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October 29, 1980 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1980-10-29

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

i

Daily Photo by USA KLAUSNER
U.S. REP. WILLIAM FORD (D-Taylor) speaks to University graduate
students about legislation to fund minority education.
-HAPPENINGS.
FILMS
National Student Nurse Association-Film in opposition to Tisch proposal,
12p.m., Furstenberg.
AAFC-The Parallax View, 7, 10 p.m., Animal Farm, 8:45 p.m., MLB.
Cinema Guild-Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, 7, 9:05 p.m., Lorch Hall
Aud.
Cinema II-Hiroshima Mon Amour, 7, 9p.m., Aud. A, Angell.
Max KadeDeutsches Haus-Der Student von Prag, 8 p.m., Oxford
Housing, 603 Oxford Rd.
MEETINGS
LSAT Meeting-3:30 p.m., Michigan Union Conference Room 6.
National Student Nurse Assoc.-Open house, 3:30 p.m., School of Nursing
Lobby.
Society for the Promotion of American Music-7 p.m., 306 Burton Tower.
PIRGIM-Projec Community, 7p.m., 1439 Mason.
Eckankar-Intr uctory Lecture, 7:30 p.m., 302 E. Liberty.
International Folk Dance Club-Advanced teaching and dancing, 8 p.m.,
Michigan Union.
Stilyagi Air Corps-8 p.m., Union Conference Rooms.
Committee Concerned with World Hunger-8 p.m., Michigan Union,
Assembly Room 1.
University Residence Hall Council-9 p.m., 3909 Michigan Union.

U.S. Rep.
Ford says
educatio n
legislation
i
increasing
By JEFF VOIGT
Legislation designed to help
minorities, migrant workers, and older
people improve their education has
been increasing during the past twenty
years, U.S. Rep. William Ford (D-
Taylor) told a small group of students
at Rackham Assembly Hall yesterday.
Ford, chairman of the House Sub-
committee on Post-Secondary
Education, explained that projects such
as the so-called "Trio Program" are
designed to help minorities and other
disadvantaged people receive post-
secondary educations.
THE CONGRESSMAN, who also is a
member of the House Elementary,
Secondary, and Vocational Education
Subcommittee, noted that more people
are attending college to expand their
knowledge inchosen fields or to enter a
new line of work, or simply to enrich
their lives through increased education.
Ford, who was instrumental in ex-
tending financial aid to middle-income
families by raising the limit of
eligibility for grants to $26,000 per
family, stressed that "there is no
student of any income who cannot
receive some sort of aid."
He added that students often are not
fully aware of the various types of
financial aid they may be able to
receive.
Ford also labeled Proposal D on the
November ballot, the Tisch amen-
dment, as being "patently ridiculous."
"IT'S OUTRAGEOUS that he
(Robert Tisch, the proposal's
originator) is telling people they can
get something for nothing," Ford said.
"It's the most dishonest piece of
demogoguery I've seen on the ballot in
a long time."
If passed, the amendment would cut
property taxes by approximately 50
percent-a $2 billion cut in state
revenues. Critics have predicted the
proposal also would severely cutback
appropriations to state institutions of
higher education.
Vladimir Komarov of Russia became
the .first known space fatality in 1967
when his craft became entangled in the
re-entry parachute.

crucial to electic
From AP and UPI
,NEW YORK-Pollster Louis Harris said yesterday
that the burden of the campaign falls on President Carter,
not challenger Ronald Reagan, and that to get re-elected
Carter must be judged the winner in last night's debate by
the American public.
"The burden of the campaign is now on Carter and that
is why (last night's) debate is so pivotal. Carter must walk
a tightrope. . . during the debate and make Reagan the
issue without appearing mean," Harris told a group of
United Press International editors yesterday.
Voter dissatisfaction is also a key issue, according to
Harris.
"THE QUESTION isn't that the number of undecided
voters is a record high . . . The real indecision is not for
whom people are going to vote, the indecision is whether
people are going to vote," he said.
"This becomes the' central pivot to the campaign,"
Harris said.
His most recent survey found that 27 percent of those
polled said they cannot vote for Reagan, 29 percent said
they cannot vote for Carter and 29 percent said they can-
not vote for Anderson.
HARRIS SAID "the fundamental issue in this election

n, pollsters say
seems to be who the voters least object to," not whom they
support. He said that the voting-against factor could have
a major effect on voter turnout.
The growing anticipation of Americans that U.S.
hostages held in Iran will soon be released has not raised
the public's judgment of how President Carter has han-
dled the year-long confrontation, an Associated Press-
NBC News poll says.
The hostage issue has, in fact, become more entangled"
in the presidential election in recent weeks, as an in-
creasing number of people say Carter's handling of the
crisis has been designed to advance his re-election cam-
paign.
In addition, Americans do not favor any deal which
would trade spare parts of military equipment to Iran in
' exchange for the release of the 52 hostages.
THE RECENT SWIRL of rumors and speculation about
a possible release of the hostages has fueled a substantial
public expectation that they will indeed be freed.
Thirty-eight percent of those interviewed Oct. 22-24 said
they expected the hostages to be released in the next few
weeks. Twenty-five percent said the release, will come
later this year and 21 percent expected they would still be
held next year. Sixteen percent of the 2,405 of the adults in-
terviewed nationwide by telephone were not sure.

U

Daily Classifieds
Get Results!
Call 764-0557

The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, October 29, 1980-Page 3
Debate outcome, hostage issue

Healthy Right-Handed males and females
Ages of 18-35
needed for interesting
psychologicl experiment.
GOOD PAY
Call U of M Psychophysiology Lab
763-0115

the new book by
ARTHUR JANOV
Author of THE PRIMAL SCREAM
"Mankind is bound hand and foot by an insidious affliction - the
most intangible, devastating and widespread of diseases. It is a
physiologic, biologic state, yet it cannot be eliminated through
diets, exercise, meditation, virtuous behavior, drugs or surgery. It
is the only illness found virtually everywhere in the body and
brain. Yet nearly everyone is unaware of it. It is a disease with
pain at its core . . .''

PRI SONERS
OF PAIN,

/ S~
vooS

'

PERFORMANCES
Russian house-Poetry reading, 8p.m., 623 Oxford Road.:
Department of Theater-The Restaurant,, 4:10 p.m., Arena Theater,
Frieze Building.
Canterbury Loft-Action, 8 p.m., Canterbury Loft, 332S. State.
Irish American Club of Ann Arbor-Pat's People, 8 p.m., Michigan
Theater, 603 E. Liberty.
University Musical Society-Lar Lubowitch Dance Co., 8 p.m., Power
Center.

UN

SPEAKERS
Department of Psychiatry-Howard Shevrin, "An Evaluation of Early
Theories of Narcissism," 9:30 a.m., CPH Aud.
Center for Russian and East European Studies-Edith Clowes, "Leonid
Andreev and Friedrich Nietzsche;" 12 p.m., Lane Hall.
Ecumenical Campus Center-Olcutt Sanders, "Fellowship of Recon-
ciliation," 12 p.m., Wesley Foundation Lounge, 602 E. Huron; "The Arms
Race-The Ultimate Insecurity," 8 p.m., Ecumenical Campus Center, 921
Church St.
U-M Committee on Southern Africa-Neil Parsons, "Re-writing Southern
African History for Schools," 12 p.m., 246 Lorch Hall.
Department of Linguistics-Student seminar, Edward Amith Jr.,
"Discourse Analyses and Text Typologies," 12:10 p.m., 3518 Frieze.
Law School Speakers Committee-Daniel Rubinfeld, "The Tisch
Proposal," 12 p.m., 120 Hutchins Hall.
Continuing Education of Women-"Career Decision Making," 1:30 p.m.,
328-330 Thompson St.
Center for Research on Learning and Teaching-Alfred Storey, 3 p.m.,
Speech Communications; Seminar on college teaching, "Grading," 3:10
p.m., 2417 Mason.
College of Engineering-John McGowan, "Browning and Yeats: The True
Value of Poetry;" 8:15 p.m.; 1047 East Engineering; "Application of
Management Engineering Techniques to Nurse Staffing: Past, Present, and
Future," 4 p.m., 229 W. Engineering; "Non-Equilibrium Transient Steam
Generator Analysis," 4 p.m., Baer Room/Cooley.
Department of Biology-Leo Luckinbill, "r and K Selection in an Ex-
perimental Population: An In Vitro Test of Life-History Theory," 4 p.m.,
MLB2.
Department of Chemistry-Matc Fraser, "Forensic Analytical
Chemistry," 4 p.m., 1200 Chemistry; Robert Damrauer, "Gas Phase Ion-
Molecular Studies of Organosilicon Compounds," 4 p.m., 1300 Chemistry.
Department of English-B. Rajan, "Sir Thomas Browne and John Milton:
The Divided and the Distinguished," 4 p.m., Mason.
Finance Club-"Commercial Lending Training Program," 4 p.m.,
Wolverine Room, Business School.
Medieval and Renaissance Collegium-Charles Foulon, "The Theme of
Celtic Other-World in Arthurian Romance," 4 p.m., 1402 Mason.
Center for Afroamerican and African Studies-Charles Long, "Black
Religion and Historical Reality," 7p.m., Schorling Aud.
Young Workers Liberation League and Michigan Student Assem-
bly-James Steele on the 1980 Election Issues, 7:30 p.m., Trotter House, 1443
Washtenaw.
MISCELLANEOUS
WCBN-"The Black Republican-Revolutionary or Reactionary?" with
former mayor Albert Wheeler and city council candidate Wendell Allen.
UAC-College bowl Intramural Competition registration, Ticket Central,
Michigan Union.
MSA and LSA-SG-"Rally Against Tisch," 12 p.m., Diag.
Career Planning and Placement-"Law School: Inside Perspectives,"
2:30 p.m., CPP 3-RRoom.
Lawrence Livermore Lab, opportunities for undergrad and grad science
majors, 3 p.m., CPP; workshop, "Identifying Teaching Skills to Expand
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