4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 18, 1983 UAC opens '83 Rx.. M A T1f'K7 K TUTQLU'I tyiMA.' IYr LLjIarilmj This year's homecoming means more than just a football game, beginning with a dance in the Union Ballroom tonight and ending Sunday with two. popular rock performers. Staffers at the University Activities Center, who have organized most of the week's events, say they will be offering students "a totally new look at homecoming," according to senior Terri Grumer of UAC.. THE CLIMAX of the week will be at Saturday's game between Michigan and Iowa, when winners will be picked at halftime for the homecoming raffle. The grand prize will be a year's use of a Dodge Daytona, complete with warranty, maintainence, and in- surace. Raffle tickets have been on sale for three weeks, and proceeds from the drawing will be donated to student finanical aid. UAC members hope to sell 20,000 tickets, said Homecoming Publicity Chair- woman Nancy Ellis. To lead up to the game and drawing, UAC has plan- ned several nights of fun and games. Tonight, the New Dittlies will bring rock and roll to the Michuigan Union Ballroom for students' danci HOMECOMING events on Thurs mass-consumption, with the Union contest at 8 p.m. kicking off the e The one who eats the most free minutes wins. For those who prefer liquid cons don't have any midterms Frida homecoming progressive bar ma at 8 p.m. Participants will trave Time Charley's, and Dooley's, whe special card stamped.. The first 300 people who come to t for their fourth stamp will receive T-shirts, and everyone with two eligible -for a raffle for concert prizes. FRIDAY BRINGS more food, w Za" - a 312-foot-long Sicilian-style the world's largest ever made. T from 7 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., when v slices for $2 apiece. Friday night will feature the trad pep rally. The parade will begin a Homecoming ing pleasure. Mudbowl, on the corner of South University and sday center around Washtenaw, and will travel along South University to 's ice cream eating its final destination in front of the Union. Several vening of feasting. University organizations will present floats, which ice cream in 15 will be accompanied down the street by the Michigan Marching Band. umption (and who THE PEP RALLY also begins at 7:30 p.m., and is ay morning), the sponsored by Alpha Delta Phi fraternity, on the cor- rathon also begins ner of South State and Madison. Michigan football el to Rick's, Good coach Bo Schembechler, the Michigan cheerleaders re they will have a and pom-pon girls, the marching band, and former gymnastics coach Newt Lokin will lead the cheers for he University Club the Wolverines. free homecoming Homecoming Day gets off to an early start, with o stamps will be the Go Blue Run, sponsored by the Student Alumni tickets and door Council. The North Campus race will benefit the University of Michigan scholarship program. And at vith the "Ultimate 10 a.m., Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity will wallow pizza - said to be in the Mudbowl with Phi Delta Theta in the annual he pizza will cook football struggle. olunteers will'sell The homecoming week draws to a close Saturday night with a performance by the Tubes at Hill itional parade and Auditorium, and a Sunday night appearance by t 7:30 p.m. at the Jackson Browne at Crisler Arena. Shamir appoints new finance minister JERUSALEM (AP) - Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir overcame opposition within his ruling Likud bloc yesterday and appointed Yigal Cohen-Orgad, an economic consultant and political hawk, as finance minister. Liberal Party deputies of Shamir's initially opposed Cohen-Orgad for the finance post, and their later acceptance removed a major hurdle in the path of Shamir's week-old government. Cohen- Orgad's appointment is to be presented to Parliament today and is virtually certain of approval. Industry Minister Gideon Patt, who heads the Liberal Party and was a con- tender to replace Aridor, announced on Israel Television after a meeting with Shamir that he congratulated Cohen- Orgad on his appointment. THE LIBERALS had threatened to leave the governing coalition if they did not receive the finance post, and Patt gave no reason for the party's sudden about-face. An Israeli Television commentator said the Liberals might be given the Foreign Ministry, now held by Shamir, and a deputy premiership. The appointment of 46-year-old Cohen-Orgad gives the Cabinet's top posts to hardliners who refused to vote for the 1979 Israel-Egypt peace treaty. They are Shamir, Defense Minister Moshe Arens and Cohen-Orgad. COHEN-ORGAD said in 1979 that he opposed the treaty because it did not in- clude his demand that Egypt promise in advance to agree to Israel's "right" to remain in the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River. Israel Radio said Cohen-Orgad is building a house in the West Bank set- tlement of Ariel, which the government plans to turn into a major urban center. Israeli doves have claimed that government expenditures on Jewish settlements in the West Bank is a major cause of the economic upheaval. AS THE senior member of Shamir's Herut faction in the parliamentary finance committee, Cohen-Orgad shar- ply criticized Aridor, saying he had not done enough to cut government spen- ding and subsidies on basic com- modities. Shamir succeeded Prime Minister Menachem Begin, and Finance Minister Yoram Aridor left the Cabinet last week in a furor after his plan to link Israel's shekel to the dollar was rejec- ted. He made the proposal after the government last week devalued the shekel by 23 percent and hiked the price of basic foodstuffs by 50 percent. Those actions led to a two-hourstrike Sunday by an estimated one million workers - 70 percent of the country's work force. The opposition Labor Party has filed a no-confidence motion in Parliament that is to be debated today or tomorrow. Shamir's government was endorsed Oct. 10 by a 60-53 parliamentary vote and was expected to defeat the motion. ISRAEL'S staggering economy received another boost with an agreement between the government and private banks designed to avert a stock market crash. The market was shut down Oct. 9tafter panicky Israelis pushed to sell their stocks and ' buy foreign currency, especially U.S. dollars. Stock Exchange general manager Yossi Nitazni announed that trading in bonds would resume Thursday and general share trading would begin again Sunday. For exceptional College Grads (and those who are soon to be) CURRENT OPPORTUNITIES: * NUCLEAR ENGINEERING " BUSINESS MANAGEMENT * AVIATION LAW " MEDICINE * INTELLIGENCE " CIVIL ENGINEERING * SHIPBOARD OPERATIONS TO APPLY, YOU MUST BE NO MORE THAN 26 YEARS OLD, HAVE A BS OR BA, (JUNIOR & SENIOR LEV- EL STUDNTS MAY I NQUIRE, PASS APTITUDE AND PHYSICAL EXAMINATIONS. AND QUALIFY FOR SEC. URITY CLEARANCE. U.S .CI TI ZENSHIP REQUSIED. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Reagan names McFarlane to national security advisor's post WASHINGTON - President Reagan named Middle East special envoy Robert McFarlane as his national security adviser yesterday, saying the former Marine officer "shares my view about the need for a strong America." McFarlane, a 45-year-old former Marine lieutenant colonel and foreign policy professional who worked in the Nixon and Ford administration under Henry Kissinger, immediately took over the job from William Clark, who Reagan is nominating as secretary of interior, the White House job does not require Senate confirmation. In his new job, McFarlane will be responsible for briefing the president each day on foreign policy developments and summarizing for him the various options presented by the State Department and other foreign policy experts. After serving as a national security special assistant in the Nixon and Ford administration, McFarlane joined the Republican staff of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Battles rage in S. Beirut slums BEIRUT, Lebanon - Artillery and small-arms battles broke out yesterday in Christian and Shiite Moslem slums south of Beirut, and U.S. Marines at the airport eased an alert and evacuated two wounded men from front-line bunkers. Residents in Ain Rummaneh, a Christian area along the old "green line" that bisects Beirut into Christian and Moslem sectors, reported a Lebanese army tank fired its cannon on the neighboring Shiite sector of Chiyah. Sniper fire and artillery barrages also were reported in the surrounding Shiite areas of Bourj el-Barajneh, Sfeir, Metahan, Sannin and Barid. There were no immediate reports of casualties. ] Smoke hung over Souk el-Gharb, the mountain ridge town held by the Lebanese army above the Marine base, and the sound of heavy artillery and rockets could be heard from the airport below. A photographer, Don Mell, reported from the airport that mortar shells fell about a half-mile from Marine positions in the area between Lebanese army posts in Khalde and the Druse-controlled town of Shweifat. Berkeley prof gets Nobel Prize STOCKHOLM, Sweden - Gerard Debreu of the University of California at Berkeley won the 1983 Nobel Prize in economics yesterday for showing mathematically how the market system achieves a balance between supply and demand. Debreu, 62, a French-born professor at Berkeley, was the 12th American to win the economics prize in the 15 years it has been awarded. The economist was cited for abstract mathematical models that confir- med Adam Smith's "invisible hand" theory - the action of competing .forces that stabilize prices in an unregulated economy. The theory has been the linchpin of capitalism from early"laissez-faire" systems to "Reaganomics" and other movements to reduce government in- fluence in the market-place. Debreu, a U.S. citizen since 1975, will receive a gold medal and 1.5 million Swedish Kroner or $200,000 in Stockholm Dec. 10. Yale lab loses infected hamsters NEW HAVEN, Conn. - Traps were set and food was put out around a Yale University medical laboratory yesterday as researchers crawled on the floor looking for three disease-infected hamsters that escaped from their cage, a school spokeswoman said. But officials believe the rodents carrying a potentially fatal virus had burrowed into bags containing old bedding removed from the rodent cages and were incinerated, Yale medical school spokeswoman Marjorie Noyes said. The hamsters were used in experiments and had been infected with the virus that causes Creutzfeldt-Jakob Sydrome, which attacks the nervous system and results in dementia. Noyes said the virus can only be transmit- ted to humans through contact with infected brain tissue. "The disease is extremely hard to transmit," she said, emphasizing there was little hazard to anyone in the building. The rodents escaped Oct. 3 from their cage in the university's Department of Epidemiology and Public Health in the Yale Medical School. Edward Adelberg, the deputy provost for biomedical sciences, said they escaped when their cage was warped by a heating process used to decontaminate in- fectious materials. Engineer charged with leaking secret papers to Soviets SAN FRANCISCO - An American engineer has been charged with stealing and passing to Soviet-bloc agents documents aimed at helping the United States survive a nuclear attack, the Justice Department said yesterday. About 100 "extremely sensitive" classified documents allegedly were passed in a series of 14 meetings over a 4-year period. They were turned over to Polish intelligence agents who routed them to the Soviet Union, the Justice Department said. The documents included the information on the Minuteman Intercontinen- tal Ballistic Missile and the ballistic missile defense research and develop- ment programs of the United States, according to federal authorities. James Durward Harper Jr., a 49-year-old consulting engineer from Moun- tain View, was arrested Saturday morning and held without bail after a brief appearance yesterday before U.S. Magistrate Owne Woodruff. FBI officials said Harper'allegedly ased his foreign contact for $1 million and received more than $250,000 as an operative. Vol. XCI V-No. 36 Tuesday, October 18, 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; Classified Advertising, 764-0557; Display Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. 4 I 4 SIGN UP AT YOUR CAREER PLACEMENT OFFICE BE- FORE i OCTOBER Z24A. io BE INTERVIEWED BY ONE OF OUR NAVY REPRE- SENTATIVESOR CALLUS AT IT800-482-5140. Reagan legally paves way for candidacy I Say t "Mine AKe; DISCOUNT MUFFRr S AMERICAN AND FOREIGN CAR SPECIALIST FROM A ais Installed by Trained '1 1 f *FITS MANY Specialists -3SMALL CARS _Installed *AT PARTICIPATING DEA LE RS FOREIGN CARS Featuring. CUSTOM DUALS vsernasd HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS One of the finest names CUSTOM PIPE BENDING in automotive parts! Y PSI LA N T I 2606 Washtenaw Ave...... 572-91 77 (11/2 mile East of US 23) Individually Owned & Operated IN AND OUT IN 30 MINUTES IN MOST CASES v OPEN DAILY AND SAT.8-6 PM Copyright© 1983 Meineke From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - President Reagan, still refusing to say whether he will run for re-election, became a presidential candidate yesterday "in the eyes of the law," and his campaign chairman said he was "a solid favorite" to win. The president signed two letters at his desk in the Oval Office. One authorized Sen. Paul Laxalt, (R-Nev.), to establish a campaign committee. A second informed the Federal Election Commission that he was "hereby authorizing this committee as my prin- cipal campaign committee..." WHILE REAGAN refused to say whether he will seek a second term, his senior aides and advisers have said they have no doubts. The president told reporters who wit- nessed the signing that he might an- nounce his intentions "by the first of the year." Asked whether his signature in black ink on the letters meant that he was running, the president replied with a smile, "in the eyes of the law." After the president signed the letters, Edward Rollins, his assistant for political affairs who is leaving the White House staff to direct the commit- tee to re-elect Reagan and Vice President George Bush, said: "We're 100 percent confident the president is running." Greek traditions re-examined. (Continued from Page 1) back. Serenading is a social event in which members of a fraternity or sorority visit another house and sing songs to one another. But a policy that allows any member of the Greek system to enter the house would allow for anyone to be prowling around, Rock said. The Panhellenic Association and In- terfraternity Council last year established a new set of rules governing the stealing of composites. THE NEW RULES state that frater- nity or sorority members must be wearing some type of Greek insignia, must raid before midnight, must enter through the front door and remain on the first floor, and must take only the composite. The new regulations were adopted because sororities were"getting con- cerned about safety and rapes, etc.," said Panhellenic President Katz, "because we don't want people running through the house in the middle of the night." Last year, members of a fraternity broke in through the kitchen window of the Alpha Phi sorority house and the women in the house could not get into the kitchen to protect it because the doors were locked between meals. "When we called police and said there were fraternity guys breaking in our house, they just said 'ha,' " said sorority president Linda Potter. Composite raiding is "a tradition and has always been fun but could be dangerous if not done in fun," Potter said. Center for Chir The University nese Studies of Michigan II ' ° rr t , third annual Alexander Eckstein Memorial Lecture Will Reforms Modernize China's Economy? SA ?1(4 Pcrl 1 Y Editor-in-chief .... Managing Editor ... News Editor .......... Student Affairs Editor. Features Editor...... Opinion Page. Editors. Arts/Mogozine Editors. Sports Editor .......... Associate Sports Editors Chief Photographer ... ......BARRY WITT JANET RAE GEORGE ADAMS ..BETH ALLEN FANNIE WEINSTEIN .... DAVID SPAK BILL SPINDLE MARE HODGES SUSAN MAKUCH .....JOHN KERR - ..JIM DWORMAN LARRY FREED CHUCK JAFFE LARRY MISHKIN RON POLLACK .... DEBORAH LEWIS Business Manager SAM G SLAUGHTER IV Sales Manager ... . . ... MEG GIBSON Operations Manager LAURIE ICZKOVITZ Classified Manager . PAM GILLERY Display Manager ............. JEFF VOIGT Finance Manager JOE TRULIK Nationals Manager ......... RON WEINER Co-op Manager .. .. DENA SHEVZOFF Assistant Display Manager ...... NANCY GUSSIN Assistant Classified Manager . 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