Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY "Health and Healing Energy" Weekly presentations at Canterbury Friday, September 17th BIOEN ERGETICS AND HEAUNG ENERGY Peg Kropschot 8 p.m. herb tea 8:30 discussion 218 N. DIVISION STREET corner of Catherine and Division FOR INFORMATION CALL 665-0606 L; /00" c Discount on d nission with S Stud ent .D. COMING Sept. 20 & 21 SONICS RENDEZVOUS HOURS: Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m.-2 a.m. WEEKLY HOURS: 9 p.m.-2 a.m. 516 E. LIBERTY 994-5350 OPPOSES POSSIBLE PAROLE: Thursday, September 16, 1976 Auto strikea may last JOLIET, Ill. (,P) -- It took only five minutes yesterday for the state parole board to deny freedom to Richard Speck, convicted of killing eight youngt nurses in their Chicago town- house ten years ago and now serving 400 to 1,200 years in the state penitentiary. Law enforcement officials and relatives of the slain wo- men appeared at a public hear- ing on paroling Speck. "I WOULD rather come to his execution than his pardon," said John Wilkening of Lan- sing, Ill. His only daughter, Pamela, was one of Speck's vic- tims. It became known several weeks ago that Speck was elig- ible for parole. Since that time, officials said, they received about 3,000 letters demanding Speck be kept behind bars. blasts Speck The Illinois Parole and Par- don Board deliberated for only five minutes before denying Speck parole. The board said setting him free at this time "would deprecate the serious- ness of the crime." THE BOARD had held a pri- vate meeting earlier with Speck at Stateville Penitentiary. Peter Kotsos, board chairman, said he and two other members talk- ed with Speck for 40 minutes in a prison hearing room. Speck was dressed in blue denim prison work clothes, Kot- sos said.I "He had no remorse during1 the questioning period concern- ing the crime and maintained his innocence," Kotsos said. THE PUBLIC hearing follow-1 ed the board's meeting with1 Speck.1 Joseph Matusek of Home- wood, Ill., the father of another of the girls, appeared before the board. "People come up to me. They tell me "if you don't do something about him we will . . . We will cut him with a razor blade.' And I believe they will," Matusek said. SPECK, WHO is now 34, was sentenced to die in the electric chair following his trial in Pe- oria. He was saved when the death penalty was declared un- constitutional by the Supreme Court. After the ruling he was sen- tenced to serve eight consecu- tive terms of from 50 to 150 years in prison for each murder -a total of 400 to 1,200 years. Casimir Wachowski, an at- torney who said he was asked by families of the victims to be at the hearing, described Speck as "a fiend and spawn- ed in hell." Speck has "never told the true story. He is a clev- er, ingenious and evil man," said Wachowski. SPECK WILL automatically receive another parole hearing in September of 1977 and every year thereafter, Kotsos said. Under provisions of a 1973 state law, inmates can decline to ap- pear at parole hearings for which they are eligible. Au- thorities said they knew of no one, including Speck, who had taken declined to appear be. fore the board. Speck came up for parole un- der the 1973 law making inmates serving sentences of more than 20 years eligible after 11 years, three months. With his good be- havior time, Speck has served that long. FA LL OPENINGS CLQI'ILARA! 'S ANursery o Kindergartners e Elementary School( * Child Care Centers An alternative program CALL 769-4511 } E It two W DETROIT P)-Negotiators in the strike against Ford Motor Co. indicated yesterday that con- tract talks will not resume until next week, and a union source said the autoworkers were brac- ing for a strike of at least two weeks. United Auto Workers President Leonard Woodcock, who called 170,000 workers in 22 states off their jobs at midnight Tuesday, said he was not optimistic about prospects for a short strike. PICKETS WERE out in force yesterday, and a union source close torWoodcock said UAW leaders are bracing for at least a two-or three-week strike. The source said union bargainers feel the two sides are far apart and are not sure how to get talks going again. "We don't expect any serious main-table bargaining to resume until Monday at the very ear- liest," the source said. "It's pretty obvious now that both sides expect this strike to go into October." "We know how to get in touch . . . Meetings can be ar- ranged on very short notice," a Ford spokesman said, and the UAW said, too, that negotiators would be available to resume talks before Monday. THE coast-to-coast walkout, the first against the nation's No. 2 automaker since a 66-day work stoppage in 1967, became inevitable last weekend when Woodcock announced there had been no progress made on any major issue despite eight weeks of discussions. Financial analysts have said a brief walkout would have no significant adverse impact on HE SAID HE was encouraged by the willingness expressed by both sides "to work to get settled as soon as possible. There Soviet Union begins space photo mission eeks or more Ford, the strikers or the econ- is that degree of hope, but there omy, but a strike of more than is a great, great deal of work a month would begin to hurt to be done. everyone involved as well as Ou :the economic recovery. One major issue dividing the th two sides is a top union demand "We have many issues be- for 12 more paid days off each tween us, we have done almost year to preserve current jobs nothing," Woodcock said in an and create new ones. Ford has address yesterday before the offered up to five more days a annual convention of the Michi- year, based on seniority and gan AFL-CIO. "We've settled attendance. only minor matters." I hAl..,..+,,.A c r se u uea issues involve wages, pensions, health care in- surance and supplemental un- employment benefits for laid-off workers. MOSCOW (Reuter) - Two Soviet cosmonauts entered earth orbit yesterday aboard the un- used back-up spaseship from last year's U.S.-Soviet Apollo- Soyuz mission to start a new phase in space cooperation be- tween Communist nations. The craft, Soyuz-22, carries an East German-made camera- the first time foreign equipment has been used in a Soviet man- ned craft-and for the first time will photograph East, German as well as Soviet territory for the economic benefit of the two countries. IN A TELEVISION interview yesterday, Major General Vlad- imir Shatalov, head of cosmo- naut training, said mission com- mander Colonel Valery Bykov- sky, 42, and civilian flight en- gineer Vladimir Aksyonov, 41, would not dock the ship with the orbiting Soviet Salyut-S space station. The station was inhabited by two other cosmonauts from July 7 until August 24. The Hewlett-Packard first family of calculators are'i a class by themselves. Hewlett-Packard built the world's first advanced pocket calculator back in 1972. And led the way ever since. Today, Hewlett-Packard calculators are recognized as The First Family by more than one million owners worldwide. In- cluding Nobel Prize winners, LISA-USSR astronauts, explorers, educator ientists, businessmen, and students. Her;° s wvhy: First family performance. Hewlett-Packard means the kind of performance that includes RPN logic with four-memory stack, a full range of advanced functions, and much, much more. First family reliability. \Vhen you buy a Hewlett-Packard calculator you get one year's protection on parts and labor. And a two working-day turn-around on most repairs. addition, a complete selection of optional accessories increases the versatility of the calculator of your choice. Hewlett-Packard offers more because Hewlett-Packard's got more to offer. HARPSICHORD and PIANO LESSONS Former instructor at Univer- sity of Hartford & Williams College All ages taught; teen- agers a special interest CLOSE TO CAMPUS Phone 665-9324 First family design. Hewlett-Packard was first -and con- tinues to lead--in the translation of state- First family support. of-the-art technology into advanced Every calculator comes with its own calculators. -comprehensive Owner's Handbook. In Free booklet while supplies last. "What To Look For Before You Buy An Advanced Calculator" helps you make a wise purchasing decision. Pick up your free copy at your campus bookstore. Or telephone 800-538-7922 (in Calif. 800-662-9862) toll-free for the name of your nearest dealer. HP-21 Scientific. New low price -$80.00* The HP-21 makes short work of the technical calculations even so-called "non-technical" courses require. If you need a calculator that does more than simple arithmetic-this is it-especially at its new low price. * 32 built-in functions and operations. " Performs all standard log and trig functions (in radians or degrees). * Performs rectangular/polar conversion, register arithmetic and more. * Addressable memory.s * Two display modes: Fixed point and scientific. HP-22 Business Management. $165.00* The HP-22 easily handles the kinds of calculations you face in business courses today, in management tomorrow. Breeze through business math calculations. Build existing statistical data into reliable forecasts. If you're going into business administration, this is the! calculator for you.1 + Combines financial, mathematical and statistical capabilities. 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What's more, Continuous Memory lets you retain programs and data even when it's turned off. + Continuous memory capability. + 72 built-in functions and operations. + Keystroke programmability. + Branching, conditional test and full editing capability + Eight addressable memories. + We also offer the HP-25, (without the Continuous Memory feature) for $145.00* HP-27 Scientific/Plus. $200.00* The HP-27 is for the science or engineering student- whose course work extends into business administration. The reason: It features every pre-programmed scientific function we've ever offered, plus comprehensive stat and financial functions.Thus the name: Scientific/Plus. * 28 pre-programmed exponential, log and trig functions, r. / an i. 9r T1 Major Shatalov added that the flight would be a short one. REPORTING THE launch, the official Tass news agency said it was part of a program of cooperation in the exploration and peaceful use of space which the nine countries of the Com- munist trading bloc Comecon drew up in Moscow in July. Until now the Comecon coun- tries--Bulgaria, Cuba, Czecho- slovakia, East Germany, Hun- gary, Mongolia, Poland, Ro- mania and the Soviet Union-- have limited their space cooper- ation to their "Intercosmos" series of scientific research satellites. Today's launch was the first move to bring Russia's allies into the manned flight program, even though only East Germany is so far involved and its con- tribution is restricted to photo- graphic equipment co-designed with Soviet specialists And man'ifactnred at the Carl Zeiss Jena Works. THE DURATION of the flight can hardly be more than a week or two, given the limited sup- nlies a Soyuz can carry. The end"rance record for an undock- ed Sovuz is 18 days, set by Soyuz-9 in 1970. A Moscow Radio commentator said today the cosmonauts' pro- gram would be "crowded." According to Tass,tthe main aim of the flight is to improve methods of studying the earth's geology and geographyrfrom space, and the results are de- signed to benefit the Soviet and East German economies. Happenings ... begin with an open house at the Pound House Children's Center, 1024 Hill, from 3:30 to 5:30 p. m. . . . prospective workers for the Riegle cam- paign will mass at 7:00 p.m. in the Kuenzel Rm. of the Union a mass meeting for new staff members for Michiganen- sian, the student yearbook, will be held at 7 p.m. in the Stu- dent Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard (or call 764-0561) .. . mass meetings for The Daily are at 7:30 tonight in the East Lounge at Bursley and the An- Bela Davis Lounge at Mark- Iley. Representatives from the news, business, arts and sports staffs will be there to beg for your recruitment ... GEO holds a membership meeting at 7:30 in Rackham Amphitheater .. . an Introductory meeting of the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellow- ship is at 7:30 in the League ... and a memorial program for Mao Tse-tung begins at 7:30 in the International Center, spon- sored by Revolutionary Stu- Idents' Brigade. classroom instruction in electronic music themusiac studio If you want to create electronic music, our 12-week course is meant for you. Learn how to use a synthesizer, operate tape recorders and m i x e r s professionally, choose equipment appropriate to your needs, and much more. Classes are small and individual attention is assured. Call today for further information. 555 e. william 994-5404 Separate classes begin an September 25 and 29 I Vacuum Clea 1230 PACK ANN ARBOR, M 761-367 . WELCOME BACI - - SEE US THIS TERM FOR VACUUM CLEANER N - * . * QUALITY HOOVER . CLEANERS, PARTS, - " *E. AND BAGS - - R.B ".". 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