Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January Z$, 1975 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY 5urday, January 2~, 'T975 r .r ww s Join Hillel's Grad-Group on a Post-Winter SOLSTICE WEEKEND Fri. Evening-Sun. morning at Camp Tamarack $12.50/person, All Inclusive Call 663-3336 for a reservation{ GRAD BRUNCH Sunday, Jan. at HILLEL, 1429 Hill 26-11:00 St. w MNRPMOONIwg GOP plans TV spots (Continued from Page 1) PLESSER said the surveys positioned the Democrats as having more leaders, morel bench. "There was no mention that the Republicans were on the move to make the party more attractive-it is complacent and satisfied as a minority group," said Plesser referring to his research. Bob Teeter of Market Opin- ion Research said interviews with a cross section of 2,000 persons brought out more sur- prises for the GOP. "LAST FALL people voted against candidates because they were Republicans - they want- ed to vote against somebody instead of for somebody," Teet- er said his interviews showed. Teeter said the surveys showed only 18 per cent identi- fying themselves withathe Re- publican party, an all time low, while 42 per cent strongly identified with the Democratic party. "The Republican party is the minority in every region of the country," said Teeter. SOMETH I NG NEW IS COMING TO R~rIWB classroom instruction in electronic music themui studio Partial list of subjects covered during our 12-week course: " Sound properties and acoustical phenomena " Electronic generation and modification of sound " Theory and use of voltage-controlled equipment " Tape recorder characteristics and operation " Studio recording, splicing and mixing techniques 555 e. william 994-5404 CLASSES BEGIN THIS WEEK It Pays to Advertise in The Daily ALGIERS (Reuter) - The world's main oil exporting countries want a conference on world energy problems with the consumer countries as soon as possible, Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani said yesterday. Sheikh Yamani told reporters the preference was for a meet- ing on the lines proposed last October by President Valery Giscard D'Estaing of France. ASKED when such a con- ference would take place, Sheikh Yamani said: "The sooner the better." He added that preparations for the meet- ing might well begin in March. The Saudi oil minister was speaking after ministers of the Organization of Petroleum Ex- porting Countries had agreed to hold a summit conference to prepare a joint approachto consultations with their cus-; tomners. Delegates said the summit would almost certainly be held in Algiers, and probably at the end of February. Algerian President Houari Boumedienne. has already invited the heads of state to meet in his capital. IF WE DIMMED 10 PER CENT NEW YORK (A) - A re-; cent article for "Lighting De- sign and Application," the jour- nal of the Society of Illuminat- ing Engineers, estimated that if all America were equipped with dimmers, and dimmed down only 10 per cent, it would save 100 million barrels of oil per year. Oil exporters seek summit with major energy consumers SHEIKH Yamani said the topics for the conference with the oil consuming countries would include energy problems, raw material and food supplies, as well as recycling. This means ensuring that surplus oil revenues are invest- ed in .ways that keep the world economy moving. Asked whether the OPEC ministers had considered the special problems of the develop- ing countries, Sheikh Yamani said: "Of course - we are part of them." President Giscard D'Estaing's proposal for establishing a dia- logue between oil consumers and producers won approval in principle from the United States when the French leader met President Ford in Martinque last December. POLICE BAFFLED 'Slasher' strikes again, claims seventh victim LOS ANGELES P) -- Police fear that a man found with his throat slit in a cheap down- town hotel yesterday was the seventh victim of the "Skid Row Slasher." Police called in their "slash- er squad" of robbery - homi- cide detectives, a group form- ed to solve the puzzling rash of murders. THE LATEST victim, describ- ed as a male Latin between 40 and 50 years old, was found in his fifth-floor room at the aging Barclay Hotel on the western fringe of downtown Los Angeles, police said. The few persons who knew him said he was a transient and a wino, last seen alive in the hotel's lobby Friday night. He was not identified by name. Sci-fi convention attracts 300 fans (Continued from Page 1) were at the party in the con- vention suite where they spent hours debating with guest auth- ors and other fans. "It's so rare to run into people of your ilk," enthused one fan. Ro Nagey, "chairgod" of the festivities, pointed out that sci- ence fiction is a one-generation field and many of the earliest authors are still alive. "IT'S LIKE being able to in- terview William Shakespeare," he said. An impromptu masquerade followed a banquet on Saturday. Wandering minstrels sang songs of the Dorsai, a band of mer- cenary warriors created by auth- or Gordon Dickson, one of the convention's guests. The collectors are a special kind of fan. One well-known sci- fi dealer from Dearborn is among the top ten collectors in the U.S. and has stacked his garage with ten to twenty thou- sand books. Another fan, the president of Waldo and Magic, said that though he owns nearly 2000 paperbacks he won't :on- sider himself a collector until he can obtain autographed, hard cover, first editions. Fans, however, are not always the fanatics their label implies. Several grumbled about the choice of Australia for the next world convention. POLICE believe the murders lict types. of seven men since Dec. 1 may "WE'VE CHECKED. every all be the "Skid Row Slasher," midnight mission every wino, or "head chopper" as he is every drifter in the downtown vividly but inaccurately called by te don-an-outrsarea we could find," police in- by the down-and-outers. formation officer Dan Cooke Police call it a difficult mur- explained earlier. der case despite the fact all the murders occurred within a THE MAJOR clue has been mile of each other in a "Skid simply that the victims had Row" area not far from Civic their throats cut, many ear-to- Center -- which includes the ear. Once a knife was left be- gleaming, high-rise police head- hind - but it apparently prov- quarters. ed to be no help to detectives. The problem, detectives say, The sixth victim was found is that the identities of the mur- cut ear-to-ear in a faded down- der victims are almost as hard town apartment house Jan. 15. to figure out as the villain. The He was tentatively identified as victims all have lived alone and Robert Shannahan, a truck tended to be drifters or dere- driver. Bubble gum house: ,Aunique present (Continued from Page 1) styrofoam smoke. The finishing penchant for blowing bubbles. touch has to be the garden fea- THE UNIQUE gift was the turing multi-colored flora made brainchild of Cindy Frankle, an of gumballs. East Quaddie sophomore, who "Sure, it was kinda fun to quickly disavows any connec- make," Cindy says. "But I tion with the architecture don't think I'll try anything school. else. The construction firm She spent five dollars and closed after this one." most of last Wednesday night In all, the final inventory for building the eight-by-ten inch the job reads like a little kid's bubble gum bungalow. And confectionary dream: with some pride, Cindy plans -184 pieces of Bazooka bub- to give it to a friend, who she ble gum. Some of which Cindy expects will devour it within admits she chomped on while hours.I working on the poet Although constructed mostly kg t project; of the ever-popular Bazooka, -3 packs of Trident chewing the house's window frames and gum: and door are fashioned from Tri- --the one lifesaver. dent gum. And a single scarlet CINDY'S happy with the ef- lifesaver serves as welcoming fort. beacon to any traveler coming "Everybody who has seen it up the path. says it's pretty cute," she PERCHED ON the tin foil smiles. "And I think my friend roof is a chimney pouring out will like it." DAILY O FICIAL BULL.ET'IN Sunday, January 26 Shontz "Social Architecture-Sift- Day Calendar ing Through the Rubble," spon- WUOM: Dimensions of Religious sored by Grad. Sch. Bus. Ad., 9:50 Experience: Marcello, Truzzi, EMU, am. "Beyond Death-witchcraft & The University values: John Ellis, African Spirit World," 1 pm. "Professional Roles with Respect to TV Ctr.: washington D.C., The the Ethical Development of Stu- Summer of '74, WWJ, Channel 4, dents." E. Conf. Rm., Rackham, noon. noon-2 pm. L M.Snnra- 'smil ranobsin emmmmmmmm I SPAGHETTI 99$ c~tMONDAYcAND l UESDAYcfNIGHTS a Jacobson's Open Thursday and Friday Evenings Until 9:00 P.M. Saturday Until 5:30 P.M. A R bridal fa~hion3 t197 Im- i '., .. ..- 'B cue y., lb ' THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXV, No. 97 Sunday, January 26, 1975 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 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) : s12 non-local mail (other states and foreign ). Sunmer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.00 local mail t Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- local mail (other states and foreign). ATTENTION A ALL MS.! FREE PINBALL at. The Cross Eyed Moose* 613 E. LIBERTY Tomorrow (Mon.) 4-5 p.m. .i . pA% . .0 * S: anmny recreat on, State, Hoover, 1:30-5:30 pm. Planetarium: Audience - request-' ed topics, Exhibit Museum, 2, 3 pm. Music School: Margaret wu, pi- ano, Recital Hall, 4:30 pm; Faculty Chamber Concert, Rackham Aud., 4 pm; Wm. Dederer, trumpet Doc-. toral, Recital Hall, 2:30 pm. Monday, January 27 WUOM: Sec. of Treasury, Simon," "Economic Policy," & Dr Patricia' Macromolecular R e s e a r c h Ctr.: Motowo Takayanagi, Kyushu U., Japan, "Molecular Motion and Deformation of Polymer Crystals," 1200 Chem., 4 pm. Geology, Mineralogy: N. I. Chris- tensen, U. of WA, Seattle, "Struc- ture and Composition of the Oce- anic Crust," 2501 CC Little, 4 pm. UAC Future Worlds: Al Lithman, "'Auroville', an Evolving Alatrnative' Future," Hill Aud., 8 pm. 1301 S.-University cAnn Arbor ISRAELI DANCING Sunday, Jan. 26 12:30 P.M. at HILLEL-1429 Hill (DOWNSTAIRS) 663-3336 I __ . _ _ _U. . , _ _. _ _ I won" If you're a woman, i about to read could Once a month, just once a month, while you're taking a shower, : before you dry or spray or powder or do any of those little things what you're save your li Jacobson's of Ann Arbor cordially invites you and your guest to attend the preview showing of "Bridal Fashions for 1975" Tuesday, the twenty-eighth of January at seven-thirty in the evening Jacobson's, Second Floor Maynard Street Entrance , R.s.v p. 769-7600 Linda Schmitt,Bridal Consultant ' rTmhFt nn' to pamper yourself,. . ; do something to take care of yourself: examine your breasts.' That's where you begin. It's a nothing examination, really. It isn't complicated, it doesn't hurt, and it only takes a few minutes.t If you don't know how, ask your doctor to show you. Or ask us, the American Cancer Society. , We've got a simple little leaflet that shows you. Consider all the years ahead of you. A few minutes out of your life once a month is very cheap insurance, don't you think? Don't be afraid", . It's what you don't know that can hurt you. Write or call your local Unit today. Please?' 4 fe'* S 4. Look Into (o-ops I FOR NEXT FALL WE ARE. . * member-owned * member-controlled s open & democratic * inexPensive 1 1 COME TO THE ICO-OP MASS MEETING SUNDAY, FEB. 9th-1:00 P.M. MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM Learn about student-owned housing on campus. All co-ops will hold open houses for all those interested in visiting them after the Mass Meeting. 14 Houses on Central Campusr i 9 Houses on North Campus Inter-Cooperative Counci I