The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, December 11, 1985 - Page 3 Three scholars to be honored (Continued from tage 1) Kung, one of the most controversial figures in the Roman Catholic church, supports the ordination of women as priests and advocates the right of priests to choose whether or not to remain celibate, said Astrid Beck, a program associate in the University's Studies in Religion Program. "HE HAS spoken out on issues that others have not dared to touch," Beck said. Kung will make a preview ap- pearance 4:00 p.m. Saturday in Hill Auditorium with a lecture entitled, "Is there one true religion or are there many?" The lecture is free and open to the public. Although his liberal views have kept him from advancing in the Catholic Church, Kung is a pioneer "because he's staying within the Church," Beck said. "THE University, by honoring someone like this, is making a statement (and) valuing the prin- ciples for which he stands," she ad- ded. Dando, who is internationally famous for his contributions to criminal procedure in Japan, began his career when torture was still a legal means of criminal punishment in that country. "(Dando) entered an area which was of vital importance to those who were trying to put together a liberal state" where individuals had rights, said law Prof. Francis Allen. "He is probably without any doubt the most distinguished Japanese legal scholar," Allen said. "many of his students occupy important positions in ... government agencies and cor- porations." Each term honorary degree recipients are nominated by an Honorary Degree Committee, which is com- posed mainly of faculty members. The names then go to the board of regents for approval and, if approved,; are put into a pool, said James Shortt assistant to President Shapiro. Up to five honorary degrees can be awarded each term, and those names are chosen randomly from the pool. Nelson Mandela, a jailed South, African civil rights leader, was recen- tly nominated for an honorary degree. The Honorary Degree Committee will consider it during its next meeting this spring. Daily Photo by JAE KIM River run Michelle Overway, an engineering freshman, jogs through the drizzle yesterday under Huron River Drive in Gallup Park. I J *N@@@@@@@@Ne@ COUPON sNNeeN !! with this entire ad $1.00 ott .0O OF SSM90adult eve. admission. 1 or 2 .0 0tickets. Good all features thru * M 12/19/85 except Tues &Seniors WHEN MY FATHER DAILY ENDS SOON! WAS AWAY 5P.M. AFTER ON BUSINESS (R) SWS _ HOURS( Call for show times. We have Canfield Pop - The only place in town! RESTAURANT ARIEL RESTAURANT ! Breakfast 8 -11 a.m. s!All You Can Eat 4. Health Food, Soup, and Salad Bar $3.75 GROCERY AND Middle East HEALTH FOOD STORE Food Specials Every Day OpenMon. Sat.8a.m..12a.m. Sundays 8 a.m. 10 p.m. ARIEL RESTAURtANT We guarantee you'll LOVE Open Mon.- Sat. 8a.m. 8 p.rn our food-or your money back f 330 Maynard - Directly Across From Nickel's Arcade -a. Iowa murder brings fears offarm violence v v . -. HILLS, Iowa - A rampage by al frustrated farmer who killed three -4eople and then committed suicide could lead to more bloodshed by far- mers facing debts and foreclosure, a counselor said yesterday. "I think a lot of farmers harbor those same feelings" of frustration and helplessness under the stress of heavy debts, said Dan Levitas of Prairiefire, a Des Moines-based far- mer advocate group. - DALE BURR, a farmer for some 40 ears, was $800,000 in debt Monday when he killed a bank executive, his wife, another farmer and himself. Burr killed John Hughes with a shotgun blast at the Hills Bank and Trust Co. after the bank refused to cash a check on his overdrawn ac- count, authorities said. "Our fear is this will provide a stimulation to push people in the direction of acting on their feelings," Levitas said, calling on Washington for help. "I have personally dealt with farmers on the phone who had a loaded shotgun and were ready to get into the pickup and go down to the bank." "Tensions are high in the coun- tryside," Levitas said, from farmers who have thought not only of taking their own lives, but of acting on their aggression and taking the lives of others as a result." LOW CROP prices, relatively high interest rates, high costs and low land values have combined to force people off farms that, in many instances, had been in their families for generations. Land has been lost in forced sales and equipment and livestock have been seized. Mental health experts say bankers, because of their role in making yearly loans to buy seed and long-term mortgages to buy land, of- ten become the target when things go wrong. "No incident can more tragically reflect the brewing violence in the Farm Belt than the senseless killing of John Highes," said Rep. Jim Leach, (R-Iowa), a friend of Hughes. "The irony is that there was no more thoughtful, compassionate banker in lows." BURR LEFT the bank shortly after he was told he could not cash a check, went to his pickup truck and returned a few minutes later with a .12-guage shotgun concealed under a heavy coat. After killing Hughes, he drove to a Johnson County farm where he shot and killed Richard Goody, with whom he had argued about farmland. He committed suicide in his truck after a deputy had stopped him and authorities later discovered the body of Burr's wife, Emily at the couple's home. "It's almost a combat mentality," said Pete Zevenbergen, director of the 'Community Mental Health Center of Linn County in Cedar Rapids. "When you're besieged, yu're really feeling you don't have alternatives and become irrational. The guy you're shooting isn't necessarily the enemy." In the minds of some troubled far- mers, bankers are the enemy. Four percent of agricultural lenders in a recent Iowa survey said they or an employee had been physically assaulted by a customer. "I have a friend who was with a PCA (Production Credit Association) who told me he kept a loaded revolver in his desk," said H. Rand Petersen, president of the Shelby State Bank in Harlan. "If it comes to that, I'm get- ting out of the business. It's no fun any more." Levitas said he was not surprised by the shootings. "We had been an- ticipating and warning of this for some time," he said. A- What's Happening HAPPENINGS- Highlight Join the Men's Glee Club on the Diag at 4 p.m. for Christmas caroling. Senate resolves to crackdown on felons Recreational Sports 16th ANNUAL SKI SWAP Saturday, December 14, 1985 9:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. SPORTS COLISEUM Fifth Ave. & Hill St. BARGAIN HUNTERS WELCOME! Films Cinema Guild - Un Mauvais Fils, 7 p.m., La Rupture, 9:05 p.m., MLB 3. Mediatrics - Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence, 7 & 9:15 p.m.; Paper Chase, 9:30 p.m., Michigan Theater. Performances Ark - Open mike night, hootenany, 8 p.m., 637S. Main. Bird of Paradise - Ron Brooks Trio. Michigan Union Cultural Programs - Early Music Ensemble, Edward Parmenter, director, 8 p.m., Pendleton room, Union. School of Music - University Choir/Philharmonia, 8 p.m., Hill Aud.; Early Music Ensemble, 8 p.m., Pendleton room, Union; recital, trumpet, Daniel D'Addio, 8p.m., Rectial Hall. Speakers American Statistical Assoc. - Roger Wright, "Hetereoscedastic Models, Finite Population Sampling and Electric Utility Load Resear- ch," 8 p.m., Room 146, Grad. Business Bldg. Chemistry - Ketan Trived, "X-Ray Fluorescence, A Technique for Non-Destructive Elemental Analysis," 4 p.m., room 1200, Chemistry Bldg.; Kenneth Fish, "Xanthine Oxidase: Recent Studies on Mechanism of Catalysis," 4p.m., room 1300, Chemistry Bldg. Classical Studies - Arthur Pomeroy, "Death Notices in the Classical Historians," 4:10 p.m., room 2009, Angell Hall. Commission for Women - Brown bag lecture, Colleen Dolan-Greene and Grace Willis, "Child care, Part-time Work and Personnel Policies Af- fecting Work and the Family," noon, room D1202, Med. Prof. Bldg. Electrical and Computer Science - Thomas Knoll, "Recognizing Par- tially Visible Objects Using Feature Indexed Hypotheses." 5 p.m., room 2076, E, Engineering. Engineering - Norman I. Badler, "Positioning and Animating Human Figures in a Task-Oriented Environment," 4 p.m., room 241, 10E Bldg. Physiology - Glenn I. Hatton, "Reversible Neuronal- Glial Plasticity in the Adult Mammalian Brain," 4 p.m., room 7745, Med. Sci. II. Meetings Dissertation Support Group - 1:30 p.m., room 3100, Union. Ensian Yearbook - 7 p.m., Student Publications Bldg. Michigan Gay Union - 9 p.m., 802 Monroe. Science Fiction Club - Stilyagi Air Corps, 8:15 p.m., League. Student Counseling Services - Adult children of alcoholic parents, 10:30 a.m. Miscellaneous Guild House Campus Ministry - Beans and rice dinner, 6 p.m., 802 Monroe. Hillel - Hanukkah party, 7:30 psm.,1429 Hill St. Microcomputer Education - PageMaker demo, Gavin Eadie, Ap- plication Program for Macintosh, 2:30 p.m., room 4003, SEB; workshops: LANSING (UPI) - Resolutions declaring a "condition of emergency" exists in Detroit because thousands of accused felons are on the loose cleared the Senate and were sent to the House yesterday. The chamber also approved a resolution giving its special Safe Streets Committee subpoena powers and sent the House a bill apparently making it easier for police to obtain a search warrant. The two Detroit resolutions authorize the Department of State Police to use troopers normally assigned to road patrols in the area to help serve the estimated 9,287 out- standing felony warrants in the city. Some individual criminals may face more than one warrant. Effective for 180 days, the main resolution also asks the U.S. Marshals Service to reinstitute its so-called Operation FIST program to catch fugitives. Sen. John Kelly, the Detroit Democrat sponsoring the resolutions, said there are up to 2,000 repeat offen- ders among the people facing warran- ts. "Those people know they can roam the streets with impunity," Kelly said. He called crime Detroit's top problem in attracting business. Responding to criticism, Kelly said the resolutions do have legal standing and are substantive. Critics, however, said they will have little impact. Sen. Lana Pollack (D-Ann Arbor) said the resolutions are "comprised entirely of rhetoric." Meanwhile, Democratic Sen. Jackie Vaughn of Detroit said the measures are not wanted by local officials. "We do not need any more occupation troops in Detroit," Vaughn said, unless aid is requested by the city. Fellow Detroit Democratic Sen. David Holmes said state police repor- ts show suburbs are actually more crime-ridden. THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS at WHITE MARKET FRESH & PURE Orange or Grapefruit Juice it1/2Gal. $1.49 Fresh Dell Subs Sandwiches: Ham & Swiss * 9Turkey & Muenster 1 each or Roast Beef 'U' forms AIDS task force (Continued from Page 1) Dolan-Greene plans to make recommendations by primarily talking to members of the different academic departments of the Univer- sity. "To my knowledge there have been no cases of AIDS within the faculty or personnel of the Univer- sity," she added. Heidke sees potential for a student with AIDS to be discriminated against in the residence halls. "considering the epidemilogy of the disease, however, I am unaware of any reason why a student would be removed from the dormitory in such an instance," he added. Task forces similar to the Univer- sity's have been set up at Columbia University and New York University. Between the two schools one professor, three staff members and two students have already died as a result of AIDS. lint. PAA TREE RESTAURANT The National Education Association has encouraged universities to adopt guidelines for admitting students with AIDS on a case-by-case basis and providing alternative education programs for students too sick to at- tend class. 609 E. William 663-4253 Hours: M-F 8-7 - Sat. 8-6 U Ann Ar bor Contact Lens Clinic We professionally fit all types of contact lenses and offer quick lens replacement. Come see our superb selection of frames for men, women, & children. We are now featuring 500 fashion and designer frames and the new ultra- thin lightweight eyeglass lenses DR. PAUL C. USLAN, O.D. 545 Church St., Ann Arbor " (ON CAMPUS), 769-1222 I ;; :> ,'