The Michigan Daily-Wednesday; September 28, 1977-Page 3 Ir U SEE NVM HAEN CALLZDAJNt An offer you can't refuse You saw the movie. You read the quickie book.You bought the lurid psters. Yes, you even bought the lunch-box. Now, we're telling you in advance so you can run, not walk, but run to Michigan Stadium this Saturday to hear the Michigan Marching Band mangle the soundtrack of, you guessed it, Star Wars. Yes, for a limited time only, namely halftime; you can re-live all of the most memorable moments of the movie via the musical magic of the over-200-member band. The per- formance comes complete with a ballet dancer, who will be featured as the band plays the 'Princess Leia' music, as well as a gaggle of R2- D2s that will zip around throughout the show. Act now, and get a free pair of earmuffs. Enjoy, enjoy. e ... ick off at the civilized hour of noon today with the first meeting of the year of the Women's Commission in room 2549 of the LSA building, everyone is welcome.. . then you've got time for a leisurely lunch and perhaps a-siesta before trotting over to Prez Fleming's house at 4 to munch cookies and sip tea at his student reception . also at 4 for the more cerebral is a lecture entitled "Do Pigs Eat Like People? Electromyography of Mastication in Pigs" given by Prof. Susan Herring of the University of Illinois in room 3056 of the Natural Science building (only at the Big 'U', folks) ... at 6, share supper with other grad students at the Wesley Foundation on the corner of State and Huron Sts. . .. teachers, counselors, nurses and other professionals whose work deals with sexual concerns can attend a workshop on "Sexuality Education and Counseling for Professionals" from 6:30 to 10 in the School of Education ... the Ann Arbor Liber- tarian League will presnt a tape lecture by Henry Hazlitt on "The World Monetary Crisis" at 7 in room C of the .Michigan League. . . at 7:30, the MSA Housing Reform Project and the Ann Ar- bor Tenants Union will present the film "It Just Ain't Right: Housing in Ann Arbor" in the Blue Carpet Lounge of Alice Lloyd Hall ... also at 7:30, a meeting at the International Center concerning traineeships abroad in the natural and physical sciences, economics, architeture, management and engineering... the Anthropospphical Student Association will sponsor a lecture by Werner Glas of the Waldorf In- stitute at Mercy College on "The Development of Consciousness in History and the Individual" at 8 in the Greene Lounge in East Quad ... and finally, at 8, the American Trio, consisting of a pianist, a violinist and a cellist, will perform a free concert in Rackham Auditorium. Yankeeisms go home In Italy, words like "leader," "weekend," "chance," and "best- seller" have become part of everyday speech. In Germany, teen-agers wear "die jeans-hose," "der t-shirt," "die clogs," and listen to "die hits" presented by "der disc-jockey." But as words like "officer '"hobby," "service," and "outsider"' begin creeping into the Russian language, purists and protectors of the mother tongue and having good old-fashioned fits. The latest to defend the language of Pushkin, Tolstoy and Lenin from foreign corruption like "offis," "khobby," "sarvis," and "autsaider" is the Soviet Communist Youth League newspaper. Vladirmir Vasiliev, chief of the paper's arts department, said: "I am against the mindless borrowing of foreign words, many of which not only do not spiritually enrich us, but soil our native speech, depriving it of purity and internal strength." We can dig it. On the outside... Looks like we're in for another typically wishy-washy Ann Arbor day. We'll have a little sun, a few tame clouds-in short, nothing to write home about. Temperatures will be on the cool side with a high of 66 and a low of 48. A final note for those far-minded folks who are already planning their weekends: Break out the ponchos, people. Mexicai SAN JOSE DEL LLANO, Mexico (AP) - Helicopter XC-GID shud- dered and bucked as pilqt Carlos Aguilar Lomeli, hunting opium - producing poppy fields, coaxed it up a windy canyon high in the Sierra Madre Mountains. Four hundred feet above, flying backup in another Bell 212, Juan Flores watched Lomeli's machine laboring in the thin air, its cargo hold filled with a plastic tank containing 250 gallons of gramoxone herbicide. "LEFT, COME LEFT, Lomeli," Flores called over the radio. "Straight ahead, now, You're lined up. With the 40-foot spray boom barely skimming the tops of pine trees, Lomeli suddenly found himself over a one-acre clearing filled with 21/2 foot high crimson flowers. F O R F I V E seconds herbicide drained from the helicopter. It would leave the field, about 350 miles south of Columbus, N.M., chemically burned in 36 hours. Lomeli and Flores are agents of the Mexican attorney general's office and part of a 250-person, 18-helicop- ter task force waging a ground and aerial war against opium poppies. The poppies come into season in the spring and fall here, the periods of maximum rainfall. THE TASK FORCE, with support from the army, covers a four state area stretching from the southern end of Sonora and Chihuahua, which border Arizona, New Mexico and Texas in the north, down through the coastal state of Sinalca; bordering Sonora on the south, and parts of Durango, east of Sinaloa. The man who heads the task force in the area, designated as Region Six, is Carlos Aguilar Garza. Aguilar Garza, who is headquar- tered in Guliacan, says the area is by far Mexico's largest producers of opium, the source of heroin. U.S. DRUG enforcement officials, who fly with the Mexican crews as observers, say the area accounts for a major portion of the heroin sold in the United States. Mexico has be- come the main.supplier of heroin in the States. fooking down from Flores' heli- THIS AD MAY SAVE YOU 50C See the Sci-Fic classic, FORBIDDEN PLANET, this FRIDAY NIGHT, at the LAW SCHOOL, for only $i.06 a savings of 50C over the regular admission price Showings at 7 & 9 Room 100 Hutchins Hall WHY PAY MORE? 1 opium under air attack Cruz Lopez Garza, Aguilar Garza's copter dozens of poppy fields could fields are planted by peasants at the second in command, said it takes be seen ranging from about one- bidding of narcotics traffickers. He about 35 acres of flowers to produce eighth of an acre to two acres. said the peasants, who are respon- 22 pounds of opium gum, which will "People are down there all right, sible for handing over the opium gum yield about 2.2 pounds, or 1 kilo, of said Flores. "They take off for cover the plants yield, can earn $2,000 to pure heroin. 3' ' s : ' "He said that when poppies are not in season, the same peasants grow marijuana. 'It's a simple matter of economics,' he said. 'Many of the peasants believe they have no other; source of income., ....; i.:. .....e ................................. ..' ';..;;..'s..::..::..::..::..::..: when they hear the sound of a heli- copter. . "A FEW days ago, not too far from here, somebody opened up on olne of the spray helicopters with a machine gun," he said. "One observer was hit in the arm and we counted 11 bullet holes in the machine." Many of the pilots wear body armor. All are armed, and the observation helicopters sometimes carry soldiers who may land and try to arrest the growers. IGUILAR GARZA said the poppy $3,000 a year, although they face, penalties beginning with a minimum' sentence of more than five years, in jail without possibility of parole. He said that when poppies are not in season, the same peasants may grow marijuana. "It's a simple matter of econ- omics," he said. "Many of the peasants believe they have no other means of income. "WE KNOW that spraying the fields and arresting people isn't going to solve the problem. The government is moving to find other industries that can be offered to the growers as a substitute." New York City police say a kilo of pure heroin is cut seven to eight times before it reaches the street, where the end product currently costs about $2.5 million a kilo, Lopez Garza said that in the first 22 days of September, the aerial cam- paign resulted in the destruction of 2,341 separate fields, totaling about 600 acres. "We estimate we're destroying about 86 per cent of the fields," Lopez Garza said. "The ones that aren't destroyed are the ones we don't see." WEDNESDAY is .. BOTTLE NIGHT featuring: Andecker and Olympia Gold at a Great Price!l On South University man St JCEIIDEAfl Ttt AICI An original musical recalling vaudeville and memorable star performances of New York City's famous Palace Theater. SAT. OCT. 8-8:30 p.m. SUN. OCT. 9-2 & 7 p.m. Tickets at $5 and $3 Box office at Michigan Theater Mon.-Fri. 10-5 or call 665-8221 or 761-2247 1-3-5-7-9 ,'11 1' a . ., SHOWS at 1-3-5-7-9 Daily Official Bulletin Wednesday; September 28,1977 DAY CALENDAR WVUOM: National Town Meeting: "Our Elderly-Today and Tomorrow", repeat broadcast, Dr. Robert Butler, Dir. National Institute on Aging and Senator Frank Church, Democrat, Idaho, moderator Nancy Hicks, New York Times, 10:30 a m. Statistics: Michael Woodroofe, "A One Arm Bandit Problem With Covariates," 451 Mason Hall, 4 p.m. Music School: American Trio, works by Copland, Beethoven, Rackham Aud., 8 p.m. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVIII,.No.18 Wednesday, September 28, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during 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. *THEANN IwAROR FILM COOERATIVE is accepting new members. Stop by one of our showings for on application. ****** * *** *** **** * FORBIDDEN PLANET Space explorers arrive on a planet and discover a scient- ist, his daughter and an in- credible robot who survived * w. _ xi t. IY .C I-"---- *.1 the Rnn arbor film cooperative TONIGHT! Wednesday, Sept. 28 THE KING OF HEARTS (Philippe de Broca, 1967) 7 ONLY-AUD. A Our most popular film. A Scottish soldier during WW I is sent to a French town, evacuated except for on asylum. Meanwhile the fleeing Germans have left a time bomb. The asylum inmates escape, taking up various costumes and roles. A very funny comedy and a powerful anti-war film-the sanity of insanity and vice-versa. ALAN BATES, GENEVIEVE BUJOLD. "Delightfully subtle satire-penetrating comedy encased in a most beautiful film."-Judith Crist. In French, with subtitles. Cinemoscope. FILM ABOUT A WOMAN WHO... (Yvone Rainer, 1974) 9 ONLY-AUD. A Dancer Yvone Rainer wrote and directed this film, a fragmented narrative about two middle-aged couples. Her dances, although they appear rigorously formal, deal with the idiosyncrasies of human relationships, and this is echoed in her films, A WOMAN WHO .. . is a complex film, with rapidly switching rhythms, times, spaces, and characters, causing the audience to sense the connections and associations rather than know them. "Rainer uses words and images as though they were the some medium, as though you could start a sentence verbally and finish it visually."-Lucy Lippard.. ADMISSION $1,50 DISCOVER DIVERSITY STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS ACTIVITIES FAIR A unique way to find out about student organizations at Michigan ,', ' I SHOWS at 1-3-5-1:5-:15 N4RK goaway." The five most dangerous words in the English language. i- THURSDAY SEPT. 29 2-1opm ENTERTAINMENT EXHIBITS INFORMATION i