4 Page 2 The Michigan Daily - Saturday, September 10, 1983 BACK TO SCHOOL SAVINGS. OLLETT S $298 3 3 0 o teL Regular Price: 329 Quicker Clckerencil 5 mm pencil SALE PRICE: Ann Arbor's fresh place's (Continued from Page 1) It will reopen late in the fall as Middle Kingdom under new ownership and serveeCantonese and Mandarin style cuisine at 332 S. Main. Oh, and for fresh Dunkin' Donuts and coffee visit The Coffee Break, which has taken over where the Potato Fac- tory left off, at 1327 S. University. They also have fresh-squeezed citrus juices and homemade quiche. When eating out turns to stepping out, a few new faces promise to spice up the local fashion industry. Ayla For Men, will open next week at 213 Main Street. As the brother to the original women's Ayla - a store always on the cutting edge of fashion - the newest sibling will feature updated men's spor-. tswear in all natural fabrics. Ann Arbor goes GQ. Putt-putt down to Trophy Golf, relocated at 205 Fifth St., for equipment and accessories at discount prices. Arborland Shopping Mall on Washtenaw at U.S. 23 has joined the discount craze with the addition of F&M Distributors, Service Merchandise, Linen & Things, and Frugal Frank's discount shoes. Yes, Yes, there's a new video arcade. All the latest mind benders will be available at a Packard-and-State hangout named Double Focus. P.S., If you feel the urge to study, the UGLi isn't as ugly anymore. M IC HIG AN BOOK STOR E 322 SOUTH STATE STREET V ~ SPECIAL LMIT EDOFFER For the students, faculty and staff of the University of Michigan and other 4-year universities. Offer extends thru September 30th. Complete System Solution IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Striking teachers ignore .judge ST. LOUIS - Thousands of teachers staging the biggest of the nation's current school strikes defied a federal judge's order to return to class and stayed on picket lines yesterday. About 2,700 teachers and 1,100 other employees set up picket lines at city schools on Wednesday, the firstday of school for 56,000 city students and several hundred St. Louis County students attending specialized schools as part of a new desegregation program. U.S. District Judge Stephen Limbaugh continued his temporary restraining order at a hearing yesterday afternoon but made no effort to have it enforced. Bruce Feldacker, lawyer for American Federation of Teachers Local 20, which is striking over wages and class sizes, attacked the order as a "unique usurpation of federal power in what is a local matter." Ed Weakley, i lawyer for the school board, argued that the federal court did have jurisdiction because the strike had a direct effect on a voluntary desegregation program approved by another federal judge. Because of the strike, Weakley said, only 294 of the expected 550 suburban students had transferred into predominantly black city schools. Mortar fired close to Marines BEIRUT, Lebanon - Druse gunners fired mortar barrages near the U.S. Marine zone south of Beirut yesterday, and Druse militiamen maintained their mountain offensive by overrunning a Christian stronghold and surrounding another. Druse gunners lobbed 12 81mm mortar rounds into Beirut's international airort in a 35-minute barrage, Associated Press photographer William Foey reported. It was the third shelling of the Marine area in less than 24 hours. Marine spokesmen said there were no casualties or retaliations in any of the three attacks, which occurred one day after President Reagan pledged "whatever support it takes" to shield Marine positions. The new shelling of Beirut came on the sixth day of fierce fighting between leftist Druse and rightist Christians that has claimed 448 Lebanese lives, ac- cording to official police counts. Food costs rise with heat WASHINGTON - Wholesale prices surged 0.4 percent in August as a pro- longed heat wave boosted costs, the government said yesterday. Economists shrugged off the increase as an aberration and not a signal of a fresh price spiral. Wholesale prices held steady for the first eight months of the year, as calculated at an annual rate. Over the past year, they've risen only 1.4 per- cent, the smallest gain in 15 years, the Labor Department said. For all of this year, economists predict those prices, as measured by the department's Producer Price Index for finished goods, will run around 2 percent or less, possibly turning in the best showing in two decades. They rose 3.7 percent in 1982. At the White House, spokesman Larry Speakes said the new figures were "still in line with our inflation forecast for the year." Edward Yardeni, chief economist at Prudential-Bache Securities Inc. in New York, said the fresh increase, coming after a tiny 0.1 percent gain in July, was "nothing to get terribly worried about." Inspector charged with forging report on fallen Conn. bridge HARTFORD, Conn. - A veteran state employee who inspected a Connect- icut Turnpike bridge before it collapsed in June, killing three people, was arrested yesterday on charges he forged a report in which he warned that the bridge was unsafe. Jerry White, 54, was charged with third-degree forgery after surrendering to investigators at the office of Chief State's Attorney Austin McGuigan in Wallingford. - White was arrested after a month-lone investigation concluded he had "altered field notes used in the preparation of his inspection report" for the Mianus River bridge on the Connecticut Turnpike in Greenwich, McGuigan said. McGuigan said that White, a bridge inspector since 1963, submitted to the Transportation Department forged field notes and burned the originals taken during a September 1982 inspection of the bridge. A 100-foot section of the bridge collapsed in the early morning hours of June 28 and three people were killed. California man may face 10 new murder charges SANTA ANA, Calif. - The district attorney's office says it will decide over the weekend whether to bring 10 new murder charges against a computer consultant already charged with eight counts of murder. Randy Steven Kraft, 38, of Long Beach, has been charged with six killingss in Orange County and two in Michigan. Those slain - as in the cases pending against Kraft - were all young men. Four of them were Marines. Most were said to have been hitchhikers who were picked up, strangled and dumped near freeways. Authorities said the slayings had "homosexual overtones." Kraft, being held without bail in the Orange County jail, was arrested May 14 after a dead Marine - Terry Lee'Gambrel, 25, El Toro - was discovered in his car during a routine traffic stop southeast of Los Angeles. In Kent County, Kraft has been charged with the murders of two Grand Rapids-area farmers. He is also under investigation in Oregon in six slayings. Vol. XCIV - No.3 Saturday, September 10, 1983 (ISSN 0745-967X) The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $15.50 September through April (2 semesters); $19.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $8 in Ann Arbor; $10 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syn- dicate and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY. Sports desk; 763-0376; Circulation, 764-0558; C.1assified Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. II 4N. 4q 11 4 f a Here's everything you need to get into personal com- puting. Ontel Corporation, one of the largest suppliers of computer terminals to the University of Michigan, brings you The Amigo Personal Computer ... And for the month of September we're offering a complete turnkey Amigo system, including printer and software, for the unbeatable price of $2395.00. Whether your needs include full MTS Visual editing, word processing, numerical processing, business. graphics or custom programming, let us show you how to increase your productivity. Whether you work with words, numbers, or graphics, The Amigo speaks your language. Manufacturer's Suggested ust Amigo Personal Computer System-.--.-.-$2,695 CP/M Operating System---------------..150 WordStarWord Processor ---_.-.-.---------495 MailMerge Form Letter Package._---.--.---..-.-. 250 DR Graph Graphics Package-------------295 Multiplan Spreadsheet- - - - - - - - - - - --- 250. 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Special Osgood Price. - You Save------ - .-.. .. $4,684 --..- ---- .-- -$2,395 $2,289 YOU GET TWO SYSTEMS FOR THE PRICE OF ONE Your Amigo is both an intelligent MTS station with Visual editor AND a stand-alone personal computer .. . No other system on the market today can give you this unique dual personality. Ic. / N' f &I I c4 1 f a 7 Ul , Your Own MTS Station I.- $1,795 Price includes Amigo Personal Computer, Two Disk Drives 400kb (800kb optional), MTS/MCP Software, CP/M, GSX-80 and CBASIC. Now you can log on to the Michigan Terminal System when you want, where you want. ... No more waiting in line to use a public access station. With the Ontel Amigo personal computer and our special Visual Edit- ing software you can have access to the full resources of the Michigan Terminal System from the convenient location of your choice. Choose a 300 or 1200 baud modem from our stock and MTS is only a phone call away. Editor-in-chief ........................ BARRY WITT Managing Editor ..................... JANET RAE News Editor..... ............... GEORGE ADAMS Student Affairs Editor ..................BETH ALLEN Features Editor ................(FANNIE WEINSTEIN Opinion Page Editors ................. DAVID SPAK BILL SPINDLE Arts/Magazine Editors............ MARE HODGES SUSAN MAKUCH Sports Editor ........................JOHN KERR SPORTS STAFF: Jeff Bergido, Randy Berger, Katie Blackwell, Joe Bower, Jim Davis, Joe Ewing, Jeff Foye, Paul Helgren, Steve Hunter, Doug Levy, Tim Makinen. Mike McGraw. Jeff Mohrenweiser. Rob Pollard. Don Price, Mike Redstone, Paula Schipper. John Toyer, Steve Wise. Business Manager.......SAMUEL G. SLAUGHTER IV Operations Manager ............ LAURIE ICZKOVITZ Sales Manoer......................MEG GIBSON Classified Manacer ...............PAM GILLERY K I I