I The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 22, 1986 - Page 3 Blanchard holds lead 11 over Lucas, poll SOUTHFIELD(AP)- Six in 10 Lucas in the past two months, the Michigan voters favor Democratic station said in a written release. Gov. James Blanchard over Repub- The station said 400 likely lican challenger William Lucas in voters were interviewed by tele - the Nov. 4 election, according to a phone. The results have a margin poll released yesterday. of error of plus or minus 5 The poll conducted for Detroit percentage points. station WJBK-TV showed 60 Fifty-six percent of those percent of likely voters supported surveyed said they would vote for Blanchard compared with 25 percent Blanchard if the election were held for Lucas, the station reported. today, while 4 percent were leaning The poll, conducted Friday, toward him. Twenty-two percent found 12 percent of voters had no said they planned to vote for Lucas preference and 4 percent refused to and 3 percent said they were leaning comment. The figures were rounded toward him, the station said. off and add up to more than 100 WJBK said the 31 percent of percent. voters who identified themselves as Blanchard held a 2-1 margin over Democrats favored Blanchard 83 says percent to 10 percent, with 5 percent undecided and 2 percent refusing comment. Among Republicans, who were 26 percent of the total, Lucas led 46 percent to 33 percent, with 16 per - cent undecided and 5 percent refusing to comment. Independents, who were 39 percent of those polled, favored Blanchard 62 percent to 22 percent, with 12 percent undecided and 3 percent declining to comment. Rounding accounts for the figures not adding up to 100 percent. Women, who were 52 percent of those interviewed, favored Blanchard 65 percent to 21 percent. CONSIDERING AN ABORTION? Complete Confidential Information Pregnancy Counseling Center 529 N. Hewitt Ypsilanti Call: 434-3088 (any time) GRADUATE NURSES Daily Photo by PTER ROSS TFireside chat t James Duderstast, provost and vice president for academic affairs, speaks with West Quad Resident Director Steve Prevaux last night at a reception in the residence hall's Fireside Lounge. The reception was the first of a series to be held with students in the residence halls. f -4 (a11T. ID eIUI receives top honor By TIM DALY Philip Converse, a University 'rofessor for 25 years and the purent director of the Institute for ocial Research, has been awarded the University's highest honor for *senior faculty members. Converse was nominated to be the 1987 Henry Russel Lecturer by the University's Research Club. The nomination was confirmed unanimously by the Board of Regents at its meeting last week. -MATHEW Alpern, president of the Research Club, said the lectureship is awarded for achievement in research. "The P award is especially prestigious because it covers all academic disciplines instead of one specific field," Alpern said. Political science department cbyarrnan John Kingdon said the lectureship is awarded to a scholar wbo stands out in his field, is creative in research, and has an outstanding international reputation. A professor of sociology and political science, Converse is widely known as one of the first political scientists to apply quantitative methods to political science. He co-authored "The American Voter," the first large- scale political science study to use quantitative methods. THE RUSSEL Lectureship heads a long list of Converse's academic honors. He has received the University's Distinguished Faculty Achievement Award, an honorary degree from the University of Chicago, and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. Converse said he was surprised when he learned he had won the award. "I had no idea I that I was being considered for the lectureship. I'm grateful to the committee for thinking of me," he said. Converse will deliver the Russel Lecture in March. He has not yet written his speech, but he said it will cover "the working of democratic systems." THE RUSSEL Lecturer is determined through an elaborate nomination process in which a list of candidates is narrowed down to four or five by the Henry Russel Lecturer Committee, composed of former Russel Lecturers and members of the Research Club. The committee then votes to determine which candidate's name is sent to the regents. Regent Thomas Roach (D- Saline) said the Russel Lectureship has always been considered one of the most prestigious academic awards at the University. "To understand the significance of the award, all you have to do is look at some of the names of past winners," Roach said. Last year's Russel Lecturer was ThomasDonahue, a professor of Atmospheric and Oceanic Science in the College of Engineering. Donahue received the lectureship for his research on the upper atmosphere of the earth and other planets. Thomas Francis, a former professor in the School of Public Health, received the lectureship in 1954 for his work in the nationwide testing of the polio vaccine. WE WANT YOUR DIRTY LAUNDRY & CLEANING We will give it back to you clean and folded just like mom used to do for just 904 a pound. ONE DAY SERVICE available U of M Students 10% off (bring .D. cards) 715 N. University 662-1906 ANN ARBOR Three stores away from Kresge's in the downstairs of Hamilton Sq. Mall Your education will not end with graduation. As a graduate nurse at Rochester Methodist Hospital, you will receive a comprehensive twelve-week long orientation where you will further develop your professional skills. Beyond orientation, you will have the chal- lenges and the growth opportuni- ties that a world-class medical center can provide. December grads apply now for positions available in early 1987. Starting salary $23,681. Attractive benefit package. RochesterMethodist Hospital is an 800 bed acute care facility affil- iated with the Mayo Medical Cen- ter. Choose challenge. Choose growth. Choose Rochester Meth- odist Hospital. Rochester Methodist Hospital Personnel Services Nursing Recruitment Section 201 West Center Street Rochester, MN 55902 Call Collect: (507) 286-7091 ROCHESTER METHODIST HOSPITAL An Equal Opportunity Employer R H V v NG AN v Tu' COUNSELING SERVICES at U-M is offering the following MEN & WOMEN ONLY SERVICES MASCULINE! NOT MACHO! A workshop for Men ONLY! WHEN: Saturday, November 1, 2-6 p.m. WHERE: Counseling Services ENROLL: Limited enrollment - sign up at Counseling Services Led by: Tom Morson and Don McAvinchey A 12 SESSION THERAPY GROUP FOR WOMEN WHO LOVE TOO MUCH WHEN: Mondays 3:00-4:30 p.m., will begin ASAP WHERE: Counseling Services ENROLL: Meet with Counseling Services Counselor for screening to assure best service. Limited to 10-12 women Led by: Barbara Bleyaert, MSW, Sr. Counselor X dx T S Campus Cinema Crow Dog (Cuesta & Baxter, 1979), Alt Act, DBL/7:30 p.m., .EQ 126. It's seven years in the life of Leonard Crow Dog, Sioux med-. icine man, from sacred rituals to the Indian political uprising of the '60s. Women in Love (Ken Russel, 1970), Hill St., 8 p.m., Hill St. See a D.H. Lawrence novel come to life! See Alan Bates and Oliver Reed wrestle in the nude! See Women In Love!! Home of the Brave (Helena Solberg-Ladd, 1984), Alt Act, DBL/8:45 P.m., EQ126. A look at the sad state of affairs of the Indian peoples today. James Joyce's Women (M. Pearce, 1985), MTF, 7:45 p.m., Mich. James Joyce is viewed through the women he loved and the stories he wrote. Speakers Anatole Senkevitch - "The Postwar 'Wedding Cake' Tall Buildings in Moscow and Their New York Antecedents," Center for Russian and East European Studies, noon, 200 Lane Hall. Dr. Sidney : Gendin - ,Against the use of animals for research, U-M Science Society, "6:30 p.m., Pendleton Room, -Michigan Union. Ronald Butler - "Approx - imate Pivots for Prediction," Sophia Collier -,"Being a Woman in Business," 4:30 p.m. Jerome Silbergeld - "Chi - nese Concepts of Old Age and Their Role in Chinese Painting Theory and Criticism," 4 p.m., 180 Tappan Hall. Fotis Fotiou - "Hadamard Transform Photothermal Deflec - IBM sell to South tion Imaging," istry, 4 p.m., Bldg. Baba Virsa "Religion and p.m., Room League. . Dept. of Chem - 1200 Chemistry Singh Ji - Spiritualism," 4 5, Michigan Meetings Jewish Feminist Group of Ann Arbor - Potluck and Meeting, 6 p.m., 809 Hill #3. Furthermore "It's Never Too Early To Think About Breast - feeding" - Dept. of Maternal Child Health and Office of Health Promotion, 7:30 p.m., Catherine McAuley Health Center. Pre-Law Day - Career Planning and Placement, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., MichigannLea - gue Ballroom Public Forum on Clas - sified and Propriety Res - earch - "History, Proposed Policies, Discussion of Accept - ability," 7:30 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Afric an ho dings (continued from Page 1) Coyle, an IBM spokesman. IBM said it would sell its subsidiary, which it has operated for 34 years, by March 1 for an undisclosed price to a new company established "for the benefit of the employees of IBM South Africa." GM, the biggest U.S. auto - maker, is the second largest U.S.- based employer in South Africa after Mobil Corporation. GM has about 2,800 South African workers, about 60 percent of whom are non- white. THEIR decisions increase to 29 the number of American companies that have left or voiced plans to do so in 1986, according to Investor Responsibility Research Center, a Washington-based group that tracks U.S. business activity in South Africa. The Coca-Cola Co., Procter and Gamble Co., and the Marriott Corp. are among others who are pulling up stakes. Thirty-nine American companies left in 1985, compared with seven in 1984. U.S. firms in South Africa number 244, with in - vestment totalling $1.3 billion, down from $2.6 billion in 1981. DISINVESTMENT has long Communication Law and Policy Consider a Career in Communications... Marketing New Media Products Broadcast and Motion Picture Management Advertising and Public Relations Managing Cable and Satellite Services Designing Media Campaigns Research on Media Markets and Audiences Office Automation and Computer Management Organizational Communication and Consulting Telecommunications in Business or Non-Profits If you're interested in any of these, come to a talk and Q &A about professional oppor- tunities in communications and graduate programs you can consider. Speakers from the Annenberg School of Communications, University of Southern California, Los Angeles. ALL MAJORS ARE WELCOME Send announcements of up- coming events to "The List," i I