The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 9, 1986-- Page 5 State Senate hopeful lectures poli. sci. class By MICHAEL LUSTIG Republican candidate for state senate Dale Apley spoke about campaign issues and his last-minute decision to run yesterday in front of about 100 students in a political science class. Apley is running against Sen. Lana Pollack in the 18th district, which includes all of Washtenaw County. B E F O R E responding to questions from students in Political Science 300, Apley discussed his decision to run. He said Republican Party officials approached him a week before the filing deadline last June after two other potential candidates declined to run. Apley quit his job as administrative assistant to state Sen. Nick Smith and beat out three other candidates in the August 5 primary. Apley acknowledged that defeating an incumbent is difficult. "It is an uphill battle all the way. We know we have to fight," he said. While anwering questions, Apley angered many women in the class with his advice concerning maternity leave: "If I were you and I was looking for work, I'd take the job that offered the best maternity leave." APLEY supports mandatory sentencing for criminals who attack elderly and handicapped people. He also supports a mandatory jail term for people who commit crimes while under the influence of drugs. Drug education and awareness are better ways of preventing drug use, Apley said, calling sentencing a "stopgap' measure. He emphasized the need for drug education by citing a survey of Ann Arbor public schools which found that one of four 12-year-olds had experimented with drugs. Apley also supports implementing a death penalty in Michigan. "Some crimes are so hideous that the death penalty is called for," he said. A P L E Y is opposed to Medicaid-funded abortions, but said he would protect a woman's right to make a personal decision. Democratic Gov. James Blanchard and his predecessor, Republican William Millikin, have vetoed measures to end state-paid abortions for welfare recipients. One student in the class challenged Apley's view, saying, "Then if you can afford it, you can have it, if not, tough luck." But Apley, arguing that people take advantage of the system, proposes a repayment plan under which women receiving Medicaid-funded abortions could pay medical fees either in installments or by working for the state. -- - -BU E From All Of Us At DASCOLA STYLISTS OPPOSITE JACOBSON'S 668-9329 MAPLE VILLAGE 761-2733 Associated Press Another boring lecture? Japanese Prime Minister Yasushiro Nakasone, center, dozes yesterday during a session at the Parliment Special Committee to reform Japan National Railways. The government plans to privatize the debt-ridden railways next year. Yugoslav court convicts Mich. citizen of government protest (Ji4< What's Happening Recreational Sports INNERTUBE WATER POLO CO-REC TEAMS NEEDED - ENTRY DEADLINE: WASHINGTON (AP)-Yugoslav authorities have sentenced a Michigan man to seven years in prison for peacefully demonstrating near the Yugoslav Embassy here in 1981, Rep. William Broomfield (R-Mich.) said yesterday. Peter Ivezaj, of Sterling Heights, is the victim of "outrageous injustice," Broomfield said. A five-judge panel of the district court of Titograd convicted Ivezaj of engaging in anti-Yugoslav activ- ities. Court sources in Yugoslavia, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Ivezaj was convicted of joining demonstrations directed against the Yugoslav constitutional system and aimed at toppling the socialist system. THE CONGRESSMAN said he was told of the sentencing by family members in Michigan and confirmed the information by telephone with U.S. Ambassador John Scanlon in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Ivezaj's trial began Friday and ended Monday. Broomfield called Scanlon during a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee hearing on alleged repression by the Belgrade government of Yugoslav citizens of Albanian descent. Broomfield said Scanlon told him the U.S. Embassy is continuing efforts to free Ivezaj and two other Americans he said also are in Yugoslavian custody. "HE TOLD me he is still hoping there could be some favorable developments in the next 48 hours," Broomfield said. The congressman said Ivezaj, a school teacher who was born in Yugoslavia and is of Albanian descent, was sentenced for his role in the 1981 protest against Yugoslavia's treatment of ethnic Albanians. Broomfield said he would try to push a resolution through Congress before it adjourns for the year to strip Yugoslavia of its most-favored nation trading status and to end U.S. trade with that nation. HE SAID he had told Scanlon, "We've got to take action. We can't afford to trade with a nation that disrespects American citizenship." Tues., Oct. 14, 4:30 pm, IMSB INNERTUBE WATER POLO OFFICIALS' CLINICS Sun., Oct. .12, 2-4 pm, IM Pool Mall s (Continued from Page 1) Tally Hall manager David Reilly says advertising was "overlooked" in September. He also agreed there were some delays in getting ads in local newspapers. "Our advertising agency's ideas had to be approved by the owners of Tally Hall. Some ads were delayed for two weeks because changes had to be made," he said. 0 REILLY says Tally Hall will conduct an advertising campaign this month which will include posters in dorms, local radio spots, and ads in local papers. Shop owners also say they are eeks 'U' concerned that half the spaces in the "food court"have not been rented yet, and that only two retail shops had moved in on the first floor. There are 13 unrented spaces on the first floor and 11 in the basement. Mencotti says he is "upset" that the retail shops haven't been rented. "The retail shops get people in the building. Once they're in the building they're likely to eat here," he says.. H A T T A R says the shop owners were led to believe that all food court and retail spaces would be occupied by the mall's grand opening in July. )usiness There was no written agreement between Tally Hall and individual shop owners guairanteeing that all spaces would be rented, or when the mall would advertise. Owners pay each month for advertising, maintenance, security, and rent. Reilly said many retail shops backed out of leases when parking structure construction was delayed by bad weather and a cement strike. "We also had a few shops break leases due to bankruptcy," he added Tally Hall management is currently negotiating with three companies that are interested in renting retail space, Reilly said. THE 2ND RECRUIT EMPLOYMENT SEMINAR RB 78XAl A. 1 T i L Ut: rFA2J' t 0 g 1 , z z 2-6, - a) ( I I Iq '"Rl ) * Lesch may retire as head of DRDA T (Continued from Page 1) should be allowed. THE REVIEW panels are the Research Policies Committee and .,~the Classified Review Panel. The new proposals under -consideration for research guidelines would eliminate the review panels as well as an end-use clause. Lesch, however, does not think 1 -that the proposed guidelines would allow illegal research projects to go through the DRDA because deans and department heads must check the proposals. Some student activists have said the proposed guidelines lack the enforcement power of the current rules. "THE (NEW) guidelines dwell on the openness so anyone can see if (the guidelines) are being r followed, " Lesch said. Openness refers to provisions in ; the new guidelines that require -research results to be published within one year after the funding period has ended, except for _ "extraordinary circumstances". The DRDA also produces a Student Activist Ingrid Kock says she has mixed emotions about the DRDA. She feels that while it has been helpful in providing information on research contracts, it is also "an administrative processing facility" and does not. subject research proposals to student input. Kock, who was the Michigan Student Assembly's military research advisor, also was dismayed with University President Harold Shapiro's placement of Lesch on the ad hoc classified research guideline review committee."(Lesch's) vested interests are in reserving defense department contracts," Kock said. 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