The Michigan Daily-Friday, July 13, 1979-Page 3 Michigan colleges consider new regimes MTU names head Engineeringa ved as head HOUGHTON (UPI) - Michigan Departmentl Tecinological University's Board of A'nativeo Control yesterday named Dr. Dale joined the 1 Stein as the school's seventh president. faculty in 196' Stein, 42, succeeds Dr. Raymond of minera Smith, who is retiring after 15 years as engineering. the university's chief executive officer. He was Stein has been academic Vice- proifessor of President at Michigan Tech since chemical en February 1977. He came to Tech in science at Mi Former 'U' student shot in Detroit By TIM YAGLE A former University Student Gover- nment Council (SGC) officer was fatally shot Monday as he was taking cash receipts and an undetermined amount of cash to a bank on Detroit's northwest side, Detroit police said - yesterday. ' Police said Reddix Allen, 23, and a former vice-president of SGC in 1974-75, left his workplace, Bover Realty, 19300 Greenfield, at 3:40 p.m. Monday to take g cash receipts to the bank, which police "' ' declined to name. Police said he parked his car outside the building and was ap- proached by a 20-year-old black male. ., , According to police, a struggle ensued before the male suspect shot Allen once ; in the side, then fled with the pouch around the building to a car and left. POLICE SAID Allen then "wan- dered" to the front of the building where he collapsed on the grass. An Emergency Medical Service unit then took him to an unnamed hospital where he died at 4:17 p.m. The male suspect is still at large, police said. Allen was SGC vice-president in 1974- 75 under President Carl Sandburg before Sandburg stepped down and Allen assumed the SGC presidency one month before the 1975 election. He did not run for re-election. Allen would have been 24 years old DRUM M Tuesday. and bugle Eastern M tocay- Final figures are in If you placed your bets on Skylab, the final statistics are in: Re-entry time, 12:08 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time; location, near Ascension Island, coordinates 15W, 8'S. Break-up time and location, the same. Communications ceased at 12:11 p.m. The North American Air Defense Command said the largest piece fell near Kalgoorlie in south- western Australia at 12:37 p.m., give or take two minutes. That was when Skylab officially ceased to exist. "This is our best guess," said a NASA spokesman. Good luck collecting bets. Too hot for the West Seven newspapers in California and Nevada refused to run recent Doonesbury comic strips satirizing California Gov. Edmund Brown's links with an alleged man allegedly involved in organized crime. The Los Angeles Times, The San Francisco ad of the Metallurgical Department. He also ser- of the Mining Engineering from 1974 to 1977. of Kimball, Minn., Stein University of Minnesota 7 as an associate professor 1 and metallurgical later appointed joint mechanical engineering ngineering and material nnesota. EMU may fallow Regents at Eastern Michigan University (EMU) have apparently made a decision on who will be the next president of that university. The EMU Board met Wednesday night in closed session for four hours. A new president will most likely be an- nounced at a special meeting early next week, according to EMU regents. ROBERT LEESTAMPER, president of Southeast Missouri State University, and John Porter, recently-resigned head of the state department of public instruction are the two remaining can- didates. Board vice-chairwoman Beth Milford said the Regents' committees would meet again soon to announce a decision. Gary Hawks, EMU vice-president who has been involved in the presiden- tial search said he did not know whether the Regents made any decisions at the meeting. He said 24 hours notice was needed before a special meeting could be called. Bugles blast crowd at EMU By BETH PERSKY They came from as far away as Wyoming and Toronto, endured prac- tice sessions of up to 14 hours a day, and weathered simple accommodations in cavernous gymnasiums. But the ap- proving roar of the crowd and the possibility of a championship made the hardships a bit easier to take as the members of 19 drum and bugle corps competed yesterday at Eastern Michigan University. The 2200 participants were vying for Drum Corps International northern championship in EMU's Rynearson Stadium. The young musicians, ranging in age from 12 to 21, camped out in nearby high school gymnasiums. One hundred forty sleeping bags belonging to mem- bers of the Phantom Regiment, the defending champion and their chaperones, cooks, and instructors, cluttered the gymnasium of Saline High School. MARIA AGUILAR, the Phantom Regiment color guard, said corps members "have to live with each other. We have to work together as a unit in order to win," she added. Aguilar said there is no secret to the success of the Phantom Regiment, "It's a lot of hard work." YPSILANTI APPARENTLY offers See BUGLES, Page5 AJOR JENNY SONNEFELD leads her Saginaw Saginaires drum corps as it marches with flags bouncing in rhythm yesterday at ichigan University's Rynearson Stadium. Chronicle, the San Diego Evening Tribune, the Riverside Press Enterprise, and the Escondido Times Advocate, all in California, reported numerous calls inquiring about the absence of the strip-as many as 1,400 in two and a half hours at the L.A. Times, a spokesman there said. Brown has denounced the series, penned by cartoonist Garry Trudeau, which deals with a $1,000 contribution to Brown's 1974 political campaign fund from Sidney Korshak. Korshak is listed with the attorney general's office as an organized crime figure. Brown called the Korshak allegations "false and libelous." Said Chronicle Managing Editor William German. "We think the series is hilarious ... in- cisive . . . but we have not been able to substantiate the charges." The Detroit Free Press, which has a monopoly on Doonesbury in this area, has con- tinued to run the tongue-in-cheek comic. Happenings ... ... are quite late in starting today. Eclipse Jazz continues the Summer Jazz Concert Series in Liber- ty Plaza from 6:30 p.m. until 9 p.m.... at 8 p.m., Theatre Lambda again presents "The Lady of the Camellias" in the Pendleton Room in the Michigan Union ... Michigan Repertory Theatre '79 offers Shakespeare's "Much Ado About Nothing" at 8 p.m. in the Power Center ... Carol Madalin, mezzo soprano, will perform in the Rackham Building at 8 p.m.... FILMS: Ann Arbor Public Library-Sa Shane, 2 p.m., 7:30 p.m., Meeting Room... Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Psycho, 7 p.m., 10:20 p.m.; The Conquering Worm, 8:40 p.m., both in A d. 3, MLB ... Cinema Guild-The Groove Tube, 7:30 p.m., 9:30 p.m., Old A & D Aud.... Cinema II-Visions of Eight, 7:30 p.m., 9:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. On the outside Doonesbury may be too hot for California to han- die, but the weather out there has Ann Arbor beat-it was 115' in Needles, California Wednesday. At any rate, today will be hot by Ann Arbor stan- dards. The high temperature will stretch to almost 90', the low tonight will be in the 60s. It'll be humid, though, and expect some isolated thundershowers in late afternoon or early evening. i Mir