0 Page 8-Friday, October 31, 1980-The Michigan Daily DEAD OF NIGHT Five stories of nightmare and the macabre that chill to the bone. An architect drives to a country home at night and becomes convinced that he is acting out a recurring horror dream. Fellow guests try to disuade him, but . . . laughter, terror and outrage build in intensity until the trap closes in the surrealistic climax. On Halloween everyone should see a vision of horror. Come see it in the dead of Friday night. Mighty Mouse in FRANKENSTEIN'S CAT will be shown to set the mood. Shows at 7:00 & 9:00. LORCH HALL DATA BLACK TAKES SURVEY 48% of blacks polled won't vote CINEMA GUILD We sold our souls to film. '"_ WJJX CHEAP FLICKSI EVERY FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT - - AT EDITED1 MIDNG VERSION E ' INDIVIDUAL THEATRES "DEBBIE "t v tLiet 6-9700 DOES AT DALLAS" MIDNIGHT RT ALL SEATS $3.00 ALL SEATS $2.00 HT S NEW YORK (UPI)-A poll released yesterday indicates 19 percent of registered black voters surveyed are undecided on the presidential election, and 48 percent of all adult blacks sam- pled are either unregistered or do not intend to vote. Were President Carter to lose the black vote it would be enough to give Ronald Reagan "a landslide victory," said former Manhattan Borough President Percy Sutton, president of Data Black, a year-old research agency which has conducted four polls on black voters this year. pass up j your chance. Help prevent birth defects THE POLLS have shown that the number of undecided voters has remained steady during the year, un- swayed by Carter's campaign. In 1976, Carter won 90 percent of the black vote, and Data Black's most recent poll indicated 76 percent of blacks who are likely to vote will vote for Carter. Three percent will vote for Reagan, and another 2 percent will vote for independent candidate John Ander- son, and 19 percent are undecided. The survey, taken with telephone in- terviews with 1,240 persons across the country between Sept. 29 and Oct. 23, has an error rate of 3 percent, said Data Black. "I CAN SAY categorically," said Kenneth Clark, chairman of Data Black, "that the choice for black voters is between voting for Carter and not voting." Sutton and Clark said the indecision among black voters is highest is urban and politically key states. In New Jersey, 43 percent of registered black voters are undecided, Sutton said. In New York that figure is 35 percent. Clark said the percentage of undecided voters in other key states is 34 percent in Pennsylvania, 27 percent in Illinois, 23 percent in Ohio, 20 percent in Michigan, 17 percent in California, 16 percent in Texas, and 14 percent in Florida. SUTTON AND Clark said the lack of enthusiasm for Carter's campaign among black voters is due to a party strategy that has taken blacks for gran- ted. "The strategy has been to frighten, not address the problems," Sutton said. "If you just frighten them with Reagan, they will stay home." "Civil rights has become very much a non-issue," Clark said. "There seems to be a gentleman's agreement to take the black vote for granted." Sutton said Carter must make a special appeal to blacks on television and radio. "It is insufficient to talk about what was done in the past, like the number of black judges appointed," Sutton said. "There has to be some commitment, something to give blacks hope that; things will be better in the future." A, 2 teaceh*rcontract asse -d-te- - -p-te pase esie dipt lopp, By JANET RAE Despite a dispute over wording that the board claims may cost taxpayers an extra $80,000 a year, the Ann Arbor school board ratified a contract Wed- nesday with the 1,059 teachers of the district.! The dispute arises from a question of salary granted to experienced teachers newly hired to the district. According to School Superintendent Harry Howard, incoming veteran teachers will be paid $2,500 to $4,000 more under the contract than thosesteachers who have equal ex- perience within the district, according to the contract. The school board says that the wor- ding oversight should be rectified by paying the incoming teachers at an equal basis as the old instructors. But the Ann Arbor Education Association does not want to allow this. "We aren't going to permit them to unilaterally arbitrate a contract," said AAEA President Richard Taylor. The AAEA has filed suit on behalf of any incoming teachers. «I 9,1~d,1 U A LLOW7EEN CQQ-ISM, E PA T 0 peContesto r -t ~~- GIVEAWAY Aw4r/y %12/NE' *SECONDR*CHANCE* 516E. LBETY, ANN ARBOR ---- DOORS OPEN 8!!!-- A*M/ECON D3 Sp * CHA Cshime* I i GARGOYLE FILMS FRIDAY & SATURDAY Rm 100, Hutchins Hall 7:00 & 9:00 $1.50 SPECIAL 3-D GLASSES WILL BE PROVIDED. Winner Best Film Toronto Film Festival - Newsday ART GARFUNKEL THERESA, RUSSELL BD U! A SENSUAL OBSESSIION FRI-7:40, 9:50 SAT, SUN- :00,53:10, 5:30, 7:40, 9:50 MON, TUES-7:40, 9:50 Sat, Sun $1.50 til 1:30 F INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th Ave oft iberty 761-9700 A story of natural love... BROOKE SHIELDS 0 ThE BLUE bAGOON FRI-7:10, 9:00 SAT, SUN-5:20, 7:10, 9:00 MON, TUES-7:10, 9:00 A Call Red Cross todayabout learning CPR- cardiopulmonary resuscitation. 1