Wage 2-Sunday, October 26, 1980-The Michigan Daily .*. , .:.u v "v%. .. . y . .v " ":% + '?'-' " .. n: .: .. ' ..*.*.. 4 .. .; .;.: *:-..*:-.-. '>"'%s:pry . .;: :; :; '...:--- .:-w:- . . . . . . ..::-: ":a: :! >. . . . . .:">.:s:". : 'U' study 'criticizes election (Continued from Page 1)1 Miller said. This isn't always a fair criticism, he added. NOT UNTIL Former President Gerald Ford slipped in response to a foreign policy question did the media address debate issues, Miller said. But even then the emphasis was still on Ford's error rather than the substance of what he said. "Who came across how was the em- phasis (in media coverage of the debates)," Miller said. "The can- didates, on the other hand, really did focus on issues."I But campaigns have always been reported in that way, Miller said. Miller's paper on the role of liberal and conservative ideology in the 1980 election will be released later this week in Economic Outlook U.S.A. His analysis of data from the American National Election Studies-a comprehensive voter survey also done by CPS-says that ideology is becoming a more important influence in elec- tions. WHETHER A person perceived him- self or herself as a liberal or conser- vative had more impact on the voter's choice in the supposedly issueless elec- tion of 1976 than it did in 1964 when Republican Barry Goldwater and Democrat Lyndon Johnson offered the country a clear choice between left and right, survey data shows. Election participation has declined among citizens who tend not to think of themselves in a left-right dimension, Miller says in his paper. That's part of the reason that ideology is becoming more important. In his interpretation of Spring 1980 ISR survey data, Miller also says that for the first time since CPS began collecting data in 1952, there has been a significant shift to the right in the public. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Iran claims war carried cove rage by media Open to all interested students This Wed.: Oct. 29, 3:30 p.m. Conf. Room 6, Michigan Union Call 1-261-LSAT for additional information LUNCH-DISCUSSION TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28-12 NOON "PERSPECTIVES ON THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION" Speaker: DR. WARREN MILLER Director Center for Political Studies, Institute for Social Research At The INTERNATIONAL CENTER 603 E. MADISON STREET Lunch: $1,.00 For Information Call: 662-5529 Co-sponsored by the Ecumenical Campus Center EVERY SUNDAY SPECIAL ITALIAN BUFFET ALL YOU CAN EAT-now only $4.45 Soup and Salad Bar included workers, union members help to block Tiseh into Iraqi territory BAGDAD-Iran claimed for the first time yesterday that attacking partisan forces had carried the ground war inside Iraq and said its troops had recaptured key positions in the embattled port city of Khorramshahr. Iraq, however, continued to assert that it was in control of Khorram. shahr and said the capture of the vital oil refining center of Abadan im- minent. Independent sources said that Iranian and Iraqi forces continued td: clash in and around Abadan yesterday with each side claiming heavy casualties and damages. In a communique broadcast by Tehran radio yesterday, Iran said "par- tisan groups inflicted heavy losses on the enemy" in an overnight "battle in- side Iraqi territory." But the report gave no further details and did not fur- ther identify the partisan groups. Volunteers search fails to find missing Atlanta children ATLANTA-Thousands of volunteers, wearing yellow' armbands and toting walking sticks and brush-cutting tools, trudged through an outlying Atlanta neighborhood yesterday fruitlessly searching for the bodies of four black children believed to have been murdered. The volunteers, joining national guardsmen in the search party, fanned out over an area of about 8 square miles on foot and horseback looking for clues that might lead to the discovery of the bodies but found only tattered shreds of clothing, some stolen property and a few animal graves in the outlying wooded area.w Meanwhile, Georgia Governor George Busbee ordered state troopers to help patrol Atlanta's troubled black neighborhoods so Atlanta police could intensify their investigation into the unsolved murders of 18 black children in that city. met announces settlement NEW YORK-The Metropolitan Opera Co. and its locked-out musicians reached a tentative settlement to their month-long dispute yesterday, spreading hope the stage would once again brighten at the nation's premier operas house. The tentative settlement was announced by top federal mediator Wayne Horvitz shortly before dawn yesterday but details of the pact were withheld pending ratification. Both federal and Met officials would not say, however, whether plans were being made to reschedule the 1980-81 season that was cancelled last month after it was apparent the dispute would not be settled quickly. Afghan UNESCO delegate Hours: 2 pm until Midnight Buffet open until 9 pm SIMM'S 114 E. Washington 665-3231 _ _ _. LANSING (UPI)-Pre-election financing reports show worried gover- nment workers and uionists are digging deep to help the effort to defeat the Tisch tax cut amendment. A study of figures on file Friday with the state showed the amounts of money available to opponents of Proposal D were substantially larger than funds garnered by backers of the measure. FRIDAY WAS THE deadline for filing pre-election financing reports un- der Michigan campaign law. Papers document contributions and expen- ditures through October 19. An anti-Tisch organization called Citizens to Save Our State, reported collecting $184,018 through Oct. 19. Government workers contributed heavily, with major amounts coming from the Michigan Education Association, Michigan Federation of Teachers, Michigan State Employees Association, and the biggest of all- $40,000-from the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Em- ployees. The Ford Motor Co. Ballot Committee gave $20,000. TISCH, WHO SERVES as drain commissioner of Shiawassee County, has raised $79,031 through his Tisch Coalition for Property Tax Cut in Michigan, and spent $66,384.17, accor- ding to his report. Most of the money came in small contributions from in- dividuals. In addition, the Michigan Tisch Tax Cut Coalition has chipped in about $1,200 in in-kind support from a realtor, SPECIAL this week only Frog Leggs satured roadhouse style Served with corn-on-cob, house fries, coleslaw and roll & butter ends Sat. Nov. 1 S 'till] THE CRACKED CRAB 112 W. Washington 769-8591 and the Realtors for Tisch Tax Cut'D about $4,300. Also lopsided was funding of the fight over Proposal B, which would lower the drinking age from 21 to 19, with bar owners' supporting contributions swamping those of anti-alcohol groups fighting the measure. T'isch may sue Shapiro, Milliken, state (Continued from Page 1) making some critical decisions now." Tisch said his official announcement would come by "church time" today or by 8 am. tomorrow., The Tisch plan, if approved by voters on November 4, would slash property taxes in half and require the state to make up the lost revenues to local governments. State officials have predicted that such a reimbursement would come at a heavy cost to state services. The University ad- ministration has predicted that tuition would have to double or triple to begin to replace state revenues that would be lost under the Tisch plan. TISCH, HOWEVER, has repeatedly criticized his opponents. "Michigan has never before seen such a blatantly misleading propogan- da campaign as the one Gov. Milliken is currently orchestrating," Tisch was quoted in the release as saying. Tisch said Shapiro is probably among those presidents against whom he will take action. "I was considering using U of M's President Shapiro as number one," Tisch said. "He's one of the biggest liars of the bunch. He spent a lot of the taxpayers money." EARLIER THIS WEEK Shapiro sent a newsletter to members of the Univer- sity community saying the Tisch tax cut could be "devastating" to the University. Shapiro was unavailable for com- ment last night, but both Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye and University General Counsel Roderick Daane std the funds from the newslet- ter did not come from tuition or state- appropriated monies. Tisch also cited Wayne State Univer- sity President Thomas Bonner and Michigan ,State University President Cecil Mackey as two others against whom he may take legal action. Tisch said he had been in close con- tact with Richard Headlee, another tax cut crusader, and had discussed with him the possibility of a lawsuit. But Headlee, reached last night at his home, said Tisch only called to inform him that "they were going to talk with some attorneys so they (Milliken and the university presidents) would cease and desist from breaking the law." r -a -M - - - - - - tONIE FREE PIZZA I ' with one paOid PLUS , denounces Soviet occupation BELGRADE, Yugoslavia-Afghanistan's chief delegate to a United Nations conference stunned fellow delegates here yesterday when he rose unexpectedly and denounced the Soviet Union's intervention in his country. The delegate, Akhtar Mohammed Paktiawal, condemned the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan- during a UNESCO conference and then flew to West Germany and asked for asylum. "Afghanistan is fighting for its freedom," Paktiawal told the delegates. "The Afghan people will fight forever ... I will fight for the rest of my life." Paktiawal then picked up his briefcase and left the conference to the cheers and applause of the other delegates. Mexican quake kills 65; leaves thousands homeless HUAJUAAN DE LEON, Mexico-Thousands of dazed and homeless residents wandered in the streets here yesterday, looking for food, water or relatives amid the rubble of buildings toppled by a massive earthquake. The earthquake, which killed at least 65 people, destroyed about 88 per- cent of the buildings in this town 150 miles southeast of Mexico City. Many residents spent the night in the streets as rescue workers, brought in by helicopters, struggled around the clock to free hundreds of people trapped in the rubble and debris from the sudden quake. The earthquake, centered in the Pacific Ocean near here and measuring 6.7 on the Richter scale, triggered dozens of landslides across the southern state of Oaxaca, blocking all major roads and toppling telephone and utility poles. The quake was also felt as far away as Mexico City where tall buildings reportedly swayed like trees. Court awards damages to late sportscaster's estate DETROIT-A federal court has awarded $235,000 to the estate of a- former radio sportscaster who committed suicide two years after he was fired and replaced by a black announcer. Storer Broadcasting Co., which owns the Detroit radio station where the announcer was fired, is expected to appeal the court's decision. It was argued that the sportscaster, Joseph "Red' Jamison, committed suicide as a result of his replacement at his Detroit job by a black announ- cer. The six-member, all-white jury awarded the $235,000 to Jamison's estate for his "wrongful" death because his suicide was caused by mental illness resulting from his racially-motivated discharge. i LONDON EURYTHMY GROUP WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1980 8:00 p.m. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Tickets $4.50 & $6.00 - Available at Liberty Music Shop and UAC Ticket Central - Telephone 763-1107 By mail, order c/o "London Eurythmy Group" 1923 Geddes Ave., Ann Arbor; 48104 Public lecture/demonstration - 12:00 Noon, November 5 Pendleton Arts Information Center, Michigan Union presented by the Rudolf Steiner Institute of the Great Lakes Area With Daniel Podlovski, violin; Alexandra Gutu, cello; Brian Willson, piano. Presented through arrangement with Christopher Mann Artist Management. Volume XCI, No. 46 Sunday, October 26, 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, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspaper Syndicate. News room: )313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY; Sports desk: 764-0562; Circulation: 764-0558; Classified advertising: 764-0557; Display advertising: 764-0554; Billing: 764-0550; Composing room: 764-0556. 0 YOU COULD BE A WINNER! Grand Prize Drawing! - AV ^A M AKI n011*IC i Editor-in-Chief....................MARK PARRENT Managing Editor................MITCH CANTOR City Editor...... . .............. PATRICIA HAGEN University Editor............ . .... . . TOMAS MIRGA Features Editor................BETH ROSENBERG. Opinion Page Editors...-.............. JOSHUA PECK HOWARD WITT Sunday Page Editor..............ADRIENNE LYONS Arts Editor...-.....-.............MARK COLEMAN DENNIS HARVEY Sports Editor.......................DALAN FANGER Executive Sports Editors........... MARK BOROWSKI Business Manager..........ROSEMARY WICKOWSKI Sales Manager................KRISTINA PETERSON Operations Manager............KATHLEEN CULVER CO-Display Manager............... DONNA DRESIN Co-Disply Manager............. ROBERT THOMPSON Classified Manager....' ............ SUSAN KLING Finance Manager.................. GREGG HADDAD Nationals Manager ..................LISA JORDAN Circulation Manager......... TERRY DEAN REDDING Sales Coordinator............ E. ANDREW PETERSEN BUSINESS STAFF: Cathy Boer, Glenn Becker. Joe Brodo, Randi Cigelhik, Barb Forsiund. Alisso Gold- ! ? a'k\\ It V IM i i