_ _. ME THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February 15, 1974 BALINESE PUPPET THEATER Rackham Auditorium FRIDAY, Feb. 15-8:OO p.m. SADMISSION FREE Sponsored by Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies 0 Let the Marantz people test your stereo for free. Wondering about the condi- tion of your audio equipment? Just bring in your amplifier, preamplifier, or receiver - regardless of age, make or where you bought it. The Marantz people will take it from there. First, they will thoroughly test your equipment (except the tuner section of your re- ceiver) on $7,000 worth of pre- cision laboratory equipment. And they'll tell you if you're getting all the sound perfor- mance you paid for. In addition, the results will be plotted on a graph for your records. You'll also get an attractive brochure that ex- plains exactly what's been done and what it all means. There are no strings at- tached. And you don't have to buy anything. We're bringing the Marantz people to our store simply to get you to know us a little better. February 18-19, 1974 Call for an appointment Solzhenitsyn heads for LANGENBROICH, West Ger- many (Reuter) - Exiled Soviet writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn is to travel to the Swiss City of Zur- ich, today, his Swiss lawyer Fritz Heeb said here last night. In a brief statement to waiting reporters here, Heeb u r g e d, "Please respect Mr. Solzhenit- syn's need for peace and quiet." He refused to specify exactly when the Russian novelist would be leaving here or how he would travel. He also refused to ans- wer questions on the duration of his stay in Switzerland. SOLZHENITSYN, who is stay- ing in this small village west of Bonn as the guest of Heinrich Boell, like himself a Nobel Prize- winner, did not speak to report- ers last night. But earlier yesterday, a smil- ing Solzhenitsyn autographed copies of his latest book, "Gulag THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, Number 114 Friday, February 15, 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 daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam~- pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session publishe sTuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area)- $6.50 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-Ioa mail ,other states and foreign). Archipelago," on the first day of his exile in the West. He was surrounded by more than 50 reporters and onlookers as he stepped out of Boell's farmhouse where he has been staying since being flown to West Germany from Moscow Wednes- day. Meanwhile a group of Soviet dissidents including physicist Andrei Sakharov has signed a document demanding that Solz henitsyn be allowed to return to Russia, a spokesman for the Ital- ia magazine Panoroma said yes- terday. THE DOCUMENT, sent by Sak- harov from Moscow, reached the "magazine yesterday and will be published next week, he said. The signers declared that the exiled author's alleged betray- al consisted of "having revealed, with disturbing force, monstrous crimes committed in the Soviet Union in the recent past." They added that "tens of mil- lions of innocent people" in Rus- sia had fallen victims to terror adorned with the name of "social justice," the spokesman said. THE DISSIDENTS demanded that Solzhenitsyn "be given the possibility of working in his homeland" without persecution and that "Gulag Archipelago" be published in the Soviet Union. They also called for the estab- lishment of an international tri- bunal to investigate crimes by the Russian security services and the publication of official files, the spokesman said. Other signatories included phy- sicist Pavel Litvinov, engineer and author Anatoly Marchenko, Yuri Orlov, Yelena Bonner, Vladimir Maximov and Melik Agursky. THE DOCUMENT reached the Italian magazine through Maria Olsufyena, Sakharov's transla- Zurich tor, the spokesman said. In another development yes- terday, a television reporter re- vealed that according to Solzhen- itsyn Soviet .police told him after his arrest Tuesday that they were charging him with treason, an offense that carries a maximum penalty of death in the Soviet Union. Researchers isolate addiction-linkedcells STANFORD, Calif. (W) - The first isolation of the brain mole- cules involved in drug addic- tion was reported yesterday by a Stanford Medical Center re- search team working with mice. "Eventually this discovery could have enormous importance' in dealing with narcotics addic- tion," said Dr. Avram Gold- stein, the team chief. He said it also might allow de- velopment of a nonaddictive pain reliever. THE NEW isolated substance, extracted from mice brains, is called an opiate receptor. Re- ceptors are special molecules into which drugs fit, like keys in a lock, explained Goldstein, a Stanford pharmacology profes- sor. "To understand addiction and possibly develop new ways to deal with it, the first thing you have to do is to find the recep- tors involved," he said. The key for the Stanford-iso- lated opiate receptor' is mor-. phine, one of a chemical com- pound class derived from opiun and its relatives. THE HEROIN taken by an ad- dict is converted by thie body into morphine, and niorphine acts on nerve cells. "In our work we studied m o u s e brain fragments and learned how to isolate and par- tially purify a receptor molecule that combines with -a narcotic drug closely related to mor- phine," Goldstein said. "This receptor is a proteolipid, a protein molecule with fatty properties. It is found almost exclusively in nervous system tissue, as in the. brain or the spinal chord," he said. ASKED IF similar receptors exist in the human brain; Gold- stein said:; "Very similar molecules are al- most certainly involved in hu- man narcotic addiction'. Many of the effects of heroin and morphinetare almost identical in mice, rats and other mammals, including man."~ UNIVERSITY TOWERS, APTS. Offers More! We provide more than Our residents moved here other University because they enjoy the Approved Housing best of Campus Living WHERE WILL YOU BE NEXT SEMESTER? 536 S. FOREST AT S. UNIVERSITY THINK ABOUT IT! __ "LET US ENTERTAIN YOU..." ALSO SUNDAY MATINEE 2:00 P.M. Tickets on sale at Power Center Box Office Feb. 11-17 (763-3333) Information 763-1107 -on Campus (walk to everything) -Music Room -8 Month Lease -24-Hour Maintenance and Security -Air-Conditioned --Heated Pool -Study Lounge -Recreation Room --Weekly Housekeeping. Furnished Apt. Prices Ivo. . :i dY{ 4. r J ac 3 y ' i 43 - J .o ,rA4. u,, ' ' 311 E. Liberty Ann Arbor 761-4434 MUSKET '74 p._ __ "A multi-film 'and dance presentation utilizing tapes from the original production in quadro- phonic sound synchronized with 10 projectors." FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15 8:00 P.M. ST. MARY'S CHAPEL (corner of William and Thompson) SPONSORED BY THE JERUSALEM GROUP 663-0557 NOW RENTING FOR FALL OF '74 Efficiences, one, two, and three bedroom apartments For Information . . 761-2680 tonight Ken Kesey's novel of family and individuality Paul Newman Henry Fonda directed by PAUL NEWMAN in Ann Arbor SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION Lee Remick Michael Sorrozin in color and Panvision iy Feb. 15-16 Friday and Saturd -duplexed- Friday: Joseph Losey's Assassination of Trotsky Richard Burton Alain Delon Saturday: Arthur Penn's Bonnie & Clyde Faye Dunaway Warren Beatty Michael J. Pollard Arthur Penn's Bonnie and Clyde BOTH FILMS EACH NIGHT AT I