The Michigan Daily-Saturday, 0 ctober 20, 1979- Page, 3 SUNDAY MORNING DELIVERY SERVICE: r j l Bagels ease student's tuition bill By BRAD BENJAMIN For Larry Goldstone it all began six years ago with a few bagels and a couple of New York Times. Back then Goldstone was a high school sophomore and his bagel route didn't medn much more than some ex- tra bucks for the weekend. Today Gold- stone's Sunday morning deliveries help pay his way through college. CAPITALIZAING ON that great American institution-service for con- venience-Goldstone,,now in his fourth year in the University's Inteflex program, first began his bagel and newspaper delivery service as -a high school student'in Oak Park. "I knew that no one enjoys waking up early, getting dressed, and strutting a few blocks for just a few bagels. So for three years I was giving dozens of Oak Park households more sleep while I was making more money than a paper boy," Goldstone recalled. Sensing that Ann Arborites also yearn for warm bagels, lox and a newspaper to accompany glorious Sun- day morning stupors,, Goldstone de- cided to continue his profitable ven- ture when he came to the University three years ago. "WHEN I STARTED college, I thought the work load would be too overbearing to continue it. But last year I managed to work a route into my schedule and it takes about six hours of work per week. Actually, I look forward to my deliveries, although it means ab- breviated Saturday nights," he said. In a typical week Goldstone makes about $63.00-approximately $9.00 an hour. Goldstone said his semester ear- nings will be just shy of $1000, which will cover about half of his in state medical school expenses. Goldstone and partner Tony Bordo, a sophomore in LSA, bill all their customers a 75 cent service charge, regardless of how much they order. They receive the bulk of their revenue, however, by paying discount prices for the newspapers and bagels while charging their customers the ordinary stand prices. Goldstone's and Bordo's morning begins at 7:15 with a quick drive to Washtenaw News Company, at 1239 Rosewood, to collect several bundles of the New York Times and the Detroit Free Press. "Some people only want the Sunday paper and with us they are killing two birds with one stone," said Bordo. The next stop is, predictably, The Bagel Factory on S. University. The door is unlocked for Goldstone and Bor- do who arrive an hour before opeing to' pick up their order of 40 dozen bagels. BACK IN THE car, the delicate operation begins. Bordo is behind the wheel while Larry carefully stacks the newspapers on the floor and spread the bagels out in a specific arrangement. Egg and raisin, the most popular, are placed in the left and righthand corners of the back seat. Lox and cream cheese are reserved for the middle, nestled between the pumpernickle and the whole wheat. Goldtone then reaches for the first bag and mutters, "three egg, one raisin, three salt." With assembly line precision, he lunges for the egg bagels while he stimultaneously scoops out the raisin and both are neatly stacked into the bag. Bordo pulls up at a house on Cambridge street where Goldstone, with bagels and newspaper in two jogs to the front door and places the bag in- side the screen door and collects his 'payment from the mailbox. "Payment is easy," said Bordo. "In- stead of wasting time by making separate trips to collect money, we tell our customers what the bill is in advan- ce and to have the payment ready for us Sunday morning. If people become negligent we follow one dictum-no money, no bagels." GOLDSTONE'S AND Bordo's prime markets are the Ann Arbor Heights and Burns Park areas. Surprisingly, only four of the 47 stops made on this par- ticular morning were in the "student ghetto." Their largest order that day? Four dozen bagels for a church meeting. :tbr,p1p 7-7PoV "Now- .*7 , f%"+ , T v 13 . . .YY {+.T a;3a3.v :. x. 'tr ;.y.f ..,y .t srr r :"°" :4' * F4 v 744.. . F.~Nr , rI, t x.* i,44'"+7c .:.. // ,'..Vi :; aY '. : - ,,,j e SF 'r 1:~i;'r." .'.? ''X?6"7:* :;.!. 'hc. xC y N . A.: .N F , 4 4 s'~: 3 F 5.nr ;i e : r s 5 "; r4 Goldstne exibitsone ofthe bgels espon icalsuces.Godson hs ee dliern stome ito hecapu. otadze7tdn wersteizexhibitspoie.o h aesrso Uia. succeseoStrHarendelirowinSo fo scoo yarsa ..Koe euiy oslai t INTEFLEX STUDENT Larry G sible for Sunday morning finan 4the brqad for profit since his high Anti-government students riots in Souti SEOUL, South Korea (AP)-Students rioted against the hard-line government of President Park Chung-hee yesterday for the fourth straight night. Police using tear gas dispersed the protest in the southern industrial city of Masan, where a night-time curfew was imposed earlier yester- day, and seized a dozen persons for questioning, witnesses said. Hundreds of students assem led around down- town business districts and neat a public park af- ter sunset and then roamed the streets in groups, shouting anti-government slogans. AFTER SIMILAR rioting in Masan Thursday night, the government slapped a 10 p.m. to 4 a.m. curfew on the city of 372,000 and announced that its two colleges would be closed until further notice. Masan is 175 miles south of Seoul and 35 miles east of Pusan, South Korea's second largest city and the scene of bitter battles between students and police this week. The protests were triggered by the Oct. 4 ex- stration since Park came to power in 1961. pulsion from Parliament of opposition leader Kim Young-sam, a native of Pusan. They began The government blamed the protests or Tuesday with what police called a "premeditated versive elements" and imposed martial riot" when students attacked city buildings and Pusan, a city of 3 million. called for the overthrow of the government. ON WEDNESDAY and Thursday, 3,000 In Seoul, about 300 students of Seoul N demonstrators converged on government and University held a brief campus rally Fr private offices in Pusan, setting fire to several demand democratic reforms in sch buildings and police cars in what was described ministration, including reinstatement of: as the most destructive anti-government demon- ts expelled or suspended in connectio n "sub- law in ational iday to ool ad- studen- n with 2 suspects charged -r -- . r _ ... .... _ ., .. .,. in 'Hillside BELLINGHAM, Wash (UPI)-In exchange for escaping the death penalty in both states, Kenneth Bianchi pleaded guilty yesterday to killing two college coeds in Washington and then admitted murdering five of the 13 Los Angeles Hillside Strangler victims. Bianchi implicated his cousin Angelo Buono Jr. in the California killings and within an hour of his confession, Buono was arrested at his Glendale, Calif., home and charged with 10 of the Strangler killings. Buono, 44, an auto upholsterer, showed no emotion and of- fered no resistance. LOS ANGELES District Attorney John Van de Kamp said Bianchi agreed to testify against Buono and would be sentenced to life imprisonment on five counts of murder, one count of con- spiracy to commit murder and one count of sodomy. Bianchi could have been sentenced to ' slayings hanging in Washington or the gas chamber in California. "This agreement shall dispose of all charges arising from pending in- vestigations in California" against Bianchi, Van de Kamp said. TREMBLING AND weeping at times, Bianchi,"28, a security guard who had once pleaded innocent by reason of insanity in the deaths of the two young women in Bellingham, changed his pleas to guilty. "I can't find the words to express the sorrow for what I have done," he told the judge. "In no way can I take away the pain I have given to others, and in no way can I expect forgiveness from mothers." JUDGE JACK KURTZ sentenced Bianchi to two consecutive life terms in prison for killing Western Washington University students Karen Mandic, 22, of Bellelvue, Wash., and her roommate, Diane Wilder, 27, of Bremerton, Wash. V19{iVEI(-SITY (:IMUSfCAL c8CJE7TV pres en t,, C4D/NFUiIY IDAIN4 I1 Tickets Available: $4, $5.50, $7 at Burton Tower, Ann Arbor, Mich. 48109. Weekdays 9-4:30, Saturday 9-12. Phone 665-3717 Sales also at Rackham Auditorium, 1 % hours before performance. mown\ in its 101stSeason J l FILMS Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Women in Love, 7,9:15 p.m., Aud. 4 MLB. Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Eraserhead, 7,10:20 p.m., I Changed My Sex, 8:40 p.m. only, Aud. 3 MLB. Cinema Guild-Fellini's Amarcord, 7, 9:05p.m., Old Arch. Aud. Cinema II-James Bond night, Goldfinger, 7, 11 p.m.; On Her Majesty's Service, 9 p.m. only, Aud. A Angell Hall. Mediatrics Films-Turning Point, 7,9:30 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. PERFORMANCES PTP-Guest Artist Series, "Idiot's Delight," 8p.m., Power Center. UAC-The New Muskey Company, "In the Boom Boom," Residential College Aud., 8p.m. Contemporary Directions Ensemble-"Sparrows," guest composer' Joseph Schwanter, featured soloist Carlotta Wilsen, U of M School of Music faculty. Also "Echoi," "4 for Percussion," "Antichrist," and "Ocho por Radio." Stephen Osmond, conductor, 8 p.m., Rackham Aud. MISCELLANEOUS National Organization for Women-ERA Move-a-thon, 9 a.m., Palmer Field (behind Hill dorms). NASCO-Co-op training for the '80's. Workshops on Starting Co-ops, Co- ops for Elders, The Co-op Bank, and Food and Housing Co-ops, Michigan Union, call 663-0889 to register. Co-op Auto-Open House. Free diagnostic inspections for visiting vehicles, 10 a.m:-4 p.m., 2232 S. Industrial. Packard Food Co-op-Benefit Social featuring musicians Julie Fink and Cindy Page; and Tom Preston, Nash Rambler and Reverend Morris, 8 p.m., Halfway Inn (East Quad basement) ; $3.00 admission. Union Gallery-"Upper Peninsula Artists" display, 12-5 p.m., Michigan Union Gallery. Baits Housing-rummage sale and carnival, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Baits parking lot and tennis courts, N. Campus. More information 764-4153. Hillel-Grad Students Coffee House party, 8:30 p.m., Hillel, 1429 Hill St. University Extension Services-Renaissance Conference and Annual meeting, Rackham Building. Socity of Amateur Cinematographers-24th annual convention, Plymouth Hilton Inn, Plymouth, Michigan. Neighborhood Senior Services-Chore Day, volunteer to perform odd Jobs for senior citizens, 662-4862, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Friends of the Ann Arbor Public Library-Fine books exhibit by four an- tiquarian book dealers, 1-5 p.m., Ann Arbor Public Library. Registration $1.00. Alice Simsar Gallery-opening reception, Cornelia von Mengershausen, artist, 7-9 p.m., Alice Simsar Gallery, 301 N. Main St. AP Photo KENNETH BIANCHI wept yesterday after changing his plea to guilty in the killing of two Washington women. Author: Turning East: the, Promise and A VEY COX Peril of the New Orientalism; The Seduc- tion of the Spirit; Feast of Fools; The Secular City; Professor at Harvard Divin- ity School. 8:00 pm Mon. Oct. 22 at New School Public Health Auditorium "The Spiritual-cum-Political Crisis Of America" (in cooperation with the Pilot Program) 10:00 Mon. morning at First Baptist Church, 502 E. Huron "What Would A liberation Theology For The First Wor/dlook like" A conversation with Prof. Cox who has visited Cuba and Brazil, taught in Mexico, attended the Puebla Conf. and is currently teaching a seminar in liberation theology. On SATURDAY MORNING at 10:30 Harvey Cox will be speaking on "The Mission of the Church in the Decade of the 80's." Baptist Church, 502 E. Huron. Ethics and Religion (764-7442) in cooperation with First Baptist Church and American Baptist Student Foundation. Ex-FRI agent kills self WASHINGTON (UPI)-Alan Rotton, who was fired as an FBI supervisor Tuesday for alleged criminal miscon- duct, apparently committed suicide yesterday at his suburban Virginia home, authorities said. FBI Director William Webster said Rotton "was found dead at his residen- ce as a result of an apparently self- inflicted gunshot wound." AN FBI spokesman said Rotton's body was found about noon. An official for the Fairfax County Police Department, which was in- vestigating the case, said it was "being worked as an apparent suicide... The official cause of death will be deter- mined pending further investigation and an autopsy." Rotton, who was with the FBI for 14 years, was fired from the bureau based on evidence he and another agent pocketed money earmarked for infor- mants and joined in a theft ring they were assigned to investigate. THE OTHER agent, Stephen Travis of the Kansas City field office, was suspended and then submitted his resignation. In a statement in the Washington Post the day he was dismissed, Rotton denied the charges, We know what good grooming looks like. UM Stylists Ted, Chet 8 Dave at the UNION ,i COMPUTERS HEWLETT lip1 INSTRUMENTS PACKARD * INVESTS 10% OF SALES IN R&D FOR TECHNICAL LEADERSHIP AND SUSTAINED HIGH GROWTH * ENCOURAGES INDIVIDUAL CONTRIBUTION IN AN INFORMAL SMALL-COMPANY ATMOSPHERE * OFFERS THE CAREER DEVELOPMENT AND RESOURCES OF A CAREFULLY MANAGED $2 BILLION COMPANY " HAS OPENINGS THROUGHOUT THE U.S. FOR BS, MS OR ...,. I. Aftmm tAA%,v