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The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 22, 1986 -Page 3 Marcos' foes report 6th political killing around. You can hear what you want to when he bit the head off a live bat on Ozzy O. denies charges LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Heavy metal rock star Ozzy Osbourne rejected claims yesterday that his music drove a troubled teenager to suicide. "I'm very sorry," Osbourne said. "But I think the young man was ob- viously ill before it happened. "I know what the lyrics mean. I wrote them. You can twist anything hear." The lawsuit claims the "satanic" influence of Osbourne's music drove 19-year-old John McCollum. over the brink of depression to suicide the previous October. The former singer with the band .Black Sabbath, whose outrageous stage antics reached a peak in 1982 stage, said any song could be con- strued to mean something sinister. "I'm confused by this whole thing," Osbourne said, "I'm just a rock 'n' roll singer."~ Osbourne's lawyer, Howard Weit- zman, said Osbourne is a "family man" with three children who had no intention of encouraging suicide with his songs. .:.....~.. . . . . . . . ............. ... ....................................... . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' .. .. ................ .......r.......................~ .... ........ .......... ...... .. ................... . . . . . . . . . . . ....n.. ............................. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . f... ......... ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .". .. .. .+."... ....rn............................:.....v......................v...:: : ": ::.:v:::: . : : :,..::..: ::::.::::.:: "::...:::.::::" "::::f:::._:.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..:". .:. .:.::i. .:":::::::::..: _: ::.. :. :::: -:. :}:. :::: CIAwon' t recruit this winter at'U (Continued from Page 1), nlaee~n ffepi teRArln. e bing and placement for this year. tivities B ACCORDING to Gunn, the agency conducti will not be doing any winter academic opposed cruiting. Gunn's office covers 20 to the ages colleges and universities. work" of , The office is, however, accepting Twenty fesumes and will advertise on cam- Universi pus, and place ads in local during la Newspapers, Gunn said. BOTH But some believe that the protests protester st October during the CIA's two-day decision isit deterred recruiters from retur- "The liing. Placeme "IF WE weren't protesting, they they hac Would have come," said Gregory Fox, dpoint," an Ann Arbor resident and protester. Gunn: , Last fall protesters gathered out- interview bide the career planning and r r ~HAPPEN ML UIIC mIIme OLUUM. A Building where the CIA was ing interviews. They said they the CIA's presence because ncy carries out the "dirty the U.S. government. y-six demonstrators, mostly ty students, were arrested ast fall's protest. [ORR and Gunn said rs had no effect on the CIA's to cancel the interviews. protesters disrupted the nt Center's activities ... but d little effect fom my stan- said Gunn. said none of the students he wed commented on the prote- INGSi sts outside. "To their credit, they were calm when they got in here," he said. BUT ANOTHER recruiter, Andrew Vaarte, said that some students he in- terviewed apologized for the protesters. "People have a right to express their point of view, but they shouldn't disrupt students recruiting for em- ployment," Vaarte said. Vaarte said he recruited at the University for the second time this fall, and was "more prepared" for the protests. VAARTE, who has recruited at Columbia University, Notre Dame University, and American University, said he only met with a "small" protest at Columbia. Gunn said he has only seen "three or four" protests during the last few years as a recruiter. "The protests have no negative ef- fect on recruitment, in fact, students wrote me after (last fall's visit) that found out we were here because of the protest ... they created some added interest in (the CIA)," said Gunn yesterday from his Cincinnati office. BUT THEA Lee, a Rackham graduate student and protest organizer, said she felt the protests deterred the CIA recruiters. "We absolutely feel we had something to do with it, but if they admitted it they'd open the doors for protests at other ,-hools," Lee said. "(The CIA) wants to avoid confron- tation. They don't ike being the focus of a big protest," said Latin American Solidarity Committee member Lee. LASC members will hold a "victory rally' today at noon on the diag. They are celebrating "keeping a terrorist organization from campus," said Lee. Four of the 26 demonstrators who were arrested at the Student Ac- tivities Building last October will be tried tomorrow at City Hall in 15th District Court, Judge George Alexan- der's courtroom. WEEKEND MAGAZINE Fridays in The Daily 763-0379 MANILA, Philippines (AP) - Foes of President Ferdinand Marcos yesterday reported another political killing, an assassination attempt and the machine-gunning of one of their local offices. Marcos himself got a lukewarm reception yesterday from top business leaders, and rain interrupted the campaigning of Corazon Aquino, who is opposing Marcos for the presidency in a Feb. 7 election. Mrs. Aquino's campaign organiz- ation reported three violent incidents, not previously mentioned, in the Philippines within the past week. A statement said Leony Legaspi, a village leader in Nueva Ecija provin- ce, northeast of Manila, died Jan. 16 of bullet wounds and a companion remained in serious condition. Local leaders said Legaspi spoke against the government at a political meeting this month. IT WAS the sixth reported killing which Marcos' rivals claimed was related to the election. The Aquino campaign also reported a Sunday attack on Mayor Amor Deloso of Botolan, Zambales, also north of Manila. Government op- ponents said an unidentified policeman fired on Deloso during a rally supporting Mrs. Aquino. The Aquino campaign said Marcos supporters hurled a fire bomb last week at the Corazon Aquino for President Movement headquarters in Pampanga province, adjacent to Zambales. It said "Marcos men" fired a machine 1gun over the weekend at the headquarters and the house of an area campaign leader, and that a woman was slightly injured by flying glass. MARCOS outlined yesterday what he termed his government's economic successes, including recent reduc- tions in inflation and interest rates. In Washington yesterday, a Democratichcongressman used a hearing of the Foreign Affairs sub- committee on Asian and Pacific af- fairs he chairs to declare that his in- vestigators have "irrefutable eviden- ce" that Marcos and his wife Imelda are engineering a secret "multi- billion flight of capital" out of their country that raises questions over whether the United States should con- tinue economic aid to the Pacific nation. Rep. Stephen Solarz of New York said his investigators have evidence linking the couple to New York real estate investments valued at more than $200 million. Highlight Author Bernard Malamud will read from his work at the Hopwood Un- derclassmen Awards Ceremony at 4 p.m. in Rackham Auditorium. Films Ann Arbor Film Co-op - Gay Purr-ee, 7 p.m.; Shinbone Alley, 8:45 p.m., MLB 3. Michigan Theater Foundation - 42nd Street, 8 p.m., Michigan Theater. Hill St. Cinema - The French Connection, 7 & 9p.m., 1429 Hill St. Performances Bird of Paradise Jazz Club - Ron Brooks Trio, 207S. Ashley. Speakers International Center - "Custom-Tailoring Your European Trip," noon, 603 E. Madison. Geology - Phillip Candela, "Serpentinization of Peridotite Within the Oceanic Crust: Experimental and Theoretical Investigations," noon, room 4011, C.C. Little. Chemistry - Frederick Drone, "The Synthesis and Properties of Group VA Heterocyclopentadienes," 4 p.m., room 1300, Chemistry Bldg.; Joseph Pang, "New Techniques for Liquid Chromatographic Detectors," 4p.m., room 1200, Chemistry Bldg. School of Business Administration - Victoria Binion, "Political Dynamics in the Workplace," 4:15 p.m., Hale Auditorium. - Near Eastern and North African Studies - . Lois Ibsel al Farugi, "Maqamat: An Introduction to the Melodic Modes of the Arabs," 4 p.m., W. Conf. room, Rackham. Biology - Robert Wetzel, "Phosphorus: External and Internal Fluxes and Controls of Photosynthesis in a Hardwater Lake," 4 p.m., Lecture room 2, MLB. Russian and East European Studies - Gyorgy Konrad, "Politics and Literature in Eastern Europe," noon, Commons Room, Lane Hall. Hillel - David Ariel, "Sigmund Freud and the Problems of Jewish Identity,"7:30 p.m., 1429 Hill. Statistics - David Lane, "Causality Assessment for Suspected Adver- se Drug Reactions," 4 p.m., room 451, Mason Hall. School of Music - "Music of the Near East and North Africa, II," 1 p.m., room 307, Burton Tower. Biology - Brown bag lecture, Anton Reiner, "Evolution of Basal Ganglia of the Vertebrate Brain," 12:05 p.m., room 5732, Med. Sci. Meetings Baha'i Club - 5:30 p.m., Union. Computing Center - Course on Using Ontels and z-150's with MTS, 3 p.m., or 6 p.m., room 1013, NUBS. Weightlifting Club - 7 p.m., room 2230, CCRB. Career Planning and Placement - Securing an Internship/summer job, 4:10 p.m., MLB 4. Academic Affairs - Nurse Anesthesist Prog., 7:30 p.m., Pond Room, Union. Student Counseling Services - Adult children of alcoholic parents, 10:30 p.m., 10:30 a.m. Dissertation Support Group - 8:30 a.m., room 3100, Union. Ensian Yearbook - 7 p.m., Student Publications Bldg. Science Fiction Club - Stilyagi Air Corps, 8:15 p.m., League. Michigan Gay Union - 9 p.m., 802 Monroe. Miscellaneous University Club - Laughtrack. Society of Women Engineers - Pre-interview meeting, Analytical Ser- vices, 7 p.m., room 1024, E. Engineering. SODC - Workshop, Leadership Transition, 6:30 p.m. Nectarine Ballroom - Ladies night and the Greatest Hits of All Time with D. J. Jim Michaels, 510 E. Liberty. Guild House - Beans and rice dinner, 6 p.m.; Discussion, Ann Fit- zpatrick, Debbie Stone, Michael Malefakis and Mary Frost, "Sanctuary: A Moral and Legal Struggle," noon, 802 Monroe. Recreational Sports - Beginner and intermediate ski lessons, 7:30 p.m., Mitchell Field; Kayak.Clinic, 8:30 p.m., NCRB pool. OAS Info. Center - Two-day Workshop, Wang Glossary, 8 a.m., room 1050, Ad. Svcs. University Club - Buffet, 11:30 a.m. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN announces the 1986 summer program in Seville, Spain FONDEROSA Ev y delicious dinner includes all You ige st fromyr our Hot Spot and the World's Biggest, Best Sas Buff L - -------- ---- -- --- DONORS NEEDED t I - WE PAY-ASH Ypsilanti PlasmaI ICenterI MICHIGAN AVE. " $10 bonus with this ad I *O- *Earn up to $110 per month PEARL with our weekly bonus program " Open for new donors I Mon., Wed., & Fri. 9-12:30 *Entrance on Tues. & Thurs. 1-5:45 f Pearson WASHTENAW Sat. 8-2 I I I PLEASE CALL FOR APPOINTMENT AND MORE INFORMATION 482-8790 """"'""n .- Enjoy -,198 P eosa Ina c to "'' I ".'Q49 " ?. : . ..: i". \Li:" .. : s ...r }¢f(lJy ,, I'A'. .1 . :1 Perform Amzing Feats If you believe you have more talent in your big toe than anybody you've ever met, then direct your feet to the sunny side of the street Because Busch Gardens, that wildly entertaining and exotic attraction in Tampa, Florida, is on the hunt for excep- tional talent to join our rare breed of entertainers. Singers & Dancers Seeking strong male and female singers who dance well, and feature dancers. Bring dance attire and be prepared to show movement ability. Singers are required to prepare short vocal selections (ballad and uptempo) and should bring sheet music in their best key. Accompanist will be provided. Seeking musicians who play primary and secondary instruments, as well as, Accor- dian, Steel Guitar, Country Fiddle, Tuba and Percussion and brass players experi- enced in dance/marching band style. Musicians should prepare two selections which demonstrate their abilities. Atmosphete Entertainers Seeking experienced performers with background in comedy and improvisation. Bring necessary props and prepare a two-minute comedy piece to demonstrate special abilities. To audition, you must be 18 years or older. Auditions are held on a first come basis.