Page 2-The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 12, 1985 802 MONROE SOUTH AFRICA ANN ARBOR, MI A series of discussions Hi]5E 48104 FRIDAY NOON FORUM (soupand sandwich available for $1.00) Sponsored by THE GUILD HOUSE CAMPUS MINISTRY and THE WASHTENAW COUNTY COALITION AGAINST APARTHEID SEPTEMBER 13 PAQUETA PALMER, Local Activist LEN SURANSKY from South Africa Harvard study finds home. air polluted - \ I O \O he , ap ?1 000hoeO~ s Vivectf bt . oo , o LOANS* " No Co-Signer Required! * No Credit Requirements! SOR Student Can Sign for Loan! CHICAGO (UPI) - People breathe in three times as many carcinogens inside their own homes than out on the street, even if they live in an in- dustrial area, a Harvard researcher said yesterday. The effect is even worse for the children of smokers, who run twice the risk of developing leukemia if one of their parents smokes and four times the risk if both are smokers, said Lance Wallace of the Harvard School of Public Health. "YOUR HOME might be more of a toxic waste dump than the companies and factories down the street," he said. Wallace, presenting a paper before the American Chemical Society, said the Harvard researchers originally set out to investigate whether living close to petrochemical plants and other industry exposed a person to greater amounts of dangerous chemicals. In 1981, the researchers equipped more than 350 residents of Elizabeth and Bayonne, N.J. with monitors to test the air they were breathing for a number of different chemicals. THEY ALSO took samplings of food and water from the subjects' homes, as well as a breath sample every evening. "There was no difference between the people living close to the plants than farther away," he said. Wallace said the levels of cancer- causing agents was two to five times higher indoors than outdoors, and in some cases, there was 100 times more of a particular compound inside the house than in the backyard. Common household items such as cleansers, pesticides and room deodorizers were the source of much of the pollution, Wallace said. Money isn 'tall that A Student May Borrow Up to $2,500.00* Per Year For Undergraduate Work - And May Have Up To $25,000.00* Outstanding While A Graduate Student *NO INTEREST CHARGE TO STUDENT WHILE IN SCHOOL Today is the day to learn more about this exciting opportunity. matters to (Continued from Page 1) opened other stores. Now a worldwide chain, Domino's will open its headquarters in Ann Arbor in Decem- ber. THE CHAIN is expected to become the second largest string of restaur- ants in five years (McDonald's holds first place). It has been so profitable that the once-poor school boy can now afford such luxuries as the $1 million Duesenberg car he bought yesterday. Wealth also allowed Monaghan to invest in a baseball team, the Detroit Tigers, whichhe purchasedtin 1983. Shortly after he bought the team, he asked his favorite player, Alan Trammell, whether the shortstop would switch places with his boss. "Trammel readily agreed," Monaghan said, adding that he has always loved baseball, but doubts he'll ever play the sport. But he does expect to leave Domino's in four or five years because he thinks he has taken the business as far as it can go. "I should like to do something real worthwhile," Monaghan said in one of his many references to his Christian principles. "I'll be in a position to do something really important for my CALL OR WRITE! PAUL V. BAUERS, CLU Insurance & Financial Services, Inc. 1-313-665-7287 1886 W. Stadium, Suite 108 Stadium Center Ann Arbor, MI 48103 *Guaranteed Student Loan Program is administered by the Higher Education Assistance Foundation (H.E.A.F.), a private, non-profit corporation chartered to guarantee student loans on a nationwide basis. longhan fellow man. I feel it's an obligation." Making money is low on Monaghan's list of priorities, though it certainly remains an important goal. He told the group that he ranks in- come after spiritual, social, mental, and physical well-being, and that "it's the love of money that is the root of evil." But later he added: "If you're a good person, like I'm trying to be, you try to make all the money you can." Residents complain about new keg policy (Continued from Page 1) or not to make the Couzens policy a campus-wide alcohol policy. "Hopefully, there will be consistency throughout the housing division," Jackson said. "You are aware that it is against the law for minors to drink. It is state law, and we will abide by the law," he continued. TIM MCHUGH, an LSA sophomore, said he felt the new approach to kegs would have a negative impact. "I think that alcohol problems are going to go behind closed doors. I don't think people get drinking problems from a keg party." Other Couzens residents said they thought the policy would ruin student and residence staff relations. Ken Sharpe, an engineering sophomore, said it would hurt studen- ts' social life. "My feeling is he's not regressing our drinking, he's regressing our social life," said Sharpe. "A keg is more reason for an open party." Sharpe said that, to his knowledge, the dorm hasn't had a keg party since Jackson began as building director this fall. One resident remarked that the dorm would turn into a freshman dorm because of the strict policy, while another said he wouldn't have signed a lease this fall if he had known about this policy. SSAT PSA ATATM NUMBER 8ECTMAT UIra GRE B0 TOE O NE OECAUT IN TEST O°B-2- PREPARATION N11MSK 0 N6 B FNGES'CGFNS -NCLEX-RU A SPNIEEDREADNG C 1 S EMIEWEX 123 ESL TOLAW SCH1-- CLASSESFORMING NOW AT 662-3149 203 E. HooverN Ann Arbor, MI 48104 5amy n ap nduI ac2oo Jlu EDUCATIONAL CENTER IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS Blacks, Asians riot in England BIRMINGHAM, England - Mobs firebombed two stores and set cars ablaze during a second night of rioting, and tensions between blacks and Asians increased yesterday in Britain's second-largest city. Minor violence was reported in London and Liverpool, raising fears that the rampage in Birmingham might spread, resulting in a replay of widespread rioting in 1981 in those cities and in Manchester. About 1,400 police were deployed in Birmingham overnight, but ar- sonists burned two stores, and several cars were overturned and set afire in the rundown Handsworth district, which has a largely immigrant population of Asians and West Indian blacks. Police said 128 people were arrested in two days, including 92 Tuesday on charges of looting and public disorder. They said 10 police officers, three firemen and three civilians were in- jured Tuesday night. Twenty-five police and three firemen were injured Monday night. Abkar Dad Khan of the Standing Conference of Pakistanis, an organization that assists Pakistanis in Britain, said the Asian community "is deeply hurt by what has happened and it has happened at the hands of blacks." Car bomb kills one in Lebanon BEIRUT, Lebanon - A suicide bomber rammed a car packed with ex- plosives into a checkpoint controlled by an Israeli-backed militia in southern Lebanon yesterday, killing the driver and wounding at least two militiamen, Israeli radio said. In Beirut, Shiite Moslem militia leader Nabih Berri accused Israel of holding three Lebanese prisoners from a batch of 119 freed Tuesday, raising the possibility of a delay in the release of two Frenchmen kidnap- ped in Beirut 112 days ago. The suicide driver crashed an explosives-packed car into a checkpoint manned by members of the Israeli-backed South Lebanon Army near the village of Hasbaya in Israel's so-called "security belt" - a 3-to-11-mile strip controlled by Israel to prevent Arab guerilla attacks on northern Israel. It was the eighth such suicide attack in southern Lebanon in two mon- ths. The Syrian Social Nationalist Party claimed responsibility for the at- tack and identified the bomber as Mariam Kheiredine, 19, and said she was driving a car packed with 660 pounds of explosives that rammed the checkpoint. Young fares well in primary, DETROIT - Mayor Coleman Young's showing in Tuesday's primary eleetion went right according to the script. Young rolled up nearly two-thirds of the total vote against a field of 12; challengers, and vowed yesterday to duplicate that performance on Nov. 5 when he faces underdog Tom Barrow in the nonpartisan general elec- tion. If that happens - and few doubt that it will - Young, 67, will roar into a record fourth term in office with an overwhelming mandate from the voters of the nation's sixth largest city. "I plan to continue to mount the type of campaign I waged to date." Young said. "I'm taking nothing for granted." Young - whose campaign theme "Power for Tomorrow" was seen on billboards across the city and heard repeatedly on television and radio ads - called his primary win "as decisive a victory as could be expec- ted." Elected the city's first black mayor in 1973, Young had little trouble getting re-elected in 1977 and 1981 as his power base - Detroit's black majority - continued to grow. Lutheran Church drops plans to bar handicapped from ministry MINNEAPOLIS - The American Lutheran Church, after a flood of complaints, has dropped plans to bar severely disabled people from en- tering the ministry, and advocacy groups for the handicapped said Wed- nesday they are happy with the decision. "It must be simply and forthrightly stated that the American Lutheran Church does not categorically bar persons with disabilities," said David Preus, the church's presiding bishop. The church, which has 2.3 million members in 4,950 U.S. congregations and is the smallest of the three major Lutheran denominations, said in a statement in June that people with significant physical or mental han- dicaps may not be suitable for the ministry. That policy never took effect because it was submitted for a review by church attorneys, who recommended that it be modified. Herb David, a spokesman for the church, said the church's decision, announced Friday, to drop the proposal was due more to the legal review than public reaction, which he described as intense. Scientists map one cold virus WASHINGTON - Scientists said yesterday they have finally mapped one of the tiny viruses that cause the common cold, raising hopes for vac- cines or other drugs to fight any number of life-threatening or merely pesky viral ailments. The findings could lead to new progress against diseases ranging from sniffles to multiple sclerosis to leukemia and perhaps even to the AIDS virus, the lead researcher, said Purdue University Prof. Michael Rossmann. He said there was great scientific significance in his group's ability to put together a three-dimensional map of a human virus - the first time such a viral code has ever been cracked - making it possible to study tiny interactions within the body. Rossmann, whose team collaborated with a University of Wisconsin group headed by Roland Rueckert, said there actually may never be a one-shot vaccine for colds. ~T~g Abhcan u 9ax1fi Vol XCVI - No. 6 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the Fall and Winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the Spring and Summer terms by students at the University .of Michigan. Subscription rates: through April - $10.00 in Ann Arbor; $20.00 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and Sub- scribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and College Press Service. pq I 01 Getto the answers faster. With theT[- 55-ll. What you need to tackle the higher mathematics of a science or engineering cur- riculum are more functions - to perform complex calcula- tions - like definite integrals, linear regression and hyper- bolics - at the touch of a the TI-55-II even simpler, and shows you how to use all the power of the calculator. Get to the answers faster. THURSDAY Editor in Chief .................... NEIL CHASE Opinion Page Editor ............ JOSEPH KRAUS Managing Editors..........GEORGEA KOVANIS JACKIE YOUNG News Editor ................. THOMAS MILLER Features Editor..............LAURIE DELATER City Editor ................. ANDREW ERIKSEN Personnel Editor..............TRACEY MILLER NEWS STAFF: Jody Becker, Laura Bischoff, Nancy Driscoll, Carla Folz, Rachel Gottlieb, Sean Jackson, David Klapman, Vibeke Laroi, Carrie Levine, Jerry Markon, Eric Mattson, Amy Mindell, Kery Mura- kami, Christy Reidel, Stacey Shonk, Katie Wilcox. Magazine Editor ............. 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