The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, January 15, 1980-Page 9 FIRST ADDRESS SINCE WINNING ELECTION Gandhi blasts previous NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Indira Gandhi, reinstalled as prime minister last night, charged that those ruling India during her 34 months out of power had reduced the economy to what she described as a "shocking" condition. In her first broadcast to the nation as reinstated prime minister, she said the people now realize that the "solid economic, social, and political in- frastructure," built up in the first 30 years of Indian independence, "was allowed to be dissipated in just 30 mon- ths" of rule by the Morarji Desai and Charan Singh governments that followed her defeat. "We assume office in the wake of severe drought and acute shortage of vital inputs, aggravated by negligence and mishandling, a year-and-a-half of strained industrial relations resulting in a loss of over 50 million man-days of work, one year of non-utilization of half of our installed industrial capacity,,a record deficit. . . and half of our in- stalled industrial capacity, a record deficit. . . and sharply declining rate of growth of exports," Gandhi said. "The overall picture of the economy, gathered from officials, is far worse than I had expected. Indeed, it is shocking," she added. ACCUSING HER predecessors of sowing "seeds of bitterness, confron- tation, division, and destabilization," she urged national reconciliation, saying "Our country needs the healing touch. We have only one adversary - social and economic injustice. We have only one goal: to build a strong, self- confident, self-reliant independent In- dia." Gandhi's Indira Congress Party scored a landslide victory in the national election Jan. 3 and 6, winning 351 of 525 seats in the lower house of Parliament. In a ceremony at Rashtrapati Bhavan, the presidential palace, President Neelam Sanjiva Reddy swore in the daughter of India's first prime minister, the late Jawaharlal Nehru, for her fourth term at leader of this nation of 640 million people, the world's most populous democracy. Minutes after taking the oath, Gandhi reoccupied the prime minister's office where from 1966 until her 1977 election defeat she had ruled India as one of the gov'ts world's most powerful women. GANDHI TOOK the oath of allegian- ,Ce along with 14 Cabinet ministers and seven ministers of state. She appointed only two members of her previous cabinets. Her controversial son, Sanjay Gandhi, was not named to one of the posts. There had been speculation she would be included in the Cabinet. Gandhi chose P. V. Narasimha Rao, a farmer, lawyer and former chief minister of the southern state of Andhra Pradesh, as her foreign minister. Gan-' dhi's choice of a man with no experien- ce in foreign affairs appears to indicate she plans to dominate foreign policy herself. SAT not the key to the 'U'; other factors more crucial Introductoly Discussions On The Haha'IFaith EVERY WED. AND THURS. THUR., JAN. 31 (Continued from Page 1) college years," he said. WHEN ADMISSIONS personnel con- sider applications, Erickson said, they first look at high school performance as represented by grade point average and class rank. Also important is the type and level of high school courses and whether the curriculum is well- rounded, he said. In addition, Erickson said the Ad- missions Office considers trends in secondary school performance and looks with favor upon applicants whose grades have shown improvement over time. Extracurricular activities are weighed but not heavily, he said. Erickson refuted Nader's charges, stating that the companies that com- pose the tests work to keep them as ob- jective as possible. "Nader has been more critical than he has a right to be," Erickson said. The admissions official added that students with very poor grades won't likely be admitted to the University, even if their test scores are outstan- ding. Daily Photo by DAVID HARRIS Above it all High .above Nickels Arcade, where most folks don't look, someone painted a message: "See what else you can do when you're high." Comedian Durante Cottage INN (good only with this coupon) Please ask for your free Pepsi 3 ' when placing the order Carry-Out and FREE Delivery r I FREE-2 LARGE PEPSIS With any medium or lorge pizzo GOOD MON THRU THURS (DON'T FORGET to ask for your free Pepsis WHEN you place your order) - 12", 14". 16" PIZZAS--10 items including Zucchini & Eggplant. * COTTAGE INN'S Very Own SICILIAN DEEP DISH PIZZA * SANDWICHES. SUBS. PIZZA SUB. COTTAGE INN DELUXE - Expertly prepared ITALIAN DINNERS: Spaghetti. Lasagna. Connelloni. Manicotti. Combination I 546 PACKARD at HILL-665-6005 I MONDAY SA1TURDAY4 2om SUNDAY orn3 wrr-w - m - inm m - mm mm - rrn - m gin serious SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) - Jimmy Durante has lapsed into uncon- sciousness and was listed in serious condition yesterday at St. John's Hospital, a friend pf, h 6-year-old comediansaid. Durante's former press agent, Joe Bleedon, said he visited Durante on Sunday but that the entertainer was 'unaware of his presence., "HIS EYES were closed and he was king oxygen," Bleedon said. Durante, who had been reported in fair condition, has worsened since the weekend, said hospital spokeswoman Marsha Bolyanatz. "There is a deterioration in vital signs from the weekend," she said. "Progressive pulmonary condition remains serious." BLEEDON SAID close family and friends had visited the ailing comedian his private room. '"Jerry and Patti Lewis came up, Danny Thomas, Peter Lawford's been there - and of course his'wife, Mar- jorie, and adopted daughter, Cece," :Bleedon said. Bolyanatz said friends and fans have been flooding the hospital with cards, letters, and telephone calls. "WE'VE BEEN receiving phone calls nationwide and also some inter- national phone calls," she said. "There f-ere 50 to 75 a day over the weekend. far as cards and letters coming in, e've received about 100 a day." Durante, who started out in show business some 70 years ago, was condition hospitalized Jan. 7 with pneumonitis, a form of pneumonia. Durante started out as a piano player at age 17. His oversized nose - which earned him the nickname "The Schnoz," - raspy voice and trademark farewell, "Good night, Mrs: Calabash, wherever you are," endeared him to millions in a career that spanned all forms of entertainment from vaudeville to television and films. Durante ... ill with pneumonia HEALTIOH PROFESSIONALS Ask a Peace Corps volunteer nurse or notut i l.- o : sw she teaches basic health care to rural villagers in El Salvador. Ask a VISTA community worker why he organizes neighbors i St. Louis to set up a free health 1-- . 't ,,', irhat Iv t vv Want to heh ,-'n nlewanft to use their