I DON'T BE LEFT OUT IN THE COLD .. .get your subscription to The Michigan Daily Be one of the FIRST FIVE people to subscribe and receive: The soundtrack and two free passes to the preview of University Alumnus Lawrence Kasdan's THE BIG CHIL Be one of the next TWENTY people to purchase a subscription and receive: TWO FREE PASSES TO "THE BIG CHILL" Don't worry, if you're one of the next TEN people to subscribe YOU'LL RECEIVE A FREE POSTER OF "THE BIG CHILL,' *Just come into The Daily, purchase a subscription, and mention The Big Chill and all this is yours. rU You've always dreamed of learning tfy This weekend, take the chance. You've always wanted to experience the thrill of flying - of feeling an airplane alive under your hands. To climb and soar. To take command over a seemingly complex array of dials and numbers and controls. Take it from us, the feeling is unbelieveable! We're the University of Michigan Flyers - the Michigan Flyers for short. And this week, we're making a special effort to get to know you. Plane on the Diag. Very early Thursday morning, we'll taxi one of our 3 Cessna 152 trainers all the way down State Street to the diag. Thursday and Friday, a club member will be there to answer your questions and schedule you for a "Discovery Flight" this weekend. Discovery Weekend. All day on Saturday and Sunday, September 24th and 25th (weather permitting), a club vehicle will be available to drive you from the front steps of the Michigan Union to the Flyer's office at the Ann Arbor Airport. There, for $20.00, you'll be treated to a Discovery Flight. A thirty-minute flight with you at the controls, sitting in the pilot's seat with one of our fully-qualified instructors at your side. When it's all over, you'll even get a pilot's logbook, with your Discovery Flight entered. Join us! Come see us on the diag and discover flying this weekend. You'll never be the same. The Michigan Flyers 994-6208 Page 10 - The Michigan Daily-- Friday, September 23, 1983 Workers right to hazard oro LANSING (UPI) - Business and Health organizations agreed yesterday that Michigan workers deserve the right to know when they are dealing with hazardous materials, but split on just how much employees should be permitted to know. At a public hearing on "Right to Know" legislation, manufacturing associations called for changes that would protect trade secrets from theft and provide a systematic method of advising employees of chemical and other health hazards. DENNIS Muchmore of the state Chamber of Commerce told the Senate Labor Committee that business suppor- ts the bill "if it can be made workable to industrial standards." The committee is expected to act on the bill later this fall. Negotiations bet- ween business organizations and the proponents of the bill are expected. "This is not to punish employers or drive business out of state," said Scott Tobey, head of the Right to Know Task Force. "It's to make Michigan a healthier place to do business." CURRENTLY the bill would: " Broadly define hazardous substances to include a wide variety of chemicals used in the workplace. Each material would have to be labeled to inform workers of potential dangers and suspected health effects. " Give workers the right to refuse to work with unknown materials. . Make information on industrial chemical use available to workers' physicians and other health officials. Alvin Pressley, president of a Lan- sing United Auto Workers Union local, told the committee such laws might have prevented the 1982 deaths of three4 workers in a paint solvent area of a General Motors Corp. Fisher Body plant. Without passage of such a right to know law, "you condemn hundreds -i workers to horrible, premature death," he said. 20 held hostage in film lab 4 From AP and UPI SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Three robbers took over a film processing lab and forced 20 employees into darkrooms for more than four hours yesterday. Sheriff's deputies killed one bandit and arrested the other two before persuading the workers it was safe to come out. The employees, unharmed but visibly shaken, walked out of two darkrooms in the warehouse-sized building about 10:15 a.m. Deputies had to coax them out by convincing them the robbers were gone. "THEY WERE not bound or gagged, and they were not locked in. They were held in the darkrooms by fear," Sheriff's Lt. Gil Magness said. None of the 19 women and one man at the Technicolor processing lab, located in the North Highlands suburb, were injured. Investigators said the robbers apparently were looking for a chemical that could be used to manufacture the illegal drug PCP or angel dust. They said the ingredient is believed to be in color processing chemicals but would, require reprocessing. ONE EMPLOYEE who asked not to be ideiatified said when she arrived at 5:40 a.m. she heard screams from several of her fellow workers and saw a masked man with a long shotgun. "He was yelling at a bunch of women, seven or eight women. They were screaming. He told them to get down on the floor," the woman said. 'They were not bound or gagged, and they were not locked in. they were held in the darkrooms by fear.' -Sheriff Lt. Gil Magness She and two other women escaped out a back door, ap- parently unnoticed by the gunman, and flagged down a trucker who called the sheriff's office. One of the first officers to arrive was Deputy Jarritt Beck, 37, who was wounded in the shoulder by a shotgun blast from a robber. Beck returned fire and killed the suspect, said Lt. Max Davidson. Beck was listed in stable condition at American River Hospital suffering from a collapsed lung. The plant was robbed two weeks ago by gunmen seeking drugs for angel dust, and police suspect the same bandits returned Thursday, Magness said. The thieves asked the employees for a chemical, but the workers told them they had never heard of it, so they stole cash from the employees, coins from a soft drink machine and cigarettes from another vending machine, authorities said. 764-0558 Dorm vacancy rates rise (Continued from Page 1) Williams also said financial hardship forced some students to wait a year before starting or continuing at the University. Housing officials said the informal count of the freshperson class conduc- ted during summer orientation did not indicate any drop in the number expec- ted to enroll. An official count of the class should be completed next week, said Admissions Director Cliff Sjogren. WILLIAMS said the vacancies shouldn't pose any financial problems for the housing system. "We're concerned about the vacan- cies and will try to correct it, but we can still operate within our budget," he said. Housing Diretor Robert Hughes reached at home last night declined to comment on whether the vacancy rate will cause financial trouble for the dorms. Williams said many of the empty spaces will be filled by new students arriving for winter term. He said the most difficult aspect of solving the problem then will be trying to appease the one or two roommates who have already settled into the rooms. "When there are already two people in a triple or three people in a quad, it's hard to make that space attractive to a new student," he said. NO HERPES College Students Unite!! Complete Computer Center's IST ANNUAL SALE Terrific bargains on old and new systems: 4 You don't have it and you don't want it! So join the gang! 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