I6 Page 10-Tuesday, October 21, 1980-The Michigan Daily Carter, Reagan seek TV debate format From AP and UPI President Carter and Ronald Reagan continued their long-distance debate on foreign policy yesterday while negotiators for both campaigns tried to reach common ground on the format of Begin your day with hibe Daig TUESDAY SPECIAL ALL SWEATSH IRT 30% off BlUOU nickels arcade a formal televised confrontation. Meanwhile, polls show that the economy may be the paramount issue among voters next month, yet President Carter and Ronald Reagan have developed surprisingly similar economic prescriptions for voters to choose between. MOREOVER, there is a wide consen- sus among economists and financial analysts that the economy, at least in the short term, will be the same under either Carter or Reagan as president. That means a sluggish recovery from the 1980 recession, with continued high unemployment and inflation through 1982-and probably a lot longer. The debate negotiations in late morning with participants talking about having urging appointments elsewhere within an hour or so. Three hours later the sponsoring League of Women Voters sent out for lunch, apparently having decided only that there will be no vice presidential debate. A TOP AIDE to Vice President Walter Mondale left the meeting, telling reporters: "We have been very eager to have a vice presidential debate," but that the Republicans are not interested. In Youngstown, Ohio, Carter con- tinued to attack Reagan's nuclear arms policies, charging the Republican can- didate with being "naive" to think the Soviet Union would respond to in- creased U.S. arms spending by reaching agreement on arms control. "It is extraordinarily naive to expect the Soviet Union would meekly accept what we would immediately and totally reject," Carter said. "IN MY JUDGEMENT that sort of expectation-if it became the policy of this, nation-would have the most 'serious consequences for the future. It would be a devastating and perhaps fatal blow to the long-term process of nuclear arms control." Reagan was in Ohio also, saying in Cincinnati there is a greater danger of nuclear war under Carter's weak foreign policy than under his own plan to build American military strength before undertaking arms control. Carter's "vacillating" foreign policy and weakened relationships with U.S. allies have damaged the nation's inter- national standing, he said. He continued to answer Carter's con- tention that he would be a dangerous president who would lead the nation in- to war. q The Maine connectiono, Some of the 20 tons of marijuana seized by police and Coast Guard officials yesterday lies on a piece of oceanfront property in Stonington, Maine. Officials arrested 19 people in connection with the marijuana, worth an estimated $16 million on the street. Other suspects are still being sought. SUBURB SENSITIVE TO SENSUALITY: Sex school feels the heat Study: Birth control pill poses 'negligi WASHINGTON (UPI)-The final report on a 10-year study involving more than 16,000 women concludes the risks from taking birth control pills ap- pear to be negligible, at least for the ble' risks young, white, middle class Americans studied. The report said the study provides "additional assurance" that users of oral contraceptives do not have an iii- creased risk for cancers of the breast, uterus or ovary. And it said, "Oral contraceptive users have no increased risk of death from all causes combined." But the report said the final word on oral contraceptives is not yet in. It said questions remain, particularly concer- ning the association between pill use, some conditions and personal lifestyle habits. OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)-A con- troversial school where students seek carnal consciousness and doctorates in sensuality has moved to the inner city to escape suburban restrictions. The school, More University, will no longer offer classes such as "Mutual Pleasurable Stimulation," "Teasing" and "Fundamentals of Sensuality" at its 22-acre campus in posh suburban Lafayette. THE SCHOOL moved to a 14-room Victorian home in downtown Oakland, said director Dennis Morgan, to "get out from under the injunctive cloud." The commune, based on a philosophy of responsible hedonism, was founded in 1970. For years, its suburban neigh- bors were relatively silent about naked cavorting on the lawn. But when the s ,ool incorporated in 1978, the Skywest Homeowners Association persuaded Contra Costa County to go to court. THE COUNTY obtained an injunction prohibiting the school from operating without a land-use permit, but the school remained open during appeals. The commune will continue in Lafayette, but sex classes are moving to Oakland, Morgan said, adding: "Now we're going to be able to reach more people." Asked how many students were enrolled, Morgan replied, "I don't have a clue. One hundred, 80; put down 80." Though the school is authorized by the state to grant undergraduate degrees and a Ph.D. in sensuality, Morgan said, "This is a fairly rough place to get into, let alone matriculate. Nobody has ever graduated or gotten a degree ... This is not a diploma mill." The university's most popular and only required course is Fundamentals of Sensuality, a two-day workshop in- cluding a thre6-hour laboratory and an examination of each student's "sensory perceptions." S Study says child-raising wl cs $254,000. @ - MORE D.R.E.A.D. GOLD CARD DISCOUNTS:. NEW YORK (AP)-In a cost projec- tion that puts all others in the shade, Parents magazine says that parents today will shell out $254,000 to raise a new baby to age 18. And that doesn't include the cost of college, the magazine said yesterday in its latest issue. CURRENT federal estimates of the cost of child-rearing come to just over $65,000, the magazine said. Parents magazine said inflation is the hidden joker not included in gover- nment estimates. But the magazine found some of the federal figures laughable and wondered whether the government's estimators had children. One figure cited was the gover- nment's estimated $22 a week to feed a teen-age boy; another was $115 to clothe an infant during the first year-a category dominated by diapers. "Our least costly way to clothe the baby's bottom-diaper service-comes to $7.30 a week," wrote Thomas Tilling, contributing editor of the magazine. "That's $380 a year." 7~~ k04 r U SOME REASONS TO CALL*~ LONG DISTANCE AND SAVE 50% GU 4AIX: r ". NOW YOU CAN SAVE 50% ON YOUR LONG DISTANCE CALLS IN MICHIGAN! Clip& save K I .. ......... F ... ..... ., tir ....v .. .. iji ,.. s. 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