Viewpoint done, head. says; UAC chief not certain (Continued from Page 1) more than $10,000 this year, although only three lectures were held for which the speakers. were paid. In addition to Hoffman's speech, Ralph Nader and the team of Jack Kilpatrick and Shan Alexander have appeared. Less than 300 students turned out for the Nader speech and the Kilpatrick/Alexander debate drew only 1,300 viewers. All three lectures lost money, Carter said. The Michigan Daily-Friday, November 14, 1980-Page 9 "We have a full line of footwear and winter clothing" WINER INFL IlION BUSTERS1 ARMY SURPLUS F 3 L Wool Navy HERMAN Pea Coats 6"-Field Boot SPECIAL$4998 $3198 Reg. $59.98 G.1. WOO!. 3-button WaullaceBerry Shirts $698 WOOL Navy Middys $449 i Junkyard blues AP Photo' Firemen in Pontiac fight a blaze Wednesday night in a local landfill containing a large number of tires. "There will be a smoke problem, but they'll just have to live with it," said.Pontiac Fire Chief Albert Raynor, adding that he did not believe the fire was set accidentally since the old tires are very hard to start burning. ranian reaction to U.S. release terms negative Help prevent birith defects SUPPORT MARCH OF DIMES REG. LEVI L13 SALE BELL BOTTOMS Reg. $19.98 201 E. Washington at Fourth - 994-3572 vis= OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9-6 SALE IN EFFECT THRU $ATURDAY, 11-15-10 14,44 ¢ .. From UPI and AP ALGIERS, Algeria - Iranian diplomats said yesterday Iran had begun studying the American reply to its demands for freeing the 52 hostages but that the initial reaction was not very positive: One Iranian diplomat said officials in Tehran believed Washington was stalling. OTHER WELL-INFORMED sources in Algeria, the country serving as intermediary between Tehran and Washington, said they believed the American position would Nprovoke a clash between moderates and hardliners in the Iranian parliament, charged by - Ayatollah. Ruhollah Khomeini with deciding the fate of the hostages. Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher was said to have told the Algerians in a lengthy explanation of the formal reply that the U.S. government could provide a pledge of non-interference but that it faced legal obstacles in fulfilling the other conditions. In Tehran, Parliament met yesterday but did not even mention the hostages, now in their 376th day of captivity. MEANWHILE, IN San Francisco, a federal judge, saying he was acting to help resolve the U.S. hostage crisis in Iran, signed an order yesterday that stays for 90 days proceedings in 20 lawsuits in his court involving frozen Iranian assets. U.S. District Judge Robert Peckham said in his order that he acted on a government "Suggestion of Interest"- requesting that "all further proceedings be stayed" for three months. A report published in an Arizona newspaper also quoted "unimpeachable" administration sources as saying they did not believe the hostage negotiations would make substantial progress at all this year. "OUR PEOPLE DO not consider it at all likely that there will be an affirmative response from Iran for the remainder of this year," the Arizona Republic quoted Treasury Depar- tment sources as saying. They characterized the American reply to Iran's four hostage demands as "positive" but "cool" and said it tried to explain to the Iranians that meeting all the demands was "impossible under American law." The conditions, first announced by Khomeini last month and approved by the Parliament on Nov. 2, are: return of the wealth of the late Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, freeing $8 billion in Iranian assets frozen in U.S. banks, dropping lawsuits against Iran and pledging non-interference in Iranian affairs. State revenue sharing approved by House From AP and UPI WASHINGTON-The House wrangled over extending the no-strings general revenue sharing program yesterday, with members saying the real issue was the power, efficiency and sanity of the federal government. The pace of the post-election session, which started Wednesday, was much faster than the months of regular meetings, although it could bog down when the federal budget hits the House and Senate floors next week. House passage of the three-year revenue sharing measure-its second major bill in two days-followed a massive lobbying effort by state and local government officials. The bill, approved 345-23, now goes to the Senate. It specifies $4.6 billion for local governments each year, and would authorize a $2.3 billion yearly share for the states in 1982 and 1983. The revenue sharing program, star- ted n 1972, provides direct grants of money with virtually no requirements on how it can be used. The entire program expired Sept. 30, the end of fiscal 1980, with Congress unable to agree on continuing the revenue-sharing entitlements to-state governments. The next round of revenue sharing grants are not due un- til January. Opponents of the state portion of the program say the federal government no longer can afford to give untargeted aid to states. TASTE THE BEER THAT OUTSELLS MOLSON GOLDEN IN CANADA: LABAITS.l Good newsy Labatt's, Canada's No. 1 selling beer, is now imported to the U S. So, now its easier to compare the taste of our Labatts with the brew of our friendly competitor. See what you think. We, like most other Canadians, prefer a bottle of Labatt's Beer over a Golden. If we didn't, we'd likely be drinking Molson* instead-and we certainly wouldn't be running this d. «6...about certain rituals ofAmerican life - athletics, cheerleaders and the pleasures we take in strict formations.. .a rollicking display.PY Christian Science Monitor Half Time The Feld Ballet Monday, Nov.17 Anatomic Balm (1980) - Ragtime Music Scenes for the Theater (1980) - Music by Aaron Copland Intermezzo (1969) - Music by Johannes Brahms Tuesday, Nov.18 Meadowlark (1968) - Franz Josef Haydn (revised 1980) Scenes for the Theater (1980) - Aaron Copland Halftime (1978) - Morton Gould Wednesday, Nov.19 Anatomic Balm (1980) - Ragtime Music Circa (1980) - Paul Hindemith Footstep of Air(1977) - Beethoven Nov171819 at8:00