The Michigan Daily-Saturday, November 15, 1980-Page3 Recyclers work to expand program in dorms By JEFF VOIGT All those old yellowed newspapers ,and non-returnable bottles and cans lit- ~tering your rooms can be put to good ruse, according to two area recycling R:organizations. Campus Recycling, a student volun- teer program based in East Quad, is' :starting a drive to establish a collection ,site for recyclables in each campus residence hall. Currently, only East :Quad has such a station. Campus Recycling is working with Recycle, Ann Arbor, a community- :based group affiliated with the Ecology Center, to collect throwaways for Frecycling. Both groups are trying to in- crease their membership. UNIVERSITY sophomore Lisa Goldoftas, head of the two-year-old Campus Recycling, explained that large turnover is one of the group's major hindrances. "Our biggest #.problem is continuity from year to year, because of graduation and lack of interest." Recycle Ann Arbor collects recyclables from East Quad, and the city's Old West Side. This week, the group also will start collecting at cam- pus co-ops. The two-and-one-half-year-old group also hopes to start a city-wide recycling program within the next two years, said University graduate and co-founder Dan Ezekiel. But he added that the organization needs more money and volunteers to continue functioning. "We are planning two tag days-one campus, and one city-wide," Ezekiel said. "But our first priority is getting a strong dorm program going." He added that other possibilities for fund-raisers include a benefit concert, and a square dance. The group hopes to raise $25,000 by May 1981. GOLDOFTAS also authored a "Recycling Manual for Dorms," which outlines methods for starting dorm recycling programs, and offers suggestions to offset common problems, including: " Accessibility to students and Area organizations recruit members loading docks; * Finding an out-of-the-way place for the station, so it won't be subjected to vandalism; " Finding containers to hold the material; and, * Ensuring the station is adhering to fire hazard and safety codes. THE BOOKLET also cautions, however, that while dorm organizational meetings are useful, large turn-outs are rare. Ten people at- tendeda joint organizational meeting Thursday, but Ezekiel noted that the organizers weren't expecting a large turnout. But Goldoftas stressed that "It seems very obvious to me that we should recycle. It's not a question of recycling or not, it's a matter of implemen- tation." And Jonathon Dreyfuss, the other co- founder of Recycle Ann Arbor, noted, "This University is based on research, and it (the research work) is all just paper." Organizers also offered suggestions to prospective contributors. They said newspapers, magazines, or phone books should be bundled in stacks six to eight inches high. White and brown paper should be separated and tied with string or placed in boxes with all staples removed. Cans and glass bottles should be rinsed, placed in separate barrels, depending on their metal com- position. Daily Photo BOTTLES, CANS,, and newspapers at this East Quad collection site will be taken to the Ecology Center for recycling. Speaker draws audience hostility at anti-rape rally Doily Photo by DAVID HARRIS THIS YOUNG WOMAN listens to speeches on women's safety in Ann Arbor at a rally sponsored by PIRGIM on the Diag. VICTIM SURVIVES IN STREETS: Teen -fights canlc( ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) - Joe Kreuter's chaotic struggle with two demons - adolescence and possibly terminal cancer - has resulted in drug addiction, ejection from -a National In- stitutes of Health treatment program, and months of hand-to-mouth survival on the streets. "All I want is what is best for my son," said Eloise Kreuter of Arlington, whose 18-year-old son suffers from can- cer of the connective tissues. BUT YOUNG Kreuter - angry and suffering pain that requires medication every few hours - is not an easy young man to help. "I was only a kid and my life was so ,good when this happened," Kreuter told the Washington Pont in yesterday's edition. "I played basketball and I thought of going to college and now I just hurt." Dr. Lucius Sinks, a cancer specialist at Georgetown University, said, "These days, kids with cancer live longer, but it's at the price of aggressive therapy that is often terribly mutilating and oc- curs at a time when kids are most con- cerned about how they look." AFTER 2% YEARS of treatment at NIH in Bethesday, Md., Kreuter was barred from the facility in January when he persisted in smoking marijuana in the wards and became in- creasingly difficult to handle. Physicians at the institute say he once physically assaulted a doctor, a charge he denies, and passed out illegal drugs to other patients. The Kreuters' landlady ordered him out of the family's rented home after neighbors complained about his noisy, disruptive behavior. After his mother's fruitless effort to find a place for him in a half-way house, Kreuter hit the streets. FOR SEVEN months, he lived in vacant lots and park benches in nor- drugs, thern Virginia, he said, fighting off muggers who wanted his narcotic, pain- killing drugs. "People would push you around, make you empty your pockets, stuff like that," Kreuter said, and he began injecting himself with the drugs to prevent their being stolen. Dr. Philip Pizzo of the NIH said that doctors at the federal facility were con- cerned about Kreuter's dependence on morphine and other pain-killers used during treatment, "but we have ways of controlling that." THE REAL problem, Pizzo said, was Kreuter's use of marijuana laced with PCP. Dr. David Pickar, an NIH psychiatrist who treated Kreuter, said the youth told him marijuana helped him endure the nausea related to his treatment, but "was told repeatedly that this was against the rules.", After fights and threats, "we tried to get alternative treatment for his psychiatric and drug-related problems," Pizzo said, but Kreuter signed himself out three weeks after NIH arranged for in-patient treatment at a George Washington University psychiatric facility. Pizzo declined to speculate on Kreuter's chances for survival. After his cancer was diagnosed, it went into remission, he said, but recurred about a year ago. PAINTING ACQUIRED WORCESTER, Mass. (AP)-The Worcester Art Museum says it has acquired its first painting representing 16th-century Dutch Mannerism. The painting, "The Wedding of Peleus and Thetis," is an oil on panel. It was done by artist Cornelis Cornelisz (1562-1638), known as Cornelis van Haarlem. Signed and dated 1597, the painting contains many elements of Dutch Man- nerism, an artistic style which preceded the realism of the 17th cen- tury. (Continued from Page 1) musicians," and supporting other ac- tivities that allegedly increase sexual stereotypes of women, he said. Such ac- tions "all lead to violent rape," Okin claimed. OKIN ADVISED concerned persons to write letters to institutions that are suspected of exploiting women. He said some advertisers and television script writers are prime offenders. Okm also encouraged a boycott of 'sexist' musicians and pornographic magazines. Other speakers met with warmer receptions. Rape Speakers Bureau spokeswoman Maureen O'Rourke was applauded as she said "we cannot allow tax cuts to stand in the way"_of the establishment Police Cash, jewelry stolen El Greco's restaurant and two residences were burglarized over the past three days, Ann Arbor Police Sergeant Harold Tinsey said yesterday. El Greco's, located on South State St., was robbed Wednesday of an undeter- mined amount of cash. The thief, ac- cording to Tinsey, broke into the restaurant through a window and pried open the desk drawer contaihing the money. About $200 worth of cash and jewelry was stolen from an apartment on the 500 block of South Forest Ave. late Tuesday night or early Wednesday morning Tinsey said. Meanwhile, $875 worth of jewelry was allegedly stolen from a house located on the 400 block of Third St. Tinsey said, however, there was no sign of forced entry. All three cases are under investigation. Ministers form "Moral Minority" HOUSTON (UPI) - A group of black ministers, aided by the ultra- conservative Moral Majority political religious movement, is organizing a sort of "Moral Minority" for blacks. Dr. J. Herbert Hinkle, pastor of Cathedral of Faith in Inkster, Mich., said the group was mapping strategy for a new organization to be called Minorities for Morality in America. Hinkle, 36, said the new group will promote the same moral principles as Rev. Jerry Falwell's Moral Majority. But Hinkle said it will not be officially affiliated with the older organization. "I concur with their positions on morality and those who agree can't help but have some sort of coalition," Hinkle said. "I'm not interested in par- tisan politics. We want to become issue- oriented. "We have a full line of footwear and winter clothing" WINTER INFL Ai0N 5USTERSI ARMY SURPLUS Wool Navy HERMAN PeaCoate Boot SPECIAL $4998 $3198 Reg. $59.98 G.I. WOOL WOOL 3-button Wallace Berry Navy Middys' Shirts $449 $ 6 9 8 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ REG. LEVI SALE$13 BELL BOTTOMS Reg. $19.98 201 E. Washington at Fourth -994-3572 Vi OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9-6 SALE IN EFFECT THRU SATURDAY. 11-15-80 Three Decades of National Party Rule in SOUTH AFRICA~ A Black and a White Perspective In -Opposition to Apartheid of a University-sponsored Rape Speakers Bureau on campus. STUDENTS AND citizens of Ann Ar- bor have to "deal with it, it happens in this city," O'Rourke told the Diag crowd. A rape occurs every five days in Ann Arbor, according to a PIRGIM report cited at the rally. PIRGIM calculated the figure from official police reports and*other sources including local rape victim assistance organizations. In compiling the figures, PIRGIM also assumed that only one in three rapes is actually reported. PIRGIM said it raised more than $2,100 in the Tag Day campaign that followed the rally. Spokespersons said the money will be used to help further educate the public about rape and to lobby for later AATA bus hours. The School of Music presents The University of Michigan company POWER CENTER TONIGHT AT 8:00 pm Tomorrow at 3:00 pm Power Center Box Office opens at 6:00 (763-3333) STUDENT DISCOUNT AVAILABLE WITH ID HAP.PENINGS FILMS Gargoyle Films-Love on the Run, 2:30, 8:15, 10:00, Nat. Sci. Netherlands America University League-Housing: A Natural Right These Days, Unknown Holland, 8 p.m., International Center. AAFC-Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex-But Were Afraid to Ask, 7, 10:20 p.m., MLB 3, Bananas, 8:40 p.m., MLB 3. Alt. Action Films-Nosferatu, 7, 9 p.m., MLB 4. Cinema Guild-Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie, 7, 9 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Cinema II-The Eyes of Laura Mars, 7, 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. School of Art-Film event, Milt Cohen, 8:30 p.m., Slusser Gallery. PERFORMANCES Dance Co.-Fall concert, 8p.m., Power Center. Men's Glee club-Concert, 8 p.m., Hill Aud. Newman Club-"Godspell", 8 p.m., St. Mary's Chapel, William and Thompson. School of Music-Ann Arbor Double Reed Extravaganza, 8 p.m., Stearns. Stage Co.-"Sizwe Banzi is Dead,"8 p.m. Canterbury Loft. U. Musical Society-Kenneth Gilberi, Harpsichordist, 8:30 p.m., Rackham Aud. Ark-Bryan Bowers, Atoharp virtuoso, 9 p.m., 1420 Hill. MISCELLANEOUS Environmental Advocacy-Community Organizing Workshop, 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Wesley Foundation. ICLE-Workshop, Marcus Plant, "Torts as Growth Industry," 9-11:45 a.m., Hutchins Hall. PIRGIM-Energy Task Force at the Michigan Energy Expo '80,10 a.m.-10 1\- Spghy yff1 Special Sundays you can get a spe- PERCY QOBOZA Editor of The Post (Johannesburg). the leading Black South African newspaper. - following the banning of The World and Qoboza's arrest in October 1977. Preselrtli Editor-in-Residence of the Washington Star, and Howard R. Marsh Visiting Professor of Communication at The University of Michigan teaching a mini-course on Journalism and Politics in South Africa. m -