Democratic candidates de bate over foreign policy (Continued from Page 1)' -;With candidate surveys showing biany Iowa Democrats still undecided, sveral of the contenders were looking t the debate to improve their chances 4ainst Mondale. The former vice president is heavily favored to win the caucuses, with Glenn ping for a second place. #But Mondale aides are worried that anything less than a 2-1 ratio of victory over Glenn opr any of the other six Democratic candidates will be diagnosed as a poor showing. If the Iowa caucuses do, indeed, slow Mondale, they could serve as a r springboard to candidates like Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado or Sen. Alan Cranston of California. It has happened before. In 1976, a little-known former gover- npr of Georgia named Jimmy Carter used a win in Iowa to establish himself as the early favorite in a crowded field of Democrats. George Bush used a win in 1980 to make himself a force to be reckoned with. "This debate is the most important so far because it is close to the caucuses," said Greg Fchneiders, spokesman for Glenn. "And there's a big undecided out there." A lThe debate was sponsored by the Des Moines Register; whose editor, James. Gannon was moderator. The format provided for the debate to start with a two-minute statement by each can- didate, followed by an opportunity to question each other and to field questions from James Risser, chief of the Register's Washington bureau, and a.panel of five Iowans: a businessman, a: farmer, the president of the Univer- sity of Iowa, a college student and the director of a vocational training center. The Michigan Daily - Sunday, February 12, 1984 - Page 5 Study of twins may reveal war WASHINGTON (AP) - The gover- nment is about to undertake a nation- wide search for 15,000 pairs of twins so it can compare the health of men who served in the Vietnam War with their brothers who did not. The purpose: to see if anything in the Vietnam experience was damaging to servicemen's physical or emotional health or had a long-term effect on their readjustment as civilians. THE FRATERNAL and identical twins will be surveyed by mail. From the results, researchers will select for interviews, physical exams and close scrutiny 360 pairs of identical twins who split up during the war - one twin going to the war zone and one posted elsewhere. Researchers hope the investigations will shed light on whether Agent Orange has damaged the health of men exposed to it, as thousands of veterans claim. Twelve million gallons of the plant killer, and its dangerous con- taminant, dioxin, were sprayed during the war to reveal communist troop's hiding places and to destroy crops. The study will also provide infor- mation on Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. It is a psychiatric syndrome similar to what older veterans called "battle fatigue" or "shell shock," but is said to be an even more serious problem for Vietnam veterans because of the hostile reception many encoun- damage tered when they came home. IN ADDITION, broader findings - into the entire relationship "between service in Vietnam and long-term health and socio-economic status" - are expected, according to the Veterans Administration. "We believe that this study will provide the most sensitive means for detecting subtle effects of Vietnam ser- vice and will therefore justify the necessary considerable expenditure," Dr. Donald Custis, the VA's medical director, told congressional subcom- mittee last year in outlining preliminary plans. "Although the first use of this register will be to assess the effects of Vietnam service, the twin register wil be an important national resource for future studies"of the influence of inheritance and environmental factors on human disease," the VA told the Of- fice of Management and budget. The search for the twins will get un- der way April 1, will probably take 2/2 years, and cost $480,000, the VA estimated in papers submitted to the OMB. Under a paperwork-reduction law, OMB's approval is necessary before any government agency adds to the public's paperwork burden. Analysis showed there may be as many as 17,000 pairs in the American population in which one brother served in the war zone while his twin did not. AP Photo The Soviet Union's ruling politburo view the body of their late leader, Yuri Andropov. Possible successors for An- dropov's position are Konstantin Chernenko (far left), Grigory Romanov (sixth from left), and Mikhail Gorbachev (seventh from left).. Soviet party leaders mourn (Continued from Page 1) daughter, was embraced by the Polit- buro members. The dimly lighted hall, like the wind-whipped city of Moscow, was draped in reds and blacks - the colors of communism and of mour- ning. WESTERN DIPLOMATS and Soviets alike were not assuming Chernenko will be the next leader of the 18 million- member Communist Party, which determines foreign and domestic policy for the country. Andropov died Thursday after only 15 months in power, the shortest tenure of any leader in Soviet history. He was ab- sent from public view for nearly six months, trying to govern the country of 280 million people from his sickbed. A Central Committee source said the group's 300 members met yesterday, presumably to debate the Politburo's recommendations and elect a new leader of th'e Communist Party. The nation's most powerful post. A KEY consideration appeared to be whether a majority of the 12-member Politburo would rally behind Cher- nenko as a transition leader or would decide to give the post to a younger man. Western diplomats who have closely watched the alignment of power in the Politburo have in recent months iden- tified two younger members as strong contenders for the leadership. They are Grigory Romanov, 61, and Mikhail Gorbachev, 52, who was con- sidered Andropov's closest confident on the Politburo. CHERNENKO was considered the leader of the "old guard" faction of the Politburo and owed his political success almost entirely to Brezhnev. He was widely believed to have lost out to An- dropov in a struggle to succeed Brezhnev as party leader. President Reagan, who once called the Soviet Union under Andropov the "focus of evil in the world, opted again- st going himself but sent Vice President George Bush to represent the United States. - Bush, who arrived in London on his way to Moscow, called his trip a "tur- ning point" that could open the way for improved relations with the Kremlin's new leadership. Americans leave Beirut Beaver and Wally lead resurgence of reruns (Continued from Page 3) "This is by far the worst," Margaret Cummings, an American resident in Lebanonsfor 22 years said as she sat on her suitcase beside the seaside evacuation zone. "I'm just fed up with it all." The Reagan administration, while evacuating Americans from Beirut during lulls in the fighting, is trying to figure out what can be done to salvage its battered policy in war-torn Lebanon. STATE Department officials acknowledged privately that events in Lebanon last week amounted to a disaster for administration policy, sending shock waves through official Washington that resembled the 1979 hostage-taking by Iran. President Reagan's special Mideast envoy, Donald Rumsfeld, and the American ambassador to Lebanon Reginald Bartholomew, sought to find ways to end the fighting and to bolster the government of President Amin Gemayel. But their influence has been sharply curtailed by the resurgence of civil war. Overall, 450 people have died and 1,100 have been wounded in fighting over the last nine days in and around Beirut, and the State Department has offered Americans assistance in leaving Lebanon. Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, meanwhile, sharply warned Gemayel not to submit to Syrian pressure to abrogate Lebanon's May 1983 agreement with Israel, which calls fore simultaneous Syrian and Israeli withdrawals from Lebanon. Shamir, speaking in an Israel Radio interview said: If this agreement is given up, we will see ourselves free of all the obligations we undertook'when we signed this agreement . ... . If this If Lebanon gives up this agreement, it will mean giving up its independence." (Continued from Page1) Bread. When June cleans she wears frilly dresses, white gloves, and pearls My mother wore fuzzy slippers." BUT KIDS from ethnic backgrounds are not the only ones who watch the Cleavers. Not by a long shot, says Wat- on, a devoted "Beaver" fan herself. In a recent article for a local publication, The Ann Arbor Times, Watson writes that "there is a strong identification with young adults (age 26 or older)." "They can remember when gasoline was really 19 cents and when Sal Mineo was king. They recall the happy, in- nocent days of their childhood, those days when sticking out your tongue in class meant a major catastrophe. For us old-timers there are touches of nostalgia, like the time Wally explains the redeeming social value of the tran- sistor radio.. "Lots of viewers wouldn't know San- Odra Dee from Sal Mineo. The fact is that 'Beaver' reruns are funny, funny shows. Well directed and produced, crafted with care, they are much better than most anything on the air today," she says. At the University. Watson assures, 'At a time of many modern television program- ming options . . . nostalgia for old-time pro- grams is a surprisingly fast growing phenomenon around the nation.' - Mary Ann Watson, University communicatons professor tmng," Watson writes in the Times' ar- ticle. "We all know that the right thing isn't always the easiest thing, and daily at 2:30 p.m., the Beave puts this premise to a new test. Whether it's buying his own skates to learn respon- sibility or developing integrity by telling Mr. Blair, his new math teacher, that he used Wally's old English test to get a 96 percent, the Beave always has a tough time of it." Starting out as a somewhat naive, black and white sitcom, "Leave it to Beaver" now seems as all-American as baseball, hotdogs, and apple pie. Join the Daily New'Saf the show is not short an audience either. "IT'S LIKE GOING back to summer camp for most University-age viewers, she says. The fact that the program is so stereotypical makes it that much more loveable, she says. Most college-age watchers take a slightly less intellectual view of "Beaver" than Watson. When asked why he liked the show, Rick Boily, a residential college fresh- man, just shrugs. "I don't know," he finally, says. "I don't know why I like those shows. But sometimes that Beaver is so cute." BOB SORCE, A sophomore dance major, says he likes Beaver's mother's "smart footwear." And Michael Berger, a Residential College sophomore, says the show is "so bad, it's good." Jake London, however, a Residential College junior manages to hit a deeper insight, according to Watson. "A LOT OF THEM ARE 'IN- credibly stupid," he says. "But when the main characters were my own age, I could somehow relate to them. This feeling of identification is an im- portant factor contributing to "Beaver's" longevity. "People can...sympathize with the Beaver over his battle to do the right TUESDAY LUNCH DISCUSSION February 7, 1984 - 12 Noon "SUPER POWER POLITICS AND THE SUFFERING PEOPLE OF VIETNAM AND KAMPUCHEA" SPEAKER: The Reverend Barbara Fuller, Indo-China Consultant for the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), and Interfaith Council for Peace (Peace & Justice issues) At the International Center 603 E. Madison Street For Additional Information please phone 662-5529 Sponsored by THE ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER CHURCH WOMEN UNITED IN ANN ARBOR come niversity+ join our staff of Michigan Housing Division Ihe U 14PPENINGS (Continued from Page 3) Miscellaneous Measles vaccinations - Oxford Rm., East Quad, 3-7 p.m. CEW - "Step Before the Job Search," workshop, 350 S. Thayer, 1:3,0-3:30 p.m., call 763-1353. Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice, CCRB Martial Arts Rm., 6-8 p.m. Turner Geriatric Clinic - Intergenerational Women's Group, 1010 Wall St., 10a.m.-noon. Cont. Medical Ed. - "Medial & non-traumatic Surgical Emergencies," course, Towlsey Center, call 763-1400. Matthaei Botanical Gardens - "Cacti & Other Succulents; Fascinating, Ferocious, & Fun" class, taught by William Collins & Adrienne O'Brien, 7:15 9:15 p.m., call 764-1168. Women's Studies Program - Brown Bag, discussion with Nicaraguans, Magda Enriquez & Nubia Aguirre. Joe's Starr Lounge - Advanced jitterbug dance class, taught by Jim Kruz & Vickie Honeyman,109 N. Main, 7:30-9 p.m. Eclipse Jazz - Jazz improvization workshop, taught by David Swain, Assembly Hall, Michigan Union, 7-8:30 p.m. POETRY READING f lservice by George Garrett PHOTO PROCESSIN and Lynn Coffin - 24 hr. service (most cases) Monday, February 13 . Quality Low Pnce 8:00 p.m. * Convenience GUILD. HOUSE COUNTER 80EGROUNDF ~~~IHGNUINo802 MONROE ggggg888888 RESIDENCE HALL POSITIONS 1984-85 SEEKING STUDENTS: lntircsid l N)kin; with odistlusints in a'I(sidevm r hal In irrcswd in m rloig itspiritol nltin i ivwiii n a resinlu c hA) 11. Interiestedt:I in lrdevIO)ing mand sir lng! huning skills m group lcaclurdlrip) and advising. mt trcsite( in d(lveloping 1rogn mlliIor ng ioi a dli ve(r st tudunt popila ion. In tmrcested in duvuloping nuw skills and talents fo[ a hi1(tinmu. POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Residem D Iirectcors Assistant Rcsidunt Di uctors M1in( rit' Puur Advisors I lua Li brarians Rcsid(mn Advisotrs Rsiden itFllows GSTA Rcsidecm Fecllow QU AL IFICATIONS: M"st he a lgiste red U of M s1c ti ton(hr Ann arbor (a"inps Must havu comutetcl a inmin inHi l of four turm1's or ii'alctnt (1and 18 undluigrad uatu crdit houls toward program b nthe1 und of tlu Spring TMin 1981. Sndclgradta tu appli an Is must havcu at luast a 2.50 in < n uiv gradc jpo int a gvuiagu in the s(ho(l or(1 lg(u in whithi v arc tinil:d n ' the lt ( oI th1 Spring 1urn ru198.1. (raluatu ap1plitants mluist bh in good acatlcuit standing inits the school (r colegu iu which thcy arc un ir:)1td by the cnd oI the .Spriug TItitt1981. A T7 T1 T T f-A '':T!lX T C A N T TA A ArlT 1 T AT T' !l T it 4A A~'T l T 4' ---- -------- ......-.-..... - . ... . .. ..---- 3 I Special I