The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 23, 1980- Page 5 the ann arbor film cooperative 210 PRESENTS po* P* COMING HOME Starring JANE FONDA and JON VOIGHT 7:00 & 9:15-Aud. A Admission. $2 PUBLIC AUCTION of ORIENTAL RUGS All to be sold for unpaid accounts to our overseas creditors through First National Bank of Boston; Ref. No. 323-74544 AUCTION AT: Holiday Inn/West Bank 2900 Jackson Rd., 1-94 Exit 172 Ann Arbor Thursday, September 25, 1980 Viewing 7pm Auction 8pm Our collection includes Kerman, Kashan, Afghan, Princess Bokhere, silk, Qum, Ardebit, Afshari and many other rugs in. all sizes and varieties from Pakistan, India, China and Romania. Sponsor: Oriental Rug Palace of Massachusetts Auctioneer: A. Adam TERMS: CASH OR CHECK . THE NUCLEAR WARHEAD that wa Titan II missile on Friday depart AP Photo is believed to have been blown out of a Damascus. Ark. An Air Force flat bed truck carried it from the site yester- ts from the site of the explosion in" day. AIR FORCE WON'T ANS WER Q UES TIONS Warhead allegedly transported .W From AP and UPI DAMASCUS, Ark.-As two helicopters hovered overhead, a nuclear warhead apparently contained in one of two canisters labeled "Do Not Drop" was loaded onto a flatbed truck yesterday and removed from a devastated Titan II missile silo site to Little Rock Air Force Base. As usual, the . Air Force refused even to acknowledge that a nuclear warhead had been in- volved in the fuel explosion at the silo Friday. BUT AN OFFICIAL of the government's Pantex nuclear weapons assembly plant near Amarillo, gexas, said the warhead would be taken to the plant. Paul Wagner, the ranking Department of Energy official at Pantex, said, "I have been told . . the damaged warhead from the Titan missile accident will be sent to Pantex for disassembly or analysis. I do not have any other specifics regarding when." Since the late 1960s, nuclear material from past military accidents has been stored at Pantex, the final assembly point for all the nation's nuclear weapons. PENTAGON SOURCES SAID the weapon suffered only a slight dent and there was no low-level radiation leakage from the fiery explosion of leaking fuel Friday that killed one airman and injured 21 others. Two large canisters-one blue, the other silver and green and each labeled "Do Not Drop"-were an- chored by chains to the bed of a flatbed tractor-trailer in the convoy of eight military vehicles. Two helicop- ters accompanied the procession. State police and local law enforcement officers also followed the convoy on the 90-minute trip south on U.S. 65 and Interstate 40 to the base near Jackson- ville, about 12 miles northeast of Little Rock. IT HAS BEEN a long-standing Air Force policy to neither confirm nor deny the existence of nuclear warheads at the silos. The Air Force also refused to confirm numerous reports that the warhead was blown hundreds of feet from the launch hole when the silo blew up about 3 a.m. Friday, However, a few hours after the convoy got to the base, the Air Force said that reporters. would be allowed within several hundred feet of the crater that was blown into the silo when it erupted. The blast, which killed a sergeant and injured 21 other men, occurred about eight-and-one-half hours after a wrench socket was dropped by a workman in the silo and hit the rocket's first stage, starting a fuel leak. Despite Air Force secrecy, a colonel directing the convoy smiled and gave a thumbs-up sign to an AP reporter who asked, "Is that what you wouldn't con- firm or deny?" An Air Force pickup truck and a security van with flashing blue lights led the convoy. The helicopters flew ahead to report traffic conditions. Jocal experts react to presidential debate By KEVIN TOTTIS Although University experts had milfed 'reactions -to Sunday night's presidential debates between Republican Ronald Reagan and In- dependent John Anderson, they did agree-there was no winner. In fact, the debate was not a debate-or at least not a formal debate-according to Communications Prof. William Colburn, who teaches courses in argumentative speaking. Colburn explained the forum allowed no interplay between the two can- didates and did not permit the six jour- nalists to respond to the candidates' an- swers. "I THINK THE reporters should have been able to question the can- didates," he said. Because of the for- mat, Colburn added, no "winner" or "loser" could be chosen. In evaluating the candidates' plat- form conduct, Colburn said, both did fairly well. "Reagan was cool, calm, not troubled or tense, this was helpful to him,". Colburn said. "John Anderson, however, was a little aggressive-but that's his style," the communications professor added. POLITICAL SCIENCE PROF. Ar- thur Miller said he felt the two can- didates' speaking abilities were not as good as they could have been. Miller said Anderson was nervous and "he was a bit too hyper-he was not really in command at times. The independent candidate may have put some people off with his actions, Miller explained. Miller said Reagan's performance surprised him because "he (Reagan) didnt use the questions to his full advan- tages" and his answers weren't broad enough. Miller said he was annoyed by the commentators' pleas for s ecificity. "There is no reason a journalst should feel they have to remind a candidate how to answer," he said, adding it's a credit to the candidates "they didn't get upset by them (the journalists)." MILLER SAID HE was impressed by the candidates handling of President Carter's absence from the debate. "They could have been so much more critical," he said. "They bent over backwards to be careful and not attack him too much." Political Science Prof. John Kingdon shared Miller's surprise. "I thought they'd be ganging up on Car- ter-besides occasional reference to his not being there, they didn't." Political Science Prof. George' Grassmuck said it was important for the candidates not to criticize Carter too much. He said the American public will not readily accept criticism of the president. "It is always dangerous for those who criticize the president." GRASSMUCK ALSO SAID the debates could prove helpful to Ander- son. "It did establish Anderson as a candidate," he said. By Anderson ap- pearing with Reagan, the "importance of image" was stressed and the "im- portance of party" was downplayed, he said. Grassmuck said he helped arrange the debates between John Kennedy and Richard Nixon i 1960 and has noticed improvement since that time-both technically and in the debates' format. He said the Sunday debates were structured better and ran more smoothly. In contrast with the Carter- Gerald Ford debates of 1976, Grassmuck said they answered the questions "somewhat more directly." 375 N. MAPLE 769-1300 'Students say Anderson bested Reagan in ontinued from Page 1 moaned while others performed violin motions. THE CONSENSUS OF the Markley residents was that Anderson won. 0 "Anderson did much better. After his first response, Anderson was more defined in his answers," said Anderson supporter Christa Lane, an LSA senior. But some students were not im- pressed by either candidate. "The debate sounded rehearsed. They never completely refuted one another," said LSA freshman Vic Corondon. VERY FEW RESIDENTS in South Quad took note of the forum. Only one *lounge was filled with residents wat- ching the debate. A check down several halls found many room sets tuned to Midnight Express. In South Quad's Kelsey House lounge, viewers remarked on Carter's con- spicuous absence. "Carter is really losing his ass in this," resident Paul Spitz said. "I thought Reagan won because his policies were more clear and specific. Anderson spoke in much more general terms," said Lisa Kaufman, a resident of South Quad's Bush House. "I thought Anderson won because he looks at things on a global scale," commented Gil Wilshire. He added "Anderson is willing to make unpopular decisions and statements," a quality which he felt was a favorable one. "I THOUGHT ANDERSON was hot- headed and sanctimonious," remarked Kent Frederick, another Kelsey House presidentia policies and plans and those of Reagan's," explained Smith, 23, a1 commercial artist. THE DIRECTOR OF Anderson's Washtenaw County campaign, George Golubovskis, 20, said, "Reagan came across as an actor, reciting the same old formula and the same old demagoguery. Reagan cannot provide a real alternative to Carter." "That is why Reagan cannot appeal to the young professional, the vanguard debate of this country. Anderson will win because he doesn't use everyday rhetoric," Golubovskis concluded. The group in the apartment burst out laughing when Reagan said a "divine force" had placed the U.S. between the two greatest oceans on earth. "Nobody is going to believe Reagan's rhetoric. That's why he's going to lose this election," said School of Engineering graduate Lisa Anneberg. TIS WEEK AT PIZZA TUE! JAM S live muss WEDN BOAT THUl PITCHE th IDfIY NIGHT SDAY ESSION Ic, no cover ESDAI NIGHT RSDRY ER NIGHT out CAST Col r