I The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 24, 1985- Page 3 Ethiopians face famine despite world aid efforts SEKOTA, Ethiopa (AP) - A year ago in the mountains ringing Sekota, people were dying of starvation by the hun- dreds every day. Now, after a huge in- ternational effort to alleviate Ethiopia's famine, people are still dying, but the numbers are lower. Near newly dug graves, women and children scratch in the rocky soil for a few seeds of grass to help them stay alive. THIS isolated village in northern Wollo region, about 250 miles north of the capital, Addis Ababa, is one of the pockets of despair which still exist in Ethiopia. Because of its remoteness, lack of good roads and a large presence in the area of guerrillas of the Tigre People's Liberation Front, Sekota has stayed outside the mainstream of the famine relief effort. A month ago, a truck convoy braved an attack by insurgents and made its way over tortuous roads to deliver food to Sekota. At about the same time, British Royal Air Force Her- cules transports airdropped food in a six-day operation. THAT WAS the last food from out- side to reach the village, where a few staffers from the International Red Cross and the French-Belgian volun- teer group Medicine sans Frontieres (Doctors without Borders) maintain a feeding center for about 2,000 people. Between $00 and 900 other people hoping to get food from the center were camped in the shade -of trees near an Ethiopian Orthodox church. At night the temperature drops to near freezing. The number of deaths varies from day to day, and no figures were available. One day this week there were at least two funerals at Sekota. RELIEF workers said other en- claves of famine were still being discovered in Ethiopia, a country three times the size of California and with only 2,500 miles of fully paved roads. George Ngatiri, a Kenyan physician who has been working in Ethiopian famine camps for nearly two years, told a visitor to Alamata in northern Wollo: "HELP from around the world has made a tremendous difference and helped to save many lives. But now these people need aid to get back to their farms to start all over again. There's no simple solution. "The situation is still critical, as you can see from the children," Ngatiri said. "They have a low blood count and at best weighed only two or three pounds when they were born - making them prone to many illnesses." People are still dying in the camps, the physician said, but now not so much from malnutrition as from diseases like diarrhea and tuber- culosis. "There's still a hell of a lot of relief to be done. The need is still desperate," said David Alexander, a Briton who works for Save the Children. "There's a grave danger that the situation could easily slip back into the position which existed a year or two ago. We've got to keep the issue alive. All that is certain is that it must never be allowed to happen again." Corrections Mara Silverman, a residential college junior, was among 15 arrested yesterday in Central Intelligence Agency protests at the Student Ac- tivities Building. An article in yester- day's Daily incorrectly named Susan Shatkin as one of the arrested protesters. A poster put up by a conservative group on campus yesterday said that students should defund MSA and LASC. A story in the Daily incorrectly stated that students should defend MSA and LASC. Crackdown Associated Press Plainclothed Philippine police, -brandishing bats, charge into a group of demonstrators yesterday on the third day of a transportation strike in support of farmers' complaints of high prices. Thirteen people were arrested and 42 others injured in the clash. HAPPENINGS- Highlight A giant Twister game will take place on the Diag at 3 p.m. The Univer- sity Activities Council is sponsoring the game as part of Homecoming Week. Everyone is urged to participate and prizes will be given out. Films MTF-Le Bal, 7 and 9:15p.m., Michigan Theater. CG-Koyaanisqatsi, 7 & 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Hill St.-Serpico, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Hill Street. AAFC-Before Stonewall, 7 & 9 p.m., MLB4. Anthropology-Turtle People & First Contact, 7 p.m., MLB 2. Performances School of Music-Ensemble Theatre, The Dining Room, Richard Oberlin, director, 8 p.m., Trueblood Theatre. University Musical Society-Nathan Milstein, violinist, 8 p.m., Hill Auditorium. English Department-Readings, "A Celebration of Michigan Poets," 3 & 8p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham Auditorium. Music at Mid-Day-Susanne Shepard, 12:15 p.m., Pendleton Room, Union. Speakers Urban Tech & Environmental Planning-Bruce Dotson, "Environ- mental Mediation in Planning," 5 p.m., East Lecture Hall, Rackham. Russian & East European Studies-Kalman, Pesci, "Economic Reforms in the USSR, Hungary & Other CMEA Countries," 4 p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham. Music Anthropology-Brown Bag Lecture, Michael Shott, "The Woodland Period in the Saginaw Valley: The 1985 Excavation at the Bridgewater Site," noon, 2009 Music. Communications-White Bag Lecture, Judith Guest, Alumnae in Residence, noon, Marsh Seminar Room, Frieze Building. Jerome Lecture Series-Irving Lavin, "Collective Commemoration: the Family Chapel," 4p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Japanese Studies-Brown Bag Lecture, Walter Edwards, "Inter- preting Himiko: Gender Assumptions in the Historiography of a 3rd Cen- tury Japanese Queen," noon, Lane Hall Comons Room. Meetings West European Studies-Orientation/Meeting for 1986-87 Academic year in Seville, Spain, 4 p.m., 439 Mason Hall. University AA-Meeting, noon, 3200 Michigan Union. Sailing Club-Meeting & Shore School Class, Windsurfing, 7:45 p.m., 311 West Engineering. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship-Meeting, 7 p.m., East Quad. Miscellaneous Yearbook Portraits-Walk-in sittings, 9 a.m.-6 p.m., Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard Street.. His House Christian Fellowship-Bible study, 7:30 p.m., 925 East Ann Street. AnnArbor Libertarian League-Forum, Rich Birkett, "Religion and the State," 7p.m., Room C, Michigan League. Armenian Students' Cultural Association-Goldfish Sale, 9 a.m., Fish- bowl. AGAPE Campus Fellowship-"The Love of God," Christian Bible Study, 6:30 p.m., South Quad. Computing Center-Workshop, "Writing & Using Editor Procedures," 7p.m., NUBS. CEW-Open House for international women, 1p.m., 350 S. Thayer. Chemistry-Seminar, Roey Shaviv, "Silver Iodide Heat Capacity by Adiabatic Calorimetry," 4 p.m., 1200 Chemistry. CRLT - Workshop, Robert Kozma, "Preparing & Using Microcom- puter-Based Tutorials," 7p.m., 3001 SEB. Hillel-Israel info, Benny Schwartz, 10 a.m., Hillel. HRD-Workshops, Overcoming Writers Block, 1 p.m.; Advanced Word Processing-An Overview, 1 p.m., 1046 Dana. IST-Great Lakes & Marine Environment Seminar, Edwin Pister, "Endangered Species: Building Blocks for an Environmental Ethic," 3:30 p.m., 1046 Dana. Md Chm-Seminar. Thnmas Deli "Pvrimidin Anniatinn Race- Networks to air birth control ad. NEW YORK (AP) - NBC and CBS television have agreed to broadcast a public service announcement about preventing unintended pregnancies, but only after a reference to con- traceptives was deleted, the physicians group that sponsored the spot announced yesterday. The change was made by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists in cooperation with NBC, and "we really are gratified NBC was willing to take the lead in getting responsible and effective in- formation to young people," Dr. Luella Klein, past president of the physicians group, said at a press con- ference. ABC SPOKESMAN Jeff Tolvin said his network had not yet seen the revised spot. The networks earlier this year refused to broadcast the original ver- sion, prompting the National Organization for Women to ask the Federal Communications Com- mission last month to determine whether ABC and CBS were violating, their obligations to the public. NOW and a telecommunications activist group argued that "the net- works owe a special public interest duty because of their extraordinary emphasis on sexual themes in enter- tainment programming and its im- pact on teen-agers." Money tops sex in survey NEW YORK - Americans think about money more than about sex, but they enjoy sex more, according to the results of a Money magazine survey released yesterday. In addition, a majority of Americans remain satisfied with their current financial situation, Money said. BUT THE number of satisfied Americans slipped to 54 percent from 55 percent in 1984, and the number of those who feel that their standard of living is "comfortable" decreased to 59 percent from 66 percent in 1984 and 68 percent two years ago, the magazine said. According to Money's third annual survey, more than a third of the people polled said they think about money more than sex, compared with a quarter who think about sex more often. But the respondents said they enjoy sex more than money by a 39 percent to 22 percent margin. Nearly half of the male respondents said they enjoy sex more than money, while 26 per- cent of the women said they do. THE SURVEY results were based on responses to a questionnaire by 2,491 adults who are the financial decision-makers of their households, Money said. People saved and invested more money this year than last. However, they also borrowed more, Money said. People who responded to the survey said they had savings and investmen- ts worth an average of $38,500 vs. $35,800 a year ago. The segment with $10,000 or more saved or invested rose to 40 percent from 36 percent in 1984, while those with less than $3,000 saved or invested fell to 36 percent from 42 percent. The average amount of debt in- creased to $33,300 from $30,900. "The reduced impression among Americans that their standard of living is comfortable is somewhat surprising, given savingsspatterns this year, plus the drop in interest rates and the rate of inflation," said Seymour Lieberman, a researcher who directed the survey for Money. - ANN ARBOR Eatr1 & 2 SW AEdeIJac 5 6J-7 - - - - - -. - - - - - - - - C O U P O N w it h " "s " $ * I with this entire ad $1.00 off $ * ______ adult eve. admission. 1 or 2 icka t s.Good allfeatures thru f U1013w /85 except Tues. & Seniors. STARTS TOMORROW! DAILY AFTER PUMPING IRONII 5 P.M. HOURS (R) s Th n 5 o530,7:30 9:30 SHOWS Thurs .n 5, 6 45,8:30, 1015 St:1 30330,5307:30,9:30Sat:1,245.50645, :010:15 READING AND LEARNING SKILLS CENTER Reading and Study Skills Classes Cost $50 Registration: October 24th & 25th CLASSES BEGIN WEEK OF OCT. 28 1610 WASHTENAW AVE. Phone 763-7195 WHAT ARE WEEKENDS MADE OF? AND READING THE WEEKEND MAGAZINE IDD)l 6 Support the March of Dimes BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION Go Blue Run Homecoming October 26, 1985 Start: 9 a.m. UM North Campus Bursley Dorm Baits and Hubbard Early Registration by October 18 Student: $5.00 Others: $7.00 Call: 763-9740 for information Pick Up a Copy! Take s °"t 0r _co t/ Xt a THEATRE Report to --nareSS First Runl ~ * *" * IC y , '-.- A - Late Registration 7:30-8:00 a.m. Bursley Dorm Lobby 1931 Duffield Student: $ 8.00 Others: $10.00