, accor- ding to Johnston's recent statistics, while use of sedatives and "lifetime" use of heroin have been dropping gradually. He also found that the num- ber of students who felt marijuana was harmful declined, the number who believed cigarette smoking involved great risk to health increased. WITHIN THE next three to six mon- ths, Johnston said he should have results of a "satellite study" on the ef- fects of marijuana decriminalization legislation on usage in high schools. He is currently comparing "before and af- ter" statistics of student marijuana usage in states such as California and New York, which have decriminalized the drug. Johnston's surveys are given to 17,000 students in 125 high schools each year. He and co-researchers Jerald Bachman try to interview a small sample of students themselves to keep in touch with the way young people think, John- ston said. Each questionnaire takes about one class period for students to answer, Johnston said. Sample questions in- clude: "During the last 12 months how ,often have you set fire to someone's property on purpose?", "Do you feel that the people running the government are smart people who usually know what they are doing?", and "How likely is it that you would want to have children?" Although the same questions are usually asked each year, they are changed occasionally if something new develops, said Johnston. Recent sur- veys include new questions on the use of the drug PCP ("angel dust") and amyl or butyl nitrite (poppers), he added. Very few of the students answer the questions untruthfully he said. The computer which compiles the suryeys is programmed to look for logical in- consistencies in replies. For example, said Johnston, if someone says they take LSD 40 times a month, "we'd drop them on the basis that they couldn't be filling out the sur- vey under those conditions.' In the 16th and 17th centuries, people put hot coals from the fireplace into a shallow pan which was then slipped into beds to warm them before the household retired for the night. Admitted homosexual gets Army discharge FT. LEWIS, Wash. (UPI) - A military board voted two-to-one yester- day to discharge Pfc. Roger Cutsinger would have an adverse effect on the morale and discipline of the Army. Rehabilitation was not possible and Cutsinger should be honorably discharged, the decision said. The next step in Cutsinger's possible expulsion was up to the division com- mander, Maj. Gen. Richard Cavazos, who will review the board's findings and decide whether to concur with them or retain Cutsinger. THE BOARD'S majority decision was signed by Lt. Col. Curt Custer and Capt. Bryan Smith. The minority decision, written by Capt. John'Jones, said Cutsinger is suitable for further service and could be rehabilitated and retained. Cutsinger was calm and showed no emotion while the decision was read. "I am very proud of that one vote," said Cutsinger, adding he had "no regrets." CUTSINGER'S attorney, Capt. John Beasley, said the one dissenting vote would have a bearing on the case if an appeal is filed. Cutsinger has a number of legal op- tions, he said, including appeal to a federal court and to the division com- mander. Until Cutsinger is formally discharged, he will remain with his unit at Fort Lewis and will work at his nor- mal duties. In the meantime, Cutsinger said, he plans "to play a lot of tennis." His Holiness The DALA! LAMA of TIRET will speak in, HILL AUDITORIUM Sunday, October 7-4:00 p.m. on "The b'uddhist wey to Wodd Peace" Radioactive water to be treated Cutsinger ... discharged from Army from the Army because the 21-year-old Battle Creek, Mich., man is an admit- ted homosexual. The Administrative Elimination Board deliberated 75" minutes before returning the verdict, ending four days of proceedings on Cutsinger's case. Cutsinger, a clerk-typist who com- pleted nearly two years, of his enlist- ment, was seeking to become the first acknowledged homosexual to finish out a full "hitch" in the Army. BUT THE BOARD said Cutsinger was unsuitable for further service and WASHINGTON (AP)-A Nuclear Regulatory Commission official told Congress yesterday he will urge the NRC this week to order about 30 per cent of the contaminated water at Three Mile Island treated to remove radiation. Harold Denton, NRC director of nuclear regulation, said the process would help cope with accumulating radioactive wastes that threaten to overflow storage tanks at the site of the March 28 nuclear accident. IN THIS MANNER, about 300,000 gallons of moderately radioactive water can be removed from nearly full storage tanks located in the auxiliary building adjacent to the damaged reac- tor, Denton indicated. That would help buy some time in the cleanup operation, he added. If the NRC does not go along with this approach, then some of the radioactive water will have to be removed from the storage tanks and pumped into similar tanks located next to the plant's second reactor, Denton said. Denton and other NRC officials testified before the Senate nuclear regulation subcommittee on the ac- cident at the central Pennsylvania power plant and its aftermath. NEARLY ONE MILLION gallons of contaminated water are now stored at the damaged nuclear plant, and the level is increasing by about 1,500 gallons daily.. According to the NRC, the radioac- tive water has increased by about 30 or 40 per cent in the six months since the accident. This results from the need to keep the reactor core surrounded with water so it won't overheat again and from leaks in the system that are con- taminating clean water, NRC officials said. But Denton said the filtering process will not work for the more than 600,000 gallons of highly radioactive water still in the reactor contaminment strue- ture-a building so radioactive that workers have not yet been able to enter. Other means will have to be found to cope with these radioactive wastes, he said, U.S. halts Mexican aid I forparaquat (Continued from Page 1); each sample. According to the report, a person would have to smoke five joints a day containing this amount of the herbicide for a year in order to cause lung damage. THE CESSATION of paraquat7 spraying is in compliance with a 1978 amendment to the Foreign Assistance Act. The amendment prohibits aid "to any program involving the spraying of spraying a herbicide to eradicate marijuana plants" if the herbicide is proved un- safe. The amendment was sponsored by Sen. Charles Percy (R-Ill.), and was praised by anti-paraquat groups. The language of the amendment was altered last week to appease the Mexicans. As it stands now, the amen- dment could be interpreted to also end aid for the poppy eradication program. A What was. Andvw might have been. ghat A~l~tJ N~ CHLLESIN(O R ANFITNE i iE 'S 1 # i" ! 'i ,g . s; i i '. } £ >+ f , . i= , , : . *.SENIORS:, TodayIs The Day * Have Your.* 0. own I m "To read this splendid book, to think about what might have been, is to die a little bit all over again' , mom I