e The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 5-Page 9,, Busch calls boycott ineffective ST. LOUIS (AP)- One month after Operation PUSH announced a national boycott of Anheuser- Busch, the world's largest brewery says the cam- paign isn't working. But the Rev. Jesse Jackson, head of the self-help group, says, "The word is out across black America that Bud is a dud and that you drink something else." Anheuser-Busch disagrees. "WE HAVEN'T been able to detect any effect of the boycott," said Wayman Smith III, a vice president for the brewery that markets Michelob, Budweiser Light and Busch beers. "We're still making the same amount of beer and selling the same amount of beer. "In fact, we're, having record sales," he said. "We're not sure if the boycott is hurting us or helping us." The dispute started in August when Jackson, head of the Chicago-based organization, came to St. Louis and proposed the national boycott, charging that only one of the company's 958 distributors was black and two were Hispanic. ON SEPT. 3, Anheuser-Busch announced a $5 million grant to train minorities to become distributors. The grant, the company said, had nothing to do with the threat of a boycott by PUSH, an acronym for People United to Serve Humanity. The following day, Jackson announced the boycott. He accused the brewery, as well, of attempting to discredit him. "Why are we boycotting Anheuser-Busch?" he asked. "Because they have 95 wholesale distributor- ships, but only one is black-owned; they are spending $254 million in advertising this year, yet less than.two percent is with black advertising firms and black media; while 18 percent of their total employment is non-white, blacks are concentrated in the lower positions and their employment does not reflect reciprocity. "ANHEUSER-BUSCH is lacking in reciprocal trade with the black community," he said. "They claim they reinvest between $40 million and $45 million in the black community annually, but we doubt these figures." Excluding its payroll, Anheuser-Busch does an estimated $5 million business a year with the black community, said Smith, one of the company's two black vice presidents. The company made a profit-of $217.4 million in 1981 on sales of over $3.8 billion. Rush cuts traumatic experience for some women (Continued from Page 1) rushee meets in a house." But it's still an "ego blow" for those who do get cut, Effinger added. "The more girls you meet, the better. your chances are," explained Effinger, "also a member of Delta Gamma sorority, "and it's not a rushee's fault she doesn't meet enough house mem- bers-they determine her fate." Many people think sorority members "run down to the basement and talk about the girls as soon as they leave," Seiler said, "but it isn't true, many" houses aren't allowed to make remarks about the girls unless they are positive. . , "THE VOTE is secret; if a girl's cut, it's not known who cut her," explained. Stacy 'Elliot, rush chairman for Delta Gamma sorority. "Because it's so diverse there are so many good girls going through, we take the best of what's coming through." Seiler added that many women going through rush "cut themselves short and end up disappointed" because they limit their choice of houses to only the "popular or favorite" ones. Consequen- tly, many of the smaller houses on campus don't get enough members, she said. There are no hard and fast rules that qualify a woman's acceptance into a sorority, but members try and get a "general feel" for the rushees, accor- ding to Tracy Elsperman, social rush chairman at Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. "IT'S LIKE talking to someone in a bar, there are no certain charac- teristics. We want someone who's laid back and easy going. It's not based on how they look," Elsperman added. Despite this, many rushees were overly concerned with what to wear and how they looked, said Effinger, who is also a resident advisor at Markley. She added that valid impressions are made by a rushee's personality, not looks. Sororities are striving for diversity among their members, Seiler insisted. They look for girls with varied in- terests. Seiler stressed that sororities provide an opportunity to develop leadership and organizational skills, as well as learning to get along with dif- ferent kinds of people. "SORORITIES encourage in- volvement, they don't want members exclusively to themselves. they - en- courage members to reach out. It broadens the entire college experien- ce," she explained. One woman who participated in rush, who also asked to remain anonymous, said she was looking for a smaller, more intimate group to associate with. She added that living in a sorority house is safer and more convenient, since meals are provided for. The convenient style of living comes with a high price. Pledge membership fees alone can be as much as $485 in some sororities, with an additional $150 for a building fund. Whe members ac- tually live in a house the average cost is equal to living in a University residence hall. SORORITY members inform rushees about the costs during rush, but there is little mention of it between the par- ticipants, according to one rush drop- out. "You either afford it or you can't," she said. "As a pledge I felt it wasn't worth it for the money ... I'd rather in- vest my money in a tennis racquet - I would use it more." But for those who want to join a sorority it is well worth the price. Ef- finger said there are many benefits to living in a house. She noted the aesthetic value; "Beautiful rooms, wallpaper, and nice meals." She em- phasized, however, that women join-the group mainly to develop friendships with people who have the same ideas for having fun - not for conformity. "GIRLS WANT to join to narrow their horizons. Because the dorms and the University are so big, it's good to narrow it to 35 people to know who are ' similar to you in a way," she explained. But for those who don't pledge or weren't accepted, the Panhellenic Of- fice's rush brochure encourages in- volvement in other University ac- tivities. "You will quickly realize this is a community with opportunity for new experience," the manual states. "Somewhere amid the variety of student organizations and activities is a place for you to become involved." Heads Up LSA junior Angelique Sabo shows off her soccer skill in the diag. ! MSU student hangs himself in cell following arrest (Continued from Page 1) He was pronounced dead on arrival at Lansing's Edward Sparrow Hospital. Officials described Hickey as very cooperative after the arrest. Because the student did not appear violent or depressed, officials did not take his socks or belt from him before he was placed in the holding cell. A passenger in Hickey's car, Toby Dahm, was also taken to the DPS station and charged with having open beers in the car. He was ticketed and released. FRIENDS SAID Hickey, who had at- tended Wayne State and the University of Michigan before transferring to Michigan State, appeared to be a nor- mal, well-adjusted student. A Michigan Department of Correc- tion rule states that "any item which might be used by the inmate as a weapon or to hang himself such as a necktie, shoelace, or belt shall be removed from him." This State administrative code ap- plies to all jails, lockups, and security camps, according to Diane Hendrik of the department. HENDRICK SAID the department will conduct a followup investigation to determine whether the MSU campus jail was in violation of the law.. This jail suicide comes in the wake of a similar case now pending in the Washtenaw County Circuit Court. The Michigan Court of Appeals ruled on Sept. 23 that the widow of a man who hanged himself in an Ann Arbor Police Department detention cell has the legal grounds to sue the city and the depar- tment. KENNETH YOUNG hanged himself in 1978 while being held in a cell at police headquarters. The city, former Police Chief Walter Krasny, and several police officers had been freed of responsibility in an earlier court decision after they argued the jail was not subject, to the above department of correction rules. The appeals court, however, said the state regulations apply to all jail facilities. Volunteers'warn elderly of Tylenol's dangers 0 (Continued from Page 1) we've been able to mobilize this many volunteers for one effort." THE 1,300 volunteers were distributing leaflets warning residents not to use any Tylenol products. In ad- dition to English, Harris said the flyers had been translated into Spanish, Viet- namese, Arabic and Polish to reach Chicago's disparate ethnic com- Omunities. Asked whether there might be ad- ditional victims, isolated individuals who may have taken the cyanide-laced capsules before public warnings were issued, Harris replied, "There's cer- tainly no indication of that right now." Arthur Hill Hayes, commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, an- nounced formation of a government- pharmacy industry task force to work on security measures-such as sealing * pill containers-to avoid future cases of deliberate contamination. ILLINOIS Attorney General Tyrone Fahner said a "very substantial" lead was the incident in which two Kane County sheriff's deputies suffered sym- ptoms resembling cyanide poisoning after handling the Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules they found strewn in the parking lot of a suburban motel. Because the incident occurred two days before Tylenol was linked to deaths, the deputies did not keep the capsules and most were gone by the time investigators arrived. FAST STEREO SERVICE TV RENTALS USED EQUIPMENT HI FI STUDIO 215 S. ASHLEY DOWNTOWN I BLOCK WEST OF MAIN % BLOCK NORTH OF LIBERTY 4.0344 or 668-7444 CALL FOR A CHAT, PAT. CALL FOR A DATEHATE. Q _- GET Oh ThE PHONE, JOAN. a aa an ssCALL FOR SDOUGH, JOE. CHUCK.5 - 5SGN UP A.A.M:) TOD Y, K Y,. Flap your gums for tiny sums. Call up an extra 50 percent discount with Budget Toll Dialing. I - --- _ _ _ 7 1 _ ..t . [r-i ~+ rff R vi atT1-lII Rialinn T1hat nt im-