The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, February 6, 1980-Page 5 ,} MSA votes to back Stephanopoulos for City Council seat come hear Join The RXOTBOEBSND Deaturing thealROOTETTES DailyFeb. 11 Your only opportunity to see INTERNATIONAL HOCKEY COMPETITION n at Michigan this year n By MITCH STUART The Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) voted last night to endorse Democratic City Council candidate Stacey Stephanopoulos, who is running in the Feb. 18 city primary against in- cumbent Council Democrat Earl Greene. Stephanopoulos told the . MSA she wants to make sure students have a voice in city government. She said she is qualified for the council spot because she has been active in city political life. Stephanopoulos has worked as a Democratic intern in City Hall under Council member Leslie Morris (D- Second Ward). The Assembly also elected Carole Bilson as its new vice-president for per- sonnel, filling the seat vacated by Bob DiScipio's resignation last week. Bilson said she hopes to encourage minorities and women to apply for the external MSA appointments. Bilson' said she has good contacts with minority groups on campus, and will try to fulfill any mandate calling for minority consideration that MSA might pass. In other action, the assembly rejec- ted a proposed resolution drafted by the Spartacus Youth League that would support a rally with the slogan "Drive war criminal Sullivan off campus." William Sullivan, former U.S. am- bassador to Iran, is a "war criminal" and his presence should not be tolerated, an SYL spokesman said. Sullivan is scheduled to speak in a Viewpoint Lecture Feb. 12. Several members of the assembly voiced concern that such a resolution would be speaking out against free speech on campus rather than simply censuring Sullivan. Daily Official Bulletin WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1980 Daily Calendar: Psychiatry: Alexander A. Guora, "Psychological Parameters of Diagnosis,": CPH Aud., 9:30a.m. CSSEAS: Jagdish Sharma, "Jainism and the Jans," 2447 Mason, 10 a.m., "Research in Progress: Jain Heroes and Hagiography," Lane Commons, 2 p.m. CEW: Margaret Lourie, Noon Time Book Review, E. Conf. Rackham, noon. Ctr. Afro-American & African Studies: Howard Lindsay, "Internal Colonialism: The City of Detroit-A Case Study," 246 Lorch, noon. Computing Center: "MTS Files, Pseudodevices, and I/0," 1011 NUBS, 12:10 p.m.; Edward J. Fron- czak, "Introduction to MTS-2," Seminar Rm., 1st loor7Ap.m. Law School: Panel discussion, "Bob Woodward's TheBrethren: Law and Journalism," Lawyers Club Lounge, 3:30 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: T. M. Sanders, "Physics of very small Crystals," 296 Dennison, 4 p.m. Industrial/Operations Engineering: Jay E. Aron- son, Carnegie-Mellon-U, "Forward Linear Programming," 229 W. Eng., 4 p.m. Chemistry: Nguyen Van Det, "Unsaturated Bridged Aromatic Compounds: Synthesis, reactions and polymerizations of E, E-(6.2) (2, 5) furanothane- 1 10-Diene and E, E-(6.2) (2,5) furanothane-1, 5- Diene", 1300 ^%em; Joel Goldberg, "recent Developments in Photoacoustic Spectroscopy," 1300 Chem, 4p.m. Clements Library: Brian Morton, "Beaumarchais and the American Revolution," Clements Lib., 4 p.m. Museum of Zoology: James E. Llody, "Oh What A Tangled Web; Signals and Sexual Selection in Fireflies," 1528 CCL, 4p.m. Several assembly members attended a conference of the new American Student Association (ASA) in Maryland last week and reported to MSA on the gathering. Brad Canale, former MSA treasurer said he is glad the University student government got involved with the ASA when it did. "We were able to get in on the organizational level," he said. "The key focus (at the conference) was bringing the people together to see 'if a strong body could be formed," Canale added. Canale said the consen- sus was the ASA could be a success. Also last night, MSA voted not to hold a special election within the next few weeks to decide whether or not preferential voting should be used in MSA general elections. Several assem- bly members cited preferential voting as one of the factors that contributed to the difficulties with last year's MSA elections. Leftover meat stock can be cooked down to a concentrate, frozen in ice- cube trays and stored in plastic bags in the freezer for future use. WAKE to I1 S4-410 6 it rs-- No. 3 NCAA POLISH MICHIGAN QOLYMPIC "WOLVERINES" TEAM SE ATS Tickets now available Michigan ticket office and at Yost 6:00 PM Wed. I --. AP Photo A NATIONAL GUARDSMAN watches over inmates at the devastated New Mexico State Penitentiary. Locked between fences, the prisoners were wrapped in blankets as protection from the cold. Displaced inmates tell of N.M. prison riot horrors From AP and UPI SANTA FE, New Mexico-Fright- ened inmates yesterday described to investigators the tortures and mutilations they saw during 36 hours of rioting'at the 'New Mexico Penitentiary. Prison officials segregated the riot leaders so they could not intimidate potential witnesses. Retribution against inmate informants-"snitches" in prison slang-was one of the chief motives in the weekend rioting in which prisoners were gang raped, slashed, bludgeoned, beheaded, and burned. FURTHERMORE, Felix Rodriguez, deputy secretary of criminal justice said many of the convicts trapped in the weekend rioting should not have been there in the first place. After revising the death count several times, officials said 33 died in the prison riot, some of drug overdose. Thirty-nine had been reported dead at one point. At least 89 were injured. Rodriguez and Criminal Justice Secretary Adolph Saenz also said many of the prisoners inside at the time and should not have been in the maximum-security penitentiary. Killing, Rodriguez said, "means nothing" to prisoners who are sentenced to hundreds of years in prison. Rodriguez and Sanez said prisoners serving time for less serious offenses were there simply because the, state had no other place to house them. The savagery illustrated what happens, Saenz said, when hardcore offenders are crowded together with younger prisoners sentenced to less serious crimes. Learn about the great opportunities available in the areas of: ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING MECHANICAL ENQINEERING INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING COMPUTER SCIENCES SIGN UP TODAY! Motorola recruiters will be interviewing on campus February 12 i No snow could save city money MOTOROLA INC. -I. BY JOHN GOYER City Council Monday night heard some good news and some bad news in second quarter financial report on the ty's revolving funds. The good news, Assistant City Ad- ministrator Patrick Kenney said, is* that if the mild winter continues with little snow, the city could save up to $150,000 in money budgeted for snow removal. But then came the bad news: smaller cars and less travel have caused a reduction in gasoline and licensing taxes collected by the state, Kenney said, and the reduction means $100,000 less in shared revenue for the city. - AS A RESULT, Kenney said, the city's licensing and gas tax fund, used primarily for road repairs, will run as planned at a $243,000 deficit this fiscal year. During last May's budget sessions, Council decided against keeping a $295,000 balance in the fund, and thus planned the deficit. The city also an- ticipated a $266,000 deficit in the revolving fund for the city's sewage disposal system for the 1979-80 fiscal year. Revolving funds are accounts kept separate from the city's general fund which support specific city services, such as the sewage system, or the parking system. These services generate their own revenue through user charges for such city offerings as sewage service (recorded on individual utility bills) or charges for parking. 9Ir a e YES, I am interested in sending a Valentine's Day Message through the DAILY Classifieds. "U JAMES - hear I PACKER ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID 1.00 for the first 2 lines .50 for each additional line DEADLINE: 5:00 P.M. Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1980 him speak about - UNOERS NDING Mb'S DILE HE QIME I~fik I T FOR YOU i VEILENTINE MESStGE: 2 3 4 Name AAICO UIRI I I I I it