New candidate enters Rack ham election The Michigan Daily -' Wednesday, February 1, 1984 - Page 3 Judge blocks Navy 's By MIKE WILKINSON *A new candidate announced plans to run for the Rackham Student Gover- nment (RSG) presidency yesterday against Angela Gantner, who had been running unopposed. Kodi Abili, a doctoral student in higher education, will attempt to cap- ture the seat mainly through mail-in votes, which are due at the RSG office by 5 p.m. Friday. Yesterday was the last day students could vote at polling places in the Fishbowl and the lobby of the LSA building. ABILI SAID he decided to run because he thought it would make the race more interesting and would bring more students to the polls. "I like elec- tions and voting, but I hate a one-person race," Abili said. He is currently serving on RSG as the representative from the education division. Ganter is the council's humanities division representative. The remaining candidates in the elec- tion are running uncontested. Public Health graduate student Hillary Murt is seeking re-election for the vice presidential seat, and candidates Dwight Fontenot and Roger Schwartz FHPP are running for the two open seats in the social sciences division. RSG DIRECTOR Vickie Buerger said yesterday that it is very possible for a candidate to win through mail-in votes - humanities division councilmember Karen Staudt gained her seat through mailed ballots in the fall 1983 elections. The mail-in vote, Buerger said, is of- fered "as a convenience for those who can't get to the (polls)," "It also is a way to campaign," Buerger said. "(Candidates) can give the ballots to their friends and have them send them in by a certain date." BUERGER SAID that polling places drew twice the number of candidates yesterday as they did Monday, with 44 students voting compared to Monday's 18. RSG is expecting a considerable number of mailed-ir ballots, however, Buerger said. RSG election turnouts have been low in the past few years, with 150 of the 6,000 Rackham students voting last year and only 12 students casting ballots in the 1982 elections. The ballots will be counted Friday night, with results expected late Friday or early Saturday. ."'JNINGS], MADISON, Wis. (UPI) - A federal judge yesterday ordered the Navy to stop work immediately on its Project ELF nuclear submarine com- munications system and to file a new environmental impact statement on the controversial project. Judge Barbara Crabb, who had heard testimony on ELF late last year, said a 1977 environmental impact statement filed with the Environmental Protection Agency was insufficient for the project, first proposed in the 1960s. HER PERMANENT injunction order meant that the Navy is to stop construc- tion of the system in Upper Michigan near Marquette and not to upgrade its testing facility near Clam Lake, Wis. The Navy also was told to quit putting ELF receivers on submarines. After she turned down the temporary' injunction request, the Navy late last year began construction of the Marquette link to the system, known as Project Sanguine when it was first draf- ted two decades ago. Then it was en- proj ect visioned as a huge communications grid covering a big chunk of northern Wisconsin. Wisconsin Gov. Anthony Earl said "I think it is a very good wruling. I think Judge Crabb by banning the project recognizes that it is not defensible by any standpoint." "THIS STOPS the Navy cold in its tracks," said David Merritt, field direc- tor in Michigan for Stop Project ELF. "This stops a major first strike nuclear communication trigger." Clam Lake was built in the 1960s. Ex- cept for a brief period in this decade when it was shutdown for lack of fun- ding, technicians have been able to communicate with deep-diving nuclear subs throughout the world. The Navy has said the system is in- tended to thwart Russian attempts to jam radio signals in the events of a nuclear attack. But through the years environmen- talists and others have sought through court actions and protests to block the project. Little House falls APPhoto The victorian mansion which housed Laura Ingalls Wilder on NBC's series "Little House on the Prairie" is destroyed in the show's final episode, scheduled for February 6. Star and producer Michael Landon decided to demolish the house in the script since the buildings would have to be levelled when the lease for the set expired. Hi hlight R rt Rockaway, a professor of Jewish History from Tel Aviv University Will speak tonight on "The Jewish Experience in the U.S.: Plusses and Minuses," at 7: 30, in the Rackham West Conference Room. Films Hill Street - On the Waterfront, 7 & 9 p.m., 1429 Hill St. CFT - The Magnificent Ambersons, 7:05 p.m., Citizen Kane, 9 p.m., Michigan Theater. Cinema Guild - I Vitelloni,'7 & 9p.m., Lorch. Social Work - I Have a Dream: The Life of Martin Luther King, 12:15 p.m., 4068 Frieze Bldg. Anthropology - Dead Birds & Ax Fight, 2 & 7 p.m., MLB 2. Architecture & Urban Planning - All That Money Could Buy, 12:15 p.m. Art & Arch..Aud. Performances UAC - Laugh Track, 9 p.m., U-Club. School of Music - Clarinet Recital, Nancy Lecki, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Speakers dustrialand Operations Engineering - "A Decision Support System for Flame Cutting," Sharat Israni, 4 p.m., 241 IOE Bldg. International Center - Brown Bag, "The Nitty-Gritty of Travel in Europe," 7:30 p.m.,603E. Madison: Linguistics - "TBA," Greg Carlson, 4 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg. Education - "Mathematical Competencies of Poor Young Children & Suggestions for Diagnostic Work," 4 p.m., Whitney Aud. Chemistry - "Fast-Atom Bombardment and Mass Spectrometry," 4 p. m., 1200 Chem Bldg. Continuing Education Center for Women - "The Exit Experience: Let- ting Go & Moving On," 7p.m., 777 N. University. Chemical Engineering - "Intro. to Digital Computing & MTS, IV," 7 p.m., E.H. Kraus Aud. Computing Center - "Advanced Ontel Terminal: Using the MTS File Editor," 8:30 a.m.-noon; Rm. 130 LSA Bldg. Physical Education - "Physical Activities & Quality of Life in Densely Populated Areas - Hong Kong," 2 p.m., 1250 CCRB. Museum of Art - "Portraits," Jeannette Goldberg, 12:10 p.m. Center for Russian and East European Studies - Brown Bag, "Stalemate in Poland," Magda Zapp, noon, Commons Room, Lane Hall. "The Yugoslav Economic Crisis," Kenneth Zapp, 4 p.m., West Conference Rm. Rackham. Meetings Science Fiction Club - 8:15 p.m., Stilyagi Air Corps, League. Michigan Gay Undergraduates - 9p.m., 802 Monroe. Academic Alcoholics -1:30 p.m., Alano Club. Transcendental Meditation -8 p.m., 528 W. Liberty. Student Legal Services - Board of Directors Meeting, 7:30 p.m., 3000 Michigan Union, MSA Financial Aid Committee --- 4p.m., 3909 Michigan Union. Miscellaneous Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice 6 p.m., CCRB Martial Arts Rm. Canterbury Loft - Meditative Celebration of the Holy Eucharist, 5:15 p.m., 332 S. State St. CRLT - "35 MM Slide Production," 7 p.m., registration required, call 763- 2367. Student Wood & Crafts - Power Tools Safety, 6 p.m., 537 SAB. Human Resource Development - "Time Management for Managers & Supervisors," 8:30 a.m., Rm 130 LSA Bldg. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 'U' students to campaign for Hart in Iowa By NEIL CHASE About 40 University students supporting Sen. Gary Hart's bid for the presidency will travel to Iowa over mid-winter break to help out in the final days before the Feb. 20 Democratic caucus. The group made final preparations at a meeting last night. The students will spend three days knocking on doors and making phone calls in Waterloo, trying to drum up support for the Colorado senator in the important Iowa poll. A weak showing there or in the New Hampshire primary on Feb. 28 by any of the eight contenders for the democratic nomination could end their cam- paigns, said Mark Blumenthal, an LSA senior who is heading the Hart campaign on campus. "If we can do well in (Iowa and New Hampshire), Hart can get the national exposure he hasn't had yet, and that makes our job in Michigan that much easier," he said, Each student will have to pay $10 for the road trip, in which they'll get the chance to observe the caucus process first hand. The remaining' expenses have been paid for by about $500 in contributions from local Democrats, Blumenthal said. "I really enjoy political work," said LSA freshman Pete Giangreco, who will be part of the Hart con- tingent. "It's really an exciting thing for all of us to be involved." Funds for Vietnam vets diverted WASHINGTON (AP) - A congressional subcommittee said yesterday the Veterans Administration diverted to other purposes nearly 40 percent of the money Congress ear- marked to run storefront centers for counseling troubled Vietnam veterans. But Dr. Donald Custis, chief medical. director of the VA, said, the money was unspent because his agency had asked Congress to appropriate more money than turned out to be needed. "KNOWING the great unmet needs, we have consistenly overestimated what the demand would be," he said in an interview. "We've turned no one away." Psychologist John Wilson of Cleveland State University, an expert on the emotional problems of some Vietnam veterans, called the diversion of funds tragic. "It would mean more suicide, many broken families and many divorces," he said. THE REAGAN administration tried shortly after taking office to kill the counseling program, but gave up in the face of overwhelming votes in both houses of Congress to keep them operating. Since 1979, an estimated 212,000 veterans have gotten help at the storefront centers, often from their fellow veterans, away from the for- malities, long waits and paperwork of- ten encountered in VA hospitals. Correction U.S. Senate candidate Jack Lousma graduated from the University with an undergraduate degree in 1959. He was incorrectly identified in yesterday's Daily as a Law School alumnus. "The Jewish Experience in the United States: Pluses and Minuses" Professor Robert Rockaway TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY February 1, 1984 7:30 P.M. Rackham WEST CONFERENCE ROOM (Sponsored by U of M History Dept.) 'Slavery' victim testifies (Continued from Page 1) Barris then asked Fulmer and Koz- minski to stand side by side to show that Fulmer was taller than Kozminski. Two medical doctors testified that Molitoris had four rib fractures, hyper- tension, and a curved spine when he was removed from the farm last August. The doctors said they couldn't explain how the injuries had occurred, but said Molitoris had gained eighteen pounds within 19 weeks after being taken into custody by the state. ANOTHER key witness yesterday, social worker, Ruth Lutz, testified that Margarethe Kozminski wanted to know where Fulmer and Molitoris were when Lutz removed them in August because she "didn't want them on the streets." Lutz has visited the farm twice, both times following calls from peopleonthe farm. Lutz dismissed the case after her January, 1981, visit because she thought nothing was out of the ordinary. On her second visit last August she removed the two men. But Fulmer testified he was "afraid to tell the truth (when Lutz came in 1981.)" He also stated that Ike "dressed up" he and Molitoris when he knew that Lutz was coming. FULMER SAID he once asked Ike Kozminski if he could visit his brothers and Kozminski said no, adding that he didn't care about him. Fulmer's sister, Leonore Wilson, 52, testified that Margarethe Kozminski told her she had kidnapped Fulmer because she knew he was being abused on the farm he had been working on. WILSON SAID she had only spoken to Fulmer four times because she was also placed in a foster home at an early age. During the end of his cross- examination of Wilson, Barris accused Fulmer's sister of neglecting Fulmer, and said, "as far as you're concerned, Bob could drop off the face of this ear- th." Barris' comment met with hissing from the observers in the courtroom. The trial will continue today. Police notes Pizza store burglarized The Little Caesar's restaurant at 1994 W. Stadium was broken into bet- ween 11:30 p.m. on January 29 and 9:55 a.m. on January 30. there was no sign of force and less than $900 in cash was taken. 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