Supreme Court hears, condlom a case WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme curt was told yesterday that un- olicitedmailed advertisements for condoms and other contraceptives must be outlawed so they won't "fall in- to the hands of children against their parents' wishes." Government lawyers asked the court to reinstate a federal law banning such mail. They are appealing a lower court victory won by the Youngs Drug Products Corp., a manufacturer of the contraceptive devices. "YOUNGS contends the law is a rowback to a 19th century morals crusade. The federal law violates free speech rights and could impair health by restricting advertising of prophylactics which, besides being birth control devices, can prevent venereal disease, the New Jersey-based company said. Strauss said prohibiting unsolicited rmiailed ads about contraceptives is in- tended to protect children and adults ho might find the material an offen- sive invasion of privacy. "IT'S SIMPLY inevitable that some will fall into the hands of children against their parents' wishes," Strauss said. Justice Thurgood Marshall said, "You're assuming children open their parents' mail. I don't think a child has the right to look at the mail" addressed to an adult. "Justice John Paul Stevens questioned hether requiring the ads to be mailed ini sealed envelop wouldn't be a less restrictive means of protecting childr- "People who are concerned they are offensive are not likely to put them on Ue dining room table," he said. ,Seven family planning organizations are supporting the drug company's arguments. They contended in their own legal brief that the cost of restric- ting advertising on contraception is 'millions of unintended pregnancies, hundreds of thousands of unwanted children, millions of abortions and a venereal disease epidemic." The Michigan Daily-Thursday, January 13, 1983-Page 7 Jackson inmate, 19, charged with slaying elderly women ~ I r~~J LANSING (UPI) - Ingham County authorities yesterday charged a 19- year-old Jackson County Jail inmate with the strangulation slaying of 78- year-old Ula Curdy, but they were not ready to pin on him any of four similar murders. Ingham County Prosecutor Peter Houk said there is evidence possibly linking Michael Darnell Harris to one of the other slayings, but not enough to bring charges. While Harris may be considered a suspect in the entire string of sex slayings from October 1981 to February 1982, there are other suspects as well, authorities said. "WE CAN'T rule him out and we can't charge him," Houk said. "He remains a suspect." Police Chief Richard Gleason said he still advises the city's elderly women "to remain cautious . . . I don't think the assaults are going to stop with the arrest of one man." Harris was being held in Jackson on charges he strangled and raped an elderly woman there. The victim sur- vived the attack. He was to be arraigned some time yesterday for first-degree murder in the Lansing case. THE DEFENDANT, also known as Michael Stiggles, lived with his mother in Lansing between June 1980 and August 1982. He was arrested in the summer of 1981 for two break-ins at the homes of elderly women. He was on probation on that case when Mrs. Curdy was killed in Novem- ber 1981. Houk said robbery was not the motive in the killing. "The apparent motive was the sexual abuse visited upon these women." POLICE SAID a fingerprint is a key piece of evidence in their case against Harris. The teenager's mother was described as "very cooperative." Houk said because the circumstances in all five slayings were similar, it remains possible that one person com- mitted them all. But, he said, the "cir- cumstances are by no means unique." He said it is possible Harris might come under suspicion in similar, un- solved Ypsilanti cases for the same reason. Reagan to ask for tax overhaul WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan plans to ask Congress in his State of the Union Message to overhaul and simplify the federal income tax code by lowering rates and narrowing deductions, administration sources said yesterday. The proposal, described by one of- ficial as long-term "major tax reform," is expected to be one of the major themes in the address Reagan will make to a joint session of Congress on Jan. 25, according to the sources, who did not want their names used. THE OFFICIALS said Reagan has no specific plan in mind, preferring in- stead to develop some firm proposals with Congress. But they said the thrust of his thinking is along the lines of proposals that have become known as "flat-rate" income tax plans. Under these plans, personal income tax rates are lowered but the amount of income subject to taxation is increased because of a narrowing or elimination of deductions, such as for medical ex- penses, state and local taxes, mortgage interest payments, business-related expenses, charitable contributions and a variety of miscellaneous items. These expenditures now can be sub- tracted from income to lower a person's tax liability. Members of Congress have expressed general interest in overhauling the tax system in such a way. Politically, however, there is serious doubt about whether Congress would be willing to eliminate such popular deductions as mortgage interest payments on homes, interest on tax-exempt municipal bonds and similar items. The sources said Reagan finds the approach appealing because it could simplify the tax code and lower the "marginal" tax rates - the highest percentage at which an individual's in- come is taxed. Belligerent bicycle Daily Photo by WENDY GOULD Most bike owners park their bikes below the pointing finger but this bike's owner thought it should rest above the others and so he perched it atop the student bike on South Forest safe from possible thieves. c I Student turns (Continued from Page 1) scribes into their classrooms. "These would just be better notes," said Prof. Paul Courant, who teaches Economics 202. "People often try to write down what the prof. is saying rather than following his arguments." BEYOND THE controversy, Bar- tleby's is a fairly simple operation. The service hires a graduate student - sometimes a teaching assistant - who is familiar with a particular class. With the professor's approval, the grad student takes down, organizes, and types the notes. Bartleby's makes copies, and distributes them at the University Cellar. Although March would not reveal the wages for these note-takers, he said professors are paid 50 cents for each subscription sold in their classes. Most professors say they re declining the payment, or donating it to their departments. MARCH SAID HE had heard that such service was offered at several medical schools and the University of California at Berkeley and wondered why it was, not offered here. The Un- viersity medical school has such a ser- vice, which operates through its professional fraternity, Phi Chi. A senior in Asian Studies, March in- sists his service isn't a get-rich-quick scheme that will lead to the ruination of school as it is known. "Obviously any private business has to be profit-oriented," he said declining comment on just how much profit has lecture notes to bank notes been made from the more than 100 sub- scriptions already sold. "Our primary purpose is not to be a substitute (for going to classes) but to be a supplement - another tool to help students." ACCORDING TO Political Science Prof. J. David Singer, this tool "makes even more of a travesty of an undergraduate teaching program. (Students) are already only interested in their track record and not their in- tellectual development." March claims such a view of students is unfair. "Students aren't people who always look'for scams, but they are going to have grandmothers die or be sick, and miss class sometimes," he said. "We're pushing this as a sup- plement, which it is - like Cliff's Notes." As for quality, according to March, many of the note-takers are chosen by professors, and the rest are carefully screened. "They know they have to be the best notetakers in class," he said. "We're only as good as the notetaker." IN AN EFFORT to ease the troubled minds of professors, March said he promises to discontinue the service if the professor feels it significantly reduces class size; accept a professor's choice for a notetaker; give the professor a chance to review the notes before they are distributed; and provide a weekly correction page. As a public service, he said, Bar- tleby's will provide free notes to disabled students and foreign students who have difficulty with English. "We're hoping for a 50 percent sub- scription rate," March said, adding that nearly 7,000 could take advantage of the notes. Several students in Economics 201, however, were skeptical of the new ser- vice. "It's possible that I might buy it," said Douglas Middlebrooks, a freshman in LSA. "But they're only going to tell me what I just heard." C.J. Stoyka, also a freshperson in LSA, said he doesn't think the notes are worth the cost. "I plan to go to class." WORK WITH KIDS AT TAMARACK IN 1983 Brighton & Ortonville, Michigan Camp Kennedy. Agree Out Post Camp Tamarack-Camp Mass Positions for bunk counselors, specialist counselors, supervisors, service staff and many other positions. INTERVIEWING JANUARY 17 & 26 SUMMER PLACEMENT OFFICE Call 764-7456 for appointment -I Student's low rades cited in law suit (Continued from Page 1) such as research and writing, that took time away from his studies. But Dr. Bruce Friedman, one of Ewing's former professors, said Ewing's performance on the board exam was a culmination of deficien- cies, not an isolated factor in his dismissal. Since Ewing entered the Inteflex program in the fall of 1975, he has received three warning letters from the Promotion Board stating that he would be dismissed if he had any more academic deficiencies. A student receives a deficiency if he fails a course or does not complete an. exam. The Board also considers failing the national board exam a deficiency. INTEFLEX students have two chan- ces to pass their courses. Generally, they also have two chances to pass the board exam. The Promotion Board did not allow Ewing to retake the exam, Friedman said, because of his poor academic record. Dr. Henry Gershowitz, a voting member of the Promotion Board, testified that the board voted unanimously to drop Ewing from the program.. A GERSHOWITZ said Ewing was dismissed because of the formal warn- :ing letters, personality problems such as frequent delay of regular exams, and his "abysmally poor record on the national board exam."' When Ewing took the exam, a score of 345 points was considered passing. Ewing received only 235 points, passing only two of the seven subtests. "We (medical professors) have a S responsibility to the society-at-large to see that graduating students will be qualified to practice," Friedman said. THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 Note our other INTERVIEW DATES February 4 February 17 March 1 March 7 March 16 March 24 YOUR SUMMER JOB-MORE THAN JUST EMPLOYMENT Tamarack is the Jewish Residential camp spon- sored by the Fresh Air So- ciety of Metropolitan De- troit, since 1903. ,L Military research vital, say engineering students (Continued from Page 3) rule states that no classified research that would endanger human life can be conducted by University faculty mem- bers. Engineering students also charge that Kerson is not working with enough engineering staff members and is, therefore, not receiving enough input from them. BUT KERSON told them last night he has contacted up to a dozen engineering military researchers, and has been1 reading "scientific and trade journals" and "publications from the Department of Defense." Atmospheric and oceanic science senior Paul Gross, along with other students, said he wants to see a "report that will cover all bases of research," combining student and faculty input. He also echoed O'Connor's concern that an inadeiquate report could harm the college. "If they (professors) don't have the funding, they can't continue research," he said. Kerson dismissed these suggestions. "Nobody's not doing any research they weren't doing before," he said. "NAPPY HOLIDAYS" Hairstyles for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State........669-9329 East U. at South U.........662-0354 Arborland ..............971-9975 Maple Village............761-2733 tPU-S CAVC jwIYV jA4J~A)f -7 / LIKEr 4-fC ? R Gh t Subscribe to The Michigan Daily OOPS... WE GOOFED!!!!! Aerobic Dance is $20 not $40 as stated in the brochure i Q; Orr m T _ r a n arrlaIkX.. -L nA_ A