.0 v 6 mmmmmmi- mmmm mm mm mm mm m COLONIAL LANES I IWELCOMES KI FLIPPER McGEE 'I This coupon good for 56C free video games or 259 off a game of bowling with Student I.D. COLONIAL LANES' 1950S. Industrial 40 bowling lanes, billiards, and video arcade muma mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm STUDENT LEGAL SER VICES' NOARD OF DIRECTORS Thrertuent Member Oenng Oponings include: One member Fall 1981-April 1982 Two members Fail 1981-April 1983 Deadline for Student Legal Services application is Monday:, September 21,1981 Applications and Committee descriptions available at MSA 3009 Michigan Union-763-3242 Page 2-Sunday, September 20, 1981-The Michigan Daily 'Sodarity Day' protest draws 260,OOO WASHINGTON (AP) - Wearing hardhats and union jackets, more than a quarter of a million people hoisted protest banners with sight of the White House yesterday to proclaim their disgust with federal budget cuts and characterize the Reagan administraton as "cold-hearted" and "callous.'' The AFL-CIO borrowed from the Polish union movement and called its rank-and-file protest "Solidarity Day." PRESIDENT REAGAN, spending the weekend 65 miles away at Camp (Amateur and Commercial Photofinishing) MSA Internal and External Comm ittee Openings EXTERNAL COMMITTEES Advisory Committee on Academic Affairs Student Relations Committee Advisory Committee on Recreational Sports Privacy Committee Residency Appeals Committee University Council Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics Library Council Review Panel for Classified Research Publications Board Honorary Degrees Civil Liberties Board Research Policies Committee Comp'uter Facilities University Relations U-Cellar Board State Relations Student Legal Services Program Evaluation Office of Student Services Policy Board University Budget Priorities R.O.T.C. Board Advisory Committee on Affirmative Action INTERNAL COMMITTEES Academic Affairs Budget Priorities Committee Communications Committee S.O.B. (Student Organizations Board) Legislative Relations Minority Affairs Permanent Interviewing Special Projects. International Students Maize Insurance Committee Course Evaluations C.S.J. (Central Student Judiciary) Course Encounters HOUR, Ektachrome SLIDE Processing On the Hour 10 to 3 Weekdays at 3180 Packard Only Regular Prices! 4 Hour Service at 691 So. Maple and 1315 So. University MsMICASEYAN ASSEMBLYf In by v9orl L ". 7 4 A F "41lI I " David, Md., received telephone reports on the demonstration. "The president recognizes and ap- preciates the frustration that comes because there are no instant miracles and he also appreciates that the medicine is hardly sweet," said White House spokesman David Gergen, ad- ding that Reagan believes that "the true enemy of working men and women is a sick economy." Addressing the huge throng, labor federation president Lane Kirkland referred to Reagan's contention that labor leaders are out of touch with the rank and file and said, "We are out of step with none but the cold hearted, the callous, the avaricious and the indif- ferent." U.S. PARK POLICE estimated the crowd at about 260,000. The AFL-CIO abandoned its traditional disdain of mass protest in hopes of impressing President Reagan and his congressional, allies with the depth of opposition to his domestic policies. Though Reagan had defeated labor and its allies in every budget battle in Congress, Kirkland said, "The winter's chill is approaching and the bloom is fading from fall's mandates." THERE WERE FEW pinstripe suits-the wardrobe of labor lob- byists-on the west front of the Capitol. Unionists marched side-by-side with civil rights and feminist activists. It was a protest without politicians. The march and rally had the support of the Democratic National Committee, but pols were invited to listen to the speeches, not make them. Earlier, the Reagan administration dismissed the demonstration as "par- tisan." The president has vowed to con- tinue slashing the federal budget and labeled critics of his program "Chicken Littles." At the head of the massive crowd that marched from the Washington Monument to the Capitol were Kirkland, BenjamineHooks, executive director of the NAACP, Eleanor Smeal, president of the National Organization for Women, and Coretta King, widow of Dr. Martin Luther King, J. Jerry Wurf, president of the American Federation of State, County 'and Municipal Employees, said, "In spite of this turnout, there's no guaran- tee that our task will succeed. This is the beginning of a long, difficult, frustrating process to turn the country around." Poetry Reading with JOHN BECK and DANNY RENDLEMANN reading from their works Mon. Sept. 21 -8:00 p.m. GUILD HOUSE -802 Monroe PIANO DROPOUTS Baltic Class. HOW TO PLAY THE PIANO DESPITE YEARS OF LESSONS Two years of testing have pro- duced a new course in making music. This course is based on an amazing breakthrough in piano instruc- tion, and it is intended for people who can at least read and play a simple melody line of notes. This new technique teaches you to unlock your natural ability to make music. You will learn how to take any melody and play it a variety of ways: rock, folk, swing, jazz, semi-classi- cal, bolero . . . you name it . just for the sheer joy of it! By the end of this 8-lesson course, you will know how to arrange and enrich a song so that you won't need sheet music or meporization. How well you play depends upon how much you prac- tice, of course. Come and experience this revolu- tionry new way of bringing adults back to the piano. FREE DEMONSTRATION Monday, Sept. 28, 1981 from 7-8 p.m. In Room 2038 School of Music Building on the North Campus of the University of Mich- igan. FO ME FORMER* PIANO DROPOUTS Continuation Class' for those who have completed the basic class and want a "refresher" course to review techniques, assess. progress and learn new concepts. While working with elements of im- IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Unpublished Beatles song may be released next year LONDON- After some 20 years under lock and key, the only complete Beatles recording never put on sale may be released sometime next year, the Daily Mirror reported yesterday. The tabloid newspaper said the song, "Please Leave My Kitten Alone," was recorded in the early 1960s but "rejected when the Beatles put together their album 'Please Please Me."' Since then, the paper said, the recording has been locked up at EMI Records in London. The Mirror said the record company planned to release the song last year, but shelved the idea when former Be tle John Lennon was shot to death in New York City. No spokesman at EMI was available to comment on the report. However, the newspaper quoted an unidentified company official as saying: "Ob- viously we would not have released the record at such a time. It would have been totally inappropriate. "There is other unfinished recorded material of the Beatles which has never been released, but 'Kitten' is the only complete track," the official was quoted as saying. Poland church supports union fight for press freedom WARSAW, Poland- Poland's Roman Catholic bishops, in a pastoral letter to be read from church pulpits today, called limiting freedom of speech "inadmissible" and said monopolizing the mass media was "unacceptable." Meanwhile, Solidarity and Poland's commuffist government observed an undeclared truce in their war of words, but the Kremlin escalated its attack and indicated Soviet military intervention might be near. The bishop's statement was made available last night and appeared to en- dorse the strivings of Solidarity, Poland's giant independent union, for ac- cess to the media, a sore point with the government here and the Soviets. Ca. anti-nuke protesters plan renewed assault SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif.- Protesters at the gates of the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant, their ranks depleted by more than 1,000 arrests, regrouped yesterday for a renewed assault one sheriff said would be "a bigone.' Tony Metcalf of the Abalone Alliance said the hundreds of anti-nuclear blockaders withdrew to their tent city on nearby private land "to prepare for a strong presence on Monday." Across the street, the power plant's main gate was free of protesters for the first time in five days. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission is expected to vote Monday on a request from Pacific Gas & Electric Co. for an interim license to load fuel, stat one of the twin reactors and conduct a series of low power tests. Prosecutor vows to crack down on Iranian leftist guerrillas BEIRUT, Lebanon- Leftist guerrillas captured in Iran will be tried and sentenced "on the spot" to save on jail costs and revolutionary guards who hesitate to carry out the order will be reprimanded, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's new prosecutor says. Meanwhile, five Khomeini disciples were declared "competent" to run for president Oct. 2. The front-runner was considered Ali Khamenei, head of the ruling Islamic Republican Party. The others were three Cabinet ministers and a former deputy interior minister. The announcement on summary trials was made Friday night by Prosecutor Musavi Tabrizi, successor to the assassinated Hojatoleslam Ali Qodussi. "I announce that security officers must stand up to these people (Mujahedeen Khalq guerrillas) most decisively," Tabrizi said on Tehran Radio. Vol. XCII, No. 10 Sunday, September 20, 1981 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, .Michigan 48109. Sub- scription rates: $12 September 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 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. 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For ads which required prepayment, there will be no refunds. Editor-in-chief....................SARA ANSPACH Managing Editor...............JULIE ENGEBRECHT University Editor................... Lorenzo Benet News Editor...................DAVID MEYER Opinion Page Editors..............KEVIN TOTTIS CHARLES THOMSON Chief Photographer.............'. PAUL ENGSTROM Sports Editor...................MARK MIHANOVIC Executive Sports Editors ...........GREG DEGULIS MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREHOUSE DREW SHARP ARTISTS: Robert Lence, Norm Christiansen, Jonathan Stewart. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jackie Bell, Kim, Hill, Deborah Lewis, Brian Masck. MAGAZINE/ARTS STAFF: Jane Carl, Mark Dighton, Adam Knee, Pam Kramer. Gail Negbour, Howard Witt. NEWS STAFF: John Adam, Beth Allen, Doug Brice, Crot Chaltron, Andrew Chapman,'Lisa Crumrine, Debi Davis, Ann Marie Fazio, Pam Fickinger, Maureen Fleming, Denise Franklin, Joyce Frieden, Mark Gin- din, Julie Hinds, Steve Hook, Kathy Hoover, Jennifer Miller. 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ANDREW PETERSEN BUSINESS STAFF-Ljz Altman, Meg Armbruster, Joe Broda, Norm Christiansen, Alexander DePillis, Aida Esenstat, Wendy Fox, Pamela Gould. Kathryn Hen- drick, Anthony Interrante, Indre Luitkus, Mary Ann Noonan, Michael Savitt, Karen Silverstein Sam Slaughter. Adrienne Strmbi, Nancy Thompson. Jeffrey Voight. PUBLICATION SCHEDULE 1981 SEPTEMBER S OCTOBER NOVEMBER OECEMSER S MT W TF SSM T W TFS SM TW T FS SM TW TF S 2123 1 3456-7 12345 1011t12 4 6 78 910 8 101f12 1314 6 8 9 10 1112 13 1516 17 18 19 111t 1314 151617 15 1718 192027 2 23 24 25 26 18 20212223 2 24 25 27 2930 X25 6 27 28 2930 31t ________ ______ 1982