Page 2.- The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 3, 1986 Festivities cause schedule conflicts IN BRIEF, (Continued from Page 1) They should reschedule." LSA freshman Amy Honig echoed Horn's sentiments, saying Jewish students "should be able to celebrate their holiday just like we take off for Christmas." But LSA freshman Laura Rollins said "I don't think it matters because it doesn't affect me. If they take the day off, that's fine." ROSH HASHANAH sym- bolizes the beginning of the New Year. It is a period of careful introspection for Jewish people as they consider why they have failed others, themselves, and God. The holiday marks a time for them to start anew and better themselves for the forthcoming year. During Rosh Hashanah, Jews create a relationship with God while preparing themselves for Yom Kippur, when they will stand before God in a symbolic Day of Judgement. During Yom Kippur, Jews repent for their sins and hope for forgiveness from others, from themselves, and from God. Yom Kippur is a more solemn holiday than Rosh Hashanah because it is a more inward experience. A 24- hour - fast symbolizes the cleansing and purification of the self. "BY FASTING," says Joseph, Kohane, Associate Director of the Hillel Foundation, "you feel physical discomfort. It lowers your guards and makes you feel more vulnerable. You feel empathy for others in hardship and less well off. Ultimately, we seek atonement for our sins so that we can live a better life in the next year." Some residence halls are holding special meals for Rosh Hashanah. South Quad, for example, is having a dinner tonight that is a "special dinner" just like a Christmas or Thanksgiving dinner, said Lynn Hammond, production supervisor at the residence hall. Information on the sig- nificance of the holiday and why the food is special will be given to the students who eat there. The menu consists apples and honey, signifying a sweet New Year, carrots, the roots of which signify the beginning of the New Year, egg bread, filet of sole, pot roast, honey cake, and carrot cake. The Hillel Foundation will be holding Reformed, Conservative, and Orthodox services for Rosh Hashanah tonight. The Reformed and Orthodox services will be held at Hillel at 7 p.m. and the Conservative services will be held in the Union Ballroom at the same time. Tomorrow Reformed services are at 10 a.m., Orthodox at 9 a.m., and Conservative at 8:30 a.m. in the same locations as yesterday. Yom Kippur services will be held beginning Sunday, Oct. 12 in the same places as the Rosh Hashanah services. Reformed services are at 6:30 p.m., Orthodox at 6:15 p.m. and Conservative at 6:30 p.m. On Monday, Oct. 13, Reformed services are at 10 a.m., and Orthodox and Conservative are at 9 a.m. Associated Press. Blockade Unemployed steelworkers block the path of three Conrail trains enroute to pick up steel at US X Corp.'s Fairless Hills plant yesterday. The steelworkers have been out of work since Aug.1 in a labor dispute. Read and Use Daily Classifieds - apparel - jewelry - accessories - .-" 325 e. liberty - ann arbor, michigan - 995.4222 Monastery to care for infants with AIDS ANAPOLIS, Calif. (AP)-A mountaintop monastery is opening its doors to unwanted infants born with AIDS who otherwise might spend their brief lives shut away in hospitals. "We believe that in the few months they have after birth and before the disease takes them, there is time for-these babies to feel the leaves and see the sun," said Brother Toby McCarroll of the Starcross Monastery. "THAT'S why we're going to give them a home." The Roman Catholic monastery will care for as many as four infants with the disease and wants to help find homes for as many as 20 others. Starcross, located on about 115 acres in the Coastal Range roughly 80 miles north of San Francisco, is self-sufficient, maintaining a small herd of milking cows, gardens and selling Christmas trees and wreaths. THE monastery has five adults, a 16-year-old foster child and one healthy adopted infant in residence. In the past, the group has cared for 15 children with special medical and emotional needs, McCarroll said. After reading about AIDS- infected babies last March, Starcross members decided to investigate the possibility of taking in some of those infants, McCarroll said. Eventually, Starcross hopes to find up to 20 homes for babies with AIDS. He said several supporters of the monastery, from Santa Rosa to Marin County, have expressed an interest in taking care of such a child. COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS Gandhi survives gun attack NEW DELHI, INDIA-A man in an army uniform fired a homemade pistol yesterday at Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and President Zail Singh, missing them but slightly wounding six other people. Authorities said the captured assailant did not belong to a terror group. The shooting triggered an investigation into protection given the prime minister, who has been threatened repeatedly by Sikh separatists. Police said the gunman was not a Sikh. The government said several police assigned to protect Gandhi were suspended after the attack, which occurred as Gandhi and the president left a prayer service commemorating the 117th anniversary of the birth of Mohandas Gandhi, who led India's struggle for independence from Britain. Two of the injured said they were standing next to Gandhi when the gunman fired, and were hit by pellets intended for the prime minister. Stud ysays child poverty up WASHINGTON-The number of poor children jumped 30 percent between 1979 and 1984, while participation rates in two key federal programs dropped sharply among America's impoverished young, a congressional report said yesterday. The rate of participation in Head Start and Aid to Families witb Dependent Children fell more than 20 percent during the five-year: period as the number of poor children jumped from 9.9 million t 12.9 milion, the study said. "The record growth in poverty among children has not been acompanied by increased availability of key safety net: programs," said the report by the Democratic-run House Select Committee on Children, Youth and Families. "To the contrary, support programs are not reaching the majority of those in need, (and) are not most available where child$ poverty is greatest." But the report, entitled "Safety Net Programs: Are They Reaching Poor Children?" drew blistering dissents from th& panel's 10 Republican members. House panel convenes over US man held in Yugoslavia WASHINGTON-A House subcommittee met in emergency session yesterday on the plight of Peter Ivezaj, a naturalized U.S. citizen expected to stand trial in Yugoslavia for joining in a peaceful 1981 anti-Yugoslav rally here. "He may languish in a dark cell for years if we fail to convince Yugoslavian officials that we really do want him set free," testified Rep. William Broomfield (R-Mich.), the lone witness at the hearing. Ivezaj, of Sterling Heights, Mich., was jailed by Yugoslav authorities in August while he and his family weme visiting relatives in that country. He is an ethnic Albanian who was born in Yugoslavia and emigrated to the United States in 1972. "It is interesting to note that he protested legally on American soil, and that he is being charged for an activity which is legal by U.S. standards," Broomfield said. Job stress threatens health ATLANTA-Stress, boredom, and frustration at work are causing substantial health problems for Americans, the national Centers for Di'sease Control said yesterday. Numerous job-related insurance claims filed around the country are citing mental stress, and "there is increasing evidence that an unsatisfactory work environment may contribute to psychological disorders," the CDC said in its weekly report, prepared by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. A study released last year by the National Council on Compensation Insurance found that claims for the gradual onset of "mental stress" accounted for more that one in every 10 occupational-disease-and-injury claims, and the average cost of those claims was higher than for other work-related health problems. Conditions such as work overload, lack of control over one's job, non-supportive bosses and colleagues, limited job opportunity, undefined tasks, rotating work shifts, and operating at a machine-set pace all can contribute to a worker's dissatisfaction with his job. Thousands die annually- from prescription misuse WASHINGTON-Federal health officials are worried -that America's "other drug problem"-the taking of prescribed medications incorrectly or not at all-may be causing tens of thousands of deaths each year. Dr. Robert Windom, the Reagan Administration's top health official, said yesterday up to half of the 1.6 billion medicines prescribed to Americans each year are taken improperly. He said one study indicated that 125,000 people die each year from failure to take their medication for cardiovascular disease. "The toll in mental disorientation, in physical effects, and even in terms of life and death may be just as great when a 70-year-old woman takes her blood pressure medicine improperly as when her. grandson smokes marijuana or takes a street drug," said Dr.. Frank Young, the commisioner or food and drugs. More than 10 percent of hospital admissions are related to misuse of prescription drugs,,said Windom. Vol. XCVII -No.22 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city..One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times 0 1w I* 0 14 STUDENTS natural cosmetics wishes you a successful school year Look your best with a full set of acrylic nails. Reg. $29.99 Now only 1999 with student ID FREE EAR PIERCING with purchase of earrings 10% OFF ALL COSMETICS with this special Located in the Briarwood Mall near Hudson's --------........................................m, I 1 / COOKIES 1 a Enjoy the game with a dozen of 1 Mrs. Peabody's award winning cookies. I . $1.50 off a dozen with coupon. 1 - I Have you seen us in the November issue of Chocolatier Magazine? 1 I1 1 1 H 761-CHIP OPEN DAILY 1227 S. UNIVERSITY t 1 I F715 N. UNIVERSITY TILL 11:00 P.M. 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" Our prices are inclusive - No hidden costs or surprises! SERVICE - _- A_ _ 1 . ..._ _ _1_ _ _ 1f." " _A_ . .. . 1"_. - " 1f " " . Syndicate. Editor in Chief....................ERIC MATTSON Associate Sports Managing Editor...........RACHEL GOTTLIEB Editors.............DAVE ARETHA News Editor ..........JERRY MARKON MARK BOROWSKY ('.y Editor ................CHRISTY RIEDEL RICK KAPLAN reatures Editor .........AMY MINDELL ADAM MARTIN NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, PHIL NUSSEL-' Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Nancy SPORTS STAFF: Paul Dodd, Liam Flaherty, Braiman, Marc Carrel, Harish Chand, Dov Jon Hartmann, Darren Jasey, Julie Langer, Cohen, Tim Daly, Rob Earle, Ellen Christian Martin, Eric Maxson, Greg Fiedelholtz, Martin Frank,ELisa Green, McDonald, Scott Miller, Greg Molzon, Jerry. 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