Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom i e 6itc 4 l lajig BLASE Partly cloudy with scat- tered snow flurries today. High around 30. dS Vol. XCL No. 111 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, February 8, 1981 Ten Cents Ten Pages ,w SportL By MAUREEN FLEMING Getting a complete list of movies of- ten meant collecting posters, several leaflets, and anything else you could grab. Now things -are a little different. Posters and leaflets still abound, but there's also the Michigan Cinema Guide, a free, 40-page listing and synopsis of campus movies covering the first half of this semester. Another movie guide is scheduled to come out later this month to complete the list. MANY STUDENTS are pleased about the cinema guide. LSA fresh- woman Ann Price said she found the movie guide very helpful. "I don't have to run around from poster to poster. We have them (posters) posted at the dorm, but it's a lot easier to have the Senators demand new probe of Donovan WASHINGTON (AP) - Five Democratic senators, citing "two serious inaccuracies" in the FBI's in- vestigation, called yesterday for a renewed investigation into Labor Secretary Raymond Donovan's past business dealings. In a letter to Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), chairman of the Senate Labor and Human Resources Commit- tee, the Democrats said the new fin- dings "lend additional credence to the statements of Ralph Picardo," who ac- cused Donovan of having ties to organized crime figures. IN THEIR LETTER to Hatch requesting further FBI investigation, the Democrats reported a "potentially substantial allegation" that Donovan's construction company may have made an illegal purchase in 1968 of topsoil ob- tained from public property. The Democrats also said the FBI should be asked to look into the previously reported allegations by a former protected witness, Pat Kelly, that Donovan's company had ties to the Genovese organized crime family and that Donovan participated in bid- rigging. Donovan was unavailable for com- ment. A SPOKESPERSON said the com- mittee staff would investigate the allegations in the letter, but said Hatch. did not promise an immediate letter to the FBI. "All allegations, including the most recent ones, will be fully gone into and evaluated in a thoroughly bipartisan manner by the staff of the main Senate Labor and Human Resources Commit- tee," the spokesperson said. "Any substantive findings will be promptly forwarded in full to ap- propriate federal officials and law en- forcement agencies, as has been done previously." movies, Group keeps t4j on campus ev~ guide at your fingertips." Sport Guides, Inc., the same group that publishes the Michigan Football and Basketball guides, alternative free game programs, began the venture to expand its market. The group also prin- ts Michigan Money $avers, a coupon booklet that came out this semester. DESPITE THE popularity of the cinema guide, it is one of only three issues that has lost money for Sport Guides, editor Tim Kunin said. Advertisers were not convinced of the movie book's value, coupon book made revenue, and, Kunin next movie guide wil Eric Peterson, at employee - a local1 advertises free gam his employers were guides. In the last fe 200 people have r from the basketbol 20 to 40 people per d the coupons from coupons coupon books, Peterson said. He ex- plained that people come in, use the coupons, and spend some of their own money. mnSPORTS GUIDES did not begin with . i t s profit as a motive, Kunin said. The core of its staff was originally on a commit- he explained. The tee which supported the 1976 returnable e up for the lost bottle proposal. Members printed 40,000 said, he hopes the football rosters with the proposal and l be profitable. reasons for supporting it on the back. Cross Eyed Moose The following year, the group, pinball arcade that working for the Coalition for Better ne coupons - said Housing, published a tabloid football e pleased with the guide. Kunin said the athletic depar- w weeks more than tment was publishing only 15,000 to edeemed coupons 18,000 programs each game, and there I guides alone, and was a "huge, untapped market. Ninety- lay have been using thousand people were not getting a the cinema and See FORMER, Page8 Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM SPORTS GUIDES, INC. has expanded from sports coverage to a new movie guide and coupon booklet. -1 Reagan signs debt ceilin WASHINGTON (AP)-President Reagan, sitting alone in thusiasm for t his private study, signed his first piece of federal legislation AND THEY yesterday, increasing the government's authority to borrow or increase ef money. The new pr His press secretary said later Reagan was grateful to weeks in offic congressional Republicans and Democrats for handing him a promised eco victory "our first time at the legislative hat" but sorry that volvement in( the spending policies of previous administrations had forced He also has him to ask for the bill. tone-and per SPOKESMAN JAMES Brady quoted the president as REAGAN S saying, "This win made me feel very good, very grateful to with the Sov both sides of the aisle for this victory." Korea, an old Reagarrcalled final passage of the $985 billion debt limit on its human rig Friday a "prompt and responsible" response to his call for from the leftis an increase in the old $935.1 billion ceiling that is due to be "We wante exceeded in a few days. people that R( Reagan's top advisers say the flurry of executive actions tion in which: that marked his first fortnight in office is evidence of his en- . - bill he job he sought for so long. PREDICT that whenever he can cut spending ficiency with the stroke of a pen, he will do so. resident has moved quickly in less than three e to demonstrate his determination to carry out nomic policies and reduce government's in- everyday life. made several symbolic gestures to change the haps the course-of U.S. foreign policy. SO FAR has signaled a new chill in relations iet Union and extended welcomes to South ally, shunned by the Carter administration for ghts policies, and Jamaica, a recent convert st forces churning in the Caribbean. d to create the impression on the part of the onald Reagan is a leader who knows the direc- he wants to lead the country and has set about See FIRST, Page 7 Amin wants guns,. - U.S. education for his 22 children ._ JIDDA, Saudi Arabia (AP) - Exiled Ugandan dictator Idi Amin, describing himself as "a simple human being" and a devoted homemaker, has appealed to the Moslem world for guns and to the United States for an education for his 22 children. Amin, ousted from his East African nation in April 1979 and enjoying Saudi hospitality since last year, emerged from relative obscurity last week to tell The Associated Press he could conquer Uganda in a week with some help from his friends. "I HAVE 13,000 diehard followers at home who-.await my return," he said. "But they have no ammunition, little food, and no medicines. My people are suffering. Uganda will be lost to Islam." Amin, a 53-year-old Moslem, claimed his supporters controlled some 10,000 square miles of northern Uganda, which he could use as a base for moving on the capital of Kampala and ousting the government of President Milton Obote. "It takes a few anti-aircraft guns, some rocket propelled grenades, anti- tank guns, rifles, and ammunition to capture Uganda," he said. THE HUSKY, TOWERING former dictator said he spends most of his time in Saudi Arabai scrutinizing maps and preparing a strategy for his return to Uganda. "I also cook food for my family, I iron clothes, and sweep the floor very ef- ficiently," he said, with a broad smile. Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY Thne long reach Wisconsin forward Claude Gregory and Michigan forward Tim McCormick lunge to grab a rebound off the Badgers' backboard in first half action yesterday at Crisler Arena. Michigan posted a 71-64 victory to climb to a three-way tie with Indiana and Iowa for the Big Ten lead. See story, Page 10. ... needs guns to conquer Uganda .v.. . . . . .'.$. ....J. ..::. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' ",'R !.;. ..k.....$ .... . ... ..i.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .x..i. .'.3.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .d,. : R ZH ...nn.. " . U g approaches record low From AP and UPI WASHINGTON-Women's liberation and economic hard times are influencing more American women to remain childless, perhaps establishing a record, the government reported. In a report on childbearing trends based on data gathered in the late 1970s, the Census Bureau said the American birth rate continues to decline. It is now measured at 2.2 children per family, just a point above the "zero-growth" rate of 2.1 children per family in Japan and many European countries. SOME SPECULATE that if current low rates continue, the proportion of women completing their childbearing years without having a baby could be as high as 25 percent to 30 percent-well over 1979's 14.2 percent and topping the record 22 percent of women born in the 1880s who went childless. The Census Bureau cites interweaving social and economic patterns to account for the new decline in the birth rate. "While the increase in childlessness among young women is due, in part, to the economic uncertainties faced by young couples today," the report says "recent changes can also be traced to the attitudes of young wives toward early child- bearing and the pursuit of their own educational and career goals." ONLY ABOUT ONE in four women had children early in their marriages in the late 1930s. It was the latter half of the Depression and the eve of World War II. Money was tight and many husbands were away. Then came more prosperous times and early motherhood, especially in the early 1950s, triggered a higher birth rate. With the arrival of what the Census Bureau calls the "modern contraceptive period" of the late 1960s and 1970s, only 30 percent of women of childbearing age had their first baby by the age of 21. BUT THE LATEST data also shows that very few women-only 7.4 percent-wait until the age of 30 or older to See AMERICAN, Page 2 Economic uncertainty and changes in attitudes are causing more American women to remain childless, according to a government report. The low birth rate may even be a record. ...... ... .. .:::. ...C C TODAY What price romance FIN ALLY, THE ULTIMATE in pr ice index. Raymond DeVoe, a New York City economist, says he has found out that the cost of loving is up 419 percent since the early 1950s while the cost of living has climbed a mere 158 percent. DeVoe, a market strategist for Bruns, Nordeman, Rea, & Co., says the Con- sumer Price Index figures are misleading and that "in- much to date as it did in the '50s. And if the costly rituals in- volved in courtship are not taxing enough, there's always the honeymoon. Seven days and six nights at a Bermuda Island hotel today cost $950. In 1954, DeVoe says, it was $285. Q The safeguard of our nation Ever vigilant, the Moral Majority is asking the Washington State Library to identify borrowers of a 21- minute movie entitled "Achieving Sexual Maturity." The request to Librarian Roderick Swartz was nade last week cycle," she added. She declined to say how many times it had been borrowed. Bjorgen refused to release the Farris letter, but library officials said Swartz probably would decide tomorrow whether to grant the request. Moral Majority spokespersons said Farris was on retreat and. would remain unavailable for comment until tomorrow. O Share and share alike? New Hampshire in May 1979 when he heard Friedman's name announced by Medford radio station WXKS. Segall said he called the station, gave Friedman's name, address, Social Security number and telephone number. He said when Friedman got the car, he balked at letting Segall share its use and at giving him half its total value. He said Friedman offered him $1,000 to drop the matter, but Segall decided to sue. James Gerson, Friedman's attorney, said he didn't know if his client would appeal the finding. 0 . I I