Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 24, 1986 Soviet culture MLB will air Soviet TV in three weeks By STEVE KNOPPER Episodes of daily Soviet life- from game shows to news programs- will be making their debut on Ann Arbor airwaves. Programma I, the Soviet Union's primary television network, will be bringing shows like "Come on Girls," a game show in which women compete to show they are the best in their careers, and "Our Correspondents Report," a survey of international affairs, to the MLB next month. The live broadcasts will begin at 4 p.m.- that's midnight Moscow time and 8 a.m. Vladivostok time- and run15 hours every day. PROGRAMMA I, which also shows newscasts, children's programs, cultural programs, films, and sports, was established in the Soviet Union in 1963 and is viewed by more than 90 million Soviets. The broadcasts will be 'a "boon to improving students' language efficiency," according to Ruth Hastie, program associate at the Center for Russian and Eastern European Studies. She also said Programma I will illustrate "in a more regular, detailed way how television has an effect on Soviet attitudes." Because the programming will run during the inconvenient times - from 4 p.m. until 7 a.m., REES is trying to work out a tape- delayed system for daily viewing, Hastie said. LSA COUNSELOR and Russian Prof. Serge Shishkoff said the University has not decided how to incorporate the programming into class curriculum. The University's Soviet Television Advisory Committee will meet today to formulate a plan. Programma I was installed by Orbita, Inc., a national company which is installing Soviet television at several other colleges in the United States, Hastie said. REES began planning for the network nine months ago, and has since spent $48,000 on the project. The William & Mary Greve Foundation in New York, the Geospectra Corporation in Ann Arbor, and LSA have donated funds for the project. Hastie said the University was able to receive the broadcasts through a licensing agreement between Orbita and Gostelradio, the Soviet ministry of television and radio. Hastie said the programming was originally slated to make its Ann Arbor debut Oct. 29, but "bureaucratic" problems forced the Center to move back the date. m rimm m m mm mmi minmm min inmm m 1 1 COOKIES 1 Enjoy the game with a dozen of I 1 Mrs. Peabody's award winning cookies. 1 1 Mr$1.50 off a dozen with coupon. ke I I Have you seen us in the November issue of Chocolatier Magazine? 1 1 * I 764-CHIP OPEN DAILY 1227 S. UNIVERSITY I ! 715 N. UNIVERSITY TILL 11:00 P.M. COMING SOON!! . OFFER EXPIRESOCTOBER 31, 1986 -1 mm m-m-m-mm---m m-m-m m1mmmm---- Critics call MSA forum partisan (Continued from Page 1) Lana Pollack" button, was not wear - ing one yesterday. But Seth Klukoff, editor of the Michigan Review, said, "I'm disappointed that our money is going to a partisan forum." Klukoff also asked why Rep. Carl Pursell (R-Mich.) was not invited, and noted Pursell's long-standing support of issues related to higher education. BUT MARGOLIS said that if Bullard and Pollack had both been Republicans, the same charges of partisanship would have flown. Gaber said Pursell was not invited because MSA's working relationships with Bullard and Pollack are much stronger than with Pursell, but he did say MSA supported Pursell's work for education. MSA paid $323 for a tent, a public address system, and cider and donuts. The two candidates contributed an additional $100 to help defray MSA's costs. Klukoff accused the assembly of endorsing the candidates by sponsoring the reception and said that by doing so they could risk losing their non- profit status.- Margolis said that MSA's non- profit status is not in jeopardy. K L U K O F F accused both candidates of straying from the education issues in their speeches. He said that Pollack talked about her work on environmental issues and that Bullard mentioned the upcoming elections four times. Pollack did try to avoid speaking on other issues, closing her comments with: "I don't want to bore you with my achievements because this is not a political event." Bullard, however, praised Pollack's abilities as a legislator, saying, "Lana is the best legislator in Lansing. She is a voice of sanity in a sea of baronial fiefdoms." Debbie Buchholtz, an LSA sophomore working for Pollack's opponent, Dale Apley, said, "I can't believe MSA would do what they, did. There is no way it could be apolitical right before the election." She said MSA never gave the legislators any awards, but gave them the chance to "expose their viewpoint." The event, which took place under a tent on the Diag, was sparsely attended. About 75 people milled around the tent. One woman, who requested not to be identified, said, "I just barely figured out who (Bullard and Pollack) were," and added that she was not registered to vote in Ann Arbor. Wendi Zazik, an LSA sophomore, said, "I think (the forum is) a good idea. It's getting the students exposed to who is running in the election." But'she added that "MSA is supposed to represent the student population and that's not all Democratic; a large percentage is Republican." Buchholtz said she and several other students, including members of the College Republicans, will raise the issue of the forum at the MSA meeting next Tuesday. IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS '87 to experience lowest Social Security hike ever WASHINGTON-The nation's 37.4 million Social Security beneficiaries next January will find the smallest raise ever in their checks: 1.3 percent, or $6 a month for the typical retired worker. Most of the elderly will find their "take home" pay from the retirement program going up even less than that because they will be, charged $2.40 more each month for Medicare coverage starting in January. And some 8.5 million people earning more than $42,000 will have to pay up to 4.3 percent more payroll taxes in1987 to help cover the $2.6 billion cost of the increase. The 1.3 percent raise became official yesterday when the Labor Department announced the Consumer Price Index for September. It means the average monthly benefit for all retired workers will' rise from $482 to $488. For an elderly couple, the average payment will go up by $11, from $822 to $833. The maximum Social Security benefit for someone retiring in. 1986 at age 65 will climb by $9, from $760 to $769. Deficit soars to record high. WASHINGTON-The U.S. budget deficit for 1986 soared to a record $220 billion easily topping last year's $212 billion shortfall but $10 billion short of what the Reagan administration had projected, Budget Director James Miller disclosed yesterday. Miller said through a spokesman that higher-than-anticipated. revenues near the end of the year and lower spending by federal. agencies accounted for the unexpected savings. The spokesman, Ed Dale, also said that projections by the White House's Office of Management and Budget suggest that the deficit will fall by $50 billion in 1987, to the vicinity of $170 billion-even if' Congress enacts no further spending cuts. The White House budget office as recently as last August had' estimated that the 1986 deficit for the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30 would amount to $230.2 billion. The OMB is scheduled to release its final determination of the 1986. deficit early next week. NOW supports pro-woman issuses on state referenda WASHINGTON-The National Organization for Women turns 20 next week, but won't observe the birthday until December, when it hopes to celebrate the passage of a state equal rights amendment and the defeat of four anti-abortion refemda. The measures are on ballots Nov. 4 in five states. "I'm hoping we're going to come through strongly in all of them," NOW President Eleanor Smeal told a news conference yesterday. "We're hoping for some strong surprises." She said opponents of the anti-abortion initiatives are leading in the polls in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Oregon, but trail in Arkansas. She attributed the Arkansas results to the influence of fundamentalists in the southern state. All four state measures would cut off government funding of abortions except to prevent the death of a pregnant woman or when a woman's life was endangered. Doctor abates fear of AIDS NEEDHAM, Mass-More than two dozen telephone repairmen who had walked off the job rather than work with a colleague dying of AIDS relented yesterday after talking with doctors about the fatal disease. But four others refused to enter the office they share with the diseased man and had to be handed their assignments outside. "It's not that they don't like Paul," said Kay Moore, wife of shop' steward George Moore. "They think their families are in jeopardy." , Paul Cronan, the diseased man, returned to work Tuesday after a yearlong absence and the settlement of a $1.5 million lawsuit against the New England Telephone Co. The suit alleged the company revealed his disease to co-workers, provoking threats. The amount of the settlement was not disclosed. Cronan, who lives in Boston, said he was greeted on his first day back at work by a message scrawled on a garage wall: "Gays and bisexuals should be taken to an island and destroyed." The sign was erased. Detroit plant worries Canada WASHINGTON-Canada is warning the U.S. government that a' giant incinerator being built in Detroit threatens public health and the environment on both sides of the border, a Canadian official said yesterday. "We expect that the U.S. government is going to take whatever. steps are necessary to ensure that the health of Canadians and the.' Canadian environment is protected," said Jim Wright, head of the.. Canadian embassy's environmental section. At the request of Canadian officials, officials of the two nations began formal diplomatic consultations yesterday on the waste-to-. energy incinerator under construction by Combustion Engineering for the Greater Detroit Resource Recovery Authority. "We wanted to make absolutely clear to the U.S. government and the EPA how seriously we regard this problem," Wright said. Canada believes the incinerator, across the Detroit River from Ontario, lacks adequate pollution control equipment to limit. emissions of acids, carbon monoxide, particulates and dioxin, and feels: it would have serious and negative consequences for people in the Detroit-Windsor, Ontario, area. 01Ihe Afit-jitgan 0auiIV Vol. XCVIl - No. 37 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 Syndicate. P" 0 0 0 0 r 01 For one week only, order and save on the gcld ring of your choice. For complete details, see your Jostens representative. JO STENS A M E R I C A S C 0 L E G E R I N G TODAY Tme 11 - 4 DepositReqi red' 2 5 Place Michigan Union Bookstore E II e al t, 191 Dnum Im. I r X004 "~ ~E~~F@~ 0000000000000000 60000% ALTERNATIVE FILMS FOR THE VIEWER WITH AN ALTERNATIVE TASTE!! " The University of Michigan Medical School Thirty-Second Annual Student Medical Research Forum TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1986 11:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. TOWSLEY CENTER FOR CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION Sheldon Area n OFFICE OF MAJOR EVENTS ECLIPSE JAZZ PRESENTS THE ONLY AREA APPEARANCE OF ELARL KLUGH Editor in Chief...........................ERIC MATTSON Managing Editor....................RACHEL GOTTLIEB News Editor...........................JERRY MARKON City Editor.............................CHRISTY RIEDEL Features Editor............................AMY MINDELL NEWS STAFF: Francie Allen, Elizabeth Atkins, Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Brian Bet, Marc Carrel, Dov Cohen, Tim Daly, John Dunning, Rob Earle, Ellen Fiedelholtz, Martin Frank, Lisa Green, Stephen Gregory, Jirn Hershiser, Mary Chris Jaklevic, Steve Knopper, Philip 1. 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