Friday, October 24, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pace Three Frd- coe 24.175TE.ICIANDAL Po Thre 11 i I II | | 1 | ||INMN.4|| | lil|Ili Eugenio Montale wins Nobel Literature Prize for poetry COMPUTER SNAFU BLAMED N. Y. cuts off lottery CLON CHIL for all Fo LARA offers .D CARE otblI Santu rdays By AP and Reuter STOCKHOLM, Sweden-Italian poet Eugenio Montale was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature yesterday by a 15- member body reported sharply split until the final vote be- tween Montale and American novelist Saul Bellow. Montale wrote of love, soli- tude and the Mediterranean and drew on the language of Dante in devoloping a unique style in modern Italian poetry. THE 79-YEAR-OLD Milan poet, a personally shy man, said he was "overwhelmed" and that the award made his life, "which was always unhappy, less un- happy." The 60-year-old Bellow, vaca- tioning in Israel, said: "It's very nice that Eugenio Montale won the Nobel prize. I'm not disappointed. There's plenty of time to win it yet." Montale was long championed within the Nobel-awarding Swe- dish Academy by its oldest member and former permanent secretary, 91- year - old Anders Osterling, a poet and personal friend of Montale. USUALLY INFORMED sourc- es said the academy was split right up to the final vote-tak- ing, but that they did not have figures either on the split or the final vote. However, younger literary crit- ics in Stockholm said the choice of Montale over the 60-year-old Bellow was a "typical conserva- tive compromise choice out of reverence to Osterling and mer- Daily Official Bulletin *.tvflfl.Vfl.::.Sy.. Friday, October 24 Day Calendar WUOM Lecture: 'Dr. Rollo May, author, Love & Will, "Creativity & Death," 9:55 a.m. UAC: Phone Booth Stuffing Con- test; Bear Chugging Contest, Diag. noon. Educ. Communications Media/ A-V Ctr.: "Olga," Schorling Aud., SE, noon. Psychology: Robert Hogan, Johns Hopkins Univ., "Moral Judgments as Self Presentations," 6050 ISR, 3:30 pm. Kelsey Museum of Archaeology: John Hayes, Royal Ontario Mu- seum, "Early Roman Pottery from the House of Dionysos, -paphos, Cy- prus," 203 Tappan, 4 pm. African Film Series: 'LChad;" "Senegal;" "Niger," Lec. Rm. 1, MLB, 8 pm. R. C. Players: "The Poor of New York: An Authentic Melodrama," 8. Quad Aud., 8 pm. Music School: Joan Morris, Wit- 1am Bocom, "A Gal Concert of, Classic Popular Songs," Power Otr., 8:30 pm. General Notices Reminder: The final deadlines for Winter 76 Course Mart proposal ap- plications is Mon., Oct. 27, 5 pm. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVI, No. 44 Friday, October 24, 1975 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d a i I y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Ar- bor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. SOVIET JEWRY VIGIL There will be a vigil at the performance of the Moscow State Symphony Protest of the oppression of S o v i e t Jews. Hill Auditorium (Front Doors) Saturday, Oct. 25, 7:30 P.M. Oppressed Jewry 663-3336 its only a shrug of the shoul- ders." The Swedish Academy said Montale had been awarded the $138,000 prize for "his distinctive poetry which, with great artist- ic sensitivity, has interpreted hu- man values under the sign of an outlook on life with no illu- sions." The citation also stated there was a negativism in his poetry "based not on misanthropy but on an indelible feeling for the value of life and the dignity of mankind." According to the New York Public Library, four volumes of Montale's poetry are published in English translation. They are "The Butterfly of Dinard," "Provisional Conclusions," "Se- lected Poems," and "Xenia." ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) -jspokesperson for Carey said, Gov. Hugh Carey ordered a halt explaining that no immediate in all games and drawings for decision had been made as to the State Lottery Wednesday how or when holders of several because "a computer complica- million lottery tickets would get tion" had resulted in the sale refunds or possibly a chance at of a number of duplicate num- winning the big money. bered tickets. "There's just no precedent, Affected by Carey's dramatic no procedures for dealing with action late Wednesday were this sort of thing," the gover- yesterday's drawing in the nor's spokesperson said. weekly 50-cent game with a The game of chance has been $50,000 payoff and the final Oct. under fire for several days by 3investigative articles in at least 31 drawing for the controver- three newspapers. The New sial $250,000 Colossus game as York Daily News charged last well as all other lottery opera- week that the state had been tions. "systematically cheating" play- kets as "winning" numbers called for cutting back by 1 million the number of weekly tickets printed. But, according to an admin- istration spokesperson, when the computer - driven ticket printer was told to run off only* 4 million tickets, a quirk in itsI program produced several du- plicate tickets. An estimated 2 million tickets had already been sold and itj was an impossible task to find out how many of the duplicates had gone out. ;N.j t " %.A I I j j t " I %-a %.A " 1 7 . I 3-YEAR-OLDS through 11-YEAR-OLDS Children in age groups with activities geared to their interest level. $3.75 PER CHILD-. reduced fees for each additional child in family FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL 769-4511 and make your reservation before 3 p.m. on day pre- cedinq the some. Subscribe to The Daily "WE WERE faced with a crisis of confidence and a pub- Montale lic relations problem," a -- ers. The final crisis was caused by a cure proposed by Lottery Di- rector Jerry Bruno. I A KEY segment of new pro- cedures to eliminate unsold tic-1 Carey ordered an immediate{ 'across - the - board freeze" on all lottery games and draw- ings. He asked State° Comp- troller Arthur Levitt and Attor- ney General Louis Lefkowitz to aid in rebuilding confidence in the operation. e Marijuaa proves effective cancer side-effect treatment THE COMEDY THAT PROVES PEOPLE ARE STILLTHE FUNNIEST ANIMALS MUSKET I I NOW SHOWING SHOWS TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:00 BOSTON (P) - Marijuana is in which placebo, or dummy,! far more effective than any treatment was used, the re- other drug in relieving the vom- searchers said. In the "double- iting and nausea that plagues blind" experiment, neither pa- thousands of cancer patients un- tients nor doctors knew in ad- dergoingchemical therapy, re- vance who got the real or dum- searchers say, and should be my drugs. considered as a treatment for Dr. Stephen Salan said in an such side effects. interview that about 75 per cent In a report published last of the thousands of patients get- week in the New England Jour- ting chemotherapy for cancer nal of Medicine, Harvard Medi- suffer moderate to extreme cal School researchers at the nausea and vomiting. And of Sidney Farber Cancer Center this group, 90 per cent get no say they tested the effective- relief from conventional anti- ness of the marijuana drug nausea drugs. against a dummy drug in 22 pa- SALAN said he and his col- tients with a variety of cancers. leagues in the study, Drs. Nor- FOR PATIENTS who com- man Zinberg and Emil Frei, pleted the study, 12 of 15 cases did not know specifically why involving marijuana drug treat- marijuana worked to decrease ments resulted in at least a 50 nausea. per cent reduction in vomiting "But we know how the cancer and nausea after therapy. And treatment drugs that cause in five of these treatments, vomiting work," he said. "Most the patients suffered no nau- of them trigger a part of the sea at all, the report added. brain to cause vomiting as op- There was no decrease in posed to nausea originating in nausea or vomiting in 14 cases the stomach. So, we can as- SUNDAY at H I LLEL Brunch 11 a.m. SPEAKER- DR. LAWRENCE EILENBERGI (Dept. of Speech Communication and Theatre) TOPIC-"IMAGE OF THE JEW IN NEW YORK THEATRE" 75c ISRAELI DANCING:DELI-5:30-6:30 p.m. 12 noon-Beginners $2.0 -.6:Y 0 pam. 1:00-Advanced $2.00 All You Can Eat All at HILLEL, 1429 Hill The Student Station presents ROCK'S POET LAUREATE BOB DYLAN Another Rockin' 650 music special WITH HOST STEVE FOREMAN TONIGHT at 10 p.m. ON CNI RL U5 "31 oths 'eHELD OVER 4th SMASH WEEK SHOWS TONIGHT AT 7P00 & 905 OPEN AT 6.45 0 THE ULTIMATE EXPERIENCE l PLU Wsi I Yis a nes wait Disne 9N Productions atO'R J © NOW SHOWING SHOWS TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:00 OPEN AT 6:45 I HIS CIA CODE NAME IS CONDOR. IN THE NEXT SEVENTY-TWO HOURS ALMOST EVERYONE HE TRUSTS WILL TRY TO KILL HIM. AND CABLE CHANNEL I . .. . _I DINO DE LAURENTIIS PRESENTS ROBERT REDFORD/FAYE DUNAWAY CLIFF ROBERTSON/MAX VON SYDOW IN A STANLEY SCHNEIDER PRODUCTION A SYDNEY POLLACK FILM OPEN HOUSE Today through noon tomorrow -free refreshments You are invited to our Open House today from 11 a.m. to It. I I . !