4 Page 2-Wednesday, September 10, 1980-The Michigan Daily "Full Line of 8ackpacking & Camping Equipment" Renk-To-Schooltlnofion Bustersl OSHKOSH 100% COTTON Bib Overalls-TURTLENECK (Pre-Washed Denim) SHIRTS S e $ 898 ALL COLORS Reg. $22.98 Sale $698 100% WOOL 100% WOOL NAVY PEA COATS NAV MIDDIES Sale $4998 $49 Reg. $59.98 Entire Stock of $ LEVI DENIM Sale 12" BELLS . Reg.$1998 Union renovations clear another hurdle (Continued from Pagel) The program statement well with a lot of input, and one that priorities for the refurbishing of works well with students, besides Union and a description of the scop havingtechnical expertise." work to be done in each areasto Selection of an architectural firm for complish those goals. the study 'is expected to take place As part of the first-priority work, within the next two weeks, Cianciola University Cellar bookstore would said. moved to another location an The program statement was student-oriented food service woul originally scheduled for approval in cupy that space. The ground h early May, with tentative scheduling would also contain 2,964 square fe for review by the -Regents set for their recreation space, equivalent to a June meeting. - half the space of the current Bill BUT A SERIES of delays postponed Room. the approval of the program statement THE SECOND PRIORITY for until July. At that time, a new director renovated Union, according to of the Union, Cianciola, was hired. statement, is to be creation Cianciola said he did not have time both management offices, an informa to acquaint himself with his new center, an enclosed terrace, and a b position and to study the program The third priority will be the inclu statement before the July Regents of a cultural complex consisting o meeting, so approval to select an ar- art gallery, music rooms, an chitect was tabled until the September recreation area. meeting. Total area to undergo m lists the pe of oac- , the A be .d a A oc- evel et of bout ;iard the the of ation ar. usion f an d a ajor While running for th Henry Clay issued a clay image as a campaign gim Like To Trave Don't Have Th Meet interesting students (foreig and sample great internationa meal membership at Frends Co.op. 1414Kill St. 3 hrs. work/ rates. 761.7435 renovations is estimated at 42;099 squre feet. Total area to undergo minor work Spresidency . comes to 32,283 square feet. pipe with his Meanwhile, a few more immediate mick. projects have been started. Already nearing completion is a study lounge l, But which can accommodate 50 to 60 e W? students, on the first floor in the former n and American) location of the art gallery. Work on the i cuisine with a front steps, scheduled for completion wk., reasonable yesterday but delayed due to the rain,, should be finished sometime today. VISA5 201 E. Washington at Fourth-994-3572 Monday thru Saturday: 9-6 Sale in effect thru Saturday, 9/13 .. : . It's More For Your Morning!, IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Soldiers guard refugees after two days of disturbance FORT McCOY, Wis.-Nearly 1,500 Army infantrymen and military police maintained a human fence around a men's compound at Fort McCoy yesterday after two days of disturbances at the Cuban refugee resettlement center. More than 40 refugees were placed under guard in a hig-security deten- tion area for allegedly instigating fence-stormings by scores of Cubans on both Sunday and Monday, said U.S. Marshal Robert Thompson. Tomas Rodriquez, president of the refugees' self-government council, blamed the unrest on an unfounded rumor that a charitable organization was selling refugees to sponsors. Robert Brandel, head of the Catholic Conference unit which has placed more than 60 percent of the 9,000 Cubans who have been resettled from Mc- Coy, denied the rumor, saying the agency's charter forbids accepting anything in return for placing refugees. Fasting activist returns Political activist Dick Gregory returned to the U.S. from Iran yesterday, weighing 97 pounds and vowing to continue a 152-day fast until the hostage crisis is resolved "in a non-violent fashion." The black civil rights activist displayed several American-made products, including a package of Kool-Aid and a jar of Vaseline. "I bought them in Tehran. The boycott is a joke," he said. He urged the government to end the boycott, unfreeze Iranian assets in the United States, and buy back billions of dollars in military equipment sold to Iran as the means of ending the crisis. Gregory didn't see any of the hostages during his 20-week stay and said he left Tehran because of an infected tooth. British close embassy in Iran Britain, the latest target of Islamic militant anger in Iran, closed its embassy in Tehran yesterday and began deporting Iranian students convic- ted of violence during a demonstration outside the U.S. Embassy in London. The move followed a threat last week from Iran's Parliament speaker, Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani, that Britain's interests would be "jeopar- dized" unless the Iranians jailed in London were released. It also came after the arrest of four British citizens in Iran-three Anglican missionaries and a businessman-as suspected spies. Meanwhile, a newspaper in the United Arab Emirates claimed Iran plans to try the American hostages as spies and then expel them without fur- ther punishment if the United States frees $8 billion in Iranian assets. Environmentalists argue against mosquito spraying LANSING-Environmentalists charged yesterday mosquito spraying designed to protect southwestern Michigan residentsd from sleeping sickness is an overreaction which will harm animal life in the area. Encephalitis was discovered amongsouthern Michigan horses late last month and three possible human cases were reported last week in Kalamazoo, St. Joseph, and Cass counties. Vern Wickman of Three Rivers, president of the Michiana Chapter of the Audubon Society, said the state has failed to show a need for the spraying since no one actually has been confirmed as having contracted en- cephalitis. Wickman said the spraying will kill bees "by the thousands," playing. havoc with fruit farms by disrupting pollination. Birds passing through the area also will be affected, he said. Health officials said the confirmed presence of the encephalitis virus in the area and the usually thick swarms of mosquitos'which carry it justify the precaution of a careful sparying program. Contagious killer virus may be under control SAN DIEGO-A contagious virus which killed three children at a hospital may be under control, officials said yesterday. A spokesman for Children's Hospital and Health Center, where the fast- spreading virus infected patients and employees, said yesterday, "We feel real good right now" that the danger of spreading has ended. The hospital shut its doors Friday to all admissions and surgeries when three children died of the infection known as advenorius type 7, a highly con- tagious common virus with cold-like symptoms. Dr. David Chadwick, medical director of Children's Hospital, one of the nation's most advanced in treatment of severe childhood illnesses, said adenovirus is serious in only one out of 1,000 cases. Symptoms of the illness, which attacks the respiratory tract, include sore throat, running nose, red eyes, and in some cases, fever and diarrhea. Jury views film of payoff WASHINGTON-Jurors in Rep. John Jenrette's Abscam trial yesterday saw a co-defendant on videotape pick up a $50,000 payoff from an FBI under- cover agent and heard Jenrette phone the agent later to say he received the money. The government charged that Jenrette and co-defendant John Stowe, a Richmond, Va. businessman, were given the money in return for Jenrette's promise to introduce a private immigration bill for wealthy Arabs. In fact, the Arabs were the creation of the FBI in its 14-month undercover operation. Six members of Congress have been indicted and one convicted as a result of the "sting" operation in which agents posed as representatives of wealthy Arabs needing legislative favors. I 6 49 I 14 oIIE Ei~b4jun 143 uilij Ghe fI t tan Batly Volume XCI, No.,6 Wednesday, September 10, 1980 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. Subscription 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, MI148109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Pressand subscribes to United Press International. 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