The Mich It's election time again igan Daily-Sunday, November 23, 1980-Page 3 _______ 2 rmmm% Two campu - v By DAVID MEYER For the second year in a row, two rival campus political parties are squaring off to win control of the LSA- Student Government. The LSA-SG election, which will be held tomorrow and Tuesday, will pit the Students for Academic and In- stitutional Development against the Student Alliance for Better Represen- tation in a struggle for political dominance over the student gover- nment of the University's largest college. IN LAST YEAR'S election, SAID emerged victorious, taking six of 11 seats on the council, including the presidential and vice-presidential spots. This year, SABRE presidential can- didate Tim Lee will be facing Sue Por- ter, who is heading the SAID ticket. Both sides predict that a low turnout with heavy fraternity and sorority voting would favor Lee. But, Elections Director Joe Daniels is estimating that the number of voters may even surpass last year's record-breaking turnout. But, regardless of the turnout, SABRE is guaranteed at least seven of parties the 15 seats on the LSA-SG executive council because SAID is only running six candidates on its slate and there are only two independents vying for seats. SABRE, on the other hand, is running 14 candidates. THE SAID campaign has been organized around three major issues: student involvement in future ad- ministrative budget-cutting decisions, the University's efforts to meet its af- firmative action goals, and the quality of the University's graduate teaching assistants. Porter described SAID as "a party that is ready to try and represent students' rights through issues and work with the administration. But, when the ideologies of the ad- ministration and students don't mix, to fight the administration for students' rights." SABRE has focused its campaign on two major issues: an overhaul of the academic counseling system and, like SAID, student input into budget-cutting decisions. "SABRE IS an organization that's for students," Lee said. "The thing that's unique about SABRE this time is that we have four freshmen running. New blood stimulates new interest." Lee concurred that a heavy turnout among fraternity and sorority mem- bers would probably benefit the SABRE ticket. "It just so happens that our ideology happens to work well with them . .. We are not the party of the Greeks, no. We are the party the Greeks vote for," Lee said, adding that "If the Greeks turn out we'll probably beat the pants off them (SAID' can- didates)." Porter conceded that the Greek vote would more likely favor Lee, but added that she expects a large voter turnout to negate the effects of that bloc. "WE'LL BE OUT all day long trying to get people to vote," Porter said. "If people look at the issues they will go with SAID." { Daniels said that students will also be presented with two ballot proposals at the LSA-SG polls this week. One ballot question seeks to measure student sup- port for a door-to-door van escort ser- vice, similar to the city's Dial-a-Ride program and will ask students how the service should be funded. A second question will propose an amendment to the LSA-SG constitution that would end the preferential voting system for the presidential and vice- presidential races. Using the preferen- tial system, a voter numbers the can- didates according to his preference rather than simply casting one ballot for a certain number of candidates. ELECTIONS director Daniels said he vie forLSA-SG s HP SUNDAY FILMS Cinema Guild-The Gospel According to St. Matthew, 7, 9:30 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Cinema I-Foolish Wive, 7 p.m., MLB 4. Cinema II -'A Woman of Paris (Chaplin), 9:15 p.m., MLB 4. SPEAKERS Kelsey Museum of Arch.-Gallery Talk, Nan Plumer, "A Victorian View of Ancient Rome," 2 pm., Kelsey Museum of Arch. PERFORMANCES Res. College-Plays, "Sgnarelle of the Imaginary Cuckold," "The Iroposal," 2 p.m., East Quad. School of Music Opera Theater-Menotti's "The Consul," 3 p.m., Men- delssohn Theatre, Michigan League. Quiet Revolutions Theatre Company-"No More Masks," music, dance, drama and mime, 3 p.m., Canterbury Loft. Ark-Joe Heaney, Irish ballad singer, 8p.m., 1421 Hill. U. Musical Society-Los Angeles Philharmonic, 8:30 p.m., Hill. MEETINGS Hiking Club-i:30 p.m., Rackham N.W. entry on E. Huron. Ann Arbor Gay Disc. Group-Readings of gay poetry and prose, "Are There Leaves of Grass in the Rubyfruit Jungle?" 6 p.m., Guild House. MISCELLANEOUS J ofA-Jog, 3or 6mi., leave Hillel, 10 a.m., brunch follows. WUOM/WVGR-Options in Education, "Teenage Pregnancy," 11:30 a.m. Graduate Women's Network-Pot-Luck Brunch, noon, Guild House. Hillel-Israeli folkdancing, beginners noon-1, open, 1-3 p.m. Hillel-Jewish Grad student skating party, meet Yost Arena 12:30 p.m., warm-up follows at 728S. Main 305. School of Music-Master Classes: Tuba, Roger Bobo, 1:30-3:30 p.m., Recital Hall; Percussion, Mitchell Peters, 1:30-3:30 p.m., 3054 School of Music; Double Bass, Dennis Trembly, 3:30 p.m., 2044 School of Music. Rec.Sports-Family Sunday Funday, 2 p.m., NCRB. Exhibit Museum Planetarium - Broadcast of images of Saturn from voyager, 2-7 p.m., AnArbor Cablevision, channel 3. School of Metaphysics -'Color baths, 2 p.m., 2191/2 N. Main St. Museum of Anthropology - Free tour for the public, "Tankas from the Koelz Collection, U-M Museum of Anthropology," 2 p.m. Exhibit Museum-Slide show, "Cold Blooded Animals in Winter," 3 p.m., Exhibit Museum. Hillel-Deli Dinner, Kosher, 6 p.m., 1429 Hill. NEWtrition Outreach and PIRGIM-dance and information-sharing, 8 p.m.,Michigan Union Ballroom. MONDAY FILMS AAFC-Out of the Past, 7 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Arbor Alliance/Science for the People-The War Game, 7:30 p.m., 443 Mason Hall. AAFC-The Friends of Eddie Coyle, 9p.m., Aud._A, Angell. Cinema Guild- Variety, 7, 9 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Women's Studies Films-Job Discrimination: Doing Something About It, Union Maids, Chisholm: Pursuing the Dream, 7 p.m., MLB 3. SPEAKERS Zoology-John A. Wiens, "Testing Ecological Hypotheses in Nature: A Lesson in Shrubsteppe Communities," 2:30 p.m., G378 Dentistry. ISR-Karin Knorr, "The Temporality and Contextuality of Knowledge Use: Some Fundamental Questions," 4 p.m., 6th floor conf. room. N. Eastern and N. African Studies-Khalil Mancy, "The Aswan High Dam in Retrospect," 4:10 p.m., Lane Hall Commons. Higher Ed.-Coll., Kenneth Mortimer, "Governance and Management Strategies for Institutional Vitality in the 1980's," 3:30 p.m., Rackham W. Conf. Rbom. Democratic Socialist Org. Comm.-Howard Simon, "The Moral Majority in Michigan," 7:30 p.m., Lawyer's Club. Chemistry-Sem., Sunny Lo, "Charge-Transfer Complexes of n-Donors with Iodine," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. Dharma Study Group-Jeanine Wieder, "Working with Emotions," 7:30 p.m., 201S. Main, Rm. 511. PERFORMANCES Quiet Revolutions Theatre Company-"No More Masks," music, drama, dance and mime, 3 p.m., Canterbury Loft. School of Music-U. Philharmonia, Paul Makanowitz, cond., 8 p.m., Hill Aud. Women's Glee Club-Concert, 8 p.m., Mendelssohn Theater. MEETINGS Bible Study Group-12:15 p.m., W5603 Main Hosp. Nuc. Med. Conf. Room. SACUA-1:15 p.m., 4025 Administration Bldg. Journal of Econ.-7:15 p.m., 301 Econ. Christian Science Org.-7:15 p.m., 3909 Union. CEW-Assertiveness Training, 7:30 p.m., 328 Thompson. Washtenaw Co. Committee Against Registration and the Draft-7:30, Fir- st Unitarian Church. Indoor Light Gardening Society-panel discussion on insect problems, 7:30 p.m., U-M Matthaei Botanical Gardens. Union of Students for Israel-8 p.m., 1429 Hill. ; U of M Ski Club-8 p.m., Union Assembly Hall. MISCELLANEOUS CEW-Counseling, "Skills for Effective Parenting as a Single Parent," 1:30 p.m., 328 Thompson. School of Art-Reception, featuring the graduate exhibit of medical and biological illustration, 4 p.m., Exhibit Hall, School of Art. Rec. Sports'-Handball Skills Clinic, 7p.m., IMSB. RC/Social Science-Film Spanish Civil War, Dreams and Nightmares, ' 1- ... 1117-11... ., n A-- 1i n ir.^A. eats expects both ballot proposals to be passed by LSA students. Absent from this year's LSA-SG race is the People's Action Coalition, a third campus political group'that has been very active in LSA politics in past years. In last years' election, there was, a three-way split in the vote, with PAC winning four seats on the council, narrowly trailing SAID and SABRE Marc Breakstone, who was swept into the Michigan Student Assembly presidency on the PAC ticket last year, said PAC is staying out of this year's LSA-SG scramble because SAID "is progressive enough" that a PAC ticket is unnecessary. "We could have organized a slate, but there were good people running so there was no reason to," Breakstone said. Daily staff writer Charles Thom- son filed a report for this story. '1SHIRT 'PRINTIMNQ Ann Arbor's fastest! From 10-800 T-shirts screenprint- ed within 24 hours of order. Multi-color printing our specialty. You supply art or use our expert design staff. Hundreds of surplus T-shirts only $2. each. Located behind the Blind Pig Cafe. 2081zs.First St.Phone 994-1367 Mao's widow denounces Chinese leaders calls them 'revisionists' PEKING (AP) - Jiang Qing, the widow of Mao Tse-tung and leader of the "Gang of Four," denounced China's leaders as "revisionists" when she was presented with an indictment accusing her of plotting a coup, foreign diplomatic sources said yesterday. They quoted Chinese informants as saying Jiang spoke in a loud, high- pitched voice when she said her ac- cusers were not truetbelievers in Mao, who died in 1976. The Gang of Four and six other defendants went on trial Thur- sday, charged with causing thousands of deaths during the Cultural Revolution in the late 1960s, and of planning to overthrow the government. THE SOURCES said the Chinese in- formants had seen a film that was one of three taken of Jiang receiving the in- dictment on Nov. 18. One of the other films, televised Friday, did not include Jiang's accusation andl showed the 67- year-old defendant having trouble signing the correct date and saying she needed someone to speak for her in court because she was sick. A television film of Jiang entering the courtroom Thursday showed her looking self-assured with her head held high. Asked about Jiang's claims of illness, a Foreign Ministry official said, "We have no idea of the nature of her illness or how serious it is." Several months ago, Deng Xiaoping, a ranking leader of the Communist Par- ty, said in an interview that Jiang's health was good. rl i .............. .... i -1 1 ::. . :... :.::::: .:.:.:::::::..::.::.......... :. . :.:: . .. l 1 Letting it all out Meechigan celebrates PERM SPECIAL COWAVE reg. $60; NOW $25 EASY DOES IT reg. $65; NOW $48.50 HAIRCUT reg. $25; NOW $13 SUNTAN OOOTH-20 VISITS reg. $60; NOW $25 Spcal hr Concept J}T q *8-37 NAIL DESIGN. * MANICURING " FACIALS Specials thru 12/16 668-6376 405 N . Main tl Cal for Appointments 668-6377 umasammessamsmaagemsmes somS' (Continued from Page l) Stockwell Hall's Blue Lounge. "It was boring until the end," Ciaccia said. "We could have lost it easily, though." By. and large, however, the over- whelning reaction to the Michigan win was favorable. "This is the best OSU game in five years, no question. What a celebration," said senior Rick Strobl. "I thought these people were all dead, overcome with apathy, but look at them. We won't be outdone by Colum- bus. "Who the hell cares who shot J.R.?" Strobl quipped, referring to Friday night's TV episode of Dallas, which revealedZ-after months of speculation-the assailant of the show's fictional anti-hero. "Who shot Earle Bruce?" Strobl continued. "The Buckeyes just got out with their lives." This story was written with files from Daily staff members Beth Allen, Rita Clark, Pam Kramer, Adrienne Lyons, and Jeff Voigt. Send the card1 they'll keep. . 1 Ohio high spirits fizzle Christmas Wishes (Continued from Page 1) p.m. Friday until the crowd thinned out after the Saturday afternoon game. The Buckeye crowd watching the game at Papa Joe's was boisterous throughout the contest, although they were disappointed with the outcome. If they weren't quaffing the large buckets of beer, they were damning the ineffec- tiveness of the Ohio State offense. "I can't believe that Michigan is win- ning this game," moaned one disgrun- tled Buckeye fan, watching the bar's television set. FOR THE Maize and Blue faithful who made the trek south for the contest, the mood was festive. "It takes a lot away from everything with the game in Columbus instead of Ann Arbor, but I loved it," University freshman Mike Adams said on High Street after the game. Fellow University freshman Dave Salater added, "The trip down was definitely worth it." FRIDAY NIGHT High Street was jammed with anxious fans from both schools, with the Buckeye farns out- numbering the Wolverine faithful. Michigan fans displaying their af- filiation were subjected to dirty looks and, in some cases, physical- abuse. Several brawls dotted the streets. When asked his opinion on the treat- ment of Michigan students by the Ohio State hosts, University junior Eric Johnson said, "Well, I haven't been killed yet." After the game the antagonism sub- sided considerably. There were a few incidents of screaming back-and-forth as jubilant Michigan supporters let their hosts know who they thought had the best team in the land. Sgt. Malloy wasn't very upset about the results because he "knew Michigan was going to win." It was a good thing the Wolverines did, the sergeant said he had a bet riding on the Michigan team. - This is one Christmas card that will still be around after New Year's. And it's so easy! Just bring us your favorite snapshot or slde: we'll help you select your card from a variety'of designs and greetings And to help make your cards look good, we'll print them on quality Kodak color paper. We use Kodak paper for every picture and card we print, it's a good way to get that good look. See us soon -and ask about our special prices. We use {Kodak paper... frao good look. 4 I I III Interest, memories fade at JFK's birthplace Amateur and C STORES AT: 131 691 LAB AT: 318 iPhoto ,ommercial Photofinishing BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP)-Seven- teen years ago Muriel Storrie was caught up in the cluttered affairs of life that were, for millions, nightmarishly frozen in time when bullets felled John Kennedy. "I was pulling into a gas station on my way to typing class," Storrie recalled while standing in the hall of a cozy 73-year-old house for which she claims "a special attachment"-Ken- nedy's birthplace. "He was just about my age, you know," the stocky, gray-haired woman .... 4 4- - 1- O r o e enf i 15 S. UNIVERSITY 1 S. MAPLE vice, which manages the homestead. "Japanese, South Americans, Irish. I'd say more foreigners know about this place than people in this country." 994.0433 663-6529 973-0770 80 PACKARD 737 N. Huron 485-0240