THE $1 .50 05 neFormerly FifthForum hatu N=4T="'BA RGA IN! MONTY PYTHON'S LIFE OF BRIANt FINAL5 DAYS! Fri & Mon 6:30, 8:20, 10:10 Fri,& Mon Adults $1.50 til 7:00 (or capacity) Sat & Sun 12:50, 2:40, 4:30, 6:30, 8:20, 10:10 I Gift Certificates Sat & Sun Adults $1.50 til 1:30 and Adults Now On Sale! p $2.50 til 5:30 (or capacity) Page 6-Sunday, November 11, 1979-The Michigan Daily Council interviews for A2 administrator (Continued from Page 1) William Kirchhoff said Wheaton, candidates and the interviews. "I think Illinois is a "very cost conscious com- ... our city administrator will be from munity." Delivery of city services is this group. the administrator's primary concern, "I THINK THERE are three pretty Kirchhoff explained. outstanding candidates," Belcher ad- "GENERALLY WHENEVER you can contract out (city) services and it's ded, but declined to name anyQne. cheaper. . . do it," he recommended. When answering Council's queries, When asked how he would deal with the candidates often cited experiences Ann Arbor's bipartisan council after from their current city manager jobs, working with Wheaton's nonpartisan and compared their towns to Ann Ar- wrig wt hatn'oparia bor. one since 1973, Kirchhoff said, "I don't Like Ann Arbor,. candidate Terry have much interest in partisan politics Sprenkle said, Ames, Iowa, is the site of . . I don't know how a a university, an airport, and a hospital. professional manager can be involved Ames, which has a population of 41,700, ... and survive." has. a solid waste shredder that has The candidates, who are all between been considered as a comparison for 42 and 49 years-old, stressed the impor- the shredder proposed for Ann Arbor. If tance of openness between the admin- he is selected for Ann Arbor's top ad- sitrator, city council, the city depar- ministrative post, Sprenkle said, the tments, and citizens. Also, they cited solid waste issue, the airport, and extensive experience and skill in for- management and fiscal operations mulating city budgets. looked like the issues he would have to Ann Arbor's city administrator job is face in his first year. considered a professional challenge by THE MOST frustrating aspect of his all six candidates. They said they were job in Iowa City, University graduate attracted by the city's reputation and Neal Berlin said, is dealing with a the opportunities the+ University .2, f f0-tl: i .. provides. . Daily Phlto by JIM KRUZ BETWEEN THEIR interviews for the position of Ann Arbor city adminis- trator, Terry Sprenkel (left), city manager of Ames, Iowa, and Neal Berlin, University graduate and city manager of Iowa City, Iowa, hold an informal discussion. Sprenkel and Berlin are among six finalists for the city administrator position. LEGAL AND MORAL RIGHTS DISTINCTION: Health care questioned at conference (Continued from Page 1) BASSON SAID the conference also served to show that communication between doctors and philosophers can occur on similar topics. He said con- ference participants in previous year subsequently have collaborated on papers. Consideration of moral, as opposed to legal rights in making ethical health care decisions was also examined at the conference. Philosophy Prof. Stephen Stich of the University of Maryland said legal rights are more clear than moral rights, whose boundaries are "obscure and open to argument." Prior to the 17th Century, Stich said, people did not talk in terms of moral rights. "The relationship between legal and moral rights need not run together," he said. STICH POINTFD to the Dred Scott Supreme Court decision regarding a runaway slave who went to a free state as one example of the separation of legal and moral rights. "The slave had a. moral right to stay out of bondage, but no legal right," Stich said. "The owner had a legal right to get the slave, but what about the moral right?" He divided health care rights into two categories : action rights, involving the. individual's right to do what he or she wishes; and recipient rights, those in- volving an individual's right to get what he or she wants. But, Stich said, the right to health care is complicated by an individual's i right to be healthy, by drinking clean water and breathing pure air,and a person's right to health care by choosing the doctor of his or her choice. A RIGHT To health, Stich said, also is placed under constraints by the legal system. He cited the government ban on laetrile and the use of marijuana for glaucoma treatment as examples of choices placed under limits. Health care problems in the United States today result from overall in- flation, government regulations, in- creased demand for services, malprac- tice insurance, new technology, and the increasing proportion of elderly, accor- ding to Pursell, who also.spoke at the conference. But Medicare, Medicaid and veterans' programs are examples of how the public has accepted respon- sibility for health care, Pursell said. In 1971, he said, $77 billion was spent on health care, some six per cent of the gross national product (GNP). In 1979, more than $200 billion, approximately nine per cent of the GNP, was spent on / health care. Soviets blast U.S. 'error' in false missile attack alert MOSCOW (AP) - An apparent com- puter foul-up that caused a false missile alert in the United States prompted the Soviet Union yesterday to warn that another such error could have "irreparable consequences." The Soviet news agency. TAss claimed the Pentagon was having trouble reassuring people about the episode, which resulted in 10 U.S. and Canadian jet interceptors taking off from their bases. "NO MATTER how hard the Pen- tagon spokesman tried to assure newsmen, they were not soothed by his statements," Tass reported from Washington. In reporting the incident,, the press said that such an 'error' may, lead to fatal consequences. "Another 'error' by the computer might have irreparable- consequences for the whole world," Tass said. At the White House, press secretary Jody Powell was asked about the ad- verse reaction. "GIVEN THE FACT that our people are sitting over there," he said, referring to 60 Americans held hostage by students at the U.S. Embassyin Iran, "anybody who is angry with us is not going to get a long hearing." The North American Air Defense Command in Colorado was using a test tape Friday when the apparent com- puter malfunction caused a warning of the simulated Soviet missile attack to be transmitted to other commands and federal agencies, the Pentagon said. The foul-up was corrected within six minutes and the false alert, never reached the president, but in that brief time the jets assigned to fight attacking bombers were sent aloft. FROM THE statement the Pentagon released, it appeared the NORAD commanders always were aware it was only a test. However, Tass reported, "Only after six minutes had passed, did the NORAD commanders become aware that a mistake had occurred and that there was no attack." Defense officials said the false alarm did not appear to have resulted from any human error. A Pentagon spokesman told a reporter there have been other false alarms that have not been announced, but that Friday's in- cident was publicized to make clear it had nothing to do with the crisis in Iran. The Soviet news media have reported previously that U.S. servicemen with access to sophisticated weapons were found to be drunk or using drugs. The Tass report on the missile incident basically followed the version of events issued in Washington, with no in- dication of whether the alert was spot- ted by the Soviet military. The University of Michigan Professional Theatre Program presents; John Houseman's THE ACTING COMPANY in The University of Michigan Men's Glee Club LEONARD JOHNSON, Director Wayne State University Men's Glee Club HARRY LANGSFORD, Director IN CONCERT NOVEMBER 17, 1979-8:00 p.m. HILL AUDITORIUM Tickets: $4, $, or $2 (student 11) MAIL ORDERS SEND CHECK TO: Ticket Manager, The University of Michigan Men's Glee Club 1024 Administration Building, Ann Arbor, Mi 48109 Hill box office open November 12, 9-5 *dP4 ' " t 'rL and PHILIP DUNNING GERALD GUTIERREZ BROAD - I