Page 2-Sunday, March 7, 1982-The Michigan Daily TUESDAY LUNCH DISCUSSION MARCH 9-1t NOON "WOMEN IN THE ARAB WORLD" Speaker: YVONNE HADDAD, Ph.D. Dr: Haddad, currently on the faculty of Duncan Black Macdonald Center, Hartford, Cpnn., is from Syria and Lebanon. At the INTERNATIONAL CENTER Lunch $1.00 603 1. Medison St. For additional information' please call 662-5529 Co-sponsored by: The Ecumenical Campus Center, The International Center, Church Women United in Ann Arbor. 'U' students help plan space shuttle payload IN BRIEF Count Bill of Rights Article II: The Slice of Life Unification Act. A Slice of the Good Life! By AMY MOON When NASA's Space Transportation System 7 shuttle blasts into orbit next year, it will carry two experimental canisters designed by University students. Prof.sFred Bartman's Aerospace Engineering" senior design course is building its first shuttle payload-a canister in which a camera photographs the reactions to space of experimental materials-for the shut- te flight, scheduled for September 1983. "STUDENTS- HAVE complete responsibility for this project," said senior Ron Chichester, the project's design manager. He said the students in the class work on all of its phases, from publicity and fundraising to testing and actual construction. The project, christened UM SCORE (Self-Contained Orbital Research Ex- periment) when it was started by the senior class of 1979, is part of a NASA program initiated in 1977 to promote scientific endeavors in space, Chichester explained. The NASA program-the Get-Away Special-is the first to allow investors, such as corporations or universities; to -buy canister space for experiments aboard the shuttle. The University paid $5,000 for one area, according to Chichester, and the Pullman company donated the other to the Aerospace Design class. STUDENTS involved in the project. during the 1979, 1980, and 1981 Winter terms worked to determine what ex- periments would be possible, and what materials would be needed. This term, the class is constructing a working model of the first payload. "I feel that this particular groupmhas made a lot of progress," said Bartman. "Basically, there is a wider variety of capabilities. Many of these students have good practical backgrounds that will be helpful in the buildingprocess." Bartman said that, although the students expect to complete a working model before the end of the term, work on the payload will continue through the fall. BEYOND THE price of the cgnister space, costs for UM SCORE-adding up to from $30,000 to $40,000-include materials, transportation to the launch site, safety testing, and publicity. The students raise most of their money from sciencefoundationsand private corporations, according to senior Mike Champness, fundraising chairman. Slice -of Pizza Special 50 Cents Off Any Slice Everv Monday 5-12 Midnight 1140 S. University at Church 668-8411 DON'T FORGET to place your adin I I 1ummer. ublet 1 1Supplement- I Name l Address __ - Phone _ I -I r fCOST: U Only 14 I Absolutely No Ads *. Will Be Accepted After March 19 Mail or bring this clipping and payment to 420 Mcaynard Street :, * Make checks payable to , The Michigan Daily, (actual size of ad) -No Refunds- Please print or type legibly Supplement will appear , in the space provided, as you Friday, March 26, 1982 . would like the ad to appear.a ............................m............U City investigates claims about candidate's residence By STACY POWELL,- A complaint filed recently with the City Clerk's office charges that Jeffrey Gallatin's Republican candidacy for a First Ward City Council seat is illegal, claiming that Gallatin does not live in the ward. Two anonymous callers told the clerk that Gallatin lives in the Fifth Ward, an office spokesperson said. The clerk notified Mayor Louis Belcher, who in- structed Police Chief William Corbett to investigate the charge. "THE complaint is under in- vestigation," Corbett said. Because ann DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR " 200 Rdoms * Color T.V.'s * Cocktail Lounge " Direct Dial Phones * Near UofM * Commercial Rates & Group" Rates Available " Major Credit Cards Honored *- Call for Reservations 100 S. Fourth Ave. 769-9500$ this type of investigation is complex, he said, the truth "sometimes takes a long time to ascertain." . Gallatin denies the charges about his residence. "They're crazy," he said. "My legal residence is 427 N. Main.'' Gallatin said he is. trying to sell this property, which he is leasing to a chiropractor while keeping an apar- tment in the building for himself. The complaint to the City Clerk, ac- cording to Gallatin, refers to his realty office at 332 E. William not a residence. The manager of the William St. building said Gallatin's office is located at that address, but that he does not live there. The clerk defines residency as the place in which a person habitually eats, sleeps, and keeps his personal belongings. POETRY R1AD1MG with RUTH ROCKWELL and ED ENGLE, Jr. Reading from their works MON., MAR. 8-8 p.m. GUILD HOUSE-802 Monroe ADMISSION FREE Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Tax refunds up, filing slow WASHINGTON- Income tax refunds are up, averaging $690.65 this year, the Internal Revenue Service says, but returns are coming in slower than last year even with stiffer penalties for those who fail to file. Preliminary IRS data made public by two senators this week also shows that the total of taxes Americans are avoiding jumped to an amount equal to 19.2 percent of all individual income taxes paid in 1981. For the first time this year, taxpayers face a stiff 20 percent penalty for non-payment, up from 12 percent last year. The threat was expected to speed tax payments but instead the latest totals through the end of February are down 4.6 percent. But, IRS spokesman Wilson Fadely said, "There isn't any reason for alarm at this point. It's still early." Intruders gain aecess to Air Force jet in Warsaw WARSAW, Poland- Unidentified persons broke into the special U.S. Air Force jet carrying the seven-man congressional delegation visiting Poland while it was parked at a Warsaw airport, U.S. sources said yesterday. The sources said the break-in at the Okecie airport was aiscovered when the captain made a pre-flight check before the delegation's departure for the southern city of Krakow. The sources said they were primarily concerned that a bugging device might have been planted in the converted Boeing-707 or that its sophisticated communications equipment might have been tampered with. Delegation leader Rep. David Obey (D-Wis.) was described by the sources as "absolutely furious, absolutely livid," and they said he made a vigorous protest to a Foreign Ministry official seeing the delegation off to Krakow.s Guatemala to vote today GUATEMALA CITY- Strife-torn Guatemala elects a new government today, choosing a president among four candidates, all rightists; The Central American nation's future may depend as much on how the selection is made as on who wins. Gen. Fernando Romeo Lucas Garcia, the outgoing president, has promised a "free, clean and pure" election and has pledged to honor the results. Guatemala has been governed by elected military presidents since 1970, but recent elections have been tainted by allegations of fraud. Rightist governments, often dominated by the military, have ruled since leftist leaning President Jacobo Arbenz was ousted in a U.S.-backed coup in 1954. Many leftists have claimed this year's elections will be rigged, and all left and liberal parties declined to run presidential candidates..One center-left party has candidates in some congressional and local races. At stake in Sunday's elections are the presidency and vice presidency, 66 members of Congress, and state and municipal offices.. Five sentenced to death for Sadat assassination CAIRO, Egypt- The four Moslem fanatics who assassinated President Anwar Sadat and a fifth man convicted of supplying the guns were sentenced to death yesterday after a three-month trial. A three-judge panel of the Supreme Military Court gave 17 other men sen- tences ranging from five years to life and acquitted two-a blind Moslem preacher and a teacher. Neither the defendants nor their lawyers were present for the sentencing. A guard said he could not bring the defendants because they would disrupt the session. The tribunal has 30 days in which to spell out reasons for the verdicts, ' which then go for ratification to President Hosni Mubarak, Sadat's vice president and successor. If he lets the sentences stand, the defendants will have 15 days to appeal to Mubarak's mere. Sadat was assassinated while witnessi g a military parade on October 6 last year. Vol. XCII No.122 Sunday, March 7, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The Univer- sity of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 49109. Sub- scription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13. by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail gu-tside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI 48109. 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