Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Saturday, January 14, 1984 Levitation on th rise i Iowa They don't get rowdy on football weekends, they don't drink, and they don'tueven seedthe townspeople very of- ten. But students at Maharishi Inter- national University have gotten the residents of Fairfield, Iowa, pretty worried. "There are no homecoming parades or football or basketball games up at MIU " grumbles Mayor Robert Rasmussen. "Their biggest thing is COLLEGES levitating twice a day and we're not even invited to that - that's a locked- door thing." WHEN MAHARISHI MANESH Yogi founded the university ten years ago and bought the vacant Parsons Univer- sity campus, few Fairfield residents complained. But now, the students sup- posedly. are practicing levitation - using mental energy to move objects. And the university is growing, too. About 1500 followers of the Maharishi live in the community and an additional 1,000. students and professors live on' campus. In the spring, the school plans to build several hundred houses in Fair- field with the capacity to house 7,000 meditators. "There is fear of them taking over the town," Rasmussen said.. UNIVERSITY officials insist, however, that they are not out to. change Fairfield. "It is not our plan, our objective, to take over the city," said, spokesman Richard Schneider, who, pointed out that in 10 years, no meditator has ever tried to run for local office or become involved in city rt.- - - '1/ i i M- i i- 46./ i ia - %W ie ia s V -v * y politics. Some Fairfield residents don't take the situation quite so seriously - several local clothing stores now sell "Fly Iowa" T-shirts, showiag a meditator hovering above a cornfield. Still, most Fairfield residents say they feel the meditation students just don't fit in. "You know, they're in the heart of America and they're vegetarians. It just doesn't give you a neighborly feeling. They won't sit down for a big, juicy beefsteak and a beer. We're not much into tofu, zucchini, and eggplant lasagna, but Lord, they are," Rasmussen said: - The Associated Press ROTC student killed Four ROTC students at the Univer- sity of Puerto Rico's Mayaguez campus were questioned yesterday in the hazing death of a cadet last week. Police said Freshman Arnaldo Mer- cado Perez had been burned and beaten as part of an initiation ceremony for the Panther Military Society, a group that is not officially recognized by the university or the Air Force ROTC. MERCADO PEREZ collapsed after he and two other cadets were forced to take a 20-mile hike as part of their initiation. The three men had been allowed only a can of spaghetti and a canteen of water daily for four days, and were kept awake 22 hours in one 24- hour period. The cadet died Jan. 5, five days after his collapse. Panther society leaders met" the morning after Mercado Perez died and planned to say that he had suf- fered a fall. Police agent Jose Pantojas said he was questioning four members of the "elite group" of ROTC members, but he declined to identify them. Pantojas said he would question 12 society mem- bers who took park in the intitiation. Assistant District Attorney Carlos Pagan said the four could be charged with involuntary homicide because Mercadp Perez agreed to go through with the ceremony. - The Associated Press Harvard commen- cement date protested More than 100 students and professors at Harvard University have signed a petition protesting the school's 1984 commencement date because it conflicts with the Jewish holiday Shavuot. The petition's signers contend that the June 7 commencement date will force them to break Jewish law on the holiday, which commemorates God's gift of the Ten Commandments to Moses. UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS say it is too late to change the commencement date, since graduation activities take place over a week's time and include many events besides the actual com- mencement ceremonies. "Literally thousands of people have already made hotel reservations for commencement," said Harvard Vice President Daniel Steiner, adding that he had consulted with several rabbis who said people could observe the holiday and attend commencement on the same day. Some Jewish students and professors, however, say they are being discriminated against. "There are plenty of other days to choose from, and the university has been so insensitive as to choose a Jewish holiday. I think this is an issue of Harvard placing itself before God and country," said Yadin Kaufmann, president of the Harvard Jewish Law School Association. Several student organizaitons, in- cluding the Undergraduate Council, the Law School Council, and the Business School Council have urged the Univer- sity to change the commencement date. --The Harvard Crimson Colleges appears every Saturday. Poli ce Store burglarized A red nightgown and panties and an electric massager were stolen from the Velvet Touch, at 215 South Fourth at 12:48 a.m. Wednesday. Two witnesses told police they saw the suspect break the display window, remove the items, and flee toward the Fourth Avenue Ar- cade. Officers found the suspect hiding behind the arcade sign. A 31-year-old Ann Arbor man was apprehended. House broken into A house on the 400 block of Hamilton was burglarized Tuesday afternoon about 2:00 p.m. The robbers gained en- try through an unlocked door and took jewelry valued at less than $400, police said Wednesday. - Matt Tucker IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Inflation rate drops to 0.6% WASHINGTON - Inflation on wholesale prices melted to a scant 0.6 percent last year, the best showing in two decades, as food prices rose only slightly and energy costs plunged, the government reported yesterday. Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said the figures were evidence of a break in the "vicious cycle of increasing inflation." The increase in wholesale prices for December was only 0.2 percent. Separate government reports said retail sales and industrial production also increased modestly in December. Economists said that meant the national economic recovery was slowing a bit, one more reason to think in- flation will stay low for some time to come. Most analysts believe wholesale inflation will be somewhat higher this. year, perhaps 2 percent to 4 percent assuming the recovery continues and there is no repeat of the big oil-price declines that pulled last year's total down. But they also see no big price surge coming up, at least not before big federal budget deficits begin making a bigger impact on the economy next year. State high court stays execution RALEIGH, N.C.- Convicted murderer James Hutchins won a stay of execution from the North Carolina Supreme Court yesterday, moments after the U.S. Supreme Court had apparently cleared the way for his death by lethal injection. In a dramatic climax to a day of legal maneuvering, the state court an- nounced it was blocking the execution at 5:20 p.m., 40 minutes before the deadline for carrying it out. North Carolina law requires that a condemned prisoner be put to death between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. on the execution day. The state court sent the case back to McDowell County Superior Court for the setting of a new execution date. The court did not explain the reasons for its action, but defense attorneys said state law-requires that once a stay is granted, a new date must be set 60 to 90 days off. Moments before the new stay, prison officials had been set in motion to carry out the execution when the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington an- nounced it had voted 5-4 tolift an earlier stay. Hutchins, 54, was sentenced to death in 1979 for the shooting deaths of two sheriff's deputies who were investigating a report that he had beaten his teen-age daughter, and the slaying of a state trooper who later pursued him. Reagan may lose more top aides WASHINGTON - With President Reagan about to mark his third year in of- fice, several top aides have left the White House and others are making plans to jump ship. David Gergen put in his last day as assistant to the president and director of White House communications yesterday, leaving the $69,800-a-year post to teach at Harvard University. James Baker, White House chief of staff, has been saying for months that he wants another job in a second Reagan administration. He has let it be known that he would like one of the "big four" Cabinet posts - State, Defen- se, Treasury or Justice. Baker said he will not continue in his present post until the end of 1984. But he also passed the word through White House sokesman Larry Speakes yesterday that he will "serve at the pleasure of the president. He will stay as long as the president wishes." Downed U.S. helicopter crew tried to surrender, Hondurans say CIFUENTES; Honduras - Honduran soldiers who reported seeing the downing of a U.S. helicopter said yesterday the crew leaped out of the craft with their arms raised in a hail of Nicaraguan gunfire and the pilot fell, mor- tally wounded. The Honduran account generally coincided with the version given by San- dinista soldiers on the Nicaraguan side of the border. The main difference was that the Hondurans said the Americans raised their hands and put them behind their heads to show they were unarmed and wanted to surrender. _-moo In Washington, a Pentagon Qficial denied the three came out with their hands up and said, "They came out running." Both the Honduran and Nicaraguan soldiers said the Sandinistas fired at the OH-58 light observation helicopter Wednesday morning as it zig-zagged over Nicaraguan hills before coming down on the Honduran side of the fron- tier. Marines return Druse fre BEIRUT, Lebanon - U.S. Marines, responding to heavy attack by rebel. militiamen, unleashed a barrage of fire from tank cannon, mortars, and ar- mor-piercing rockets yesterday on the outskirts of Beirut. French paratroops clashed with Shiite Moslem militia in a downtown shootout. No casualties were reported by either contingent of the multinational peacekeeping force, and there was no word of rebel casualties. Druse gunners in the hills overlooking the Marine base shelled Beirut's Christian sector, killing two civilians and wounding 13 others, police said. Four school children were wounded when snipers fired at their bus in a Christian suburb. The hostilities in Lebanon were the worst since Dec. 16, when Lebanon's civil war combatants agreed in a Damascus meeting to spare population centers further bombardment. U.S. Special Middle East envoy Donald Rumsfeld, in Damascus, met with Syrian President Hafex Assad for the first time. Assad, who had declined to meet Rumsfeld during two previous visits to Syria, said before the meeting that "Peace in Lebanon cannot be established under the American gun barrel." 4 I 4 sinu Kissinger u East- Westi Brussels, Belgium (AP) - Henry Kissinger said yesterday that President Reagan and Soviet leader Yuri An- dropov should appoint special envoys to quietly pursue a reduction of East-West tensions., He said he was not a candidate for the job. .f THE FORMER U.S. secretary of state said such talks should not include Soviet activity in Central America, however, because it would wrongly legitimize the Soviet Union's presence in that region. Kissinger also said he would not lob- by in Washington of behalf of a report on Central America by a Reagan- appointed commission,kwhich he led. The report said Soviet and Cuban ac- tivity in Central America threatens U.S. interests. Kissinger said personal represen- tatives from the White House and Kremlin "should be authorized to con- duct private, exploratory conversations on their leaders' behalf, preferably without publicity." EACH REPRESENTATIVE should have access to leaders on both sides and begin "a global review of their entire relationship," Kissinger said. Kissinger made the , proposal in a speech at a Brussels conference spon- sored by the Georgetown University Center for Strategic and International Studies, and he expanded on it at a news conference. In response to questions by reporters, Kissinger said he would not be a can- didate for such an assignment, despite playing similar diplomatic roles in Moscow and Peking for President Richard Nixon. rges private meetings 4. k . 4; Kissinger ... warns Reagan officials "It would raise too many hackles among conservatives in the United States," Kissinger said. "It would not be a wise choice in an election year." ' He said he hadn't discussed the idea with Reagan, but "many weeks ago I put that idea to other senior members of the administration and they didn't throw me out of the room." President Nixon advocated a similar approach in a recent magazine interview. U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz is scheduled to meet Gromyko at a 35- nation security conference in Stockholm, Sweden, next week - their first discussions since the Soviets broke off nuclear arms talks Nov. 23 to protest U.S. deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe. 4 HO ho hoAP Photo Nine-year-old Martin David Schmitt was just goofing around in his gean- dparents backyard Thursday in San Bernardino, Calif. when, he decided to climb up on the roof to try plunging down the chimney - just like Santa Claus. But Schmitt lacked Santa's sliding skill and got stuck midway down the shoot. Schmitt, uninjured, but wiser, is fished out of the chimney by San Bernardino fire officials. (The handcuffs on his wrists are a toy). (urd RlftbItp 'Eutie Geac may soon aid FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS FOUNDATION 502 East Huron, 663-9376 9:55 a.m. Sunday Worship, January 15, r"Hope." Sermon by Robert B. Wallace. Also: Choir Thursday 7:15 p.m., John Reed, director; Janice Beck, organist. Student theological discussion Thur- sday 6:00 p.m. (Call 761-6476 evenings for infor- mation) Weekly Student Dinner. Sunday 6 P.m. Senior Pastor: Robert B. Wallace. Campus Minister: Rev. T. J. Ging. FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 120 S. State St. (Corner of State and Huron) 662-4536 January 15. "The Sacred Appendix." Sermon by: Dr. Donald B. Strobe. Churhrh orhnnl for all a--: 0am. NEW GRACE APOSTOLIC CHURCH 632 N. Fourth Ave. Rev. Avery Dumes Jr., Pastor 9:45 a.m. Sunday School. 11:45 Morning Worship. 7:00 p.m. Evening Service. Bible Study-Wed. & Fri. 7 p.m. For rides call 761-1503 or 487-1594. * * * UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw Robert Kavasch, Pastor' 663-5560 Sunday, January 15, 9:15 and 10:30, Worship Service. Wednesday night mid-week Advent 7:30 p.m., Bible Study and Handbell Choir at 8:30 p.m. Thursday Voice Choir at 7:30 p.m. and Bible Study at 9:00 p.m. * * * FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 14229 Wahtencu aA _9-4AA LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY at Lord of Light (LCA-ALC-AELC) 801S. Forest at Hill St., 668-7622 Galen Hora, Pastor Sunday worship 10:30 a.m. Sunday 6 p.m. Student Supper. Wednesday - Worship at 7:00 p.m. Choir at 7:30 p.m. CAMPUS CHAPEL- 1236 Washtenaw Ct. A Campus Ministry of the Christian Reformed Church Pastor: Reverend Don Pastema 668-7421 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship. Sermon: "A God-Conscious Person" 6:00 p.m. Meditation: "Affirmation of Persious and of God." Wed. 10 p.m. Evening Prayers. * * * ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL (Catholic) book fine collection (Continued from Page 1) however, because circulation from the reserve unit is on a smaller scale and workers can keep track of those books without the computer.. Based on the estimates of fines collected for fall semester 1982, the Graduate Library alone has lost $10,000 in uncollected fines. Officials hope to get the bugs out of the system soon so they don't lose any more money, and so students will get their overdue books back into cir- culation. "The programhtesting looks positive," said Sharon Fleenor, associate director for public services. "It may be a matter of a week or two." But students have been fortunate enough to get through one almost fine- free semester, and according to FleeDnor the final wnrd from the Saturday, January 14, 1984 Vol. XCIV-No. 86 (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, Anti 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; Tom Ehr. Joe Ewing, Chris Gerbasi, Jeff Harrison, Pou, Editor-in-chief.........................BARRY WITT He"gren, Steve Hunter. 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