Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom E Lit i~t9wu i~ai1Q Punt Cloudy, with chance of rain toward the evening. Highs between 65 and 68 degrees. t " Vol. XCV, 'No. 27 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, October 6, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages University life Lisa Birnbach style By CHERYL BAACKE "Watch this," said Lisa Birnbach just before she spit her gum into a hot chocolate container which she just emptied. a Has Birnbach, who just completed her own guide to the nation's colleges, been spending too much tine with college students? "NO, THEY'VE been spending too much time with me," she said. RELEASED last month, Lisa Birnbach's College Book is the product of visits to college campuses and interviews with thousands of students compiled into profiles of 186 schools and essays about the state of campuses today. Birnbach's book also offers helpful hints to college students such as how to perform "The First All-Nighter." "NEVER LET more than a half-hour go by without a discussioit having nothing what- soever to do with your work, such as a candid 'Economic. indicators show mor Amerwans at work WASHINGTON (AP) - More than 270,000 Americans got jobs in Septem- ber as civilian unemployment dipped to 7.4 percent, the government said yesterday, taking this politically sen- sitive economic indicator a notch below where it was when President Reagan took office. Just over a month before the presidential election, deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said the report showed that "the economy continues to expand." "THE PROSPECT is excellent for continued economic growth and the creation of more jobs," Speakes said.' Some private analysts, however, noted that job growth has slowed as the pace of economic recovery has slackened. These analysts said they were concerned by the figures which showed that the employment gains were registered mostly in service-orie- nted and retail business while there ac- tually were losses in manufacturing. In fact, the bulk of the more than 270,000 jobs created in September came from service-oriented businesses such as restaurants, retail and wholesale trade, and hospital and health care in- stitutions along with state and local government. Several categories of manufacturing industries suffered declines according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics report. Barry Bluestone, a Boston University economist, said he found that "distur- birig" and said "we've gotten about as much employment growth as we're going to get for the next year or so. B sIn a telephone interview, Bluestone T said that behind the overall im- a WSee ECONOMIC, Page 2 n discussion about sex or drugs," she writes. For anyone who ever wondered, Birnbach also explains the purpose of a fire drill: "allowing members of the opposite sex to see you in your nightwear." The twenty-eight-year-old Birnbach, who also authored The Official Preppy Handbook, in, 1980, traveled to each of the schools listed, talking with students and university officials to present an interesting - though admittedly skewed and non-academic - look at what's happening. EACH PROFILE includes such importand details as the best and worst dorms and best pizza - details Birnbach says are really the important ones to consider when choosing a college. She also made up charts - "The Definitive Put Out Chart (how far can you expect to go on a first date?) and the "Room- mate Desirability Chart" to show there is more to a school than its ivy-covered walls. "The book is supposed to be fun - it's not supposed to be a serious read. But it's also not so funny that it shouldn't be taken seriously," Birnbach said. "Certainly the charts are silly. . . although I would take the "Roommate Desirability Chart' 'I think if your roommates don't have toaster ovens. they really are not worth it. - Lisa Birnbach. very seriously. I think if your roommates don't have toaster ovens they're not really worth it." BIRNBACH majored in English at Brown University in Providence, R.I. and has worked for a number of publications including The New York Times and The Village Voice. She is now contributing editor for Parade magazine, but added that her next step is to "get a job." The idea for the College Book arose as Bir- nbach was promoting the Preppy Handbook at campuses. She said she enjoyed the variety at the campuses, and wanted to write a "useful" book for people applying to colleges as well as for current students and alumni. Birnbach did visit Ann Arbor, but she was here for a day and a half in June when most students were away. Although she stayed at the Campus Inn, she did manage to catch a meal at the League cafeteria and a delivered pizza from Cottage Inn (listed in her book as the best in Ann Arbor). SHE SPOKE with University administrators, and students, and said she was impressed with the atmosphere here. "It's a big school but as bureaucracies are concerned there seemed to be a real element of warmth and allegiance at the University that I didn't see at other schools," Birnbach said. Overall, the book contains criticisms of the conservative atmosphere that Birnbach said she believes prevails on many campuses today. "IN 1975 AND '76 you would never find a student who would tell you they were Republican - you couldn't because we had just lived through Watergate," Birnbach said. South African investments and the Solomon Amendment which links financial aid to the draft, are two of the major issues that have faced college students .in the past few years, Birnbach said. "And yet, none of the issues have jolted the national student body into activism. They are too remote, unreal, abstract; they evidently do not affect most students to the extent that they consider doing anything about them," Bir- nbach writes. See THE, Page 2 Tigers win; it's off to t he Series By MIKE-REDSTONE and SCOTT SALOWICH Special to the Daily DETROIT - The crowd was quiet. The bats were quiet. Even the wave was moving in slow-motion. All the excitement of the 1984 season seemed to stun the 52,168 Tiger Stadium spectators into silence during the final inning of last night's American League Championship finale, BUT... When pinch-hitter U.S. Washington popped up to third baseman Marty Castillo the spell was broken, as players, police and a few paying customers rushed onto the field after the Tigers' 1-0 victory. After Castillo's pennant-clinching catch, several hundred Detroit police officers circled the field and prevented the party from becoming ,a riot. Ap- proximately 250 fans raced on the field but the ring of cops prevented a repeat of the field rush of 1972, when thousands of celebrators caused considerable damage to the field. SOME TURF was removed but damage was negligible. Milt Wilcox's masterful pitching per- formance brought the American League pennant back to Detroit after a 16-year drought. Wilcox kept the Royals' hitters guessing as he mixed the fastball with his patented collection of off-speed pit- ches. The veteran righthander struck out a season-high eight hitters in picking up his second career playoff victory. The first came with Cincinatti in 1970. WILCOX WAS ecstatic with the vic- tory. "We did it all year. We deserve Super-saver Willie Hernandez finished Kansas City off in the ninth, allowing only a scratch single to pinch- hitter Hal McRae. The game's lone run came in the second inning when Tiger designated hitter Barbaro Garbey led off with a sharp single through the bok. CHET LEMON was safe on a fielder's choice and Darrell Evans sent him to third -with a long single to left center. Castillo beat out a possible double play grounder to shortstop, bringing Lemon home. Besides that run, it was all K.C. star- ter Charlie Leibrandt. The rookie lef- thander blew his fastball by the A.L. champs, allowing only three hits and striking out seven. The Tigers head to the Fall Classic for the first time since 1968, when they beat the St. Louis Cardinals four games to three. Detroit will face either the Chicago Cubs or the San Diego Padres, pending the outcome of the National League Championship Series. The Cubs currently hold a 2-1 edge in games in the series. Ironically, if the Cubs win, they will be playing the same team they last played in the World Series, Detroit - but that waslin 1945. For the moment though, the Tigers were content to enjoy their moment atop the American League. Said an exuberant Wilcox, "I don't care who we play." Added teammate Kirk Gibson, the playoff MVP, "We could taste it. It was a real nail-bitter." Uazing shuttle Associated Press ampa residents are treated to a spectacular view of the Space Shuttle Challenger as it rises from its launch pad at ape Canaveral at dawn yesterday. The shuttle carried seven crew members, a record number, including two women d a Canadian. I -, -- .............. ............ .............. - .- ................... - - .............. :: :::?:::: r.::: ::r:::>:>:; .> :: ::>ti > .:z;:::;;: . ::;_ :<:.:.::::..1 :i2S > ' ' 'E's. ">3 ~ i > f iE?i2 s E~r> 'iii ii-iyi'i :yes:?2 ?%i..,....:......,. Mail, class preparation 'slowed by Yale strike NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) - The on- campus mail system has slowed down. Professors are preparing class materials and making their phone calls. About 1,800 clerical and technical workers are walking the picket line at Yale University, an Ivy League in- stitution that ranks.as the nation's four- th richest school with a $1.1 billion en- dowment. THE STRIKE, which entered its 10th day yesterday, is the fitst for most of the union members. Union officials say a dispute over pay equity - that women should be paid as much as men for similar jobs - caused the strike. The 2,650 workers represented by the union, 82 percent of whom are women, earn an average of $13,300 a year. An administrative assistant earns $13,500 a year, but a truck driver makes $18,400, the union says, noting that the two jobs are comparable in responsiblity and skill. The difference, it says, is that the administration assistant is a woman and the truck driver a man. "We're trying to say that Yale has taken advantage of a national pattern of undervaluing the work that is done primarily by women and minorities," See YALE, Page 3 Toxic waste bill sent to-Reagan WASHINGTON (AP) - A bill tightening the federal law covering hazardous waste disposal was sent to President Reagan yesterday, making it the first major piece of anti-pollution legislation enacted by the 98th Congress. The Senate, acting on voice vote and without debate, approved the bill and sent it to the White House. The House passed tkie bill earlier this week. SPONSORS say the bill will end exemptions and exceptions that allow millions of tons of hazardous waste to escape federal regulation each year. Ending one of those exemptions will bring an estimated 130,000 small businesses under the regulation of the Environmental Protection Agency. Another provision regulates the currently legal practice of blending hazardous waste with heating oil and selling it, sometimes without notice, for home heating. AND A THIRD provision will forbid blending hazardous waste with waste oil and using it for dust suppression, the practice that resulted in extensive dioxin contamination of Times Beach, Mo. The changes are made in the Resour- ce Conservation and Recovery Act, the hazardous waste law first enacted in 1976 and now considered one of the nation's seven principal anti-pollution laws. ............ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..in .......Ex.::......n ^ : iifi LNI j.-ii {; ? .r}:iiiii:..iii i: >,.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..?iy:?"?:"ii~~ ii jJ:ii~ }iiiLii:: j$~i:::::: :: ~di _ i i:;iVi: i: i::::- si~: i}' ::i :: : ;"? : TODAY scene," Walz said. "They wanted to keep him but the dorm mother wouldn't let them." Committee city Only in Nebraska DOROTHY, WE'RE not in Kansas anymore. The administration's student code for non-academic conduct is looming in the not-so-distant future, and the representatives in the Michigan Student Assembly have vowed to fight it. According to MSA ex- ners which will be displayed at next week's Michigan- Northwestern football game, the Networking committee (in charge of contacting various student groups about the code), and a host of other committees. There was a bit of confusion over how the balloon situation would be han- dled, since helium balloons would just float out of the stadium. Fortunately, the confusion was soon resolved - committee members will simply hand out deflated balloons at the game. "People are that way at games - if you have a balloon, you blow it up," said one committee S... nr Rw. D 4.o t i.an r rn..,,4 l nno nn hoc r nm.. *nna 4.,tol}u years for his bride-to-be. At age 101, Jonsson has become engaged for the first time in his life. "After 100 years as a bachelor I've got a lot to catch uv on." said Jonsson. who recently celebrated his 101st birthday."Never say never," he added with a chuckle. After living as a bachelor and working as a horse dealer and farmer, Jonsson started to feel his age this year and placed an advertisment for a houskeeper. He hired -55-year-old Ingrid Engdal, who moved in last spring. "I'd planned to stay for a couple of weeks, but then love intervened," said Engdal, who has i i