Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 7, 1985 Inquiring Photographer By Darrian Smith I "What are the chances of the Wolverines going to the Rose Bowl?" Karen Washington, LSA Kevin Cochran, LSA fresh- Adoreya Elrod, LSA Brian Krause, LSA senior: sophomore: Pretty good if man: Their chances are freshman: They'll definitely I'm hopeful, but I wouldn't they get their offense rolling. good if they don't lose any do it if they keep up the good bet the ranch. more games. work. Tom Yardley, LSA senior: Sending Michigan to the Rose Bowl would set up a terribly boring game. Warren Whitney, Marvin Woods, Engineering Tony Krpan, engineering John Greene, LSA senior: Wayne Rappaport, LSA Engineering senior: It's my junior: It's a little on the graduate student: With a lit- Pretty good, Iowa is losing senior: As good a chance as last year...we had better go slim side. tle luck they (Michigan) and the rest of the Big Ten is Ohio State or any other team to the Rose Bowl. This is may still go. Ohio State has knocking each other off. I in the Big Ten besides Iowa. Bo's year. the upper hand now. think they will do it. CHRISTIAN CHURCH SAIAH 20 16 IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS Young wins 61 percent of vote, looks forward to fourth term DETROIT - Mayor Coleman Young began looking forward to a record fourth term yesterday after scoring a knockout over scrappy challenger Tom Barrow and pledging to make Detroit "a great city" for both blacks and whites. The popular incumbent finished with nearly 61 percent of the vote in Tuesday's nonpartisan election to 39 percent for Barrow, the nephew of boxing legend Joe Louis. Elections officials said the final, unofficial vote totals were 141,551 for Young and 90,907 for Barrow. Only about 35 percent of the city's registered voters went to the polls. "I am determined that Detroit will continue on the road of progress .. . that it not be a great black city, not a great white city, but a great city," Young said at his victory celebration. Ex-KGB agent returns home WASHINGTON - After satisfying the State Department he was not coerced by Soviet authorities, former KGB agent Vitaly Yurchenko left yesterday for his homeland, where a variety of experts believe a bleak future awaits him. Yurchenko left the United States at 4:55 p.m. EST aboard the same Soviet Ilyushin 62 jet airliner that shortly after noon brought Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin back from presummit talks in Moscow. The Soviet agent, accompanied by about 20 other Soviets, walked briskly from a van at Dulles International Airport near Washington into the aircraft. He paused briefly and waved to reporters, but said nothing. Three U.S. government officials briefly boarded the plane and left a few minutes later. Queen outlines govt. program LONDON - Queen Elizabeth II, opening Parliament with the full pomp, of the realm, outlines a government program yesterday that calls for tough action against riots in the slums and the biggest sale yet of state- owned industry. The Speech from the Throne, written by the Conservative government, also promised a new attempt to find peace in Northern Ireland. Reading it to Parliament, the 59-year-old monarch wore a full-length white dress, velvet train and the jewel-encrusted Imperial Crown. The approximately 20 bills envisaged by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's administration contained no new proposals for reducing unemployment, now at a near-record 13.1 percent. Her planned sale of British Gas, expected to fetch up to 8 billion pounds ($11.44 billion), is the most radical step yet in the Conservative policy of selling off public enterprises. Thatcher's government already has turned 12 major concerns over to private investors, including the sale in 1984 of its majority share in the national telephone and telex system British Telecom for 3.9 billion pounds ($4.7 billion). Record crew lands Challenger EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. - Challenger coasted onto a desert runway yesterday after a science mission flown by a record crew. of eight, and researchers promptly began studying five of the astronauts to see how they re-adapt to gravity. The space shuttle and its crew of five Americans, two West Germans and a Dutchman touched down at 12:45 EST on a dry lakebed after a seven-day, 45-minute mission in which it orbited the Earth 111 times and traveled more than 3 million miles. National Aeronautics and Space Administration chief James Beggs said the success of the international, West German-sponsored mission "gives us a lot of confidence that we can proceed to the space station era where we'll be cooperating with a number of countries." During the 48-second coast after Challenger touched down on the Ed- wards runway, mission commander Henry Hartsfield tested a new nose wheel steering system that is to give more control for landing space shut- tles. "We are optimistic that it worked well," NASA shuttle director Jesse Moore said at a news conference. Moore said he believes the test will enable the shuttle Columbia to land in December on the concrete runway at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Voters affirm stance on issues Voters approved ballot measures affirming handgun control and the right to abortions and to smoke-free workplaces, but three communities rejected attempts to fluoridate their water and San Franciscans refused to limit downtown high-rise construction. Even in an off-off year election, voters in nine states and scores of cities and towns grappled with ballot issues that touched on some of the nation's most emotion-laden economics and social questions. Three New England towns - Bristol, Conn.; Dover, N.H.; and Derry, N.H. - rejected similarly worded measures Tuesday calling for the over- turning of the U.S. Supreme Court's 12-year-old ruling that legalized abortions. It was the first time since the high court ruling, Roe vs. Wade, that voters had the chance to vote on such referendums. Oak Park, Ill., one of four U.S. cities which have banned handguns, beat back a proposal to repeal its 13-month-old ban. The other cities with similar handgun laws are Washington, D.C.; Morton Grove, Ill.; and Evanston, Ill. Tucson, Ariz., voters passed a proposition restricting smoking in work- places, and another one limiting the size and location of billboards. But they defeated a measure that would have required smoke-free space in restaurants. When a 4 hour test counts as much as 4 years of school, youd better be prepared. LSAT,GMAT,GRE classes forming now S UNIVER- w a- q-. 9Q ~ (j:g 7C J Q Mike Caulk Pastor People dedicated to knowing and communicating Jesus Christ. 1954 South Industrial information: 769-2910 Meetings: Sunday 10 am & Wednesday 7 pm LSAT GMAT MCAT SAT ORE Preparation for LSAT, GMAT, GRE, MCAT, SAT. Day and evening, weekday and weekend classes. Guarantee: Score in the top 25% or take the next course free. 1-800-222-TEST The National Center for Educational Testing NationalCenter 0 I i S Vol XCVI - No.46 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the Fall and Winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April - $18.00 in Ann Arbor; $35.00 outside the city. One term - $10.00 in town; $20.00 out of town. 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. Chief Photographer .............. DAN HABIB Editor in Chief..................NEIL CHASE PHOTO STAFF: Jae Kim, Scott Lituchy, John Opinion Page Editors..........JODY BECKER Munson, Matt Petrie, Dean Randazzo, Andi JOSEPH KRAUS Schreiber, Darrian Smith. Managing Editors ....... GEORGEA KOVANIS Sports Editor..,............... 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