Page 6-Friday, October 30, 1981--The Michigan Daily Prism and WABX present .811 0010, S. I TI C K ES0N A E OWa e ,.,Mo . .. ....e... .. . .,A,.. u s1 , y5 o CAI1 EaOaE Ipe !ItC1; IMICHIGAN THEATRE TIKT ON SNW I T4C KETS S7.50 RESERVED tAVAILABLE AT SCHOOLKIDS' RECORDS. MIHIA THAR BOX OFFICE, HUDSON'S, & ALL CTC OUTLETS. Ii II k IB II91 Fan stabbed at Stones concert 0 HOUSTON (UPI)- Police yesterday held a 16- year-old concession worker in the fatal stabbing of a fan at a Rolling Stones concert in the Astrodome, the second death on the band's current 32-city U.S. tour. Police said Wesley Shelton of Houston was stabbed twice in the chest during a fight with a worker at a sixth-level concession stand about 10 p.m. Wed- nesday, 15 minutes after the band took the stage. He died 30 minutes later at Ben Taub Hospital. "WHAT I'VE been told is the man supposedly took some nachos (a snack food) without paying," Detec- tive L.W. Hoffmaster said. "We're still in- vestigating." Hoffmaster said the suspect was arrested at a motel across the street. His name was withheld because he was a juvenile and had not been formally charged. Police said off-duty officers working security at the motel arrested the suspect after a man complained his watch was stolen. The boy later was identified as a suspect in the knifing. THERE ALSO were reports of two rapes related to the concert, but police said they were unable to con- firm them. They said records were incomplete but they had nine dispatcher calls at the concert, most of them drunks or disturbances. The killing was the second death on this U.S. tour by the Stones. Two hours before the band's Oct. 15 concert in Seattle's Kingdome, a 16-year-old girl died of injuries in a fall from a stadium ramp while waiting to see the band. Rolling Stones spokesman Paul Wasserman in Los Angeles expressed regret about the Houston death but said it would not affect the band's schedule. The Stones went ahead with their second concert in Houston last night. 0 U.S. could suf fer a deeper recession ยข of d WASHINGTON (AP) - An "especially steep plunge" in a key government index foretells a national economy already in a mild recession sinking even deeper in the next few months, a top Commerce Department official said yesterday. "The only real question is how far it is going to drop," said Assistant Secretary Robert Dederick. BUT DEDERICK and other analysts inside and outside the government say they don't foresee a downturn as sharp as last year's recession. The Commerce Department said yesterday that the government's Index of Leading Indicators fell 2.7 percent in September, the biggest drop since April 1980. Since April 1981, the index has fallen 5.5 percent. Dederick called the new decline "an especially steep plunge" in the index, which is designed to forecast future trends of the economy. "THE REPORT strongly suggests that industrial production will be down for the third successive quarter. Any upturn is unlikely before early 1982. "The iffy question," he said, "is whether it is going to turn around in the first quarter or the second" of next year. At the same time, the Labor Depar- tment reported yesterday that over all business productivity fell at an annual rate of 1.9 percent in the third quarter, the biggest decline since the first quar- ter of 1978. AND FEDERAL Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker told senators on Capitol Hill that it is "quite possible" the economy was in a recession. But he declined to make any flat declaration, saying a recession is "something you pronounce after the event when you can see what's hap- pening." But Dederick agreed with his boss, Commerce Secretry Malcolm Baldrige, that the Reagan administration's forecasts of a 3.4 percent average growth throughout 1982 may be too op- timistic. "The year-over-year growth could well turn out to be less than what was earlier projected," he said. je r ?0 Groups donates money to aid Atlanta families By SUSAN SHARON A $1,000 donation to families of the slain children in Atlanta was given to a local official of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference during a news conference at the Trotter House yester- day., The money, presented by Michael Shane of the University's Afromusicology Society, was raised primarily through a recenty musical production. Twelve area churches of various denominations and University music school students combined talents for the cause. "IT WAS A beautiful thing," Shane said. "Black and white joined together for a common bond." John Powell, vice president of the local branch of the SCLC accepted the donation on behalf of his group. The money will be sent to Ralph Abernathy, the organization's director, and added to a trust-fund set up for the victims families. Other Afromusicology Society fun- draising efforts that contributed to the $1,000 donation include a dance last April and a "Ribbon Day" in the Diag. President Reagan has sent $900,000 of federal money to be used to investigate the killings. "This is the most expen- sive manhunt in all of history," Shane said. 1S W IN E is the civilized accompaniment to every meal, but many would-be wine lovers have been intimidated by high prices, fancy names, and haughty service. The LORD FOX is offering a remedy for this: with presentation of this ad, we are offering our patrons a com- plimentary glass of wine chosen to enhance EACH COURSE of the meal. Ask our wine steward for suggestions, and begin to learn everything about wine you were afraid of before. This offer is good Sunday thru Thursday only. And while you're at it, you, can enjoy our UNIQUE SETTING ... CONTINENTAL SPECIALTIES.. 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