The Michigan Daily--Sunday, September 26, 1982-Page 3- Beer By JERRY ALIOTTA A team chug, a one-minute marathon, and a nipple-sucking con- test. The brothers of Theta Delta Chi had all this and more to offer people at its 14th annual Beer Olympics party Friday night. And the 1,500 beer-lovers who turned out lapped it up. A $2 admission fee - charged anyone who wished to enter the temporarily fenced off lawn of the State Street fraternity - covered all the beer the partier could drink, and the live rock music of Giveaway. "I can't complain-I've got well over $2 of beer since I got here," said LSA freshman Paul Driessche. "I don't know how they make money.". Mark Leaman a psychology major from Michigan State University, traveled all the way from East Lansing for the bash. "What the hell - there Olympics was nothing else to do," Leaman said. Yesterday, the fraternity still didn't know whether the party had made any profit. Members said they hoped they'd break even to cover the cost of 50 kegs of beer - abut $1,875 - and of the band and set-up expenses, totalling about $1,200. "We're just glad everybody can come out and have a good time," said Richard Richardson, organizer of this year's Olympics. Richardson said that if there is a profit, the fraternity will donate it to another organizaion. "I'D LIKE TO donate the money to Madeline Pound House," he said. I like little kids, and would like to see them with a new swing." Drinkers at the party who wanted to pay $2 above the cover price had the chance to make names for themselves in the contests. The first, second, and third place winners in all of the draws 1,500 categories brought home 18-incn trophies from the Olympia Beer com- pany, which helped promote the party with T-shirts and table coasters. LSA sophomore Greg Lanesey, a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon, was the proud winner of the one-minute marathon. Lanesey, wfpo guzzled six glasses of beer in less than a minute- without spilling a drop, which would have disqualified him-couldn't quite keep it down after his runaway victory. But that didn't stop him. "I'm in the in- dividual contest later, and I'm going to win it," he said confidently. THE THUMPTY Dumps tried to schedule their Beer Olympics around the Panhellenic Association's sorority rush activities, but couldn't work around the conflicts. "The whole goal of the party is the interaction of frater- nities and sororities and to get everyone else involved," said Brendan Nedzi, a traternity member majoring in com- puter science. But even with the absence of the sorority sisters involved in rush, the party had plenty of contestants for its contest open only to women. LSA sophomore Shelly McNamara suc- ceeded in sucking the most beer in seven minutes from a 12-ounce beer bottle topped with a nipple. "It's been a hell of a lot of fun," said McNamara, who has never participated in a formal beer-drinking contest. "And I joined at the last minute, too." The crowd stayed under control, although about 500 people gathered around outside the fence without paying. "Some people have been trying to sneak in, but other than that, the crowd has been excellent," said LSA sophomore Robert Eustice, another member of the fraternity. Deejay waits for The Who on ledge } .A One contestant 'sucks one down' at the Beer Olympics. MILWAUKEE (UPD- A deejay's, high rise stunt has made rock 'n' roil history in the land where beer and but ter are king. "Tim, the Rock 'n' Roll Animal," a local radio deejay has vowed to camp on a 21st floor building ledge until the rock group The Who agrees to play, Milwaukee on its farewell tour across the nation. THE WQFM deejay climbed out a window to his perch outside his station's newsroom at 10:30 p~m. Sept. 16 outfitted with a cot, make-shift tenit and portable commode to lobby for the Who's appearance. -HAPPENINGS- Sunday Highlight The Professional Theatre Program will hold open auditions for The Amen Corner, by James Baldwin, from 3 to 6 p.m. and from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. in the New Trueblood Theatre in the Frieze building. The Amen Corner is Bald- win's autobiographical herald of a black man's triumph over racism, guilt and rejection. An all-black cast of 9 women, 5 men, and congregation mem- bers if needed. For more information, call 313-763-5213. 0Films Cinema II-Return of the Secaucus Seven, 7 & 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Cinema Guild - Suddenly Last Summer, 7 p.m.; Raisin in the Sun, 9:05 p.m., Lorch Hall. Alice Lloyd Pilot Program - Catch 22 and Why Vietnam, 9 p.m., Alice Lloyd Red Lounge. Performances School of Music - Harp Recital, Jane Rosenson, 2 p.m., Recital Hall; Voice Recital, Maryann Zorko, 4 p.m., Recital Hall; Organ Recital Series, final of four concerts by doctoral students of Marilyn Mason, 7 p.m., St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Tecumseh. Meetings SYDA Foundation - Sidda Meditation Intensive, 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m., 1522 Hill St. UAC Sound Stage-Mass auditions for musical, 12-4 p.m., Michigan Ballroom. Miscellaneous Chabad House - Yom Kippur Services, 7 p.m., Chabad House, 715 Hill St. Computing Center - Card-Box Clean-Up, 8 a.m.-noon, Computing Center and NUBS. Slusser Gallery - "Karnak Dissolve," by Katherine Constantinides, Reception, 6-8 p.m., Slusser Gallery. WCBM FM - Today's Programming, Hemispheres with Arthur Durkee, 9-11 am.; Global Village with Maricio Font, 11-1 p.m.; African Village with Gabriel Ugwu, 1-3 p.m.; Synthescapes with Tom Simonian, 3-4 p.m.; Horizons with Bill Eldridge, 4-6 p.m.; Black and White Classical Trip with Arwolf and March, 6-8 p.m.; Studio Live (Live Broadcast), 8-9 p.m.; Reel Live Music with Thomas Bray, 9-11 p.m. Wildlife Society - Field t r i p t o Point Pelee, Canada. Sign-up sheet in Natural Respurces, Dans Bldg. Hillel - Yom Kippur Services, Reform, 7:00 p.m., Hillel; Conservative, 7:00 p.m., Power Center; Orthodox, 6:45 p.m., Hillel. 400,000 Israelis protest massacres (Continued from Page 1) string of wretched decisions arousing such doubt, sorrow and distrust among the citizens," opposition Labor Party leader Shimon Peres said in his ad- dress. He claimed Begin had not uttered "a word of sorrow or of condemnation of the killers," and asked the prime minister, "Why do you describe it as a natural disaster instead of a policy disaster." FORMER LABOR Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin said "something has broken down in our world of moral values" and accused Begin of turning the Israeli army into Beirut's police force. Other speakers included actress Hanna Maron, who lost a leg in a Palestinian terrorist attack in Europe 10 years ago, and Avraham Burg, a war veteran whose father, Yosef Burg, is in- terior minister in Begin's Cabinet. In Washington, U.S. Middle East Holidays to pose hassles (Continued from Page 1) MENDEL ALSO agreed with the University policy, but remains distur- bed by the actions of some faculty members. "I've felt great sadness for those students who choose to observe. Some professors haven't made adjust- ments, and some even go out of their way to schedule tests," he said. "This troubles me very deeply." Laurel Adelman, an LSA junior, plans to attend both services and classes tomorrow. She said the conflict between classes and religious obser- vance poses no real problem. "If a person doesn't go to a class and misses something really important, than I don't think it's fair. Usually though, professors are pretty sym- pathetic," she said. peace envoy Phillip Habib has given the Israeli government what amounts to an ultimatum that U.S. Marines, will not enter Beirut until Israeli forces leave, a high White House official said. The official, who insisted on anonymity, acknowledged that the United States was following a two-track policy-on track one, saying in public that the Reagan administration "hopes" the Israelis will depart by Sunday; on track two, telling reporters ''you would not be wrong to assume" that Habib told Israeli officials that Marines would not go ashore until the Israelis left. In Israel, Israeli Defense Ministry spokesman Uri Dan said after a meeting of Habib and Defense Minister Ariel Sharon that reports of such an ultimatum were "groundless," and at the State Department, a source who asked not to be identified advised reporters "not to put much credence in it." BUT THE Italian ambassador to Lebanon, Franco Lucioli Ottieri, said his country's forces and U.S. Marines would not land until Israeli troops left the Beirut port area. U.S. diplomats in Beirut would not comment on the issue. Dan said Israeli troops probably would be out of Beirut by the second half of the week. He acknowledged that 'some subjects arose which needed coordination" in the Habib-Sharon talks on the deployment of the Multinational force. The Israelis have not said if they will withdraw from east Beirut as well, despite Habib's ultimatum. ANOTHER 250 French paratroopers arrived in Beirut, bringing to 600 the number of French ingtheicity. The bulk of the French are positioned at the French ambassador's residence and a small unit at the port. West Beirut was tense following the shooting death of one Israeli soldier, the wounding of three others Friday and a fourth yesterday. Troops clamped a strict curfew on Beirut and security in the capital was tight. In addition, officials said four United Nations officers were killed when their car drove over a mine on a mountain road near the Syrian lines on the out- skirts of east Beirut. A U.N. spokesman said the officers hit the mine on the Mansuriyeh road, which forms a demarcation line bet- ween Syrian troops and Israeli forces in Christian east Beirut. POETRY READING With JOHN BECK and BARNEY PACE Monday, Sept. 27 8:00 P.m. GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE (662-5189) INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5 h Ae o liberty 761-9700 I SAT * SUN only $200 shows before 6.00 pm. ! (PG). Gregorys_ GirlC MON-6:50, 10:30 SAT., SUN- 1240 2:40, 4:40, 6:30,8:20. 10:10 _ow AN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMAN DEBRA WINGER RICHARD GERE Read and Use Daily Classifieds (R; i " k }§ R} '+ i MON-7:40, 9:55 SAT., SUN.- 12:40, 3:00, 5:00, 7:40, 9:55 i mmaj Monday Highlight The Ann Arbor Chapter of the Indoor Light Gardening Society of America will host a program on "Growing Orchids Under Lights" at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium of Matthaei Botanical Gardens, 1800 N. Dixboro Rd. Arden Roberts, an expert phaleonopsis grower, will present information on basic orchid culture. Films Classic Film Theatre - Enter the Dragon, 3:30, 7 & 10:15 p.m.; Return of the Dragon, 5:15 & 8:45, Mich. Speakers Chemistry - "Acrolein Via Catalytic Oxidation," Inorganic Seminar by * R.L. Kuczkowski, 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. Meetings, Christian Science Organization-7:15 p.m., Rm. 4, Union. SACUA - 2:30 p.m., 4025 Fleming Administration Bldg. Miscellaneous Computing Center - "Introduction to MTS File Editor (I)," Lecture by Forrest Hartman, 3:30-5 p.m., 171 BSAD. SGuild House - Poetry Reading, John Beck and Barney Pace, 8 p.m., 802 Monroe. Michigan Union - Senior pictures being taken for the 1983 edition at the Student Publications Bldg. Call 764-9425 for an appointment. Tae Kwon Do Club - Martial Arts Practice, 8:30-10 p.m., Sports Coliseum. UM Committee on the Development of Treatment for Rare Genetary Diseases-Conference, "Orphan Diseases and Orphan Drugs," noon-5:30 p.m., Rackham. WCBN FM - Today's Programming, News, 5:30-6 p.m.; Rites and Rhythms with the Ann Arbor Women's Radio Collective, 6-7 p.m.; Rhythm and Blues with Lola Rebop, 7-8 p.m.; Women in Jazz, 11-2 a.m. Chabad House - Yom Kippur Service, 10:00 a.m.; Yizkor (memorial) Service, 12:30 p.m.; Closing Service, 6:00 p.m., Chabad House, 715 Hill St. Hillel -- Yom Kippur Services, Reform, 10 a.m., 5:30 p.m., Hillel; Conser- vative, 9:00 a.m. & 5:45 p.m.; Power Center; Orthodox, 9:00 ? 5:45 p.m., Hillel. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., 4nn Arbor, MI. 48109. ..mm m...- m - m- mm-mm-m- mm-mm m. ---mm. m-mm.-m-m- mm-mm.--m 04 - AUTUMN PANORAMA IT WILL ONLY TAKE ° A MINUTE TO CHANGE... y# YOUR WHOLE LOOK, MISS J! Beautiful coordinates...in so many textures and tints that the slightest change gives you a fresh start! Invest for the future in Miss J, our shop for young women. Modern Juniors, 3-13. fs #r A. 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