Thursday, May 26, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Poge Seven Lasers eeyd for civilian use By SHARON BONANNI Lasers for civilian energy use is not so far-fetched according Some day in the not so dis- to KMS Fusion, Inc. of Ann Ar- taut future your Datsun may bor. The small firm, pioneers run on a man-made, low pol- in laser fusion development, tutant fuel, concocted by the remain the only private com- same laser fusion process that pany currently receiving fed- treats cancer victims at the eral funds for their research. community hospital. "SOME REPORTS on laser Block argues for halt of special search waarrant By SUE WARNER Judge S. J. Elden of the Fifteenth District Court heard argu- ments yesterday on the validity of a "special search warrant and order" which was handed down to Joel Block, president of AFSCME, Local 1583 on May 13. The warrant demands that Block submit to making a voice print which would be matched against the voice on a taped phone call, allegedly received at police headquarters during the recent AFSCME strike. The unidentified caller made a bomb threat on the University's Administration Building. ELDEN HAS postponed his decision until June 1. Block and his attorney Donald Koster made a motion to quash (stop) the order while Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Neil Juliar attempted to uphold it. Koster argued that the order should be stopped because there is not probable cause in the case to permit it. He also contended that the voice print would be inadmissable as evidence because almost trhee months have elapsed since the alleged threat was made. Koster said that no previous case has used spectrograph (voice print analysis) evidence made more than one month after the original sample. THE DEFENSE continued to object that the court would not be able to enforce the warrant even if Elden rules it acceptable because the suspect could use a different voice at the second sampling. Juliar portested that the spectrograph readings were admiss- able as evidence, and cited testimony of two Michigan experts on the sbject, an MSU professor and a Michigan State Police official Otto ;,,id they believed voice print can clearly indicate whether so v oices are the same. Bisek was optimistic about the judge's decision in the matter. A think it came out in the hearing that there's just no need for them to obtain this court order." 'V, position," he continued, "is that they don't have a tape of vs v ce now, but if I give it to them (Ann Arbor police) there's n arantee of what they'll do with it." Can astrology solve all your problems? research are wildly inaccur- t ate," says Donald Woodbridge, I KMS Director of Classification n and Information. "Lasers are often confused with nuclear bombs and with the same emo- i tional association as weapons, a But our work is not explicitly t orientated to weapons re- ft search." w The KMS program uses t high - intensity laser radiation,K compressing tiny deuterium e and tridium elements to high m temperatures to promote nuc- t lear fusion and fission," UMM Professor of Nuclear Engineer- i ing, Richard Osborne said. "If t it works, it's an enormous in- 1 crease in our energy reserve of t alternate fuels." iZ Actually the KMS Fusion las- f er technique uses an unlimited t' energy source, the heavy hy- e drogen molecules extracted from ordinary water, which are converted into usable fuels.- It IN ADDITION to a substitute p for dwindling natural gas, KMS w claims clean - burning, hydro- $ gen - based fuel for cars and f other vehicles could be derived t from the laser fusion process, o Developing lasers for medi- t cal use requires purchasing e a larger, faster-firing laser r from Canada, says Woodbridge. The fusion process poses little environmental threat. "No pro- cess is entirely safe," says Woodbridge, "but the hazards proposed are very satisfactory compared to other methods. There's no danger of radiation scattered over the countryside, or exhaust escaping into the atmosphere." Before KMS can sufficiently develop these potential uses of laser energy, they need more than the present $7.3 million provided by the goverment's Energy Research Defense As- sociation (ERDA). KMS pro- vides fuel pellets and laser tar- gets for ERDA's defense pro- gram. After a cut in 1974, they received a miniscule $350,000 contract to provide laser data for ERDA's government labora- TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:00 the Sterom h Coo APOrom .nP cMle 1 TON IGH T AT 7:00 & 9:00 TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:00 MUHAMMAD A~LFn A COUMBIA/EMI E^Fe3" _ . F~r~nma~xlie. uen PG 9 : ories, but their fundamental funds, including work by gov- aser contributions boosted the ernment labs, be used strictly ext year's grant to $7 million. for civilian application. Despite this victory for civil- THE CURRENT laser debate iap energy funding, Pursell said n the government centers on in a recent, interview, "that's battle for limited funds be- half the battle. The bill goes to oeen the supporters of laser appropriations next, which is or civilian - usage and those probably as military - oriented ho support military applica- as the other (committee). ion of the beams. Although "There's battle with those MS sees much civilian laser that feel public funds ought to nergy potential, the govern- be used for military use. I ex- sent expects a greater pay-off a problem in leadership n military applications," says with Schlesinger, and others Vaodbridge. Civisn research who are pro-military." equires much effort, he says, If KMS receives the addition- I' comparison to the current al energy research scientists ow risk, low-cut governmental estimate it will be the mid- actic concentrating on wea- 1980's before public laser-facil- aons simulation. "Youfireda iies are a reality. aser approximatelyionce a day "But we need sufficient ef- ar military applications and of- fort put into it,' Woodbridge en 1,000 times far civilian en- says, "efforts on the order of rgy resetarch," he said, the Apollo space program." One of the KMS supporters Only four fillies have won the who sees laser fusion's civilian Preakness Stakes, the second sotential is U, S. ReptCarl D. leg of racing's Triple Crown. Pursell (R-2nd District), Last The last to do it was Nellie week his amendment to add The ackdit 9N4. 9.2 million to current KMS Morse back in 1924, unding passed unanimously in he House Science and Technol- The University's C h a r 1 e ogy Committee. In addition to Baird Carillon, now 40 years old, lhe total $116 million earmark- is the third heaviest carillon in d for KMS, Pursell's bill di- the world by total weight (100 eets 60 per cent of laser fusion tons). I HAD CANCER AND I LIVED. Continued from Page 3) Titunik insists that her advice to people is accurate whether it concerns questions tsf job choice, po tital success, or divorce. She explains that University rtudeitts come in for vocational cinetseting after they have been t the placement office for ad- vice. "I LOOK at my client's chart ad come up with the same an- swer," she said. Titunik once advised a young woman to en- ter military service on the basis o1 her chart. The placement office had given the woman the same advice. "Politicians have their pet astrologers around the coun- try," she confides. "They ask them, 'what is the campaign period going to be like in 1978?"' This way, she contends they will be aware of stress periods and will know what to expect. "All of our recent politicians had Pluto in the tenth house. They had a certain type of char- acter that's presidential tim- ber," she says. Concerning the "misrepresen- tation" of astrology in the paper, "If people explore it, they'll see there's more to it . ' * there are more than twelve dif- ferent types of people," she says, referring to the 12 astro- logical signs. ANN AI0[CE0 HuM CCr-0 Thursday, May 26 GONE WITH THE WIND (Victor Fleming, 1939) 6:30 & 10:00-Aud. A The "ROOTS" of the White Southern aristoracy, this big, beautiful, technicolor epic stars Vivian Leigh as Scarlet O'Hara, scheming her way through husbands, the Civil War and Re- construction, and Clark Gable as rakish, romantic Rhett Butler. A movie that has become a national institution, GONE WITH THE WIND can only be seen properly on the big screen in mm, and that's how you'll see it tonight. With Leslie Howard, Olivia de Havilland. Marvella Bayh I have had breast cancer and a mastectomy to dare it. But it didn't change my life-or my femininity. Of course, right after surgery, I was discouraged. But then I received a visit from an American Cancer Society volunteer. She gave me a ball and a rope. And she showed me how touse them to strengthen my arm.She gave me information about breast forms and how to fit my clothes. Then she told me that she,atoo,had had a mastectomy. TIhat's when she gave me faith. I knew then, if other women could do it, so could I. And I did. If you know a cancer patient who needs help, call your Unit of the American Cancer Stciety. We can give people information and counseling on all kinds of cancer. We can also give them hope. I know. Because I had cancer and lived. American Cancer Society. Callus for help. sa 5a ct iCr:'sue't eee A stoSu5sota t s a 5