The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 20, 1980-Page 3 Den scare would-be abductor 1 :Two local men came to the rescue of a screaming woman Tuesday morning after another man attempted to abduct her from an Ann Arbor parking lot, police said yesterday. -The would-be kidnapper, described as in his mid-20s and of medium build,, abproached the woman at -a Huron Parkway and First Street parking lot at 11:30 a.m. and asked for directions, Ann Arbor Police. Sgt. Harold Tinsey said. As the 43-year-old resident got out of her car to respond, the suspect allegedly flashed a pocketknife, pushed the woman back into her car, and at- tempted to follow her inside. Two men walking near the area were alerted when they heard the woman screaming, Tinsey said. When they ap- proached to offer assistance, the suspect fled. There were no injuries in the incident, and the case is still under investigation. I Hotel manager foils theft A hotel manager who saw his own briefcase being carried away by a guest following a break-in at his hotel Tuesday, helped catch the suspect before he could make his getaway on an AATA bus, police said yesterday. Employees of the Arbor Valley Inn at 2800 Jackson Rd. discovered at 10:00 aim. that a storage room had been birglarized, Sgt. Harold Tinsey said. They soon saw Curtis Davis, 23, from New Haven,. walking out of the hotel FHAPPI FiI with a plastic bag and a briefcase similar to the manager's. Tinsey said the manager requested an employee to follow the man and proceeded to call the police. Davis was apprehended at an AATA bus stop near the Maple Village shop- ping center. Tinsey said the plastic bag' was filled with items allegedly stolen from the hotel, and verified that the briefcase did belong to the manager.. Davis was arraigned yesterday in 15th District Court -and charged with three felonies including breaking and entering and two counts of forged checks from previous incidents. He was released on $15,000 bond pending a Nov. 26 pre-trial examination. Hit-run suspect arraigned A man suspected of fleeing the scene of a car accident Monday night was arraigned yesterday in 15th District Court, police said. James Daniel, 34, allegedly left his car following a fiery head-on collision with John Dazy at Plymouth and Green Roads Monday night at 8:30. He was found by police and arrested Tuesday, Sgt. Harold Tinsey said. Daniel was arraigned on one count of leaving the scene of an accident and released on bond. He has a previous warrant out for disorderly conduct, Tinsey said. NINGS1 LMS SUIT INVOLVED EX-SECOND CHANCE EMPLOYEE Jury acquits bouncer By MAUREEN FLEMING A former Second Chance bouncer was acquitted Tuesday of an assault charge stemming from a March barroom fight. A jury deliberated most of Tuesday afternoon before finding Daniel Haisenleder, 31, not guilty of the felony-assault with intent to commit great bodily harm less than murder. HAISENLEDJCR was accused of beating University student Thomas DeJonge nearly unconscious during a fight in the Second Chance bar at 516 E Liberty St. The fight reportedly began when DeJonge was asked to leave the bar by bouncers after they thought he was in- volved in 4 beer mug throwing incident. GET PU5I/SHED SUBMIT PAPERS TO Michigan Journal of Economics by Dec. 1 BOX IN LOBBY OF ECONOMICS BUILDING John Collins, Haisenleder's attorney, said he was very happy with the trial results. "It became tremendously ob- vious (during the course of the seven day trial) that Haisenleder was going to be let off." Collins added that the prosecutor's officehad blown the whole incident out of proportion. PROSECUTING attorney Robert Cooper refused to comment on the case. "I think the prosecutor really over- charged us," Collins said. He explained that Haisenleder was a weight lifter, and if he wanted to hurt DeJonge he could have. Collins said DeJonge had two black eyes and a bump on his head from the fight, while Haisenleder suffered a broken nose, black eye, and a wound from a bite inflicted by DeJonge. He added that the only blood found on Haisenleders' shirt was from Haisenleder, although witnesses testified that blood was squirting "all See FORMER, Page 9 Rent a Car from Econo-Car Econo- Car ECOPJO-CAR 438W. Huron RENT-,-CA 761-8845 A GELCO COMPANY U of M students 19 years old and older Rent a Ford or another fine car T4E WIZARD, Nov. 20, 47ft 7 p.m. Power Center Tickets at PTP Box Office Michigan League ' -Call764-0450 MasterCharge or Visa A-V Services - Detour, You See, I've Had a Life, SPH II Aud., 12:10 p.m. Cinema Guild-The Conversation, 7, 9p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Mediatrics-Rock 'n Roll High School, 7:30, 9:30 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Ann Arbor Public Library-The War at Home, 12:10,7:30 p.m., Ann Arbor Public Library. Special Ed. Program, School of Ed.-Dyssymbolia, 7, 8 p.m., Whitney Aud., School of Ed. Bldg. PERFORMANCES University Musical Society-Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio, 8:30 p.m., Rackham Aud. UAC-Comedy troupe, "Sunday Funnies," 8p.m., Union Ballroom. Theater & Drama-Showcase Series, "The Eccentricities -of a Nightingale," 8p.m., Frieze Trueblood Theater. PTP-Puppet Theater of Israel, "The Wizard of Oz," 4, 7 p.m., Power Cen- ter. Guild House-Poetry reading, Jacqueline Moore, E. G. Burrows, 7:30 p.m., 802 Monroe. Residential College - Plays, ,. "Sgnarelle of the Imaginary' Cuckold," "The Proposal," 8p.m., East Quad. School of Music and Opera Theater-"The Consul," Gustav Meier con- ductor, 8 p.m., Mendelssohn Theater. -L_ .. Z-L:4.q4 .. SPEAKERS Biology - Sem. John Pringle, "Cellular Morphogenesis in Yeast, noon, 1139 Nat. Sci. CJS-Bag lunch-lec., Charlie Quinn, "What You Didn't Learn in Japanese 101 . .. ," noon, Lane Hall Commons. Museum of Anthropology-Bag lunch seminar, Robert Kelly, "The Truth about Hunter-Gatherer Settlement Systems," noon, 2009 Museums. Computing Ctr. - Chalk Talk, "Using MTS Sigfiles," 12:10 pm., 1011 NUBS Vision/Hearing, HGD-Sem., Richard Mark, "Growth and Reorganization of Neural Connections in Fish Optic Lobes," 12:15 p.m., 1057 MHRI. Education-Frances Hawkins, "Matt, Kris, Judy, and Andrew-Four Special Children," Dean's Conf. Room, 2-4 p.m. HGD, MHRI-Sem., R.M. Gaze, "The Paths Taken byRetinal Axons in Xenopus," 3:45 p.m., 1057 MHRI. Chemistry - Sem., Ernesto Rodriguez, "An Introduction to the Ther- moelastic Effect on Polymers," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. W. European Studies-Lec., Richard Evans, "German Social Democracy and the Working-Class Family 1878-1918," 4 p.m., Rackham W. Lee. Room. Shree Gurudev Rudrannanda Ashram - Swami Chetanananda, "The Flowering of Universal Consciousness," 8p.m., Angell Aud. A. Baha'i Student Association-"Intro. talk and discussion on Baha'i Faith,"' 8 p.m., International Center. Grad. School of Business Adm.-Elmer Staats, "Measuring and Evaluating Federal Productivity," 4 p.m., Hale Aud., Grad. School of Business Administration Bldg. English Department-Patricia Cornett and Ian Findlay, "Careers in Technical Writing," 4 p.m., East Conf. Room, Rackham Bldg. Program in Comparative Lit.-Brown bag lunch lec., Ingo Seidler, "Fixed Forms: The Modern Sonnet-Germany," 4th Floor Commons, MLB, 12:10 p.m. Dept. of Economics-"The 1981 Economic Forecasts," Saul Hymans, 9:30 a.m.; Harold Shapiro, 1:45 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater," Nancy H. Teeters, "On Current Monetary Policy," 8p.m., Campus Inn. MEETINGS Med. Ctr. Bible Study-12:30 p.m., F2230 Mott Library. Campus Weight Watchers-5:30 p.m., League Project Room. PIRGIM-Consumer Task Force, 6:30 p.m., Union. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship-7 p.m., League & Union. Study Abroad-Info. meeting for Junior Year in Aix-En-Provence, 7 p.m., 3201 Angell. MSA-Task Force mtg., 7:30 p.m., 3909 Union. Sailing Club -7:30 p.m., 311 W. Engin. Al Anon-8:30-10 p.m., N2815 U. Hosp. MISCELLANEOUS WUOM/Union-NPR's "A Question of Place" series, replay "Simone De Beauvoir," commentary by Monique Bilezikian, 4 p.m., Union Lounge. International Night-Netherlands, 5-7:15 p.m., League Cafeteria. Spartacus Youth League-Class, "Women's Liberation through Socialist Revolution," 7:30 p.m., Room 2, Union Conf. Rec/Sports-IM Wrestling meet, 7-9 p.m., Coliseum. Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity-Thanksgiving Drive for the Ann Arbor Com- munity Center will be collecting canned goods and monetary donations in the basement of the Michigan Union from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. UAC-Soundstage coffeehouse, 8-12 p.m., 'U' Club at the Union. OXFAM and Comm. Concerned with World Hunger-A fast from Nov. 9- 20.