The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 14, 1980-Page 7 'U' archeologystudents 'dig' demolished A farm By GARLAND CAMPBELL demolished. The site was probably used nv_ Sometome between 1850 and 1900 the old farm house disappeared. During the past three weekends University archeology students have been trying to reconstruct the history of the long-ago demolished home near the Fuller Road bridge and Wall St. GROUPS OF students in Prof. Carl Hutterer's Archeology 221 class gained first-hand excavation experience retrieving artifacts from three test pits in what was formerly the basement of the building. The glass bottles found at the Fuller Field site reflect turn of the century glass-making techniques, but most of the material recovered was refuse. Teaching fellow Chip Wills speculated that the basement was never filled in after the house was as a aump by people who lived in the area, he said. HISTORICAL CITY maps from 1850 show several farm houses near the Fuller Road bridge, but all mention of the house site excavated by the studen- ts disappeared from the city maps by the turn of the century. "This shows us the house must have been torn down by at least then," Willis explained. Hutterer said the Ann Arbor area has many sites which could provide prac- tical experience for the 70 students in the class. "IT IS CUSTOM with many univer- sities' introductory courses to find an area in which to dig," he said. The ex- cavation site was chosen by a group who investigated historical maps of Ann Arbor. v aUugnt Le su enLsD asic ex- cayation techniques. "The methods, techniques, and digging are the same for prehistorical and historical ar- cheology," noted Wills, who has done pre-historical archeology in south- western United States and Europe. The archeology students said they en- joyed their first excavation lessons. "I'd thought about what a real ex- pedition would be like many times. Now I've participated in one," said LSA freshwoman Lisa McFarlane. Kari Kristoffersen also said, "The practical experience was well worth it." BELL'S GREEK' PIZZA The Pizza of very special quality Free Delivery From 4:30 to closing, 7 days a week. East in or Pick-Up S. State and Packard 995-0232 'U' enrollment shows gain over last year BURRITOS and TatCOS a JIM'S RESTAURANT Come in and build your own from our MEXICAN MAXIMUM BUFFET - _"IP By KEVIN TOTTIS Total University enrollment increased slightly this year over last year, a move, that surprised administrators who previously predicted a decline. According to figures released by the' Registrar last week, total enrollment A on all three University campuses (Ann Arbor, Dearborn, and Flint) was 47,081-401 more than last year. Enrollment on the Ann Arbor campus .. rose from 35,423 to 35,670. "We had expected a small decrese AP Photo overall," Ernest Zimmerman, PRESIDENT JIMMY CARTER, dwarfed by New York City, pauses from assistant to the vice president for his political activities to enjoy the start of the Fifth Avenue Columbus Day academic affairs said. "But a slightly parade yesterday. higher percentage than normal of ac- cepted applicants" came to the Univer- sity. v IN AN INTERVIEW in July, Univer- Ra n . sity President Harold Shapiro cited declining enrollment as one con- tributing factor to his plan for a r er , WS N .Y O ."smaller, but better paid and supported C a rte r Zimmerman said this year's slight increase probably would not affect Shapiro's plan. "I don't think it will have an effect in the long run," he said. "It is clear that the number of high school graduates is going down. In the next few years, even with some extra effort, we will probbly have fewer students coming to the University.'' THE PERCENTAGEF, of women enrolled on the three campuses in- creased to 44.6 percent from 43.8 per- cent last year, according to Joanne Meagher, of the registration office. Forty-three percent of the students on the Ann Arbor campus are women, compared to 42.4 percent last year. The most significant enrollment decline in any school or college on the Ann Arbor campus occurred in the School of Education, which dropped from 2,066 to 1,753 students. Small declines were also seen in the Law School, School of Dentistry, and School of Library Science. Enrollment rose from 16,019 to 16,410 in LSA, and 5,065 to 5,285 in the College of Engineering. HAPPY HOURS Mon.-Thurs. Spm-close Hamburger $1.75 French Fries 25t Peanuts Ot Great discounts on beer and liquor BUSINESS HOURS Mon.-Thurs. 11:30am-midnight Fri.-Sat. 11:30am-1:00am Sun. 4:00pm-9:00pm From AP and UPI President Carter and John Anderson tried in New York City yesterday to demonstrate their commitment to Israel, and then both presidential can- didates marched in the Columbus Day parade down Fifth Avenue. Republican Ronald Reagan spent the day trying to solidify his California home base. Joining Carter and Anderson in the parade was George Bush, the Republican vice presidential can- didate The Democratic incumbent, who has said he sees no chance of re- election without carrying New York, began the day with a noisy audience at a Jewish community center in Forest Hills, Queens, and vowed that he nevr would 'turn his back on Israel. He said he wouldn't negotiate with the Palestine Liberation Organization unless it recognized the right of the Jewish state to exist. .HECKLERS REPEATEDLY in- terrupted the president but were booed down by other members of the audien- ce. Anderson, the independent presiden- tial candidate, told n Jewish audience he would pull the United States out of the United Nations if Israel were ex- pelled from the world body. Anderson won support for his in- dependent presidential campaign yesterday from a long list of former backers of Sen. Edward Kennedy. AMONG THOSE ON a list of about 100 members of the new committee are author Arthur Schlesinger Jr. actors Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Paul Newmanl and Jason Robards, writer Kurt Von- negut, singer James Taylor, and Bartle Bull, chairman of Kennedy's New York state presidential campaign., Anderson marched about a quarter- mile behind Carter in New York's Columbus Day parade, and said later with a smile, "I waved to Carter. I blew him a kiss." Reagan, at his first stop of a day-long helicopter swing through the sprawling Los Angeles suburbs, was greeted by some 200 hecklers in a crowd of 3,000 at Claremont College who shouted "Heil, Reagan." Reagan's hecklers were carrying signs with such slogans as "Stamp out Smog-Nuke the Trees," "We're choking on substantially controlled smog,'' and ''Mutants for Reagan."~ In various polls,. Reagan leads Car- ter by 10 to 15 percentage points in California, and he plans to spend most or all of the remaining three weeks of the campaign in the East and Middle West. 1301 S. University, corner of Forest PEACE CORPS 20TH ANNIVERSARY Tuesday, October 14 9:00 10:30 Seminars on topics related to the Changing Needs of the Third World, Michigan Union. 11:00 Ceremony commemorating the 20th A nniversary of the Peace-Corps. Front steps of the Michigan Union. 3:00 "The Challenge of the '80's", Richard Celeste, Rackham Amphitheatre 5:00 Peace Corps social,, returned volunteers and U ofM students invited. Michigan Union. 8:00 "Kennedy's Children ", a play performed by Canterbury Loft. Michigan Union. No admission charge. 'U' sophomore killed in head-on car collision A University sophomore was killed positioned two-fifths of a mile south of Sunday night in a head-on collision with the accident, sheriffs said. an automobile being driven on the Spiers, from Pompano Beach, Fla., wrong side of northbound U.S. 23 near was an LSA sophomore. She was the Dundee, Monroe County sheriffs repor- coordinator for Project Community at ted yesterday. PIRGIM and was also on PIRGIM's Jodi Spiers, 19, suffered internal in- board in charge or recruiting. Last year juries and was pronounced dead at the she was publicity, director for Soun- scene by a Monroe County medical dstage Coffeehouse. examiner. Two passengers in Spiers' . . .: .. car, Kathy Orckin,' 25, and Donald >r;::{ Gallagher, 23, were hospitalized and {:::x } f>>{".}>:. : are listed in fair condition. THE DRIVER OF the wrong-way car, Marjorie Cain, 56, of 230 w. Main in Milan was taken to St. Vincents Hospital in Toledo by helicopter and is listed in critical condition. Sheriffs offered no explanation as to ~ ~: why the woman was driving 'o the { wrong side of the road but did say e know about it and were attempting to intercept the car when the accident happened. Two deputies were. TN 8LRE wr M ?Nu411G c 2 ~o9 Qlz E3 U4 E5TY6 11 _ t Man assaulted near campus A Southfield man was assaulted early Sunday morning after an argument at a West Quad party, police reported yesterday. The man told the police he was at a party at 11 p.m. when the two suspects were asked to leave. He claimed he saw the men later, with a third man, while walking on South Division Street after leaving the Pan Tree restaurant at 3:30 p.m. He told the police that he noticed one suspect had a knife. A fight ensued and the victim was cut twice in the forearem, punched in the mouth, and pushed around by the three men. The beaten man walked back to West Quad, received first-aid and called the police. Police'said no officer was available to take the complaint, so the man went to the police station to report his assault. The case is still under investigation. ('ac stntinn rnhhptl V SCRUB DUDSTM Wear the Latest in Fashion Authentic operating room scrub suits as worn by doctors and nurses in -surgery. They're reversable, How the human mind can expand the realm of possibility "No barriers, no masses of. matter however enormous, can withstand the powers of the mind; the remotest corners vield to them; all things suc- cumb; the very heaven itself is laid open." These words were written by a man named Marcus Manilius almost 2,000 years ago. Read them carefully. And rmmrnhr them xmwll has long since turned to dust. These words express a truth that time cannot age or alter. Because there is in all of us a need to understand that is immortal and insatiable. A need that makes the unknow- able food for thought and the unheard-of music to our ears. At Conoco Chemicals we are more than mindful of this need. It is an intrinsic part of what we are and what we hope to be. For our need to know has compelled us to develop the kind of technology that will 4ol,- the nohlems e mirne barrier between what is possi- ble and what is not. The many advancements and refinements that we are presently responsible for are, we feel, both proof and promise. Because the level of tech- nology that we have achieved is only the beginning of the kind of expertise that we are striving to attain. For Manilius was right. There are no real boundaries to the realm of possibility. 'There are only opportunities. Opportunities that we intend rt tirelesl, nursue.0n(b ri- a comfortable, look great and are available in two colors. G. ' + +O.R. GREEN______- I.C.U. BLUE______