The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 19, 1982-pa Parade is on, UAC exchanges work for funds By KRISTIN STAPLETON City Council last night put an end to doubts about whether there will be a Homecoming parade this year by deciding to pay the $2,000 needed for police protection along the parade route. In exchange, members of the Univer- sity Activities Center, organizer of the parade, will put in 20 hours to "beautify" a city park. THE AGREEMENT came after Council's rejection of the proposal last week, on the grounds that it would be discriminatory to provide funds for one group and not for all others that use city property. Councilmember Lowell Peterson (D- First Ward), who opposed the resolution the first time around, said he wanted to make sure city funds were provided consistently and fairily to all deserving groups. Gerald Jernigan (R-Fourth Ward) cast the only negative vote, saying he thought providing money for the parade was "a bad use of city funds" in a time when much money is needed for pover- ty relief. UAC MEMBER Rick McGuinness, said the group proposed to provide 20 hours of public service after the coun- cil's initial rejection. He called the parade, scheduled for Oct. 29, "wholesome entertainment for the whole community." Council also voted to request the governments of Michigan and neigh- boring states to refuse to oppose sen- ding Great Lakes water to any other region. Barbara Wykes of the Ann Arbor Ecology Center, which supported the resolution, said a proposed diversin of water to southern states would severely damage the Great Lakes. She added that it also might encourage the southern states to waste water resour- ces. Councilmember Edward Hoode (R- Fourth Ward) was the only member to oppose this proposal. He called the resolution a "sham" because the city has no authority over state and federal issues. Asking Council to vote for the resolution, Wykes said that to pass it would be to "join with other municipalities to remind our state and the Great Lakes states to be good stewards of our water resources." Woman robbed An Ann Arbor woman was robbed at5 Jones and Broadway Streets Saturday evening as she was about to get in her car, police said. Two males in their late teens took cash and credit cards from her purse and then took her rings and bracelet valued at several hundred dollars. The men fled on foot. Silver, gold stolen A microwave oven, silverware, and gold dust valued at $7,075 was taken from an apartment on the 900 block of Lincoln Street early Sunday morning, police said. The thief forced a window to gain entry. Home computer taken A home computer worth $1,400 was taken from a residence on the 3100 block of Williamsburg Street Saturday. The thief entered the house through an. unlocked sliding glass door. Sexy underwear swiped More than $200 of sexy underwear was taken from Sensually Yours on 215 S. Fourth Ave. early Sunday morning.-. The suspect broke the display window to get at the garments. -GREG BRUSSTAI TUESDAY4 Robert Berg (left), director of communications for Gov. Milliken and Jack Casey, public analyst for radio station WJR and channel 4, discussing the role of public relations and its effect on election results. Public not easily fooled rin elections, analysts say By JERRY ALIOTTA The American public, although ac- cused of political apathy come almost every election, is not as easily fooled as. commonly believed, according to two Michigan political analysts. "You can't manipulate the public," said Robert Berg, director of com- nunications for Gov. William Milliken. "You can show examples where people Were misled, but overall, people are very perceptive." BERG, ALONG with Channel 4 public analyst Jack Casey, were in Ann Arbor yesterday to discuss the effect of public relations and the media on national and local elections. Some amount of public manipulation, however, is possible. A candidate for office, Casey said, has to have a "credible" personality for the public to vote him into office. "There is an ac- ting part in politics. You have to act in a way that is pleasing to the public." Mannerisms, such as dress, speech, and looks can affect the way people vote. If a candidate isn't a natural ac- tor, public relations professionals can only make him somewhat better. A major change is almost impossible - improvement is sometimes the best that can be hoped for, he said. As a contemporary, example, Casey pointed to Reagan's dilemma. "All the chips are riding on how Reagan will con- vice the people" that the economy is getting better, Casey said. OFTEN, PEOPLE will vote for a candidate instead of an issue. Here, ac- ting can make a great deal of differen- ce, Casey said. In some polls, the two analysts said, people said they were voting for candidate "A" instead of candidate "B" only because they hated candidate "B". In addition, a lot of being a successful politican centers on maintaining one's cool. "On the day of the vote, there is nothing you can do, and you feel helpless. People are deciding what you will be doing on Jan. 1," Berg said. "It's all part of the job, if he loses, he looks for another job." SOMETIMES, Casey said, can- didates will lose their cool, and become paranoid just before election day. A candidate, believing he or she is the only one who deserves to win the elec- tion, will often blame the voters for being apathetic. "Candidates get up- tight and pour more money into their advertising," taking the attitude that there's no tomorrow, Casey said. School of Ed. hosts games conference i - Engin . may (Continued from Page 1) literature, and the technology and science sections into LSA, while keeping the rhetoric section within the college. DUDERSTADT said that while he thought non-tenured professors in the rhetoric portion of the department, which teaches technically based writing skills, would probably be kept within the college. The non-tenured professors in the literature part of the school "would probably have their ap- pointments terminated at some time" if the department is closed. Some professors in the department felt that if the humanities department was eliminated students would lose out on the advantages it offered. kfinko's co iM Our Xerox 9500 otters offset quality & fast Service ' , 5C OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 540 E. Liberty St.-761-4534 Corner of Moynord & liberty " s kinkoss copies (Continued from Page 3) symbol lies within each box in the grid. As the grid fills in, each student forms a theory about the pattern he begins to see. The game, run by Tim Erickson of The University of California, Berkeley, teaches the way scientists form and test *heories by allowing the student to form and test his own theory on how to com- plete the pattern. !4MATH AND science teachers make things so difficult," said Harvey Met- te, a psychology professor at Long Island University in New York who 'played the game. "I experienced de- mystificatin of all that garbage the science teachers gave us. I started recognizing patterns. In that way, may afternoon was well spent." One game discussed at the conferen- cet is currently played by University students in a political science course. Suransky and political science lecturer Edgar Taylor, jointly developed the Middle-East Conflict Simulation Game (MESG) for use in Taylor's Political Science 353 class, "The Arab-Israeli, Conflict." Students take roles of important political figures - Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon, for example. They study their roles and their charac- ters' personalities in great detail for two months. PLAYERS THEN meet during an en- tire weekend to form countries and react to a scenario written by Taylor and his teaching assistants. The scenario "triggers the game," giving it "a kick in the seat," said Taylor. "Students get at the enormous com- plexity, the multi-faceted nature of the conflict," he said. "They're no longer ix humanities "I give the material a different slant," said humanities David Hughes, "I relate it to Freud and Marx. I try to get it (the course material) to the areas engineers are interested." reading about what others do; they're doing it themselves." Other games at the conference were: "Psychotherapy," a "Dungeons and Dragons"-inspired game; "Jericho," a game which enables the player to feel the concerns of handicapped persons; and "Kick the Can," a simulation which trains the player to understand child abuse and neglect. EDUCATORS gathered from across the nation to teach, learn, and share in- formation on simulations, games, and other educational exercises at the Ann Arbor conference. "It was an informal working con- ference," said University Education Prof. Frederick Goodman, co-director of the event. Goodman, a founder of the assocation, sees gaming as a powerful educational tool. CRATIVE F..REEDOM. In the age of information technology, a company -whose sales of $1.7 billion annually and whose products and components extend from data acqui- sition and information processing through data communication to voice, video and graphic com- munication - is making creative freedom a reality for their new graduates. ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS November 12th Electrical and Mechanical Engineering, Business, Computer Science and Technical Sales (EE, ME, CS) Majors Make arrangements at the Placement Office. ApyHARrM An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F/H/V The 'whole you' through metaphysics (Continued from Page 1) - flhonda Struble, an engineering senior and metaphysics students, said people can learn about themselves and othiers Py sharing experiences at the classes. The format is "in a lot of ways ike a rap session," she said. OUT, STRUBLE added, the program is ,not for everybody. the school is designed for people who are ready to learn more about themselves, she said, and many people drop out "when they can't handle it." the full program consists of four years of weekly classes that cost $8 . .. -- each. The mandatory tuition is referred to as a donation, so students can deduct it from their taxes. The .school is a non-profit organization, O'Guinn said, and all of the teachers are volunteers. Tuition money goes toward maintenance of the building, she said. The school also offers'services to the community, O'Guinn said. Readings, for instance, supply "information gained through a trained person who knows how to use the subconscious," she said. "It will aid you as an individual to understand yourself, your situation, your circumstances, the difficulties you meet in your life, and how to change your attitudes toward those so that you can have a more productive life," she explained. O'Guinn stressed, however, that while the readings - $30 for in- dividuals, and $200 for businesses - are a popular aspect of the school, they are only a small part of what the school has to offer. FAST STEREO SERVICE TV RENTALS USED EQUIPMENT HI FISTUDIO 215 S. ASHLEY DOWNTOWN 1 BLOCK WEST OF MAIN % BLOCK NORTH OF LIBERTY 769-0392 or 668-7492 * DailyClassifieds Bring Results OCTOBER 19 3:30 Rm. 231 AngelI Hall MASS MEETING for students interested in AmericanInstitutions 1 N T E, R N S H I P S Where to Iuv? dU I