* Full-Service Dining Room *k Hot Sandwiches * Spaghetti and Cavatini Ua* Salad Bar-All you can eat * Lunch Smorgasbord * Carry-Out * Computer Games 3045 Carpenter Rd. at Packard, Ann Arbor 971-6500 2407 Washtenaw Ave, at E.M.U. --434-1448 1249 E. Michigan Ave., Ypsilanti-481-1400 2160 Rawsonville Rd., Belleville - 483-8800 " ."1 NeWLarp Pan Pizza. I~o $2.00 off medium iI One Coupon Per Pizza Hut P2.&f dI' Visit at Ann Arbor and Offer Good only onrequla,,menu Ypsilanti Area Pizza Hut prices through 11-23-80 Restaurants... 1980 Pizza Hut ..Inc. L-----rn .. ._-rn - - .._- Poge2-Tuesday, November 18, 1980-The Michigan Daily Police notes N BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports . .. Woman abducted Police are still searching for a man who abducted a 29-year-old woman in the Briarwood parking. lot last week and forced her to drive to a rest area of U.S. 23. She escaped unharmed after "elbowing her abductor in the groin," police said. The woman was getting into her car at the shopping center at about 8 p.m. last Wednesday, when a man allegedly forced his way into the car, police said. The abductor, described as a man in his 20s, made the woman drive south on U.S. 23 until they reached a rest area t4 1. " _ 10 " r . "i where they got out of the car. The woman escaped, ran back to her car, and drove away. The incidentawas reported to the police Friday. Assaults keep police busy The weekend was a busy one for Ann Arbor police officers who responded to an assortment of unrelated assault reports. Four men allegedly assaulted and robbed a man who was walking alone near the Mosher-Jordan dormitory early Friday morning, police said yesterday. The victim was approached by four unarmed thugs and robbed of an undetermined about of money at Washington Heights and Observatory sreets at about 1 a.m. The case is un- der investigation. Early Sunday morning on South University Street, a woman allegedly attempted to run over a man with whom she had argued earlier. Accor- ding to police, the victim said he was walking down the street when the woman drove up behind him. The man was not injured and no charges have been filed. In an unrelated incident Saturday night, a motorist on South University Avenue noticed a car following him. He stopped and walked up to the second car whose driver allegedly got out and threatened him with a pocketknife. The man was not injured and the assailant drove off. There are no suspects in the case. = = : 11111111 Practicing Pharm.D.s discuss Career Oftions For Doctor of Pharmacy Graduates A U-M College of Pharmacy seminar open to all students Tomorrow (Nov. 1 9)-.4-6 p.m. 3554 C.C. Little Bldg. College and University staff will be present to answer questions about admis- sion to the U-M Doctor.of Pharmacy program. Refreshments will be served. BAUSCH & LOMB SOFT CONTACTS $119 THUJ 12-=,-N 'Gang of Four' trial couldstart today PEKING - Defense Minister Lin Piao wanted so badly to be China's top leader nine years ago that he planned to ask the Soviet Union to help him stage a coup after he assassinated Mao Tse-tung, Chinese officials said yesterday in setting the scene for the "Gang of Four" trial. Lin and five allies, all of whom are now dead, plotted to use flame throwers, bazookas, dynamite or bombs to stop a train carrying Mao and kill him in the ensuing confusion, the Foreign Ministry said. The long-awaited trial of the Gang, led by Mao's widow Jiang Qing, and the six members of the "Lin Piao Clique" could start today. The Chinese press has said that execution could be the penalty for conviction of serious "counter-revolutionary" crimes. Brushfire winds calm LOS ANGELES - Ferocious winds that drove flames from six brush fires on a hopscotch path of destruction through five counties of Southern California calmed yesterday. Evacuated residents.returned to weep over their losses. The weekend blazes that shot out of the tinder-dry canyons north and east of Los Angeles charred 50,000 acres of hillside land, destroyed at least 61 expensive homes and caused $25 million in damages in Los Angeles County alone. Toxic Schock victim sues DETROIT - A 29-year-old Detroit area woman who suffered Toxic Shock Syndrome last spring filed suit in excess of $1 million yesterday against two tampon manufacturers. The action was filed in Wayne County Circuit Court against Kimberly Clark Corp., manufacturer of Kotex tampons, and International Playtex Corp., which makes Playtex tampons. Peggy Crusan, who declined to say where she lives for fear of harassment, said her husband, Roger, rushed her to Wayne County General Hospital April 12 after she complained of severe flu-like symptoms. Heavy casualties reported in Iran, Iraq conflict BAGHDAD, Iraq - Iran claimed its forces threw back the Iraqi in- vaders of Susangerd yesterday, driving them into retreat with a wave of tank-led reinforcements and helicopter gunships after three days of intense fighting for the Iranian border town. Claims of enemy casualties from both sides totaled over 1,380 there in 48 hours. The Baghdad military command's evening communique did not mention withdrawal, instead claiming successful helicopter and fighter raids on Iranian installations at Susangerd. Earlier it claimed heavy damage against Iranian land and naval forces there. Fears that the two-month-old war between Iran and Iraq would spread to other oil nations on the Persian Gulf mounted with Kuwait's formal protest to Iranoversthe seond aerial rocket attack in five days on a Kuwait border post. Banks raise prime rate NEW YORK - The economy's fragile recovery was threatened yester- day by a surge in interest rates to their highest levels since last spring. Banks raised the prime rate they charge top corporate customers to 16% percent. The increase, from 15%/2 percent, was in response to the latest money- tightening move by the Federal Reserve Board. Economists predicted the prime rate would reach 17 percent before leveling off or-dropping laterthis year. "The prime rate's going to have to go higher," perhaps as high as 17 percent, by "late in the weekor early next week," said economist Bob Sin- che at the brokerage house of Bear, Stearns & Co. L.A. officials 'optimistic' for strike settlement LOS ANGELES - City officials were optimistic yesterday that an agreement was imminent in the five-day strike by municipal employees that littered curbsides with tons of uncollected garbage. City Council President John Ferraro, emerging from a morning meeting of the Executive Employee Relations Committee, said he was "optimistic" the strike would be settled within hours. More than 90 percent of the trash collectors remained off their jobs and garbage was piling up at the rate of 9,000 tons a day. Authorities asked residents to take their garbage to private dumps or keep it at home in plastic bags rather than leaving'it on the curbs. I 4 4 COMPLETE! ! EXAM, STERILIZATION KIT, & FOLLOW-UP EXAMS. UNION LAKE OPTICAL COMPLETE EYE CARE FOR THEENTIRE FAMILY Dr. D.M. Soles, Optometrist 7231 COOLEY LAKE RD UNION LAKE 363-71 01 II .. _._. __. _ I GRADUATING ENGINEERS: 4 Sign up now look at one C year's best jot for, a- 'f the. ) offers I A i We offer civilian career opportunities that stress immediate responsibility-your chance for recognition, reward and growth right from the start. "hands-on" professional 4 Mare Island is an engineer's kind of world. We're the third largest active naval shipyard in the U.S. and the West Coast's oldest and best known naval institution. And, we're located in one of the world's best places to live and work-the heart of Northern California! San Francisco is just a bay away. . .the famous wine country is right next door.. .and sailing or skiing are as close as next week-end! To get complete information, contact your placement office and sign up now for an interview. CA MPUS INTERVIEWS Wed. Nov. 18, 1980 MARE ISLAND NAVAL SHIPYARD Volume, XCI, No. 65 Tuesday, November 18, 1980 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); 13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigon Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. 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