0 Page 2-Sunday, September 27, 1981-The Michigan Daily Interested In Experience In Hieeth Core? Getting Away from The Books? Help ing eople? VOLUNTEER AT U OF M PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITALS CALL 763-1580 SINGA SONG! with the U-M WOMEN'S GEE CLUB Positions still available for fall call665-7408 737 N. Huron, Ypsilant 465-0240 For Sands and Drink Spcials Mon.-GREEK NIGHT. Fraternities & Sororities ad- mitted free with proper I.D. Music by BITTERSWEET ALLEY Tue.--5 for 1 DRINK PRICES on some Drinks. $1.00 before 9:30 p.m. MILLERZ KILLERZ Wed.-LADIES FREE: Guys $1.00 before 9:30 p.m. 2 for 1 on some drinks. SAVAGE Thurs.-PARTY NIGHT. Pitcher Specials. HUGE CROWD! Music by TEEZER (Recording Artist) Fri. & Sat.-HAPPY HOUR till 10 p.m. No cover before 9:00 p.m. One-half cover between 9-9:30 p.m. Voted Detroit's Number One Bar Band the ALMIGHTY STRUT A N~ Services Monday Night, September 28 +.7,30 p.m. inspirationa many insights and explanations of the holiday will be given throughout the services and meal. all are welcome. no charge. - V 715 Hill 99-LEARN 4,. Legal pads indiIspensible companions NEW YORK (AP) - They're con- sultants in canary yellow. Disposable and indispensable. And they keep con- fidences. President Reagan finds them good listeners. Garry Trudeau bounces ideas for "Doonesbury" off them. Richard Nixon turned to one when he decided to resign. MORE THAN JUST an office supply, yellow legal pads are tight-lipped com- panions. They carry the musings of presidents and criminals, coaches and cartoonists. They are mirrors for the mind-a place to unfurl ideas for private viewing. Three of the ubiquitous pads are born every second. Americans use 100 million a year-a stack that would rise 300 miles. Uncle Sam buys 7.2 million a year for executive offices around the world. The Senate buys 72,000; the House 92,000. LAUREN BACALL wrote "By Myself" on one. Stingo in William Styron's novel, "Sophie's Choice," wrote on one. And so does Styron. Hours after former Secretary of State John Foster Dulles died in 1959, President Eisenhower carried a yellow padto his sun porch in Gettysburg, Pa., and penciled a tribute to his friend. But the courtroom is their everlasting home. They are to the lawyer what the slide rule is to the engineer, the clipboard to the manager, the whistle to the lifeguard. IT'S BEEN THAT way since the turn of the century, when a Massachusetts judge carried his unlined yellow pad in- to American Pad & Paper Co.'s Holyoke, Mass., offices. He wanted a ruled pad with a left side margin for his notations. The company now makes 32 million a year. The-legal process is awash in the pads. Judges, prosecutors, defense at- torneys, defendants, and victims carry them. "It's a rare bird who doesn't use a yellow legal pad," says Scott Turow, a federal prosecutor in Chicago. He totes three or four in his briefcase. CHANGE A lawyer's stapler and he'll hardly notice. Give him new paperclips and he won't say a word. But pull a switcheroo on his yellow legal pad, and you've got a problem on your hands. They tried it on Turow, swapping a pad without a perforated top for one with perforation. Purists can't be fooled. "I complained bitterly," he recalls. He laughs about it now; they got him the most expensive pads. "There's no cost-cutting when it comes to yellow legal pads," he says. THERE ALSO is no methadone for the legal pad addict. When the Carter White House put a freeze on the pads, one worker swapped information with federal agencies based on how many legal pads he could get in return. Poetry Reading ith Anna Nissen and Lyn Coffin Reading from their works Monday, Sept. 28 -8 p.m. GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe 662-5189 Given Reagan's affection for them (he wrote a Fourth of July essay on one), it seems unlikely the current White House crew will be cutting back. THERE'S CERTAINLY no scrim- ping in the Senate, where offices are supplied with high-quality pads bound in imitation leather. Each yellow sheet is "watermarked," with the brand name, Gold Fibre. That doesnt make them easier tp write on, but it does help justify the cost-41 cents each at the bulk rate. At retail, they go for more than a dollar. "They're the most functional," ex- plains David Marcos, whose official Senate title is: ,"Keeper of the Stationery." The House pays a paltry quarter for each of its pads, and only a trained eye could tell the differences. But there are many trained eyes among the aficionados. Most legal pads are a quarter-inch thick, 8 to 8% inches wide, 11 to 1412 in- ches long, rest on cardboard and are bound at the top by staples or plastic. Each of the pad's 50 sheets wears 25 to 35 horizontal blue lines spaced on-third inch apart, and two or three vertical red lines that create a 1 -inch margin on the left side. All are yellow. Some say that's because yellow is easy on the eyes; others say yellow has a calming effect. No wonder they carry everything from letters to confessiois, grocery lists to secret equations, novels to news. Notes for this story filled two. Jurors review Jonestown testimony SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Jurors in the trial of former Peoples Temple member Larry Layton, ordered by a judge to continue their deliberations, heard a review yesterday of testimony of three cult defectors. The reading of testimony in U.S. District Judge Robert Peckham's court came after 39 hours of deliberations. THE' JURORS, who began deliberations Sept. 17, asked to hear the testimony of temple defectors Monica Bagby, Vernon Gosney and Dale Parks. All were sitting with Layton in a small plane when gunmen opened fire on a larger aircraft nearby. Rep. Leo Ryan (D-Calif.), three jour- nalists and a women temple defector were shot to death by now-dead temple assassins at the Port Kaituma airstrip, a few miles from the temple's Jonestown settlement. U.S. diplomat Richard Dwyer was wounded. Shortly after the Nov. 18, 1978, shootings, cult leader Jim Jones and 912 followers died in a mass murder and suicide. LAYTON, 35, was charged with con- spiracy to murder Ryan and Dwyer and with aiding and abetting in Ryan's killing and the attempted murder of Dwyer. Layton's lawyers declined to put on a defense, saying the government has not proved its case. Gosney and Bagby were wounded at the airstrip. Layton was acquitted by a Guyanese court of attempted murder charges in those shootings. The jury announced Friday it was deadlocked but continued deliberations under the judge's order. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Feisty Solidarity reconvenes its first nationalcongress GDANSK, Poland- Despite official warnings to moderate its policies, the independent union Solidarity reconvened its first national congress yester- day showing no signs of muzzling the rank-and-file militancy. A shouting match erupted when a delegate rose to angrily denounce the day-old law on workers' rights in management decisions, passed by Parliament as a compromise with leaders of the 9.5 million-member federation. "There's going to be a storm here tomorrow," said a Western diplomat ob- serving the restive proceedings after noting 49 delegates signed up to for- mally debate the issue today. In the streets of Gdansk, meanwhile, residents reported soldiers in battle fatigues had bolstered police patrols. Reagan, Congress debate .Saudi AWAC sale WASHINGTON- The Reagan administration took its AWACS arguments under cover yesterday as it sought a compromise that would be acceptable to both Capitol Hill and Saudi Arabia. The proposed sale of five of the sophisticated radar planes and other military hardware to the Arab nation, an announced enemy of Israel, has drawn the administration into a major foreign policy showdown. A suggested deal to put uniformed American military personnel into the Saudi AWACS gained brief momentum among some opposing senators at week's end, but was quickly rebuffed by the Saudis. There were reports a blue-ribbon delegation might be sent to Saudi Arabia to encourage such an arrangement. Reagan tax cuts take effect Thursday WASHINGTON- The first stage of the biggest tax cut in history that ap- plies to individuals takes effect Thursday-but don't count on a windfall just yet. For most people, the cut will beonly a few dollars a week. On Oct. 1, federal income taxes will be reduced for all taxpayers by 5 per- cent on an annual basis. Because the cut comes in the last quarter of 1981 the reduction will amount to a mere 1.25 percent cut for the year. Internal Revenue Service spokesman Ellen Murphy said the new income tax withholding tables were mailed to about 5.5 million employers in late August and are available at local IRS offices for employers who did not receive them. "Everything is kicking along about normal," Ms. Murphy said. To figure out how much you will save on a weekly basis, deduct 5 percent from the "federal withholding" amount on your paycheck stub. That's only a few dollars a week for most people. Nestle asks Methodist group to monitor infant formula DAYTON, Ohio- The United Methodist Church Infant Formula Task For- ce says the Nestle Corp. has asked it to monitor the company's compliance with an international baby formula code adopted ,by the World Health .Organization. J. Philip Wogaman, dean of the Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington and chairman of the task force, said Nestle representatives made the request during a private meeting here Friday. Wogaman said the task force had made no decision#on the proposal. The task force will decide whether to recommend that the church join a boycott of Nestle, which is based in Geneva, Switzerland, and three U.S. in- fant formula manufacturers. Backers of the boycott say the formula distributors persuade mothers to give up breast feeding in favor of the formula. They say the formula often becomes diluted or contaminated by bad water, resulting in disease or death of the babies. Vol. XCII, No. 16 Sunday, September 27, 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 Dily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. a 0 0 0 Are you considering professional school? Y0RVEIRD UNIVERSITY John F. Kennedy School of Government is looking for future leaders in public affairs. Come learn about Harvard's two year Masters program in Public Policy and City & Regional Planning. MEET: DENISE MADIGAN, Consultant and Kennedy School alum DATE: TUESDAY, SEPT. 29 (Group Info Sessions at 10 and 11 A.M. 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