The Michigan Daily-Sunday, November 22, 1981-Page 5 THE PUZZLE By Don Rubin Window Pains If you started at the front door and walked around this house in either direction you'd pass each of the following windows, one by one - but not in their present order, of course. This is a maze from the outside. Using the various vantage points and interior relation- ships as clues, see if you can determine the order of the windows. LAST WEEK'S ANSWER: 1) Paris-Austerlitz 2) Munich-Olympiastadion 3) Berlin-Potsdamer Platz 4) Athens-Omonia 5) Hamburg-St. Paul 6) Budapest-Deak Ferenc Ter 7) Milan-Duomo 8) Rome-Colosseo 9) Rotterdam-Centraal 10) Barcelona-Cataluna 11) Lisbon-Rossio 12) Madrid-Plaza de Castilla 13) Washington-Foggy Bottom 14) Mexico City-Hidalgo 15) Buenos Aires-Avenida La Plata 16) San Francisco-Embarcadero 17) Tokyo-Daimon 18) Philadelphia-Market 19) Boston-Copley 20)Montreal-Frontenac 21) Leningrad-Nevski Prospeckt 22) Moscow-Gorky Park Kultury 23) London-Paddington 14) New York-Bleecker Street 25) Chicago-Wacker Drive The following people answered last week's puzzle correctly: Susan Wineberg Alfred Meyer Send your completed puzzle to the Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Ar- bor, MI, 48109 by Wednesday of next week. One person will be selected at Random from the correct entries to win a free Michigan Daily T-shirt. Fed up with these crazy puzzles? Would you like to get even with Don Rubin and win $10 to boot? Then send your original ideas for The Puzzle to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, 48109. All entries will become the property of United Feature Syndicate, Inc. (You only win the big bucks if we use your puzzle idea.) Rent a Car from Econo-Car OPEN 7 DA YS A WEEK WE RENT TO 19 YR. OLD STUDENTS1 -'CALL FOR OUR THANKSGIVING SPECIALS. -Choose from small economical cars to fine luxury cars. -Special weekend rates. -Pick up services upon request. -We accept cash deposits. k s:i., R' t "'J ""t ij1 ' ,.:"-. r' v ' s' y J3J) "'": ; ": 4 ,; .. " s ; t ; : _ : ,. ' .. ' i ,. ^ r . ; . v.~1 r: .47 7 r ;Y . "r, "I ECONO-CAR' 438 W. Huron 761-8845 ANN ARBOR A GELCO COMPANY 1I 2 3 _ _ _ _ _. * .y .-...~w a ,tl l ~r . i aif '(.. t t '::. i I i - - - ..,gr . u M': s.. 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Journalist Fuyuko Kamisaka, who has said she also gave Allen $1,000 intended for Nancy Reagan to give to charity, told The Associated Press one of the watches was given Jan. 16, before President Reagan's inauguration, and the other Jan. 22, two days afterward. ALLEN, IN HIS latest written response to questions presented him by the White House press of- fice, said both watches "were received prior to Jan. 20, 1981," when Reagan was inaugurated and Allen became national security adviser. White House officials generally are prohibited from accepting gifts worth more than $100. The watches were valued at about $165 each. "Had the personal gifts been given after Jan. 20, which is not the case," Allen said yesterday, White House regulations do not apply to "gifts from friends when the circumstances make it clear that the per- 'Allen should give a press con- ference-to clear us of everything- once and for all.' -Fuyuko Kamisaka, Japanese journalist sonal relationship is the motivating factor." THE CONTRADICTIONS in the accounts by the journalist, who was grateful to Allen for arranging a Jan. 21 interview with the first -lady, and by Allen were the latest in a series of discrepancies that raise new questions about the credibility of one of Reagan's key aides. Kamisaka told the Associated Press yesterday that she was unhappy over Allen's failure to donate the money to charity as intended and that Allen should hold a news conference to clear up questions. "I wrote in the article that the money would be the first contribution to Mrs. Reagan's charity program, and as a writer, I owe a responsibility to the readers for what I wrote,"' said Miss Kamisaka, whose Jan. 21 interview with Mrs. Reagan was published in March by Shufu-no-tomo-Housewife's Friend. "THE WHOLE affair is an internal affair of the White House, and they should not entangle innocent magazine publishers and writers who have nothing to do with U.S. domestic politics," said Miss Kamisaka, a noted critic and free-lance writer. "Actually, we have nothing to do with it. Allen should give a press conference-to clear us of Severything-once and for all." The $1,000 honorarium received by Allen is under investigation by the U.S. Justice Department. A 1977 law prohibits U.S. officials from keeping gifts worth more than $100, with a penalty of a fine of up to $10,000. Miss Kamisaka said she was unaware that the $1,000 had not been forwarded to charity until Japanese police questioned her in October about her contact with Allen. The affair surfaced Nov. 13 when a Tokyo newspaper disclosed that the Justice Depar- tment had asked Japanese police to help in an in- vestigation of a "high" White House official. r I Our 6th Annual / DELUXE ROSE BOWL TOURS with regularly scheduled airline service American Airlines American Airlines United Airlines 6 nites Dec. 30-Jan. 4 $653 to $730* 7 nites Dec. 26-Jan. 2 $641 to $758* 4 nites Dec. 28-Jon. 2 $660 to $737* Accommodations at the L.A. Pacifica Hotel for the stated number of nights, superior hotel, double occ. " Airport / Hotel Transfers " Suprior reserved grand- stand seat for Rose Bowl Parade " Transfers to Pa- rade/Game/Hotel " Fully Escorted " *Includes re- served seat for Rose Bowl Game. **Charter, includes New Year's Eve dinner and party. " L.A. Hilton option AC. AIR FARE ONLY * Economists differ over forecasts (Continued from Page 1) These models can serve two pur- poses. "One is its use as providing what you might call unconditional forecasts, of the sort: 'Our best guess is that the GNP for the next year would be such and such,' said Neil Wallace, professor of economics at the Univer- sity of Minnesota. "THE OTHER is to make conditional forecasts of the sort that 'If we raise taxes such and such, GNP will go up such and such,' " he said. There is currently a substantial body of literature criticizing models for the second type of forecast. The major problem with that use, according to Thomas Sargent, a Har- vard economics professor, is that it ACCORDING TO Shapiro, however, all forecasts are conditional-even those called unconditional by Wallace - if only in that they assume away major, or unforeseeable policy changes or disaster. The issue in evaluating a model's usefulness is how often such critical changes occur. An added twist this year, said Sargent, is that the Reagan ad- ministration has made "all kinds of changes in policy, unprecedented in history." But Shapiro said the government's departure from past policies has been overexaggerated. "If you look at the Kennedy program in the early '60s, itis very similar," he said. "There are dif- ferences, but I'd stop short of saying this is a revolutionary change." Overall, the economists agreed, the models can be useful. "On the whole, although they make a lot of errors, they very much improve our capability (in forecasting)," Shapiro said. And will the 1982 prediction be ac- curate? "I think modesty is ap- propriate in this case," he said. - Thss space contributed by the publsher EXAMS GETTING YOU DOWN? 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