The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 5, 1981-Page 3 Ma Bell closing its Huron street store By JENNIFER MILLER Michigan Bell will close its Huron street Phone Center Store Nov. 13, but Bell officials say students won't have to go to Briarwood Mall, where the store is reopening, to pick up new phones. The move to Briarwood Mall is required because of federal deregulation of the retail telephone in- dustry, Bell officials said. FOR A FEW weeks during the spring and fall rush for new telephone service next year, the telephone company will set up a temporary office on campus where students can pick up phones. Singer said the telephone company may either lease an office on campus or in the Michigan Union, or set up a trailer on campus. "We don't know where the office will be right now," Singer said. After Nov. 16, bill payments can be made in person at all Ann Arbor Bank & Trust branches, Farmer Jack on Stadium Blvd., and National Bank & Trust of Ann Arbor. PHONE CENTER stores will accept new telephone service payments, but can no longer handle regular bill payments. Customers paying late bills before telephone service is due to be shut off must go to the Customer Service Center at 30 N. Washington in Ypsilanti. According to Singer, by 1983 Michigan Bell retail outlets must be out of Bellnbuildings that are under regulation. Support the March of Dimes SBIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION The Federal Communications Com- mission has said that Michigan Bell's owner, American Telephone and Telegraph Co., must conduct phone sales-now a deregulated industry- through a deregulated retail company. Singer said Bell has used temporary offices to service the student phone rush at other college campuses. "It works out well-it has been very suc- cessful," Singer said. The only change is location, Singer said, and the process of getting a new telephone will be the same as in the past. As a sixteen-year-old violin prodigy, Jascha Heifetz made his America debut at Carnegie Hall in 1917. Doily Photo by KIM HILL in Briarwood Mall will MICHIGAN BELL'S PHONE Center Store on Huron street will be closing Nov. 13. A new store open Nov. 16. Young facing uncertain third term From UPI and AP DETROIT- With his biggest and easiest victory behind him, Mayor Coleman Young looked ahead yester- day to an uncertain third four-year term as mayor of a city whose renaissance is undermined by the economic slump. Young rolled up a landslide 66 per- cent of the vote in Tuesday's non- partisan election to 34 percent for Perry Koslowski, an obscure city accountant whose long-shot campaign never caught fire. VOTERS HEEDED Young's call for a City Council reflecting the city's majority black population by electing five blacks to the nine-member council. Erma Henderson was the leading vote- getter, and thus will continue to serve as council president. Voters soundly rejected for the second time a Young-backed advisory referendum to legalize casino gambling in the city. Nationwide, Democrats claimed yesterday that the 1981 elections amounted to an early repudiation of President Reagan. Republicans said it was no such thing. IN NEW JERSEY, where Reagan's economic policies had been at the cen- ter of the campaign rhetoric, Republican Thomas Kean clung to a razor-thin lead over Democrat James Florio in the governor's race as vote counting continued almost a full day af- ter the polls closed. And in Virginia, Democrat Charles Robb led a sweep of the three statewide offices on the ballot, the first guber- natorial victory for his party after 12 years of Republican rule. Both races had been watched as possible referendums on Reagan's policies and as major party tests, since Reagan campaigned for the GOP can- didates. BETTY HAPPENINGS- HIGHLIGHT Fiddler On The Roof opens tonight at the Power Center at 8 p.m. The show is being sponsored by UAC. FILMS Mediatrics-Arsenic and Old Lace, Nat. Sci., 7 p.m.; Long Day's Journey Into Night, 9:15 p.m. AAFC-Gloria, 7 p.m.; The Killing of a Chinese Bookie, 9:10 p.m., Aud. A, Angell.; Cinema Guild-King Kong, Lorch Hall, 7 & 9:30 p.m. Public Health-Noontime Film Fest, Married Lives Today & We Were Just Too Young, SPH II Aud., 12:05 p.m. 9 MEETINGS Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship-Mich. Union, 7 p.m. For info, call 761- 6472. Med. Center Bible Study-Rm. F2230 Mott Children's Hosp., for into call Jim Evans at 764-2979. Botticelli Game Players-Dominicks, noon. Sailing Club-311 W. Eng., 7:45 p.m. Campus Crusade for Christ-2003 Angell, 7 p.m., for info. call 971-1555. Society of Women Engineers-Pre-Interview Program, American Elec- trical Power, 229 W. Eng., 7-9 p.m. SPEAKERS Ypsilanti Township Civic Center-Leonard Woodcock, U.S. ambassador to Peking, "After Reaganomics-What?"8 p.m. Center for Japanese Studies-Makoto Ooka, Japanese poet and critic, "Japanese poetry: Traditional and Modern Approaches," noon, Lane Hall commons. Vision/Hearing-Lunch Sem., Avinoam Adam, "Population Genetics of Color Blindness," 2055 MHRI,12:15p.m. Society for the Promotion of American Music-Martin Williams, "Sarah Vaughn, American Singer," 306 Burton Tower, 7:30 p.m. Public Policy Studies-Barry Blechman, "Nuclear Weapons & Foreign Policy," Rackham Amphitheatre, 2 p.m. English-Colloq. Akeel Bilgrami, "Can There Really be a Therapy of Metaphor?" 7th fl. 1g., Haven Hall, 7:30 p.m. Bio. Sciences-Sem., Robert Arking, "Stage Specific Protein Synthesis in Drosopphila Embryogenesis," 1139 Nat. Sci., noon. Health Psychology-Sem., Huda Akil, "Endophrins & Pain Modulation," VA Med. Center, 2215 Fuller Rd., Rm. A-154, noon. Bio. & Genetics-Sem., Robert Arking, "Stage-Specific Protein Synthesis in Drosophila Embryogenesis," 1139 Nat. Sci., noon. American Statistical Assoc.-Thomas Juster, "Recent Developments in Federal Funding for Soc. Science Research," Rm. 1016, Paton Accounting Center, Grad. Sch. of Bus. Ad., 7:30 p.m. Museum of Art-Rudolph Arnheim, "Visual Composition: Samples of a New Theory," Hale Aud., Grad. Sch. of Bus. Ad., 4 p.m. LS&A - Chester Starr, "Thucydides," Rackham Amphitheatre, 8 p.m. ME & AM Automotive Eng.-R. E. Baker, "Engine Friction," Rm. 165, Chrysler Center, 3:30 p.m. Hillel-Lec., Trude Dothan, "The Israelite Settlement in Light of New Discoveries," 1429 Hill, 8 p.m., "New Discoveries in Egyptian & Philistine Cultures: The Period of Exodus & the Israeli Settlement," 3050 Frieze Bldg., 4 p.m. RQ, Romance Lang.,-CULS, Ethics & Religion & Latin Amer. Culture-Lec., Pablo Armando Fernandez, "Art & Culture of the Cuban Revolution," Rm. 124, E. Quad, 4 p.m. Vision/Hearing-Lunch Sem., Dan Swift, "Spatial Frequency Masking & the Search for Weber's Law," 2055 MHRI, 12:15 - 1:30 p.m. Computing Center-Chair Talk: "How to Read an Assembly Dump," CC Counseling Staff, 1011 NUBS, 12:10-1 p.m. Lee., Steve Tolkin, "Introduction to SPIRES VI," 3040 Frieze Bldg., 2:30-4 p.m. Lec., John Sanguinetti, "Pascal Programming Language," 166 Frieze, 3:30-5 p.m. PERFORMANCES School of Music-Clarinet Recital-Amanda Kephart, Recital Hall, 8 p.m. PTP-Wings, Lydia Mendelssohn, 8 p.m., For info, 764-0450. Canterbury Loft, 332 S. State-Ladies at the Alamo, play by Paul Zindel, 8 n.m. Mafia women no longer silent ITONIGHT611 l k 17 MESSINA, Sicily (AP) - The wives and sisters of Mafiosi, once silent and submissive, are becoming active - either by testifying against the Mafia or by taking part in the crime syndicate themselves. And some women who have lost their husbands in Mafia ambushes are en- tering politics, saying it is the only way to stop the killings. "I'VE REBELLED," says Rita Gaetano, the wife a state prosecutor, who was murdered by the Mafia in Palermo last year. "I'm against the resignation and fatalism. Gaetano, 59, helped collect petitions signed by 30,000 women in Mafia strongholds in Sicily and Calabria this spring calling on the Italian gover- nment to take a stronger stand against organized crime. This summer, she was elected as a representative to the regional government on the Communist Party ticket. Antonio Padalino, a journalist who writes about the Mafia for the weekly news magazine Panorama, says women are often more courageous than men in fighting organized crime. HE DESCRIBED a recent trial in Cortona, Calabria, in which three men who witnessed a double murder testified they saw the hands of the killers but not their faces. "The assassins, however, were nailed by a woman," Padalino said. Maria Cat- velli, girlfriend of one of the killers, testified against them. The ground was broken in the mid- 1960's by Serafina Battaglia, who testified in court about the murders of her Mafiosi husband and son. The Italian press said Battaglia was the fir- st person to break the Mafia's traditional code of silence. Not all of the activist women are fighting the Mafia, however. Some, like Rosetta Cutolo, are becoming big-wigs in the underworld themselves, police report. BETWEEN 1967 and 1977 the number of women killed in gangland violence in Calabria rose from seven to 31. Noon Luncheon Soup and Sandwich, $1.00 NOV. 6, 1981 Susan Harding, Residential College and Dept. of Anthropology "HOW DO POLITICAL MOVEMENTS CHANGE PEOPLE?" 802 Monroe GUILD HOUSE 662-5189 MichiganUnionBirm. 2 s hows ! 8 &10:30 Tickets are 6.50 general admission and are now at the Michigan Union Box Office and outlets. on sale all CTC FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 763-6922 h ) '7x 1 r+ tAl ii 44 i t. ... iL .. . , r.. G Thompson Street break-in More than $600 worth of property was stolen from an apartment on the 300 block of Thompson sometime before Tuesday morning, police said yester- day. The thief entered by prying open a window. The loot included a portable television set, a cassette player and a radio. I o .1, 7. 4 1 ? / f6. .' / } ; biee LEE RIDER STRAIGHT LEG