. > Free Pregnancy Testing Immediate Results Confidential Counseling Complete Birth Control Clinic > .Medicaid Blue Cross 'lAnn Arbor and .. , X13}941-810Downriver area i Pace 2-Sunday, January 27, 1980-The Michigan Daily Laotian refugee y t ,. (313) 559-0590 Southfield area. , Northland Family Planning Clinic, Inc. 4 :.; To the Freshman: It wouldn't be the DEKE H OUSE If there weren't some rumors about it. Just for the record, Here are some of the things we're not: TEKES or QUARANTINED Entirely GROOSE POINTE ARISTOCRATS In the bar 24 hours a day, and so forth. Come down and see us during Fraternity Rush Week at our mysterious century old DEKE Chapel, 611 E. William Street, next to White's Market. DELTA KAPPA EPSILON, a Michigan tradition since 1855, is back on campus. F Aim Abo'ai' O e cu t Fiuedt Kdwicte F ede Reatoitu d FAIRFIELD, Iowa (AP) - The few Laotian refugees in this southeast Iowa farming community are "having trouble inside" trying to understand why a fellow refugee and his four children were hanged from twine nooses in the basement of their home. Prosecutors, in the meantime, plan to take the case to a grand jury. Police say .Theng Pao Yang, 29, apparently hanged his children and then hanged himself. One of the children died.h YI LY, 25, told police she found her husband and their four children hanging in their basement on Tuesday. She quickly cut them down, but their only son, eight-year-old So Yang Yang, had died of strangulation. Theng Pao was hospitalized in good condition yesterday. His six-year-old daughter, Bay, was listed in fair con- dition. Two younger daughters, three-year-old Chu and one-year-old Mai Yai, were with their mother in Fairfield. The other five Laotian families who have come here in the past year are confused by it all. "THEY FELT very sad," said Bar- bara Hill, who teaches English to the refugees. "They call it 'having trouble inside.' "They can understand a man wanting to take his own life; this happens in their country. But they do not under- stand why he would kill the boy or why Daily Official Bulletin SUNDAY, JANUARY 27,1980 Daily Calendar: Center for Near Eastern & North African Studies: "A Round Table on Iran and Afghanistan: The Current Crisis," MLB, Aud. 3, 1:45 p.m. MONDAY, JANUARY 28,1980 Daily Calendar: Near Eastern and North African Studies: Lois Aroin, "Teaching About Palestine and the Arab- Israeli Conflict in the 1980's," Lane Hall, noon. SNY Research Group for Environmental Action; 'Perry Bullard, State Rep., "Current Environmental Issues and Legislation in Michigan,1520 Dana, noon. Macromolecular Res. Center: Amos Korin, "Copolymers of Vinyl Fluoride," 3005 (hem., 4 p.m. English Symposium in Critical Theory: Stanley Fish, "How to Recognize a Poem When You See One," Rtackham, 4 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: S. Dimopoulos, Stanford-U., "The First 3 Seconds of The Universe," 2038 Randall, 4 p~m.. ELI/Near Eastern Studies: Shoshana Blum- Kulka, "A Study of the Performance of Speech Acts by Native Speakers and Second Language Learners E. Conf., Rackham, 4 p.m. School of Arch: Stanley Tigerman, "Toward an American Architecture," Chrysler Center, 8 p.m. he would try to hang his whole family." eAuthorities are just as confused about what happened, and why. Jefferson County Attorney Edwin Kelly said Friday he would call a grand jury to in- vestigate the death of the boy. KELLY SAID his investigation had been hampered by the language barrier and having to work through inter- preters. "There have been some discrepan- cies," he said. "But we don't know if these creep into the translation or for some other reason."~ He also said he would ask the Juvenile Court to decide whether the state should seek custody of the Yang children or offer some other form of protection for the family. THE FAMILY arrived in Fairfield on Dec. 1 after spending five years in a refugee camp in Thailand. Those who -knew him agree that Theng Pao was troubled because he left his mother and stepfather behind in the camp. But did the Yangs face more dif- ficulties than the 4,500 other Southeast Asian refugees who have come to Iowa? The Rev. Lynn Bergfalk, pastor of the First Baptist Church, which sponsored the Yangs, said language barriers, homesickness, and unemployment were common problems among .the refugees. AP rPoto HOLDING ONE OF HER children, Yi Ly Yang arrives at Evergreen Cemetery to attend to graveside services of her 8-year-old son, So Yang. Yang's husband and four children were found Tuesday hanging in the basement; the others, except So Yeng, survived. NOW PRESENTS: Sunday Brunch featuring: FRESH MUFFINS WAFFLES PANCAKES AND OMELETTES NEW HOURS S 2oam-2:30pm Kennedy prepares policy speech 314 E. LIBERTY ANN ARBOR 662-2019 . _ THE MICHIGAN DAILY .. CUSPS 344-9400) Volume XC, No. 96 Sunday, January 27, 1980 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published SUNDAY: daily Tuesday through Sunday morn- ings during the University year at 420 SPAG H ETTI NIGH T Ma nard Streets Ann Arbor, Michigan 481 9. Subscription rates: $12 Septem- "All the pasta you can eat ber through April (2 semesters); $13 by for only $2.50" mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through And on'MONDAY NIGHT Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- EnjoyRick's Burritos side Ann Arbor. Second class postage IY paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- only $1.25 MASTER: Send address changes to BEER SPECIAL THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. From APand UPI WASHINGTON -Sen. Edward Ken- nedy arranged briefings with State Department, Pentagon and CIA of- ficials yesterday in preparation for a highily' publicized policy speech he hopes will turn his presidential acam- paign around. Kennedy, following a dismal showing last week in the Iowa caucuses, can- celed a scheduled four-day campaign swing through New England to devote adequate tig'e to his speech tomorrow at Georgetown University in Washington. KENNEDY WAS briefed at the State Department yesterday afternoon by Deputy SEcre3tary of State Warren Christopher., He also was to meet later in the day with CIA officials at his Senate office, and with a top Defense Department of- ficial at the Pentagon. He met Friday with U.N. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim, presumably about the situation in Iran, in preparation for the speech. KENNEDY HAS been secretive about the speech, but word has leaked out it will deal with foreign policy and seek to open up discussion of the nation's problems overseas, including Iran and Afghanistan. His cancellation of the campaign ,swing through Maine and New Ham- pshire - two states he acknowledges he must win to remain a viable candidate -has focused attention on it. After delivering the speech tomorrow, Kennedy's updated schedule calls for him to travel to New York for a fund raiser. He speaks to a labor group in Philadelphia and then leaves Wed- nesday for an extended campaign swing through New York. BEFORE KENNEDY challenged President Carter, few questioned the senator's credentials as a winner or the likelihood he would whip Carter and sweep to the nomination. Carter's popularity was at an historic low. ft seemed likely that Americans would be paying $1 a gallon for home heating oil and the same for gasoline. If , those numbers came true they would destroy the president in the New Ham- pshire primary, it was said. "I .don't think that he ( Kennedy ) could be denied the Democratic nomination if he were to run," House Speaker Thomas O'Neill said last Sep- tember. IN NEW HAMPSHIRE people are paying $1 a gallon for home heating oil and as much as $1.25 a gallon for gasoline. Nonetheless, Carter has a good chance of winning the Democratic primary in Kennedy's own backyard and scoring a quick knockout in the race for the presidential nomination. Kennedy's campaign is low on money and lower on morale and he acknowledges he must carry the Maine caucuses on Feb. 10 and the New Ham-, pshire primary on deb. 26. But the last two weeks of his losing campaign in Iowa saw Kennedy criticizing Carter repeatedly for "lur- ching from crisis to crisis." KENNEDY HAS avoided ciiticizing The embassy takeover three days before Kennedy his candidacy for president. happen announce Indiana Chrysler workers OK contract Carter's effort to win release of the Americans held hostage in the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. His one direct foray into the Iranian situation was his criticism early in December of the exiled Shah of Iran, who, Kennedy said, "ran one of the most violent regimes the history of mankind." That statement stirred a storm of criticism of Kennedy. In part, it reflected the senator's frustration with the Iranian situation, which has dogged his campaign since its outset. i a RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATION FORMS FOR 1980-81 ACADE MIC YEAR Available Starting January 17, 1980 !n Ms. Charlene Coady's Office, 1500 SAB POSITIONS INCLUDE: Resident Director, Assistant Resident Director, Resident Advisor, Head Librarian, Resident Fellow, Minority Peer Advisors and Graduate Student Teaching Assistant Advisory positions require the completion of a minimum of 55 credit hours by the end of the 1980 Winter Term for the Resident Fellows in Residential College, Resident Advisor and MinorityPeer Advisor positions; Graduate status for Graduate Student Teaching Assistant in Pilot Program, Head Librarian, and Resident Director positions. However, qualified undergraduate applicants may be considered for the Resident Director positions. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a registered U. of M. student on the Ann Arbor Campus during the period of employment. (2) Must have completed a minimum of 55 credit hours by the end of the 1980 Winter Term. (3) Preference will be given to applicants who have lived in resi- dence halls at University level for at least one year. (4) Undergraduate applicants must have a 2.5 cumulative grade point average in the school or.college in which they are enrolled. Graduate applicants must be in good academic standing at the end of the 1979 Fall term in the school or college in which they are enrolled. (5) Preference is given to applicants who do not intend to carry heavy academic schedules and who do not have rigorous outside commitments. (6) Applicants with children will not be considered. (7) Proof of these qualifications may be required. INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - Chrysler. workers in Indiana have approved the ' United Auto Workers' modified con- tract with the financially-troubled automaker by a margin of almost 10 to 1. Only one local's votes were still un- counted late Friday. WORKERS IN Indianapolis, New Castle and Kokomo voted over- whelmingly in favor of ratifying the new contract, which called for numerous concessions on the part of the workers. Region 3 Director Dallas Sells said he was pleased by the large margin in favor of the pact, adding the vote "reflects the fact that Chrysler workers understand the problem and are willing to make the sacrifice necessary." The renegotiated contract called for $446 million in concessions by the workers, mostly in the form of delayed raises, less benefits and fewer days off. In exchange,. Chrysler will issue about $162.5 million in stock for its UAW workers. 'The 16,410,030 shares traded at the New York Stock Exchange on Black Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1929, set a volume record that lasted until April1, 1968. protest. 0 ag ainst draft U.S action (Continued from Page 1) situation and would like to gear up war sentiment to get re-elected and solve economic problems. "During wartime work increases, bu after a war there are no jobs," DuBois said Supporting theSoviets.in Afghanistan, DuBois said when the U.S. goes into a country, backwardness among the people is perpetuated. DUBOIS CRITICIZED the system of democracy in this country and said it works only when there is no threat to the bourgeoisie. "The Black Panthers were opposed the system and were shot up," DuBois said. "Do you think there's freedom for black auto workers in this country whr' are left without a job?" Manning sal" Use Daily Class if ieds SYL stages Ratification of the contract wa proceeding well nationwide, spokesman for UAW International Headquarters in Detroit said. The votes were expected to be completed by Feb. 1. STUDY IN EUROPE The University of Louvain (est. 1425) Leuven, Belgium OFFERS COMPLETE PROGRAMS IN PHILOSOPHY FOR THE DEGREES OF B.A., M.A., AND PH.D. PLUS A JUNIOR YEAR ABROAD PROGRAM Write to: Secretary English Program, H.I.W. Kardinaal Marcierplein 2 B-3000 Leuven, Belgium svPec " or o eVĀ°1 I