There was a young jock from St. Paul Heard "League" and he thought of footbal. He came here for dinner, Thought "This is a winner! This League's #1 after all!" mevlchigan Next to Hill Audito Located in the heart of the car it is the heart of the campus .. Lunch 11 30 to 1:15 Dinner 5:00 to 7:15 SPECIAL LOW PRICES FOR STUDENTS Send your League Limerick to: Manager, Michigan League 227 South Ingalls rium You will receive 2 free dinner npus. tickets if your limerick is used in .. one of our ads. Page 2-Tuesday, October 20, 1981-The Michigan Daily Taylor millage fails, schools may -cose BELL'S PIZZA Free Delivery on pizza after 4:30 p.m. . OPEN: Sun-Weds until 1 a.m. Thurs until 2 a.m. Fri & Sat until 3 a.m. State & Packard 995-0232 Within less than a month, two Michigan school districts may be closed down due to a lack of funds, leaving thousands of students, teachers, ad- ministrators and other employees in- definitely idled. Voters in the suburban Detroit district of Taylor turned thumbs down to a millage request yesterday - an ac- tion that will force the closing of the district's 30 schools next month. SCHOOLS IN Alpena shut down last Friday to become the first district in the state to do so since the Depression. In Taylor, residents voted down the millage request despite a warning from Gov. William Milliken that the district would get no help from the state, should the request be defeated. Voters in the blue collar Detroit suburb had been asked to approve a package calling for a 15 mill renewal and a 5.4 mill increase. WHILE OFFICIALS in Alpena and Taylor ponder their uncertain future, a third district could close in January should a millage increase fail in a special election Dec. 9., Voters in the Pontiac district have already rejected the proposal eight times in the past. Taylor Superintendent Simon Kachaterian said as of Nov. 13, the district's 16,000 students will be sent home, 1,800 employees laid off and 30 buildings will be locked up indefinitely. There is one faint hope for Taylor, as under a state law enacted especially for the district, school officials could try again before year's end to get the millage passed. THERE WAS no immediate word if district officials would again go to the voters with another millage request., Voters in Alpena, a 6,800-student district nestled along Lake Huron's Thunder Bay in northeast Michigan, will get another chance come Oct. 30. The voters have rejected a new property tax levy to keep the schools running three times, but will be asked again and if the result is positive, schools will reopen Nov. 3. But if it fails, nobody knows when the classroom doors will open. AT ISSUE is a proposal to levy 20.25 mills to generate $14 million for bare- bones operations and a companion proposal to levy an additional 3.45 mills to raise $1.2 million for bus transpor- tation and other school programs. R K " y L r M r 4 w 4 4 C 6 15 4. UNIVERSITY OF SNOTRE DAME A representative of the Uni- versity of Notre Dame Gradu- ate School will be on campus WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21 to discuss Notre Dame's gradu- ate programs. Interested students may ob- tain further information by contacting The Career Plan- ning and Placement Office. IN'BRIEF Complied from Associated Press and United Press International reports Attorney files emergency suit for pregnant 11-year-old LANSING- An attorney representing an 11-year-old sexually abused girl filed. a new lawsuit yesterday in U.S. District Court in a race against the clock to win the court's intervention to obtain an abortion for the youngster. A Kalamazoo County Circuit judge last week denied attorney Nelson Pelletier's request to grant temporary custody of the girl-who is more than 23 weeks pregnant-to her father, an ex-convict who would have permitted the abortion. Abortions are not permitted after the 24th week of pregnancy. Federal official on paid leave after arrest on sex charges WASHINGTON- The director of the Education Department's Gifted and Talented Office has been put on paid leave following his arrest on prostitution and marijuana charges, Education Secretary Terrel Bell said yesterday. Harold Lyon, 46, of Middletown, MD., was arrested in suburban Arlington, Va., Wednesday and charged with conspiracy to pander, prostitution and possession of marijuana. Lyon, a West Point graduate, is a civil service em- ployee earning between $46,675 and $50,112 a year, department officials said. Lyon was placed on administrative leave Thursday, when the department learned of his arrest, officials said. New clues in Sadat murder CAIRO, Egypt- Evidence that the plot to assassinate President Anwar Sadat.involved more than the four suspected killers mounted yesterday as police disclosed the arrest of 230 "religious terrorists." The evidence was reported in the semi-official daily Al-Ahram, and Mayo, which is considered the organ of the ruling party. The papers said the police had uncovered evidence of a "secret religious terrorist organization" three weeks before men said to be Moslem fundamentalists gunned down Sadat and some of his top aides Oct. 6 at a military parade. Sadat had been informed last month of a plot to assassinate him, accor- ding to Al-Ahram, but insisted on going through with a Sept. 26 public ap- pearance in Mansura, a Nile delta city some 70 miles north of Cairo, and allegedly home base for the fundamentalist group. Western diplomats doubted earlier government claims that the four suspected assassins, who were handed over to a military tribunal for in- terrogation yesterday, had acted as an isolated group.j Three Americans win Nobels STOCKHOLM, Sweden- Two American scientists and a Swede ion the 1981 -Nobel Prize in Physics yesterday for their work with spec- troscopes-"stronger spectacles" to look at atoms. A third American shared the chemistry award with a Japanese professor for "milestone" theories on chemical reactions, Yesterday's awards brought to six the number of Americans sharing in this year's 10 Nobel laureates. Professors Nicolas Bloembergen of Harvard University and Arthur §chawlow of Stanford University shared the physics prize with Professor Kai Siegbahn of Sweden's Uppsala University. Ronald Hoffman of Cornell University and Kenichi Fukui of Japan's Kyoto University were awarded the chemistry prize.. Elvis autopsy samples show presence of 12 drugs MEMPHIS, Tenn.- Tissues and blood samples removed from Elvis Presley during an autopsy contained a dozen different drugs, a California physician testified yesterday. Dr. Norman Weissman testified in the drug trial of Dr. George Nichopoulos, Presley's physician of 11 years. Nichopoulos is charged with overprescribing addictive drugs to Presley, singer Jerry Lee Lewis, him- self, and eight others. S I Today, 10/20, Wed. & Thur. Interviews: Placement center. Information: Michigan Union Detroit Office 313-226-7928 1 _..__._.._.... n i IJ1Te 3t0igan aiIQ Vol. XCII, No. 35 Tuesday, October 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.f- The Michigan Doily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press international. Pacific News Service. Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspopers Syndicate. News room: (313) 764-0552. 76-DAILY. Sports desk, 764.0562. Circulation. 764.0558. Classified advertising 764.0557. Display advertising. 764-0554, Billing 764.0550. 0 r Editor in chief...................SARA ANSPACH ,, Managing Editor ............... JULIE ENGEBRECHT' University Editor................LORENZO BENET News Editor ...................... : . DAVID-MEYER Opinion Page Editors........... CHARLES THOMSON KEVIN TOTTIS Sports Editor .................MARK MIHANOVIC Associate Sports Editors ............GREG DeGULIS MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREHOUSE DREW SHARP Chief Photographer .............. PAUL ENGSTROM PHOTOGRAPHERS- Jackie Bell, Kim HjlI, Deborah Lewis, Mike Lucas, Brian Mosck. ARTISTS: Robert Lence, Jonathan Stewart, Richard Walk, Norm Christiansen. ARTS STAFF: Jane Carl, Mark Dighton, Adam Knee, Pam Kramer, Gail Negbour NEWS, STAFF: John Adam, Beth Allen, Julie Barth, Carol Choltron, Andrew Chapman, Lisa Crumrine, Debi Davis, Ann Marie Fazio, Pam Fickinger, Denise Franklin, Joyce Frieden, Mark Gindin, Julie Hinds, ' Steve Hook, Kathy Hoover, Mindy Layne, Jennifer Mil- ler, Dan Oberrotman, Janet Rae, David Spok, Fannie Weinstein, Barry Witt. SPORTSSTAFF SPORTS STAFF: Barb Barker, Randy Berger, Mark Borowoski, Joe Chapelle, Martha Croll, Jim Dworman. John Fitzpatrick. Larry Freed, Chuck Hartwig, Chuck ' Jaffe, John Kerr, Larry Mishkin, Dan Newman, Ron Pollack, Jeff Quicksilver, Steve Schaumberger, Sarah Sherber. James Thompson, Kent Wpley, Chris Wilson, Bob Wojnowski. BUSINESS STAFF Business AAanager ...... ...'.. RANDI CIGELNIK,. Sales Manager .. ...............BARB FORSLUNDo Operations Manager ..... .......... SUSANNE KELLY' Display Manager . ...... MARY ANN MISIEWICZ Classifieds Manager............ DENISE SULLIVAN= Finance Manager ..............MICHAEL YORICK' Assistant DisiovManager......... NANCY JOSLIN Nationals Manager ............. SUSAN RABUSHKA. Circulation Manager,................. KIM WOODS Sales Coordinator ..., ........ E. ANDREW PETERSEN' BUSINESS STAFF: Liz Altman, Hope' Barron, Lindsay Bray, Joe Brodo, Alexander DePillis, Aido Eisenstadt, Susan Epps, Wendy Fox, Sandy Frcka, Pamela Gould; Kathryn Hendrick, Anthony interrante, Indre Luitkus, Beth Kovinsky, Barbara Miner, Caryn Notisse, Felice Oper, Jodi Pollock, Michael Savitt. Michael Seltzer, Karen Silverstein, Sam Slaughter, Adrienne Strambi, Nancy Thompson, Jeffrey Voigt. I PUBLICATION SCHEDULE 1981 SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER S M T W T F SSM T W T F S S M T W -T F S SM T W T F S 07 4612 3 1" 3 45 67 12 3 45 10112-, 4 ,67 8910 8 10111213142 13 15 161 7718 19 1 1314 15716 17 15 1718 192021 20 2223242526 18 2021222324 22 24-256-22291< ______nv __ A 1982 _MACH It might be a nuclear sub or a billion dollar aircraft carrier. At the Norfolk Naval Shipyard, you can provide engi- neering support for the maintenance and testing of the most sophisticated technolonv in the world. with hands-on Located in the Tidewater, Virginia area, the shipyard is surrounded by a vast array of recreational and cultural activities. Just minutes away, the resort city of Virainia Beach hosts water activ- 1