Page 6-Wednesday, October 29, 1980-The Michigan Daily Sen. Levin joins key Democrats on By STEVE HOOK State Democrats continued their pre-election campaigning blitz on cam- pus yesterday with Sen. Carl Levin highlighting a noon-hour rally on the Diag. 'Nearly 200 students withstood the cold, blustery weather to hear Levin promote Proposal B, blast the Tisch amendment, and recommend a President Carter reelection. He also voiced his support for Second District Congressional hopeful Kathleen O'Reilly, who is concentrating on University students to defeat incum-. bent Carl Pursell. O'REILLY APPEAREAD briefly to address the students. In addition, State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) ser- ved as emcee for the event. Betty Sch- wartz, who is attempting to oust the county prosecutor, also spoke. Finally, Rep. Richard Fitzpatrick (D-Battle Creek), the state's leader of the drive to reduce the drinking age to 19 (Proposal .B), gave a few words on behalf of his HAVE D Charle A bowl o bread & $1.50 Speci Good]I 1140 Soutl cause. But it was Levin who clearly students out for yes rally--when he finished s much of the crowd surrounde a discussion in the corner of and many others departed. 7 speakers had much less of an which had dwindled in size to 30 by the rally's end. "The only thing wrong with B," Levin said, "is that the should have been 18, and not 1 tacked the proposal for "try what the family should do, anc won't work." HE THEN DISCUSSED Ca plaining his stances on SAL Equal Rights Amendment, the profits tax, and his record or appointments. He also state major obstacle to Carter's r should be avoided by voters: derson. "A vote for John Ai tragically, is a vote for campus Reagan," Levin said. drew the The others kept their comments sterday's rather brief, due apparently, to the cold peaking, weather and the fading attendance. d him for O'Reilly echoed the remarks she made the Diag on the Diag last Friday, and last night The other at the Union. She stressed that the audience, Second District has the most students of less than any in the country, and that students have a major role in her candidacy. Proposal COUNTY PROSECUTOR candidate new age Schwartz began her address by stating 9." He at- that "we have some very strange laws ing to do in this state." She named several d this just examples, such as the 21-year-old minimum drinking age. She then vowed arter, ex- to serve responsibly if elected. T II, the Bullard closed the forum by urging e windfall students to get involved with the elec- n judicial tion-to write newspapers and d that a representatives and express their con-, eelection- cerns. John An- "Without your participation," he said, "the main trends and thrusts of nderson, this country are in a'very ugly and con- Ronald servative direction." INNER WITH Daily Photo by LISA KLAUSNER U.S. SENATOR CARL LEVIN (D-Mich.) talks with students on the Diag after yesterday's Democratic campaign rally. Daiy editors arrested outside Crisler Arena THIS WEEK )f chili, a slice of corn- house beverage for al is from b-a pm, M-F rime Charley h University-08-1 11 Hit man confesses, violates family tradition NEW YORK (UPI)-An admitted mob hit man and one-time organized crime boss in Los Angeles testified yesterday there are 20 cities in the United States, including Detroit, with "family" links to the secret organization known as La Cosa Nostra. The witness, James "Jimmy the Weasel" Fratianno testified as a key prosecution witness at the U.S. District Court trial of Frank Funzi Tieri of Brooklyn, the reputed boss of the late Vito Genovese crime family. FRATIANNO, the first to break the Mafia's code of silence since Joe Valachi in the early 1960s, told a hushed audience about joining La Cosa Nostra, about the ritual crucifix and gun on the table, the drawing of blood and the kiss on the cheek of the family members. "You have to be Italian," he said. "I was told when I joined, 'You come in alive and go out dead: There's no other wa." Tieri, 76, frail and seriously ill, sat in a wheelchair listening to the wor- ds of an old friend turned gover- nment informer whose information led to his indictment. Tieri, who like Fratianno is from Naples, is the first person ever to be tried on charges specifying he headed an organized crime family. Fratianno, also reported to be a member of the Genovese crime family, spoke casually about his part in nine West Coast murders, With the same apparent indifference he told about the inside operations of the syndicate. (Continued from Page 1) pts to enter any other part of the building would constitute a violation of the trespass act. Parrent replied that the group's only reason for being in the building was to get into the meeting. "We believe it's an open meeting and that's what we're here for," he told of- ficers. Peck then headed toward a partition that some meeting participants had en- tered earlier. Police Sgt. Arthur Hughes asked the group to leave. "WE DON'T WANT to leave," Parrent replied. "You don't want to leave, then we're going to escort you out," Hughes said. He then grabbed Parrent's arm and began dragging him away. Parrent asked whether he was under arrest. "I am escorting you out." Hughes replied. - After a few moments of debate, Hughes placed Parrent under arrest. Soon afterward, Peck was also placed under arrest and led out of the building. UNIVERSITY Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson, an ex officio member of the board, appeared on the scene just as Parrent was being frisked and handcuffed by police of- ficers. After discussing the matter with police and University officials who wit- nessed the incident, Johnson said het decided not to attend the meeting. He opted, instead, to go to police headquar- ters to post bail for Parrent and Peck, he said. Bail was not required, however. "I came out of concern," Johnson said. "I was almost arrested myself for protesting when I was in graduate school. I came to show a familiar face." Johnson said the Daily staff members* had "every right" to follow their con- yictions, but he said they had to be prepared to accept the consequences of their actions. MORE MONEY NEW YORK (AP) - Higher mortgage rates are causing some prospectivejob candidates to insist on larger salaries before they'll consider relocating. According to Bill Cantor, president of the Cantor Concern, a New York executive recruitment firm, the same job hunters who would have taken a 15 percent increase to relocate six months ago, are now asking 25 percent before they'll move. Viewpoint cancels Hoffman ta (Continued from Page 1) YEIIUDEIMICII -Israel's leading poet Reading and Discussing His Poetry 8:00 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 30 at 11111.1, 1429 1Hill St. -Refreshments Served- Cinema II Presents HIROSHIMA MON AMOUR (Alain Resnais, 1959) An actres in Tokyo making an anti-war movie meets and falls in love with a Japanese architect. Immediately Resnais introduces us to things within things-the filming of a film within a film; an actress playing an actress; an anti-war film within an anti-war film. Resnais subtly mirrors the many layered levels of our lives, skillfully placing his boxes within boxes; his meaning within layers of meaning. (88 min.) WED., OCT. 29 AUD A 7:00 & 9:00 GOLDFINGER (Guy Hamilton, 1964) A mysterious financier by the name of Goldfinger is criminally tampering with Britain's and the U.S.'s gold reserves, trying to contaminate Fort Knox with, horrors of horrors, a nuclear bomb! Will Agent 0007 prevent him? Or will our favorite spy too be gilded like a Tiger Lily? Sean Connery as Bond and Honor Blackman as Pussy Galore. Splashy and full of fancy gimmicks. (112 min.) SAT., NOV. 1 AUD A 7:00 & 9:00 THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVI LLES (Sidney Lan field, 1939) Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce team up in one of the first, and perhaps the finest, of the Sherlock Holmes series. Following a trail of mysterious murders in the Moor of the Baskervilles, Holmes and Watson set out to unveil the phantom canine killer. (80 min.) 7:00 and 10:20 I MARRIED A WITCH (Rene Clair, 1942) Veronica Lake, Fredric March, Susan Hayward, and Robert Benchley - . ~ ~ ~ ~ . . a_ a _ -- % im 1 L L. lecture. A CAMPUS-WIDE survey was taken by UAC, meanwhile, to see how studen- ts felt about the upcoming Hoffman ap- pearance. The results indicated that University freshpersons and sophomore were generally unaware as to who Hoffman is. "We realized that this might not have been primarily student-oriented," Car- ter said. "Then I got the question, 'Isn't that what UAC's all about?"' For Viewpoint, the Hoffman ap- pearance was a must-win situation. "If I brought him in and we lost $1,000," Carter continued, "that would have been it for the entire year." The way it stands now, Viewpoint may present a lecture or two late next term. "WE WERE NOT willing to stake Viewpoint's future on a lecture of this type," Attenborough replied. "I am not pleased; it's a decision I did not want to make," he added. "It tears me apart," Carter said. "This is the one lecture I wanted students to see." She emphasized that student input is essential if Viewpoint is to survive. "I have to save the committee and I can't do it alone," she said. "Otherwise, it's going to fold, there's no way around it. "What I perceived Viewpoint as Drinking age debated being, is evidently not what students perceive," Carter continued. "I don't know, I really don't know. Maybe they want comedians, magicians. But if it comes down to that, I resign." (Continued from Page 1) clusions. Fitzpatrick cited other studies, such as one by the National Council on Alcohol Abuse, that claim there is no relation between the drinking age and alcohol-related accidents. HE ADDED that Michigan Secretary of State Richard Austin supports the proposal because his studies have failed to link the drinking age and traf- fic accident rate. Fitzpatrick, who is also the chairman of the 19 is Fair Committee, stressed that raising the drinking age has failed to stop 19- and 20-year-olds from drinking. He said that overall there has been as much alcohol of all sorts sold in 1979 as in any other year. Last year, for in- stance, he said the sale of kegs of beer increased 550 percent, proving that amount of alcohol consumed hasn' changed, but rather the places 18- to 20- year-olds drink it. "Alcohol and beer industries haven't given us (the 19 is Fair Committee) a penny because sales haven't been af- fected," Fitzpatrick said. IN AN INTERVIEW before the debate, Fitzpatrick said that Proposal B still stands a good chance of passage, despite the findings of recent polls. Fit- zpatrick said none of the respondents in the polls were college students, and that if college students turn out in large numbers on Nov. 4, the proposal will pass., 4 But Fletcher said he doubted that there is even strong support for the proposal among 19- and 20-year-olds. I, 99Rumour has it that the Academy is nowadays one of the three most famous things about England.P-The London Times 0 ACadem Of &Martin in th ied8 Handel: Concerto Grosso, Op. 6, No. 11 Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 in G Grieg: Holberg Suite, Op. 40 Schubert: Rondo in A major for Violin & Orch. Bartok: Divertimento for Strings Mon a , ov. TT4 A 4t .yA 11 h3 S !I II I