The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 13, 1977-Page 3 C, . YU SEE LE&IS Wn EXCAU.1ZDN~ Fetus found in body For those of you who say you've heard everything, try this one on for size. A lifeless fetus was removed from the abdomen of an 11- month old boy, India's news agency reported. Dr. Viswanatha Rao, a pediatric surgeon, removed the fetus in a three-hour operation Satur- day at the King George government hospital in south India. "It is a freak ,phenomenon," the good doctor said. Rao added the fetus ap- peared to have developed to the fourth-month stage. When the youth was first admitted to the hospital, Rao was expected to remove a nor- mial tumor. The child is in good condition. Join in the ranks You have nothing to do Monday night, right? It's too early to be behind in your homewrok, midterms are weeks avay, and happy hour is over at 6. To fill that void we have scheduled a meeting for everyone interested in joining the Daily. We'll sharpen your pencils as well as your prose if you promise to meet us at 420 Maynard at 7:30 p.m. Mon- day. Happenings . . begin with a lecture by American Studies Chairman Marvin Felheim entitled "Films in the U.S." It will be held at the Inter- national Center at 603 E. Madison, and is the first of the weekly Tuesday Luncheon lectures. Lunch is =l, but you can bring your own.. next. join LSA Dean Billy Frye for tea at 4 p.m. in Room 3050 of the Frieze Building. Frys invites all students who want to talk or just feast on the donuts and tea to drop by to the first of his monthly teas. ... the L5 Society is meeting tonight at 7 p.m. in room 4202 of the Union to talk about solar energy and space habitation: Sounds spacey ... at 7:30 the Michigan Student Assembly will convene on the third floor of the Union.:. at 8:30 p.m. Rueven Gold will be telling Chassidic tales at East Quad. Ops! We reported in Thursday's paper that Seva's serves good beef barley soup. That is not true.-No, we are not going to tell you Seva's beef barley soup is bad, it is merely nonexistant. It is a vegetarian' rc tnt w ith n+aa to ^C-+,,:,.fo..,.a_ Dorm life gaining in studenit popularity Cambridge, Mass. (AP)-The day appears to be passifg in some places when college students shunned the life of the "Dorm-rat" for the independence and adventure of off-campus apar- tments and houses. Educators say more and more students are returning to campus housing because it is cheaper, safe, chummier-and because there's no longer as much of a stigma attached to them. THE BOSTON metropolitan area, with a total population of about 2.7 million, is packed with a dozen colleges and more than 10,000 students. Educators here feel a local trend reflec- ts national attitudes. And they see the local trend as the end of a rebellion. "They are no longer rebellingagain- st the idea of living on campus," says Michael Behnke, dean of admissions at Tufts University, one of several major institutions, including the University of Michigan, suddenly without enough space to meet the demand for accom- modation. "Over the past five to ten years, students said, 'I want to go off on my own. I dont want to be part of that group.' That's over. Students really seem to want to be part of campus life. ' To house an overflow of 350 students, Tufts has rented two floors in a Cam- bridge chain hotel two miled from its Medford campus and across the street from Harvard University. Boston .AP. Photo JUST LIKE AT South Quad, right? Wrong. This easy living is compliments of Boston College which is putting up some of its students in a local hotel because there isn't enough room in the college's dorms. Student Kathleen Kelly enjoys a brew and the maid service of Kathy Kelly in one of the hotel rooms. College temporarily is housing 94 freshmen in 47 double rooms with color television in a skyscraper motor inn three miles from its Boston campus. THE HOTELDordinarily charge $33 to $36 niightly for the rooms, but neither' school wants to discuss precise costs. However, Tufts figures housing its campus overflow will cost $200,000 a year until new residential buildings are completed. )Boston University, with 600 or more to house this year than last, bought an 82-unit apartment hotel in midtown Boston. YThe school is rentin 25 apar- tments in another private building to upper classmen. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with about 80 more fresh- men than expected in a class of 1,080, has for the first time opened a transient dormitory, Random Hall, to freshmen. EARILY FILMS,4 '3 A collection of vintage classics of early cinema by ' a variety of artists including GRIFFITH, LUMIERF 49 * and EDISON. Tonight at Old Architecture Aud. CINEMA GUILD 7:00 & 9:05 FREE SHOWING 3 U$$* restaurant wiL not a spot ofD eetin ted in that issue of the Daily that the the Natural History Museum charg the Planetarium is on the fourth flo enter. On the outside . Good day. This is God speaking. It w rain tiday. There will be a high of 76 information. the joint. Secondly, we also repor- . * Planetarium on the third floor of l arty 'Harry es a 25 cent admission. However, or, and it will costiou 50 cents to game ends in . boy's death ill be mostly cloudy today. It may COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - 'today. Dial 76A-BOVE for further Just like he saw the star of "Dirty Harry" do the night be- fore on television, a 14-year-old Columbus boy faced off against a his 11-year-ofd brother and kill- ed him with the pull of a trig- ger police said. omicide Detective Lester Maynard said Micros Thomp- son was using a toy pistol, but his older brother, Delphus, got his father's .22-caliber derringer Sunday to reinact a scehe rom the movie. THE OLDER BOY playing the role of the star, Clint East- wood, who had a .44-caliber Magnum; aimed the two-shot derringer the detective said. y "He catted for his brother to 'go for it' the toy gun," May nara sai. A single shot struck .AP Photo Micros in the chest near the er name is Susan Perkins. heart. . See Miss America smile. "Del phus said they had wat nt her pretty new crown. ched 'Dirty Harry' on television The Daily again. . Saturday night," said Maynard, who interroga ted the sobbing, stuttering youth. ****************** ajor Events Office USHERS' Mass Meeting 4 VETERAN USHERS: TUES. SEPT.'13-5 P.M. NEW USHERS: THURS. SEPT. 15-5 Pt.M. * Ushers who have ushered in past for Major Events come to veteran usher meeting; all others come to new usher meeting. MEETING IN PENDLETON ROOM-2nd floor Michigan Union. Students, please bring student I.D. STEVE'S LUNCH 1313 SO. UNIVERSITY HOME COOKING IS OUR SPECIALTY Breakfast All Day 3Eaas, Hash Browns. Toast & Jelly-$1.35 Ham or Bacon or Sausage with 3 Eaqs,IHash Browns, Toast & Jelly--$1.95 3 Eqgs, Ribe Eye Steak, Hash Browns, Toast & Jelly-$2.25 We make Three Eqq Omlets -Western Omlet -Bean Sprout Omlet 0 Hk EVERYDAY SPECIALS Beef Stroganoff Chinese Pepper Steak Eag Rolls' Home-made Soups. Beef, Barley. Clam Chowder, etc. Home-made Chit; Vegetable Tempuro (served after 2 o.m.) Hamburger Steak Dinner- Spaqhetti in Wine Sauce Beef Curry Rice Baked Flounder Dinner Delicious Korean Bar-b-a Beef (Bul-ko-gee) on Kaiser Roll Fried Fresh Bean Sprouts Kim-Chee Mondav-Friday 8-8 Saturday 9-8 Sunday 10-8 769-2288 1313 So. -University WE CAN INCREASE YOUR LSAT SCORE I. Call or Write: 2200 Fuller Rd., Suite 912B Ann Arbor, MI 48105 313-995-4014 I I -00-mi _ ___ _ . SEE MISS AMERICA. H4 She is from Columbus, Ohio See her wave. See her flau You may never see her in' THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVIIINo.-5 Tuesday, September 13, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Pub- lished' daily Tuesday through Sunday morning dur- ing the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day morning. Subscription rates; $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. The surface of Lake Superior is 602 feet above sea level. It is the highest of the Great Lakes as well as the largest.The smallest and lowest is Lake Ontario, with a surface 246 feet above sea level. Introducing the Hand-Me-Up Calculators. Even after you graduate, Sharp Scientifics still help you make the grade. t Choose the Sharp Scientific Calcu- lator that's tailor-made for your college or professional studies. And that very same Sharp will prove invaluable long after you graduate. The reason? Sharp builds calculators so soph- isticated, you never outgrow them. And the longer you use your Sharp, the more you'll appreciate Sharp's world-famous quality. What's more, every Sharp is priced with your budget in mind. In every way, it pays to get Sharp. The Hand-Me-Up Calculators. FREE SLICE OF PIZZA* FOR EVERYONE ON TUES. SEPT. 13, 1977 11 A.M.-7 P.M. AT la &dp a% rMQw I 15 scientific functions, including log/trig. Memory. 8-digit scien- tific notation. Batteries included. 19 scientific functions: trig, logs, Elegantly thin. With leather-, y to the x power, eX and V0t grained wallet and memo pad. 21 Factorial key, square root, cube scientific functions, plus statisti- root, and pi. Batteries included. cal functions. Batteries included. - , $.0*. . In__ -_ L_,1...,1