The Michigan Daily-Saturday, November 12, 1977-Page 3 3 1 . YOU S~EE lN&,S MAn 4CALL XZDAULY Slick tick If the. Daily isn't snappy enough for your literary taste, you may be interested in picking up a copy of the University's new super-slick publication - the Winter Term Time Schedule. Yes, the lack-luster time schedules of yesteryear have given way to a new breed complete with full page color ads for speakers and guitars and a subscription card offering "special student savings on popular magazines." According to Scheduling Office Director Alfred Stuart, the new format has cut time schedule costs in half, while providing students with 30 per cent more schedules. Once the local political organizations get wind of the idea, there may be no stopping it. Imagine crowds of activists waving class listings hastily printed on the backs of political leaflets outside CRISP the way they now do with football lineups outside the stadium. "Free class schedules! Get your free class schedules!" The mind boggles. "The whole heritage bit" Crew members and a team of Peruvian technicians put the finishing touches on Norwegian explorer Thor Heyerdahl's latest. creation a 30-ton replica of an ancient Sumerian reed boat. Heyer- dahl will attempt to navigate the good ship "Tigris" down the Persian Gulf to the Indian Ocean. ,, . Rapes keep women running If you tried to go to the bank, and found the revolving doors immobile yesterday, you probably figured out that it was Veterans Day. 9r, if you were strolling down Main Street yesterday morning, the columns of mar- ching, marching, marching people would have clued you in. Operating on the principle that "everybody loves a parade," the Washtenaw County Veterans staged their third annual march. Scores of little kids, hardy veterans and the usual smattering of high school bands and majorettes lifted their collective heels and toes for the event. With music playing and flags waving, Veteran George Hains described the parade as "the whole heritage bit." "We're not interested.in promoting war, he said, "we're just trying to preserve a little heritage and patriotism for the youngsters." Patriotisn is nice, agreed 9-year-old Kathy Chapekis, "but it's fun to get out of school. That's the best." " In trouble again SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - Joyce Swanson wears running shoes to class. She fears she may have to flee a rapist on the 157-acre campus of San Jose State University. "When I dressed this morning I put these shoes on because I thought I'd have a better chance to get away on foot," the 22-year-old senior said Thursday. Some 30 women have been sexually assaulted on the campus or in its sur- rounding 8-4y-15 block patch of urban decay this year - six just this week. A Roman Catholic nun was raped in her convent Wednesday. Several attacks have come in daylight. THURSDAY night, a 30-year-old San Jose man was shot in the chest after he allegedly attacked a woman officer working as 'part of a special patrol unit, police sai#. San Jose police Sgt. Bob Burroughs said that after surgery, the man would be booked for investigation of assault with a deadly weapon. Police said the man allegedly approached . the officer, Jo Ann Punneo, 30, as she sat at a bus stop, put a knife to her throat and told her to come with him, police said. She "I'm scared to death at night. I won't take a class after 5:30 p.m. and I'm afraid to go to any campus activities after dark." - Sheri Quinlan, San Jose State student Rum@EMW msmomemmasema IN ADDITION to plainclothes offi- cers, extra police are patrolling the tense campus. Campus and city police are holding rape prevention seminars and have set up escort more than 200 whistles ard shriek alarms from the school bookstore.. Others carry small canisters of tear gas. SOME STUDENTS refuse to sched- ule night classes. "I'm scared to death at night," said Sheri Quinlan, 18, "I won't take a class after 5:30 p.m. and I'm afraid to go to any campus activities after dark." The editor of the student newspa- per, Tony Bizjak, 22, termed the mood on campus one of "continued surprise." He said, "You keep expecting it to stop but police aren't catching any- one and it isn't stopping. It's getting worse." STUDENTS were stunned by this week's string ,of rapes. "I can't believe it. A 'nun was raped," said Marilyn Magnasco, 19. "Now I'm really scared." Amy Greenberg, 19, was anxious about what she would tell her parents. "Whenever they 'call they ask about the rape situation here. I don't know what to say anymore." freed herself and shot him. Burroughs said the man would be questioned about the college rapes. He said police believe several men are responsible for the attacks, although some of the attacks could be linked. He said that since July, six, men have been arrested for rape or attempted rape on the campus or in the area, although he did not know whether any had been convicted. But still, the assaults continue. services. Sgt. Peter Graves refused to discuss what specific steps the police are taking. He added that pastpubli- city about the rapes may have spawned imitators. "There may be some people out there who have thought about committing this type of crime. They see others getting away with it, so they decide to try it, too," he said. Frightened women have bought Daily Official Bulletin *.....~.. MEDIATRICS m Saturday,November 12.1977 DAY CALENDAR Music School: Bandorama, The Friars, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. Musical Society: Asian masked dance, Rackham Aud., 8:30 p.m. ' * *s CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT 3200 SAB - Phone 764-7460 The 1977 College Job Interview Center, Cleveland Plaza Hotel, E. 12th & Euclid Ave., downtown Cleve- land. December 27, 28, 29. Cleveland area employers will interview 1977-78 graduates. Applications & com- plete information available at CP&P. Two positions: Brand Assistant & Systems Analyst, Procter & Gamble Commercial Company, San Juan, Puerto Rico. Primarily for students who have lived in Puerto Rico. Applications available at Career Planning & Placement or International Cen- ter. INERVIEWSON CAMPUS Nov. 15, 1977: American Grad Sch of Intern'l Mngt., Wabash Dealer, U. of Dayton, Law, Georgia Institute of Tech/Industrial Mngt. Nov. 16, 1977: Amos Tuck Sch. of Bus. Admin, U. of Mass/Amherst, Fidelity Union Life THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LxXXVIII, No.57 SaturdayNovember 12, 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. Nov. 17,1977: Institute for Paralegal Trng., Dow Chemical Nov. 28, 1977: Oakridge Nat'l Laboratories The National Science Foundation announces the 1977-78 program of NATO Postdoctoral Fellowships in science. Apply to NATO Postdoctoral Fellowship Program. Division of Scientific Personnel Improve- ment, National Science Foundation, Washington, D. C. 20550. Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, R.I. has posi- tions for residents, in Hospital Pharmacy & residents. in Clinical Pharmacy. Address inquiries to: Louis P. Jeffrey, Dir. of Pharmacy Services, Rhode Island Hospital, 593 Eddy St., Providence, R.I. 02902. The Experiment in International Living - Group Leadership positions in 30 Countries - summer and semester programs leading high school or college age groups. Foreign la'nguage fluency required for most positions. Apply before Dec. 1. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB- Phone 763-4117 ATTENTION! Students in Natural Resources. Material for applying for Forest Service Sum- mer/Seasonal Employment has arrived. Appls. must be filed between December 1 and January 15. Details and applications available. I U * U All U Cellar cap & , * gown orders MUST be u placed by November , I I 18, 1977.* * *This is a correction to the ad * which ran on October 30. I t I I I I *.m--mm -------------.m---- THE LONGEST YARD (1974) Starring BURT REYNOLDS. A hilarious film about a football game between prison inmates and guards. SAT. NOV. 12 7:15 & 9:30 NATURAL SCIENCE AUD. $1.50 Plamnondon An old Ann Arbor radical, once on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted List for bombing a CIA office in the late 1960's, is a fugitive again. A bench warrant for Lawrence 'Pun' Plamondon's arrest was issued earlier this week in Traverse City when the former leader of the defunct White Pan- ther Party failed to appear at a pretrial hearing. Plamondon was charged Oct. 24 with drunken driving and possession of our favorite weed. Known for going against society's grain years ago, when he advocated total over- throw of the establishment, Plamondon got into trouble again when a cop stopped him for going the wrong way on a one-way street. " Happenings .. . take off with a trip. to the Detroit Institute of Arts, leaving from the International Center at 10:00 ... perhaps philatelists will Want to peruse at the Ann Arbor Stamp Club's exhibition anytime between 10:00 and 8:00 in EMU's McKenny Union ...,have you asked yourself, "Is American Youth Headed for Compulsory Service?" well, Frances Large answers that question at 10:30 in the A2 Library's Meeting Room, Fifth and Williams ... Elephants never forget, so don't allow the White Elephant Sale in the Union Ballroom to slip your mind, from 11:00-7:00 browse over the vast collection of chairs, doors, and deer heads available ... let the cards fall where they may at Hillel's "Oy Vey Las Vegas" night, 9:00's the time, 1429 Hill St. is the place. " On the outside Aren't you glad you got your winter coat out of mothballs? Clad your- self in it because tomorrow's high will only be 320. Brrrrrrrrrrrrr! Tomorrow night the low will be 20°. More Brrrrrrrrrrrrr! You will be showered with snow till morning, but don't bother dragging out the shovel since the stuff won't stick. WR: MYSTERIES OF THE ORGANISM IlThe wierd anndhilarious fantasv +hn+ m-i~ kc k kkA AA~:,;&# AN. .,.. . ..-.. . . . . . . . .J..the ann arbor fim cooperatve TONIGHT! Saturday, Nov. 12 WOMEN IN LOVE (Ken Russell, 1970) 7& 9:15-MLB3 An encyclopedia of filmmaking tecnnique and a masterful adaptation of the D. H. Lawrence novel. Russell is restrained and brilliant in what is undoubtedly his most consistent and intelligent film. Glenda Jackson won an Academy Award for Best Actress. "it is difficult to recall another film that so successfully recreated the post with a depth that brings to life every album snapshot we have seen of the time."-Judith Crist. ALLEN BATES, OLIVER REED, JENMIE LINDEN. ADMISSION $1.50 CINEMA 1 Angell Hal! Aud. A aturday, November 12 A STREEtCAR NAMED DESIRE Director-ElA KAZAN (1951)