- The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 30, 1986- Page 3 New campus escort program begins.service By JOHN FITZGERALD and MICHELLE ROZSA Volunteers for SafeWalk, a new campus-wide escort service, began operating Sunday night- despite the lack of telephone service- by accompanying 10 people to their destinations. "It uplifted us because we expected it to start out slow without the phone. We're really positive now," said LSA freshman Leslie Cole, a coordinator of the program. The program is part of a University-wide effort to improve safety conditions on campus. "SafeWalk is an alternative to walking alone at night," said LSA sophomore Michelle Missaghieh, another coordinator. THE SERVICE'S phone was supposed to be installed Sept. 25, but it did not work until yesterday. Steve Mayo, Manager of Telecommunication Systems at the University, said the delay arose because of "a lack of manpower. There is a lot of demand (for phone installations) and just X amount of manpower." SafeWalk receives calls at its office on the ground floor of the Undergraduate Library and dispatches a two-person walking team-either two women or a man and a woman-to the caller's location. The team accompanies people virtually anywhere in the central campus area, according to Missaghieh. Walkers wear orange vests and carry SafeWalk picture identification cards. SafeWalk is a precautionary measure against any type of crime and gives both men and women the opportunity to participate more freely in activities after dark, Missaghieh said. In the winter term of1985, the Michigan Student Assembly distributed a survey to 300 men and women about a SafeWalk- type program. The study indicated that 75 percent of the women and 10 percent of the men surveyed would use such a program. ACCORDING TO LSA senior Amy Simon, chairman of the Women's Issues Committee of the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan, "SafeWalk exists to provide people with. options. If men want to use the service it is available to them." LSA sophomore Gary Rudman, a program volunteer, said, "I cannot see any situation where I wou.d use SafeWalk, but I would encourage all the women I know to use it. It's great for someone who wants to leavefthe library earlier than her friends but doesn't want to walk alone." The project took off last year when the women's issues committees of MSA and PIRGIM decided to work together on the project. The groups hired Missaghieh to coordinate a pilot program in the West Quad, Betsy Barbour, and Helen Newberry residence halls. When the project succeeded, coordinators decided to develop a campus-wide program modeled after similar projects at other universities, including Ohio State, Harvard, Oklahoma, and Ferris State. The Department of Public Safety and Security, Housing Security, MSA, PIRGIM, the Sexual Assualt Awareness and Prevention Center, the Under- graduate Library, and the University Cellar sponsor Safe- Walk by donating money and equipment. "There has been a great amount of cooperation between different aspects of the University to get this program off the ground," according to Public Safety Officer Vein Baisden, a staff coordinator for SafeWalk. The SafeWalk office is in Room 102 of the Undergraduate Library and operates Sunday through Thursday from 8 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. The service is available to students, faculty, and staff and can be reached by .calling 936-1000 on off-campus phones or 6-1000 on campus phones. Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Homecoming bash Engineering sophomore Bill Kishler, a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity, takes a swing at a front right fender during the annual car bash in the Diag last Friday. The bash, a fraternity competition, was one of the opening events of Homecoming weekend. c ipse WASHINGTON (AP) - America faces a dark hou Friday, and a few minutes more That's when the new moon c October will steal between th Earth and sun, triggering a eclipse-an event th'at has bee the source of religious dogma folklore, fearful predictions an wild speculation throughou history. Long seen as aberrationso nature, many primitive people considered eclipses somethin to create hour - needing correction, and they that the one F r responded with prayers, cere- observe for t . monies, noisemaking, sacrifices most of the1 )f and other activities. Canada-exce e , Some Indians in the Pacific Arizona, and n Northwest, for example, believed Western M n that eclipses occurred when the Mexico City w a, moon, a female, went to visit her see the eclipse d husband, the sun. The Cherokee visible in n t are said to have had a similar America and idea, but considered the sun America. of female and the moon male. The best vi s Scientists can predict eclipses Northeast, wit g more accurately, and they say just a thin Of riday will b he cautiou United Sta ept for Ca part of exico in ill also beL , althoughi much of northern ewing will1 th the sunk crescenti darkness )e easy to England and eastern Canada. s across Although the sun is partially ates and obscured, the light will still be lifornia,very powerful -and looking Oregon. directly at it is just as dangerous cluding as at any other time, astronomers unable to warn. Looking directly at the sun it will be can result in blindness. Central z South . The best way to view the eclipse iby poking a pinhole in be in the cardboard and focusing the light becoming onto a sheet of white cardboard a in New few feet away. UNTIL JUSTICE AND PEACE EMBRACE author: Nicholas Walterstorff OCTOBER 5, SUNDAY 7:30 P.M. Deans approve of report on classified research (Continued from Page 1) Goldstein said he sympathizes with the minority report's concern over researchers' freedom to do secret research, but ultimately, "openness takes precedence." AN ASSOCIATE dean of the Business School said most faculty members and administrators in the business school are satisfied with the majority report, but he noted that the school has only just begun its discussion of the proposals. The associate dean said the proposals of the majority report probably would not have a major impact on research in the business school. The Research Policies Committee will hold two or three more meetings before it makes its recommendations to University PresidentHarold Shapiro and Vice President for Research Linda Wilson. COMMITTEE chairman George Carignan said he hopes to have someone representing the "left" perspective on classified research -someone who feels more restrictions should be made-speak to the group. Carignan also said he wants to have a representative from the Division of Research and Development Agency speak to the committee. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH TO BE BLACK IN SOUTH AFRICA Walterstorff is a friend of Allan Boesak and recently visited to support him in court. OCTOBER 6, MONDAY MORNING 9-12 NOON FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH UNTIL JUSTICE AND PEACE EMBRACE A discussion with the author of this highly recommended book. Office of Ethics and Religion, Campus Chapel, First-Presbyterian Church, First Baptist Church, Program on Studies on Religion , Chernobyl disaster causes Soviet power crunch MOSCOW (AP)-The Cher- nobyl nuclear disaster and building delays at three other atomic power plants are con- tributing to serious shortfalls in the Soviet electricity supply as winter approaches, the newspaper Pravda said today. In a front-page editorial that urged all citizens to save electricity at home and work, the Communist Party daily gave no details of how the Chernobyl accident has affected the national power supply, nor specify how much electricity has been lost as a result of the April 26 disaster. The accident at the power station in the Soviet Ukraine destroyed Chernobyl's No. 4 reactor and led to the immediate shutdown of the plant's remain- ing three reactors. SOVIET MEDIA have said that 11 L iT Campus Cinema The Big Chill (Lawrence Kasdan, 1983), CG, 7:00 & 9:00 p.m., Aud A. Seven old friends gather to search for whatever it was they had and lost during the '60's, and find out that all they really need is each other. Pull My Daisy And Other Selected Films (Robert Frank & Alfred Leslie, 1959), Eye, 214 N. 4th. Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, and Gregory Courso are featured in this look at those Bohemian Beatniks. Also, Deathstyles, and some other good stuff. Crazy, mzn, crazy. Sugar Baby (Percy Adlon, 1985), MTF, 7:45 p.m., Mich. This love story was all the rage at the New York Film Festival, so see it and be hip. Performances with U-M," noon-1 p.m., MLB Lecture room 1. A. Sullivan - "Israel & the Palestines: An Update," noon lunch, International Center. Harriet Mills - "View from the Inside," Center for Chinese Studies brown bag, noon, Lane Hall commons. D. Buss - "Evolution & Mate Selection (Human)," 12:30 p.m., 4054 Kresge Hearing Research Institute. Joseph A. Boyd - "TheInternational Competetive Equation," 7 p.m., School of Business Administration Hale Auditorium. Meetings CEW Job Hunt Club - noon & 1:30 p.m., 350 S. Thayer. Career Planning and Placement On-Campus RecruitmentProgram - 4:10-5 p.m., MLB 3. Furthermore Chernobyl's No. 1 reactor will be brought back on line in the next few days and that the No.,2 reactor is scheduled to be working in October. There has been no word on when the No. 3 reactor, adjacent to the ruined No. 4 unit, will come back into operation. Each of the reactors has a capacity of 1,000 megawatts. Pravda's editorial was only the NASA trails Soviets in research (Continued from Page 1) and space station." Challenger exploded shortly after liftoff in January, killing all seven crew members. He said the government should use funds to launch new space probes and analyze data accumulated from past and current, projects. If the government cuts other programs to rebuild the shuttle, Donahue said, "NASA could risk losing a lot of excellent young minds that we have in space science." Thomas Adamson, chairman of the Unversity's aerospace engineering department, dis- agreed. "I respect Professor Donahue and understand his feelings, but there are many job opportunities available now and will be available in the future," he said, because aerospace jobs are available in the private sector. THE SHUTTLE disaster is a symptom of deeper problems in the U.S. space program, according to Donahue. "U.S. latest in a series of appeals for better work from the nation's power industry and for economy at home and in factories as winter approaches. The national television news on Sunday evening also carried a lengthy report on the need to save electricity. In August, the ruling party Politburo also stressed the necessity to produce more power. PHI SIGS A New Beginning * OPEN RUSH * " Tuesday, Sept. 30 Michigan Union Rm. 1209 7 pm * Wednesday, Oct. 1 PHI S10 HOUSE 7pm Fraternity For more information call 769-8421 There is life after college.. . And, your student work performanCe is important in determining the quality.of that life. Come to THE MICHIGAN LEAGUE and we will help train you in: Better work habits Working with people Working under pressure Organizing your skills