Thu rsdaV, September 27; 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Skylab 2 astronauts in very good spirits' ABOARD USS NEW ORLEANS (A2 - The Skylab 2 astro- nauts, back on earth after.a 59%~-day space mission, were "much improved and all in very good spirits;" space doctors said yesterday. Astronauts Alan Bean, Jack Lousma and Owen Garriott spent their first morning back on earth in more than two months sleeping late in their quarters aboard this prime recovery ship. They awoke about 10 a.m. EDT, just as the New Orleans was entering port at San Diego, Calif. AFTER THE SHIP tied up at a dock here, the spacemen UAC-DAYSTAR presents stephen sills with minanassas BROWSING THROUGH some of the hand-sewn clothing at "Hand Made Things," is Beth Przybylski, one of the volunteer employees at this non-profit store which specializes ii1 selling goods produced by local handicraft buffs. The goods include everything from dresses to pottery. FROM TOYS TO JEWELRY: Camus-ar ea store offTers hand-crafted merchandise By PAUL TERWILLIGER For a long time, people have complained of impersonality and sterility in the huge modern shop- ping centers. In these stores, the emphasis is on quantity, lower prices and efficiency. Two young, women in the city, however, have a store' with a different emphasis - warmth, homeyness and hand-made as op- posed to mass-produced mer- chandise. c Jane Harris and Carolyne Schoth, from Chicago and Dear.- born respectively,, are the pro- prietors of a small store called "Hand Made Things" located at 343 Maynard (in the alley). They sell a wide variety of hand-made items ranging from clothing to jewelry, pottery and children's toys. Actually, "Hand Made Things" is not a store in the traditional sense of thie word. It is a place where people bring things to sell as well. The store operates on a con- signment system, which means the people who make the items set a price, with the store get- ting a one-third cut on all items sold. SThe store's cut is used entirely to cover overhead expenses, and neither the owners nor the em- ployes receive any wages, ac- cording to Harris and Schoth. Instead, people who work at the store are given the privilege of selling their wares without sur- rendering, the usual percentage. "There are about 18 peoplei helping at the store right now," Harris said. "Thpy come to sell their things and are attracted by the atmosphere. Soon they are involved in running the place. The idea of a store for the peo- ple, by the people appeals to a lot of people." A few people, according to Har- ris, actually support themselves .entirely through selling their wares. But most, Harris and Schoth added, also work at out- side jobs. The major gal of the store is to provide a place where peo- ple can sell their own things. "Many stores will. buy hand- made articles," Harris says, "but they usually cheat both the buyer and the maker because they mark up the prices so much." Because there is a very low overhead and no middle-man to take a cut, Harris feels "Hand Made Things" is able to offer prices comparable to those charged by other stores for items of the. same quality. "Most people think that just because something is hand-made, it is necessarily going to be more expensive, but we don't think this has to be true," she says. Prices in "Hand Made Things", range from as high as $60 to as little as 25 cents. Dresses and gowns range from $9 to over $30, shirts go from $9 to $15 and cer- amics are priced from $1.50 to $10.00. Harris and Schoth have been in business since last fall and the store has grown steadily. Harris says that about 200 people cur- rently sel things at the store. Most are from the city, but some are from as far away as New York. By January, Harris hopes to reorganize ''Hand Made Things" as some kind of co-operative where people can sell items es- sentially free of charge. started a six-hour medical exami- nation, their second since they splashed down in the Pacific Ocean on Tuesday. Dr. Carter Alexander, a space doctor, said they were already shwing signsrtof readapting to the He said they awoke very hunigry, but breakfast had to wait until doctors could draw blood samples. AFTERWARD, the astronuts ate and began the long series of med- ical tests. Despite history's longest expos- ure to the deconditioning effects of space weightlessness, the astro- nauts made a remarkable showing in medical tests Tuesday, doctors said. "We're impressed," said Dr. agnc ysiians"on board here. He said their excellent condi- WEIGHTLESSNESS has the ef- fect of permnitting muscles to de- condition or weaken. Since the mus- cles don't have to work against the constant tug of gravity, they waste away. Intensive exercise by the astro- nauts during their marathon mis- sionn apparently halted the pro- gressive deconditioning, Buchanan said, adding, "The personal exer- cise was the saver." ABOUT THREE HOURS after splashdown, however, he said,' Bean and Lousma reported that the heaviness feeling began to disap- pear. Doctors, anxious that the astro- nauts not be exposed to germs or to- unnecessary exercise, kept the spacemen isolated- They were not permitted to walk the decks or wander the passage- Iways of the ship, but went direct- ly from their quarters to the med- sical laboratory for the tests. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 18 Thursday, september 27, 1973 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 aily Tuesdaynthrosugh seua y mornng nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- psarea); $11 local mail e (chgantatd Ohio) $12non-lcal ail (therstae UNITED NATIONS UP) - Sec- retary of State Henry Kissinger focused his diplomacy on U. S.- wieBritisheand West Germa leaders cealflefor ftreermove- tween East and West. Winding up a three-day visit to had a luchN dte nwith Foreign Minister Michel Jobert of France KISSINGER already has reach- ed agreement with the nine Eu- ropean Common Market nations& to begin formulation of new dec- I arations on economic and politi- cal cooperation. A session to start in on them will be held within a week in Ne- wark or Washington with Walter Stoessel, the assistant secretary of state for European affairs, rep resenting the United States. France has been the most skeptical of the allies about Kis- singer's proposed new Atlantic relationship. The luncheon talk with Jobert sought to niarrow their differences. BRANDT is a central figure in the search for a consensus. Kissinger also devoted some at- tention to other areas of the world. He discussed Indochina with Deputy Foreign Minister Choonhavan- Chatchai of Thai- land, Latin America with For- eign Minister Mario Gibson Bar- boza of Brazil, and squeezed into a busy schedule a midday meet- ing with Ambassador Huang Hua, China's permanent UJ. N. repre- Isentative. This Fri. Night-Sept. 28 Crisler Arena, 8 pm $4.00 advance: Michigan Union 11-5:30 daily 763-4553 infO. ALSO: South U. Discount Records, World Hdqtrs. Records, no personal checks. $5.00 at the door. Also on sale now: ROBERTA FLACK 2top Peronst leades ki11 ed within 24 hours L EGA L A BOR TIONS - $135 National Abortion Center BUENOS AIRES (Reuter) - A leader of the Peronist Youth Movement was shot dead here yesterday 24 hours after the as- sassination of Argentina's top Peronist labor leader. Police sources said Enrique Gri b e wa kill d by four me apartmient. THE KILLING occurred as the funeral procession of Jose Rucci got under way from the head- qutarters of the General Labor Confederation (C.G.T.), where his bullet-riddled body had lain in state since las ngt Ltarge crowds gathered for the funeral procession despite a to- tal lack of public transport ser-. vices caused by a nation-wide general strike to protest against Rucci s murder.odmigte murder were issued today by la- bor unions, political groups and professional associations across SOME BLAMED it on "reac- tionaries at. the service of im- perialism" and other expressed fears that it would set off a vio- lent chaini reaction endangering the "process of national unity un- Only one incident has been re- slightly woundd in e pcentral city of Cordoba last night when demonstrators protesting against Rucci's slaying -were fired on. Gen. Juan Peron, who next month begins his third term as president of Argentina following a landslide election victory on Sunday, called today at the CGT headquarters to present his con- STARTS TOMORROW. 7, 8'20, 9 :40 MORE SPICE ...fromihe makers of "Fritz The Cat" -She is not sure exactly what and foreign). ' 19009 W. 7 Mile Rd. form ,the co-op will take, but Summer session published Tuesday Detroit 255-3985 dolences to Rucci's family. says its primary goal will be to ton urates: $5.50 by cearrier s(camu clinics in' RUCCI, run. was shot down have profits going to the hand- area): $6.50 local mail (Michigan and Tuesday apparently by an ex- made goods makers, not "some Ohio); '$7.00 non-local mail (other Midwestern cities tremist faction of the Marxist rip -off organization." saes and foreign). Licensed Qualified Physicians People's Revolutionary Army - - - ----- - ( E.R.P.).' He had been C.G.T. Secretary - General since 1970 He inlte bik bringing THE FELLINI FESTIVAL Peron back to Argentina ,after 18 years of exile and in paving the way for his election on Sunday.T E H E S E K Shortly after his assassination at a street crossing in a western This 1952 farce was the first film district of the capital, anonymous Fliidrce nhson on callers told police and a local ra-Felndictdo hsow Ayug dio station that the E.R.P. had couple honeymoons in Rome - the "executed'" Rucci. husband -plans to see the Pope arnd . THE SLAYING came less than the wife wants to meet comic strip . . 24 hours after the government hero "The White Sheik." Neither gets of interim President Raul Las- what they expect. tini had outlawed the E.R.P. The most militant of the urban guer-. Short: Vigo's A PROPOS DE NICE C. rilla groups and the only one still . .. active since the Peronists took over in May. Fri: Fellin Festival: I VITELLONI E.R.P reprial for the govern edt ea Police Chief General Architecture Aud. Miuel Iniuz told newsmen he C M DTonight at hadben tldby an anonymous7 d9 5AD .$ caller that an "August 22" fac- 7and 9:0AD $ tion of the E.R.P. had assassin- ated Rucci._________________________________________________ 1* NEW WORLD FILM COOP-presents MAAR hILNAMONROEL~L in K EN K ESE Y'S 4 * 4' * loM~lY ORE newl relasse docmentry ' *bu aiy' ieadtms Aneaiain*ftemn phss*deet htldt he*niel eie