a Page 14-Friday, September 10, 1982-The Michigan Daily WANTED! is. to vote on nuclear freeze football tickets SEED: call 24 hours nlsin 662-9899 WE N Wisco 1I I' A UCLCA 'Indiana Michigan State Minnesota Purdue EZ TICKET SERVICE Our 5th Season SERVING ANN ARBOR! MADISON, Wis. (AP)- Wisconsin on Tuesday becomes the first state to hold a referendum on a nuclear weapons freeze, and .the Reagan ad- ministration is warning that approval could undercut its negotiations with the Soviet Union. The question on the ballot asks whether the state should urge the federal government to seek a mutual freeze on and reduction of nuclear weapons in talks with the Soviet Union and other nations. More than 200 town, city and county governments have ap- proved some type of call for a nuclear weapons freeze, but Wisconsin is the first of seven states this year to make it a statewide issue. Residents of Brat- tleboro, Vt., will also vote on a similar question in that state's Sept. 14 primary. AS PASSED by the legislature, the ballot question reads: "Shall the Secretary of State of Wisconsin inform the president and Congressof theUnited States that it is the desire of the people of Wisconsin to have the government of the United States work vigorously to negotiate a mutual nuclear weapons moratorium and reduction, with an appropriate verifications, with the Soviet Union and other nations?" The other statewide referendums-in California, Rhode Island, Oregon, New Jersey, Michigan, and Arizona-will be held during the general election on Nov. 2. The proposal will also be on the ballot then in the District of Columbia. The referendums are largely symbolic since results are not binding. But freeze proponents in Wisconsin say it will send the Reagan administration a message to get busy on arms limitation talks ana help prevent a nuclear war. Opponents argue that a freeze now would increase4 the risk of war by locking the United States into an in ferior military position against the Soviet Union. The Reagan administration, which defeated a freeze resolution in the House of Representatives last month by just two votes, is taking on the Wisconsin proposal as a threat to U.S. efforts to negotiate a nuclear arms freeze with the Soviet Union in Geneva, Switzerland.: Campaigning for the proposition last week, Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Calif.) said a yes vote "would sen4 a message.. . that the people of Wisconsin want an end to the nuclear arms race, an end to the threat of nuclear war." r ul uuw PAYING CA$HI CALL US FOR ALL YOUR TICKETS TOP DOLLAR, FOR SINGLES, PAIRS AND RUNS OF THREE OR MORE! STUDENTS PLEASE CALL US IF YOU DIDN'T BUY YOUR TICKETS. WE ALSO HAVE A FEW SELECT TICKETS LEFT FOR SALE, PLEASE CALLI 1111!I1 Hewlett-Packard Solutions Books * Sixties can be sexy, t~oo Calendar adds 'appeal' to senior citizen's image 83 ye~ar old Harriet has been a dancer and now occupies herself as a college studenit and house- wife. Her measurem~ents are 32 - 28- 34. She lives in Boston, Mass, 1 '40 F r} HP-11C WAIIO*S HAND(IMM Limited Time Offer Get the HP-11C or HP-12C Solutions Handbook ($20.00 Retail Price) Free with the purchase of an HP-11C or HP-12C. This offer is good September 6 - November 30, 1982. By GREG BRUSSTAR This calendar is not as explicit as the Playboy one, nor as ingenious as one from National Geographic, but is has a special way of telling which day of the month it is. The pin-up models are all over 60 years old. The cover of "Sexy Sixties" features a long and lean set of female legs, presumably belonging to some senior citizen, although it is hard to tell. SIXTY-YEAR-old Betty Jean of Florida, with 35-25-36 measurements, appears beside a pool in a swimsuit as the January beauty. Irene Niksa's 65- year-old legs appear on the April page, with her age not at all apparent. Bill Baldwin, the calendar's creator, claims the publication is not ,all hype, but a calendar with a cause. "On TV the only people who buy cars, clothes, or go to fancy hotels are 25 years old," Baldwin said. As a result, he says, young people have the wrong impression about older people. FAST STEREO SERVICE TV RENTALS USED EQUIPMENT. HI FU STUDIO 215 S. ASHLEY DOWNTOWN i BLOCK WEST OF MAIN T BLOCK NORTH OF LIBERTY 769-0392 or 668-7492 HP-11C , The new Scientific Advanced Programmable Calculator from Hewlett-Packard. Over 200 steps of program memory. Suggested Retail Your Price $100.00 $ 79.95 HP-12C The most powerful handheld financial calculator ever made by Hewlett-Packard. "YOU NEVER see old people on TV unless it's a constipation or false teeth commercial, he continued. "TV doesn't portray the true image of old people - some of us aren't classified as senior citizens." The 30 people in the calendar show of- fered their smiles or physiques in an at- tempt, as the cover claims, to give "a new dimension to that tired phrase 'Senior Citizen'." a BALDWIN, who is 60, found his models through advertisements he placed in newspapers across the coun- try. He received more than 225 photos from people all over the nation. The thirty people in the caldendar show off their smiles or phvsiaues. Baldwin also has other ideas which may boost the image of senior citizens, including Sexy Senior Models, a beauty contest for those over 60, and the Sexy Senior Nightclub, where the enter- tainers would be over 60- "You know, someplace where we can raise hell without young people," Baldwin said. Irene Niksa, 65, model for April, said her friends urged her to send a picture to the calendar. She admits the calen- dar is "unusual, and our friends get a kick out of it." THERESA MADER, 62, of Royal Oak said, "It lets people know how the people over sixty feel." She advocates that older people stay active and she adds, "we still have a lot of living to do." Lucille Pearson, 60, of Troy, who is the October. 1983 model, said the calendar "gives a new perspective to senior citizens." Niksa, Mader, and Pearson are members of a senior citizen dance troupe called the "Dazzle Dancers." They perform for various senior citizen benefits and at nursing homes around the Detroit area. This story was reprinted from the Daily's summer edition. 0m '6 AUGUST ,u M T.. W _.T ..F S 2 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 13 14 617 18 19 20 21 24 25 26 27 28 31 Suggested Retail $ 150.00 Your Price $119.95 Main Store: MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 E. University E. University & S. University 662-3201) Electronics Showroom: 1110 S. University (at the corner of ' __ SENIOR CITIZENS display their poise in the "Sexy Sixties" calendar, created by Bill Baldwin, 60, of East Lansing. Read and Use Daily Classifieds 0 plans to hire several Photojournalists I.d ®m I