MMMMEq , October 30, 1977-The Michigan Daily 'ricks haunt Halloween {Continued from Page1) go out tomorrow night, and ex- )CAL children, however, seem to pressed anticipation of "all the all the precautions pretty much candy" and "seeing everyone all ride. dressed up." like getting all the free candy, THE TRICKING aspect of Hallo- I don't like the way people put ween seems largely to have been and stuff in it," said Anthony separated from the treat part, how- w, 10. ever. e children interviewed, all fifth "One thing I remember is that if a ers at Burns Park Elementary house had all its lights off, then it ol, said their parents always meant that people were home, but k their candy before they are they were choosing not to take part in ved to eat it. the ritual, and therefore deserved to ly parents look through all my be tricked," said Kottak. ly and they take anything that's "There's not much tricking on rapped and throw it away," said Halloween," said 10-year-old Amy ear-old Sarah Stedman. Andrew Fischer. "Devil's Night (the night ertson, 11, said his parents before) is trick night around here. 'ked for "pins, razor blades, poi- Kids go out and do lots of mean things , and stuff." like soaping windows and putting agardless of the risks involved, shaving cream on cars and throw- he children said they planned to ing eggs." ' 0 LSA Subcommittee on Distribution Requirements TELL US YOUR PLRAN-, DISTRIBUTION, THAT IS! OPEN HEARINGS, NOV. 1 & 2 7:30-9:30 2203 A NGEL L HALL : Tell us why you chose your distribution plan- general feelings, frustrations, gripes, suggestions. * The End Report Affects You! JELTA 'ksta uran t'Ie Sunday Special Dinner for$3.10 Home-made Chicken Noodle Soup ' served with: Baked Ham'w/ Home-made Applesauce Roast Chicken w/ dressing Roost Turkey w/ dressing Spaghetti and Meatballs (no potato or veg.)1 'DINNERS iNCLu'DE: A Soup or Juice-Potato and Vegetable Bread and Butter-Small Beverage Crisp Salad and Dressing Dessert: Rice Pudding or Ice Cream 640 r cka open 7 dgs e week 662-7811 7:00 AM tol:1 AM THE CHILDREN said that most of the tricking was done by "older kids who shouldn't be out anyway." All of them also said they were forbidden by their parents to go out on Devil's Night. "Lots of people don't know that you can get picked up by the police on Devil's Night," said Andrew. "Recently, there's been a real disassociation between the tricking and the treating," said Kottak. "Halloween has always represented a ritualized rebellion where for one night each year, kids could demand things from their parents and get them. Now, we're taking the tricking part away from the kids and parents are worrying that other adults are doing the tricking. It's almost like a role reversal." THOUGH" PARENTS may be tak- ing careful precautions, it is likely that all their worries will be for naught. "There are always isolated cases, but we've never had any serious problems that I can remember," said Deputy Police Chief Harold Olson. "This type of thing usually happens in big cities instead of someplace like here." "You hear rumors so you have to watch out, but you hate to publicize it for fear of giving someone ideas," he said. IT MAY LOOK like an advertisement for a new extr-str ength detergent, but it's actually the remnants of the Kappa Alpha Theta soccer team after a clash with a tea n tn appa Kappa Gamma in the annual Mudbowl classic yesterday. The Thetas are smiling because they won, 1-0. ' R)Q eoggn'O I/iflg .*An al time to party." said Erley. "But, there is a tendency PERHAPS ONE of the most en- to aChe the ijexdi (ay." thusiastic Homecoming participants Erley explained that alumni at- was. alumni cheerleader Dune Erley, h° +7hmnt to the University is similar who cheeed this weep in his "htl con to a "parent child relationship." secutive Homecoming game. 'The school has really made us "It's fun getting down on tii held what we ae," 'Erley stated. "We and feeling like I'm twenty again," naturally feel a lot of affection for .1m TIT 0 !1 A'" 4 something that has put us so far towards our life's work." ALUMNUS Chuck Furress, '34, visiting from Dallas, Texas,.said he thinks students may not get as much out of Homecoming as alumni, but, they "get a different sort of feeling."' ._.. , .t CIA operatves active on national campuses =1 (Continued from Page 1) of Pennsylvania have been told of their involvement with the testing. WHILE THE country's reaction to the intelligence agency's covert research and secret funding policies has been-not surprisingly-one of sur- prise, and anger, the recruiting issue has drawn even greater attack. Educators, politicians and campus governing bodies alikehave expressed alarm at the presence of covert recruiters in the cover of professors, ISAT WE CAN INCREASE YOUR LSAT SCORE Call or Write: University LSAT Preparation Service Inc. 0 .Si4e9128 AnnAror'Mchgan 48105 4 , .3139954014 administrators and, sometimes, students. A report resear ched by a special Harvard committee in Miay, 1976, describes the recruitment process this way: "The job of covert recruiters is to identify for the CIA members of the community, including foreign students, who may be likely candidates for an employment or other relationship with the CIA. . . When the recruiter believes that a likely candidate has been iden- tified, the name of the candidate is reported to the CIA, which then conduc- ts a background check on the individual and creates a file . . . Neither the recruiter nor the CIA informs the in- dividual at this stage that he or she is being considered for employment or other purposes by the CIA. If the in- vestigation confirms the view of the recruiter, the. individual is then ap- proached to discuss a present or future relationship with the CIA." THERE IS VERY little argument from anyone that the p~pe wj0 io f fer;, most from the covert irecritifnt b CIA operatives on campus are fore gi students. SWhena foreign student is ap Sproache i -in much the sarne way as Ithat dram ratized at the beginning of this story-they often have no choice but to ac cept the CIA's offer' of recriuitmnent. ® Fomei gn students are very umuch snsceptible to various kinds of black- mail," alperin points out. If infor- ma tion about their political views reaches the IA, it could very well be used later to pressure the new recruit. The CIA works closely with intelligence agenci s of other countries-Iran or Koea , for instance--and often the two 'es exchange hits of information. W N .Au1,PO 1"ED by an agent, the fcoreign stlent has what some woudi consider an impossible choice to Whle the student may have made' unpatr iotic remarks to his professor, and therefore revealed himself as a potential CIA r en- it, he may not be unpatriotic enough to spy on his own counti y, Yet, if the student ref uses to work for the CIA, hi unpatriotic ren- rks are still on record in his CIA file. The agen- ey could very well use the student's name indi ,remark someday in bai gir+ingr heigt:4n intelligence ser- V-e i mOI'irfltiO t a 9\ m(RII IN'I' case in- vl : irmg an_)1r anl~instudRent at St. Louis. W: , Imfingt n 1111ve'rsity was documen- ted in a Ja 1976 article in New ime a i Ahnad Jabbari was app t""o;Aclcd b heHr CIA to deliver in- f Inrai abio t theIranian gover- llmnl'! Jbb 'i hd the presence of imnid tose''! d yitpe record all his en- countn 3wih isF('IA contact, and thus a lte e to make public the go. iu~ o. JaL~rri n ac, never wvent to ~oik fr he l lliene agency, but nrtinrt ined his contacts by feigning in tete 1n uh activi %. Teranin dent was not only otfer1d a mnthly stipend while he was to ,be spying foi the agency, but was toldtha l(I could help him oia resident alien sJtatu s,'" or' even U r. matiralization if he w"'as cope r ative. Foreign studenIten~counters with ("I A i' rt iitjit. te ,? : if bt,, often do not work out as well as Jabbari's did. Many foreign students attending universities in this country today live in fear of being exposed to their countries by the CIA as dissidents. HALPERIN BRINGS out an even more basic point about foreign student recruitment. "Students who are invited to an American univer- ; sity," he says, "have the right tofeel: that they can engage in discussions with their professors, write papers and answer questions .in class with-. out fear that one of their professors is. in fact a CIA operative who will, report that information to the CIA." American students as well, Halper- in adds, should have the same. security. The Harvard committee report calls the involvement of faculty, members and others in recruitment, for the CIA "inappropriate." "THE EXISTENCE of. . . uniden- tified individuals who may be prob- ing the views of others and obtain- ing information for the possible use of the CIA is inconsistent with the idea of a free and independent uni- versity,"' the report says. Halperin was upset enough about the Senate committee's findings that he became the chairman of the; Washington-based Campaign to Stop; Government Spying, a group devoted, to ending domestic surveillance of all' types. Halperin has been campaign- ing against government spying ever since he discovered his home phone was being tapped at the orders of- President Nixon. The CIA has no intention of ending its involvement with American aca-, demia, despite the disclosure of its activities, according to the Senate report. As long as the undercover work is not illegal, the Senate Committee says, "There are no prohibitions to prevent an increase in the operational use of academics., The size of these operations is, determined by the CIA." THE HARVARD Committee con A cluded its report with a proposed set of guidelines Which restrict the: operations of the CIA on campuses' requiring faculty members app, proached by the agency to report the incident to their dean. QUIL APAYUI An Evening of Music in Soidarity with the Chilean People Friday, November 4 Rackhan Auditorium 8:00 pmr $3.50 General Admission Ann Arbor Committee for Human Rights inLatin American I I I Sundays At the UNION BILLIARDS at reduced roles 'til 6 p.mr "With great flair, the ensemble fused ancient Indian and other folklore styles with contemporary protest lyrics, project- ing always a sense of urgent intcnsity." New York Times, 23 March, 1975 THE BI G ' 1 V I tt'Al MICH IGA N ST UDEN T ASSE MBL Y FALL ELECTION CANDIDATE REGISTRATION (9) 1 EA (1) YAR $ gM' OPEN REGISTER !1IN M..A [WS4t[LR MICHIGAN UNION BY MONDAY t 3 For More information Cull M.S A. Offices at 763-3241 AVAIL ABLE ONltYahU.CELLAR ,J- R - All cap & gownt orders Must be placed by DECEMBER 18, 1977 (lectee cap &golwnt hood lpsTO111TAL Baclelo. $b 25 2;00 8.25 VlTE MICHIGANXAXIIo.4 Sunday. October 30, 1977 See All The Action SUNDAY AFTERNOON & MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL on our 7'x5' TV SCREEN A s edited and mnanaged by students at the Uni'versii" of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second cas postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Pul ished 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 b3 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. Sundayis... - Imported Bottle Beer Night featuring: Beers from Every Country at o GREAT PRICE! Watch the Sunday Games Also Open Sundays at 1 p.m. I SPECIAL COUPON SAVINGS g~ mm mm.............. m ...-. m....----------m --m --m Monday Thru Thursday 10% DISCOUNT ON ALL DINNERS 1 FREE PIZZA WITH 1 PAID PIZZA u AFTER 8 P.M. (No Take Outs)