Page 2-Friday, January 25, 1980-The Michigan Daily BRUCE WOOLLEY & THE CAMERA CLUB including: Clean-Clean/Dancing With The Sporting Boys Video Killed The Radio Star I-- N 99 TlIt LP T Wha 499LP 549 tape ao o The Romantics including: To Carrie" When I Look In Your Eyes t I Like About You/Keep In Touch A JC 36301 Bruce Woqlley is the brightest new rock star on the ho-I rizon. Look for him to be rising fast. 2-Record Set Specially Priced The Clash LONDON CALLING including: Lost In The Supermarket/The Card Cheat Jimmy Jazz/Spanish Bombs/London Calling 699 LP and TAPE Speciallow price JZ 36273* The Romantics synthe- size elements of the mid-sixties Brit- ish invasion (Kinks, The Beatles, Dave Clark Five) and combine them with the energy and creativity of the '80s. STEVE FORBERT JACKRABBIT SLIM including: Romeos Tune Wait Say Goodbye To Little Jo Make It All So Real The Sweet Love That You Give (Sure Goes A Long, Long Way) 4 99P 549 TAPE Daily Photo by CYRENA CHANG STUDENTS DISPENSE conscientious objector information in the Fishbowl. women consier possibility of facing mlitar re1stration E2 36328 The most vital English band blasts it all back home in "London Calling"-a double-album set containing 19 explosive tracks. Joe Strummer, Mick Jones, Paul Simonon and Topper Headon issue a clarion call for the new decade. i i JZ 36 widely-I 191 Forbert.has followed his (heralded first album bril- with more incisive songs in n expressive style. "But It Once. Enjoy It A Lifetime. his ow his owr Recorded Music Is Your Best Enter- tainment Value." A N N A R B 0 Rr Ann Arbor's lowest priced record and ton cta 523 E. Liberty 994-8031 tape sore. mo 5141/2 E. William (upstairs) 888-1776 COUPON Coupon good 10% OFF ANY at Scho0oOFFidN TAPES ONLs pre-recorded I tape per 8-Track or Cassette customer q lA Ulp W~ilia. ~ ~ 2. vmin UVr irdIp' m, ~ng (Continued from Page 1) military services, for women would be debated in both houses. Phyliss Schlafly, a leader of forces opposing the ERA, said she plans a petition campaign to gather signatures of men and women opposed to registering women for the draft. "WE ARE VERY much opposed to women registering," she said. "It's been the plan all along of the ERA proponents to draft women and put them in combat." Most local women conceded that, pending the passage of ERA and "equal rights," they would not object to fighting alongside men. Among the most representative observations of University students: *Gretchen Sievers:" "I'm against the draft, period. But if men have to register, so should women." * Kathy Sullivan: "I don't think it I J I -4 r .- m m o e a p s B d inin - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -nmw K/ \\ should be any different for me just because Iam a woman." * TERRI BONIFIGALO: "A woman can shoot just as straight as a man, if that's what is needed-there are cer- tainly capacities in which women can serve-they are just as capable." " Katie Kelleher: "I don't see why men should face the issue alone-they shouldn't get stuck with the problem." Some women who were contacted, however, said that it would not be "practical" to send'women into battle. According to junior Sheryl Beshke, "A lot of women may not be emotionally equipped at this point in time to go to war-maybe fifty years in the future, but now I don't think they're ready." John White, the deputy director of the Office of Management and Budget who has been studying the military con-. scription system, said that a presiden- tial report to Congress on the draft was due by Feb. 9. He said it was likely that THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume XC, No. 94 Friday, January 25,1980 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morn- ings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street; Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates : $12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters);$13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postage aid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. the president, would indicate then whether women should be registered. In the past, Carter and Defense Secretary Brown have said that any registration should include women as well as men. Boycott o supported ' (Continued from Page1) this weekend in Colorado Springs, ac- cording to sources inthe adiministration and on Capitol Hill. The !board is expec- ted to consider Carter's request at that meeting. However, Sen. Frank Church (D- Idaho), chairman of the Foreign Relations panel, ignored the appeal for immediate action. Church refused to' change plans for committee hearings next week on the Olympics question, While endorsing the House resolution and predicting eventual Senate ap- proval of a similar measure, Church, through an aide, said his committees must first hold hearings. The U.S. Olympic Committee has warned that a U.S. boycott might destroy the games. But House mem- bers were more concerned with the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and chose to act rapidly on the issue. Hewlett-Packard s Statistical ,Wonder: theHP-32 E F L i n e a r r e g r e s s i onF Linear estimate) " Correlation coefficient- Q and Inverse (normal distri- bution functions) 7 8 Metric conversions R4 H - Full statistics for both X and Y Full scientific functions, including hyperbolics and their inverses, List Price $70.00 Our Price $58.00 We are the only people in A2 that cover the year warranty period by handling the servicing and loaning you a cal- culator to use while yours is being repaired. We -pay ship- ping! We offer a full 30 day over-the-counter exchange on all defective HEWLETT-PACKARD Calculators for another cal- Daily Official Bulletin Friday. Janury25, 1980 D~aily ('alendar Medical Care Organization: Diana Wright, "Level of Training. Cost of Medical Care, and Outcome," 3000 Vaughan, SPH, 11iam.n Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies: Richad H. Wallis, "Balinese Ceremonies and Their Music,"Lane Commons.noon. Resource Pol. & Mgt.: Pat West, "Policy Im- plications of Behavioral Research," 2032 Dana, noon. Guild House: Soup and sandwich, 75 cent luncheon, Doug Hill, Princip of American Collegiate Institute, Izmir, Turkey, "The Crises in the Middle East," 802 Monroe, noon. Physics/Astronomy: A. Marseher, U-California, San Diego, "Theory of Radio Sources," 807 Den- nison, 4 p.m. A pp.- F'"" Roundtable On Irane and fganistan: The Current Crisis An afternoon devoted to discussion of the social, political, and economic aspects of the events currently convulsing Iran and Afghanistan, as interpreted by specialists on the Near East and as viewed by experts on China, India, and the U.S.S.R. SUNDAY, JANUARY 27-1:45 p.m. AUDITORIUM 3, MODERN LANGUAGES BUILDING (Washington St., between Thayer and Ingalls) Sponsored by The University of Michigan Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies, with assistance from the Center for Chinese Studies, the Center for Russian and East European Studies, the Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, and the Office of the Dean, College of Literature, Science and the Arts. SPEAKERS: CENTER FOR NEAR EASTERN AND NORTH AFRICAN STUDIES Robin Barlow, Director, Center for Research on Economic Development; Professor, Department of Economics. K. Allin Luther, Professor,. Department of Near Eastern Studies; former President, American Institute of Iranian Studies Richard P. Mitchell, Professor, Department of History William D. Schorger, Director, Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies; Professor, Department of Anthropology .r.... .I #UIUCer euMmrrc 0