Please don't play it again Sam ADRIAN (UPI)-WLEN radio was a bit overwhelmed by the response to its latest promotional gimmick-in- cluding a broken window and a surprise visit from the local police. Without explanation Saturday night, the station began playing the pop record "Where Were You When I Was Falling In Love" nonstop, except for news and other re'gularly scheduled programs. A STATION spokesman said it received virtually hundreds of calls-some from none-too-happy listeners-wondering what was going on. At one point, Adrian police broke a window and entered the station, ap- parently fearing there was trouble in- side. The station finally announced yester- day it was all part of a contest. The winner will be the person who most closely guesses the number of times the record was played. The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 30, 1979-Page 3 ENGINEERING WITH A FUTURE NATIONAL SEMICONDUCTOR, the 2nd Largest producer of integrated circuits in the world, is on campus TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30 to interview candidates for engineering positions in California. Greg Ledenbach will be on hand to discuss the company and opportunities. Interview with us in the Engineering Pice--, ment Center and visit with Greg in the West Engineering Building Room 333A between 8:00 and 11:00 AM and in Room. 401 A between noon and 5:00 PM. Photo by Marion Halberg A CROWD OF MORE than 200 gathered on the steps of the state capitol in Lansing Sunday to defend legislation ,allowing legal abortions. The chanting, sign-carrying group listened to pro-choice. advocates speak on the issue. GR OUP DEMANDS CONTINUED LEGA L ABOR TIONS: SPro-choice forces stage rally '! RvT M A"UANT tj At RtiRlr By MARIO1N HALBSERG Special to The Daily t LANSING - In a march and rally .rarking the culmination of what one national organization proclaimed as .k"ro-Choice Week" a crowd of more than 200 gathered at the Capitol steps iere Sunday demanding that legislation providing for legal abortions be preser- vpd. Participants gathered at Riverfront Park Sunday afternoon and marched five blocks to the Capitol, chanting and waving signs with slogans such as: "Better unborn than unwanted" and "If men could get pregnant than abortion would be legal." ' AFTER THE marchers arrived at .the Capitol, they listened to several ad- vocates of a woman's right to have an abortion, who denounced efforts to Waken the U.S. Supreme Court's 1973 ruling that made abortion legal. The event was organized by the Michigan Abortion Rights Action League (MARAL), whose parent group, the National Abortion Rights Ac- tion League, sponsored Pro-Choice ek to publicize attacks by anti-abor- n groups on those sympathetic to abortion. Ann Arbor Planned Parenthood Nur- se Christy Speirn, who was among some three dozen local participants in the rally, said abortion is not a popular topic, but one that thousands of women have to reckon with. "WHAT WE'RE fighting for is not that abortion is wonderful, but that it is the right for the woman to choose," Speirn said. "Abortion is a very hard emotional decision that a woman will live with for the rest of her life. But she must have the right to make that decision. Eighty-year-old Nellie Cuellar of the Grey Panthers, a senior citizens lobby group, was one of the more outspoken participants Sunday. "We shall not be moved. We will fight the battle and win," she shouted. "The old women and the young women gots the votes. Let's make them (politicians) recognize us." SPEAKERS AT the rally included Carol King of the Michigan National Organization of Women (NOW); Rod Reinhart of the Mobilization for Sur- vival; Dr. Ed Keemer of the Keemer Clinic; steel worker Martha Dowling; Jaqui Hoop, a national board member of Planned Parenthood; John Glaza of the Kalamazoo Planned Parenthood; State Representative Mary Brown of Kalamazoo; Margret Cook of the State Wonen's Commission; and Lorraine Beebe, MARAL president and former Michigan state senator. Though MARAL officials had predic- ted that anti-choice groups would try to disrupt the rally, only four men ap- peared Sunday who said they opposed abortion. "We purposely didn't bring a lot of people because there was a lot of violence in Detroit" where a pro-choice rally took place last week, said Rev. Stan Carter of the Liberty Christian, Chapel, one of the four opposed to abor- tion. HAIRSTYLISTS For Men, Women and Children at Dan/,lsStylists Liberty off State-668-9329 East U. at South U.-62-0354 Arboriand-971-9975} Maple Village-761-2733 TWO NEWSMEN from the WalI Street Journal will be on campus THURDAYNOVEMBER-1st* to interview Sophomore, Juniors, Seniors and Grad Students in- terestdd in Journalism Careers. Charles Camps Detroit Bureau Chief and Richard Martin, Chicago Bureau Chief at the Student Publications Building 420 Maynard St. 2-5 pm on Nov. 1st Korea iron rule to loosen? SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - The assassination of President Park Chung- hee may have set the stage for a sof- tening of the iron rule that has held down opposition in this country for years, informed political sources said yesterday. The government may have signaled its intentions by allowing publication of an opposition appeal for democratic teforms in South Korea. BUT NORTH Korea charged that the .Park killing was actually aimed at preserving the "fascist regime." And the Soviet Union accused'the U.S. Cen- .rMl Intelligence Agency of having directed the death plot- to protect American interests, an allegation denied by the Carter administration. Meanwhile, the helicopter carrier USS Blue Ridge was cruising toward the South Korean port of Pusan in a demonstration of continued American support for the Seoul government. It was scheduled to arrive today. South Korea's acting president, Choi Kyu-hah, and Cabinet ministers met in hours-long sessions behind closed doors yesterday, presumably discussing the leadership crisis and possible replacements for Park, MEET THREE PEOPLE WHO FOUND~ U FILMS Cinema Guild-I's A Mad Mad Mad Mad World, 6:30, 9:45 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. Cinema II-Bed and Sofa, 7 p.m., Maedchen in Uniform, 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. SPEAKERS Midwestern Study for the Coming Revolution in Higher Con- sciousiness-Patrick Danahy, 7 p.m., Hussey Lecture Hall, Michigan League. Rackham-Patricia Harris Stablein, "La Signification de Gand Dans la Cartologie de Bertrand de Born," 4:10 p.m., West Lecture Room, Third Floor. Department of Geology and Minerology-Prof. Gerald Smith, "Late Genozoic Lakes and Fishes on the Snake River Plain," Kp.m., 4001 C.C. Lit- tie Building. Center for Western European Studies-Henri Krsuki, "Worker Par- ticipation in Decision-making: the Case of Contemporary France," 4 p.m., Anderson Room, Michigan Union. . Computing Center-Chalk Talks on MTS Topics : Assembly Language Debugging for Beginners, noon, 1011 NUBS. Math Colloquium-Prof. R. May, 4 p.m., 3201 Angell Hall. Bioengineering Seminar-Timothy White, "Biochemical Adaptations in Mammalian Skeletal Muscle," 4 p.m., 1042 East Engineering. Computer, Information and Control Engineering Seminar-Prof. Bradley Dickinson, "Structural Properties of Communication Receivers for Additive, Correlated Gaussian Noise Channels," 4 p.m., 1504 East Engineering. MEETINGS Office of Student Organizations, Activities, and Programs-Workshop on Organizational Development: a Model for Effective Planning, 11:30 a.m., Knenzel Romnn. Michigan Union. ELECTRONIC ENGINEER As a college student faced with finding a job and starting a career you are presented many options. NSA should be one of your considerations. Working at NSA has been both a challenge and a continual learning experience since our mission demands that we work on the cutting edge of technology. I have experienced the satisfaction that comes with having been a member of project teams involved with a variety of computer systems and communications problems." Mark Walch B.E.E., M.E. *i COMPUTER SCIENTIST "My objective on graduating from college was to obtain employment with a leader in my profession. NSA fulfilled that objective. The histories of NSA and the computer have been intertwined since the origins of both. NSA continues to be the pacesetter in the data systems field - presenting opportunities to be a part of the latest technology being developed and used industry-wide." Edward Johnson B.S. Computer Science MATHEMATICIAN "As an NSA Mathematician I enjoy the opportunity to apply a variety of mathematical disciplines, including many which fall under the heading 'pure mathematics, 'to my job. A wide range of sophisticated cryptologic problems presents a constant challenge to develop new and creative approaches. In fact, creativity is probably the one universal requirement for an NSA Mathematician." Linda Shields B.A., M.A. Mathematics PUT YOURSELF IN THE PICTURE At the National Security Agency your future will be linked to the nation's. Whether your interests are in electronic engineering, computers, mathematical research or high priority translation, you will play a meaningful role in the nation's communications security or the production of foreign intelligence. NSA is challenge. NSA is opportunity. E National Security Agency headquarters arei ated in the nleasant Marvlands uhurh cloe to Washington. D.C.' W~ ~