Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 22, 1974 PageII TwoTH MCHGA DIL Snd-,Setebe-2, 97 DICK GRIFFEY presents: THE 1974 STEVIE WONDER FALL TOUR STEVIE WONDER WITH Wonderlove PLUS The Commodores FRI., SEPT., 27-8:30 P.M. at OLYMPIA STADIUM TICKETS: $7.50, 6.00, Tickets At -Olympia, Grinnell's & Hudson's MC . . Honored at Olympia "+M A RIN ER 10, 'Hurricane Fifi MRNR1 k tSpace shot working Cklls thousands (continued fromPage 1) Earth and Earth's moon, may Alumni declare'U' y f inest in the world' (Continued from Page 1) where U. S. companies of Unit- ed Brands and Standard Fruit have major holdings. U. S. AMBASSADOR Phillip Sanchez flew over the stricken area for six hours yesterday and reported all large agricul- tural valleys under water and "crops 90 to 100 per cent ruined." He said he saw bodies floating in flood waters and sur- vivors clinging to trees andI homes surrounded by water. "I don't doubt that the death toll estimated by the govern- ment - originally thought' to be excessively high - will now go even higher," Sanchez said. fIF THE FIGURES are con- firmed, Fifi would rank as the third or fourth most devastat- ing hurricane in modern his- tory. A cyclone in 1969 killed 300,000 persons in East Paki- stan, a hurricane in the West Indies killed 22,000 persons in 1780 and Hurricane Flora kill- ed 7,800 persons in Haiti in 1963. In Miami, Anthonio Valla- dares, Honduran consul-general, pleaded for assistance and saidl the death toll may even reach as high at 10,000. "We need help so desperate- ly. Please. We need everything - food, medical supplies, ev- erything," he said. "Every hour that passes they findmore people dead and more people reported missing . . . the de- struction is terrible. It is im- possible to figure how many millions and millions of dollars we have lost."I space explorer was to zoom past Mercury's southern hemisphere at a distance of 29,814 miles and complete its rapid-succession series of black and white pho- tos. A member of the JPL scien- tific television team, Donald Gault, said he hoped to see some of the "weird terrain" and large, smooth basins that were evident in pictures taken during the first Mariner 10 visit to Mercury last March. Scientists expected the best photos to be taken within a four-hour period, which they called "prime time," while the space craft zoomed by the south polar region. The Mariner photos were beamed 105 million miles to Earth where they were received by a set of huge radar anten- naes in the California desert. They were then transmitted to scientists at the Mariner con- trol center in Pasadena. The study of Mercury's make- up in relation to Mars, Venus, help provide details of the evo- lution of the planets closest to ~the sun.: A series of 84 pictures taken by Mariner's twin cameras Fri- day showed mainly the same desolate, meteorite-pocked sur- face which the spacecraft photo- graphed March 29. Not until yesterday's encounter was pre- viously unseen territory to come into the cameras' view. (Continued from Page 1) It used to be calm and beau- tiful." STUDENT HOSTESS Bev Lo- der describes the group as "really sweet, great people." She adds, "Everytime they walk' by a classroom, they go crazy. They're really interested in good education." , Rhodes was clearly the fa- vored speaker of the weekead. According to Huebner, "the audience hung on every word Rhodes said. They were very interested in innovative pro- grams like Inteflex (six year .medical program)." According to Overseth, the University is highly dependent on private contributions fromn the Jib. Although some money is earmarked for particular rposes, most is funneled into a general fund. Several rniem-' bers have buildings named after them in honor of their contribu- tions, notably the Power Center which was built largely with money from the Power family. HOWEVER, a lu m n u s Jim Waterman had no hand in -the building of Waterman Gym, al- though friends this weekend enjoyed calling him "Waterman Jim." Overseth points out that "the radical 60's turned very few alumni away, and almost all came back. They're very faith- ful. " 5920 OLYMPIA STADIUM Grand River (313) 895-7000 Detroit 48202 ii I i i ; * Mercury, a scant 3,000 miles in diameter, is the innermost planet of the solar system. It is in scorching proximity to the sun and temperatures range from about 650 degree farenheit on the lighted side to 300 de- grees below zero on the dark side. Although Mariner's nearest pass was at such a distance that planets Mercury's size could fit between the spacecraft and the surface, the powerful cameras were able to pick out features as small as a half-mile across. The space probe flew within 430 miles of Mercury on its first fly-by. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN a:; vd't},d .,rtrr4:4;t m .?.w t,.K v++C ;y g y , .,Cv" "tv. . ,4 ; yr}+ +p IA Day Calendar TV Ctr.: Country of Old Men: A Sunday, September 22 Weary Pilgrimage, WWJ TV, Chan- nel 4, noon. Residential College: Ars Musica, Mozart selections, Res. College Aud., Monday, September 23 wUOM: Live coverage; Senate Rules Committee hearings on con- firmation of Nelson Rockefeller as MICHIFISH U OF M SYNCHRONIZED SWIM CLUB Invites all prospective members to prac- tice on September 23 at 6-7 p.m., and 25 at 7-9 p.m., at Barbara Bell Pool. KOH ER DELI-6 p.m. SANDWICHES-DRINKS at HILLEL-1429 Hill St. SUNDAY, Sept. 22, 1974' COST, ONLY $1.25 V-P, 10 a.m. Physics A, Astronomy: High En- ergy Seminar, G. Takhtamyshev Dubna, "Some Data on Low t p-d Inelastic Scattering (Fermilab Gas Jet Experiment No. 186)," F&A Colloq. Rm., 4:15 p.m. Music School: Carillon recital, Hudson Ladd, Christopher Marzonie, Burton Tower, 7-8 p.m. U-M Dearborn: "Great Songs of the Gershwin Years," Wm. Bolcom, pianist, Joan Morris, vocalist, Fair Mane Ctr., 8 p.m. General Notices Germanic Lang. & Lit.: Make-up final exams for German 100, 101, 102, 111, 112, 221, 222, 230, 231, 232, & 236 will be given,Tuesday, Sept, 24, 1974, from 7-9 p.m. in these rooms: Ger- man 101, B108 MLB; German 102, B115 MLB; all others, B1224 MLB. Students who wish to take the make-up final must get permission from their former German teacher, or course director, no later than Monday Sept. 23, 1974. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXV, No. 16 Sunday, September 22, 1974 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d a i y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area) $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and fregn). Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday' morning. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.00 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- local mail (other states and foreign). John D. Rockefeller, Theodore Roosevelt, Steven Vincent Benet, Frederick March, Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Russell Lowell, Charles Percy, and Franklin D. Roosevelt has something in common besides being men of achievement. I. wr HAI TO THE VICTORS! Now for the first time an in- depth look at the black athlete in b i -time intercollegiate sports. The super performers at one university-=the University of Michigantell in, their own words what it was like to be a star-and black-in the days before Civil Rights legislation. I I I They belonged to ALPHA DELTA PHI Shouldn't You? OPEN HOUSE 556 S. State St. (near the Union) 161.8282 Friday, Sept. 20- Sunday, Sept.-29 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. I a U E F of