The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 24, 1984 - Page 3 OPEC nations to cut oil GENEVA (UPI) - Six OPEC coun- tries led by Saudi Arabia agreed yesterday on a general plan to cut oil production to keep the cartel's $29-a- barrel base price from collapsing. Saudi Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani said the price rescue proposal will be presented to a full emergency session of the 13 Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries on Oct. 29. "WE DECIDED to defend the price of oil by cutting production," Yamani said after a day and a half of advance talks with other OPEC ministers from Algeria, Kuwait, Libya, the United Arab Emirates and Venezuela. "There is no price cut," he said after the meeting, which also was attended by non-members Mexico and Egypt. Yamani planned to fly to Nigeria today to try to persuade the OPEC state to rescind its $2-a-barrel price drop last week that undercut reductions by non- OPEC Britain and Norway and set the stage for a price war. 'We decided to defend the price of oil by cutting production' - Saudi Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani A SENIOR OPEC delegate said the advance discussions centered on an overall reduction of about 3 million barrels a day in OPEC output, with Saudi Arabia accounting for half the rollback. Kuwaiti Oil Minister Sheikh Ali Khalifa Al-Sabah said he was confident that a cut in OPEC's current production ceiling of 17.5 million barrels a day would be approved at next week's emergency summit in Geneva. "I do not expect any problems," he said. "Everyone is coming with a determination to defend prices and a determination to make his own con- tribution." But oil analysts expect a long and bit- ter summit because fighting is inevitable over how members should share the production cutback. Many OPEC nations are unwilling or unable to reduce production because of heavy foreign debts and other economic pressures. THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 President Reagan gets a big hug from the Medford bear at ti a crowd of nearly 15,00 before heading to Portland. Political camps From the Associated Press President Reagan faced vigorous hecklers chanting "warmonger" and "liar" at a West Coast rally yesterday, as Democrat Walter Mondale told voters in the Midwest that the Republican incumbent is trying to associate himself with "any Democrat who is dead." Mondale, still trailing in the polls after two debates with Reagan, admitted the Carter-Mondale administration had failed to help financially strapped steel companies, but he added that the industry had suffered even more under Reagan. "LET'S FORGET the past," Mondale told an enthusiastic crowd in Youngstown, Ohio. "Let's admit none of us have done what is needed for this region. The question is who will be the better for this region, me or Reagan." Democratic vice presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro denounced "the extremists who control the Republican Par- ty" at a campaign stop in Little Rock, Ark., before heading to California for three days of intensive campaigning in Reagan's home state. .Her opponent, Vice President George Bush, visited a dairy farm in Mondale's home state, Minnesota, but was haunted by questions about a CIA manual which advised Nicaraguan rebels on the selective use of violence to "neutralize" oppon- gnts. REAGAN DID not mention the bombing of the Marine the Medford, Oregon airport Monday night. Reagan spoke to exchange barbs barracks in Beruit that killed 241 Marines exactly one year ago, although he did bring up the invasion of Grenada one year ago Thursday as one of his foreign policy successes. The GOP incumbent spend much of his speech denouncing Mondale and his plan to raise taxes in 1985 to reduce the federal deficit - a standard stump line from Reagan. The Democratic nominee said the Republican incumbent tries to associate himself with "any Democrat who is dead" - a sharp contrast to his earlier denunciations of the same Democrats. For example, Mondale released a letter signed by Reagan in 1960 in which Reagan attacked then candidate John F. Kennedy. "THAT'S THE big difference between the two of us. I believe that a president who cares, who leads, just as John Kennedy did, can make.. . a difference," Mondale said. Ferraro told about 1,000 supporters in Little Rock that the great civil rights victories of recent decades "are stamped made in America by Democrats." She contrasted the Democrats' stance to that of the GOP, saying "The extremists who control the Republican Party feel that the moral values of one group should be the law of the land." In Cologne, Minn., Bush attempted to milk a Guernsey cow for the benefit of cameras while, during a stop at the farm of Dale and Martha Molnau, he admitted Reaganomics hasn't helped all farmers. me i.. r d A mw T Olw ww MIL J _ 7 _ ME z. ! ! 3 -- a Z z echo I won't i Bart kip a be muke ;a I Bec scholars ing for Th Scholar expens fees. It E month If Y1 Scholar Force - Second days of ause you may hip that takes I edical school. Armed Force ship Programce s for tuition, rei ven pays you V 'hile you attena )u're selected f ship-from the you're commis Lieutenant or E ctive duty eac qualify for a full' he worrybut of I Professid st of youi ioks, and' h $600 a school. Handle diverse patient cases work with sophisticated medical techi After graduation, your assignme depends on the requirements of the selected and the years of scholarship assistance received (3 year minimurT be a military doctor with good pay, bE and regular workhours. Best of all, you'll have valuablee ence. A challenging job. And most of medical school bills paid. Don't wait to get the facts. Mail t coupon below now. There is no oblig And iology. -t $ervice ). You'll nefits f ___ iician's avy or Air s a Reserve ou serve 45 hile in (peri- ,our e tion. Highlight The Latin Solidarity Committee and Faculty for Human Rights in El Salvador sponsor Central America Day. State Representative Perry Bullard and Ann Arbor mayoral candidate Bunyan Bryant will appear at a rally on the Diag at noon, and various other activities are scheduled throughout the day. Films Ann Arbor Film Coop - Lord of theRings, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Angell Aud. B. Hill St. Cinema - All the King's Men, 7 & 9:05 p.m., 1429 Hill St. Performances Professional Theatre Program - The Flying Karmazov Brothers Power Center Ark - Lady of the Lake, 8 p.m., 637 S. Main. Michigan Voice - Poetry reading and music, Richard McMullen and An- drew Carrigan, 8 p.m., 812 Monroe. Labor Studies Center - Frithjof Bergmann, "The Development of the New York Center in Flint: A Strategy for the Transformation of Work, 12:15 p.m., room 6050, Institute for Social Research. Chemistry - Leonidas Bachas, "Analytical Chemistry and Importance of Metals in the Atmosphere, 4 p.m., room 1200, Chemistry Building; Stephen Crowley, "Chromatography of Enantiomers via Chiral Stationary Phases," 4 p.m., room 1300 Chemistry Building. Kelsey Museum - Dean Snow, "Mohawk Iroquois: Archaeogy of the Long House," 4:10 p.m., Angell Aud. A. Center for Russian and East European Studies - Vladimir Schlapentok, "Various Orientations of the Soviet People," noon, Lane Hall Comons Room; "Recent Trends in Soviet Public Opinion," 4 p.m., Rackham West Conference Room. Germanic Languages - Eberhard Lammert, "Das Bedurfnis nach Poesie. Uber die Entwicklung der dutschen Prosa in den 7Oer Jahren," 8 p.m., Rackham East Conference Room. Anat. and Cell. Biology - JoAnne Cameron, noon, room 5732 Med. Sci. II. Economics - Daniel Fusfeld, "General Equilibrium Theory," 4 p.m., Rackham East Conference Room. Psychiatry - Normal Alessi, "Biological Research on Prepubertal Major Depressive Disorder: Current Status of the Evidence, 10:30 a.m., CPH Aud. Program in Judaic Studies - Michal Palgi, "Changing Roles of Women in the Kibbutz," 7:30 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Women's Studies - Michal Palgi, "The Cooperative Idea: Decision Making in Collectivist Groups," 12:15 p.m., room 238A, West Engineering. Meetings Black Student Union -7 p.m., Trotter House. Michigan Gay Undergraduates - 9:30 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe St. Soaring Club -8 p.m., room 296, Dennison Building. Academic Alcoholics -1:30 p.m., Alano Club. Ann Arbor Support Group for Farm Labor Organization - 5:30 p.m., room 4318, Union. Science Fiction Club - 8:15 p.m., League. International Students Committee -7 p.m., room 3909, Union. Recreational Sports - 7:30 p.m., NCRB conference room. Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship -8 p.m., room 225, Angell Hall. Turner Geriatric Clinic -10 a.m., 1010 Wall St. Miscellaneous U-M Computing Center - lecture, "Tell-a-Graf Files," 3:30 p.m., room 177 Business Administration Building; lecture, "Using the IBM-PC and Zenith Z-150 Microcomputer with MTS," 4 p.m., room 1016, Paton Accounting Cen- ter. Center for Continuing Education of Women - course, "The Step Before the Job Search," 350S. Thayer. Michigan Ensian - Senior pictures, 420 Maynard. Affordable Housing Task Force - forum, 7:30 p.m., City Hall. Law School - forum for Probate Judge Candidates, 7:30 p.m., 551 S. State St. Student Wood and Craft Shop - Power Tool Safety Class, 6 p.m., room 537, Student Activities Building. Student Activities Center - open house, 4:30 p.m., Alumni Center Lutheran Campus Ministry - choir, 8 p.m., corner of Hill and Forest. Center for Northeast and North African Studies - video (in Arabic), LouReed to perform at Hillin November Lou Reed, one of rock music's most critically regarded songwriters, has been scheduled for a November 16 ap- pearance at Hill Auditorium. This tour, publicizing Reed's recent New Sen- sations album, marks his return to nationwide performing after a six year hiatus. Reed's reputation extends back about 17 years to his role as one of the foun- ders of The Velvet Underground. The Velvets, though never accepted by a mass audience, are generally regarded as one of the most influential bands of all time for their breaking of numerous musical conventions and lyrical taboos. Many current bands, most prominently R.E.M., cite Reed and the Velvets as a major influence. Reed's own solo work, with his charac- teristically dense, vividly emotional soliloquies, is among the most stylistically singular around. Though the critics have often been bitterly divided on Reed's body of work, he has still attained a solid, moderate-sized following of fans. Tickets for the show are $11.50 and $13.50, and go on sale at 9:00 this mor-. ning at the Michigan Union box office. - Byron Bull arvard c lus vote to exclude womlen (continued from Page 1) male undergraduates belong to the clubs, which are autonomous and own their own real estate but are linked to the university heating and telephone systems and use school records. MOST OF THE clubs started in the 19th century, but the Porcellian, con- sidered the most exclusive, traces its origin to 1791. The clubs have long been criticized for not accepting blacks and other minorities. The Porcellian has elected one black member in the nearly 200 years since it was founded. Annual fees of up to $1,000 a year - - ----- ===-=---- -- -====m -1 11= Y Tell me how the Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program MailSh can help pay my'medical school expenses. I understand there is no obligation. Mail this coupon to: Armed Forces Scholarships, P.O. Box 1776, Huntintgton Station, NY 11746-2102 9005 I Check up to three: Q ARMY : I NAVY L] AIR FORCE ' Please print all information clearly and completeiy. - Name Male L Female First Middle initial Last Address Apt. # ICity State ZpLIIlil~~ Phone L L LK JL LISoc. Sec No.LJ.d .LJL..UJ.. Area Code Number Bateh College Date o ay Graduation ' Field of Study Date '. Wr UMo. Year L The inormation you voluntarily provide will be used for recruiting purposes only. The more complete it is, the better we can respond to your request (Authority :1, USc 503) 't:{ proudly presents NO W SHO WING in the Kuenzel Room of the Michigan nion Special Guest: DR. GEORGE GA MOTA Director of the U-M Institute of Science and Technology