The'Michigan Daily - Friday, October 31, 1986 - Page 5 Detroit fights 'Devil's DETROIT (AP)-Officials urged residents to help curtail "Devil's 'Night" arson yesterday as police prepared to enforce the second day of dusk-to-dawn curfew. The curfew took effect in the nation's sixth-largest city at 6 p.m. Wednesday and continued yesterday for everyone under 18. Police spokesman John Leavens said 236 youths were arrested or detained for violations Wednesday night and early yesterday. At least six small fires were reported on the west side of the city Wednesday night and a multiple- alarm blaze broke out in a three story warehouse on the east side, Fire Capt. Donald Robinson said Wednesday night. He said he didn't know how many were arson related. Fire officials, including Marshal Donald Robinson, declined' comment yesterday, referring questions to the mayor's office. Bob Berg, spokesman for Mayor Coleman Young, said 80 fires were reported from midnight Tuesday to midnight Wednesday, compared with 88 in the comparable period last year. part of a "No More Devil's Night" effort launched by the city. "The early indications from last night are that the plan is working," Berg said. "The people in the city have really come together." Berg said help from volunteers who patrolled neighborhoods and watched for trouble was crucial. "You just don't have enough police officers to be on every street," he said. Of the curfew violators, those age 17 were arrested and had to post a $50 bond, Leavens said. Younger offenders were released to their parents, who will be ticketed if their children are detained again. "We've laid down the law and we're enforcing it," Leavens said. Six bus lines were rerouted to avoid troublesome areaas, said Hued Kinard, operations assistant for the Department of Transit. In 1983, one person died and 553 fires were set over two days. During a 71-hour period over the last three In recent years, the night before Halloween, known as "Devil's Night," has brought a spate of arson to Detroit. The curfew was r-v Night' days of October 1985, 479 fires were set, including 64 in occupied dwellings and 153 in trash. That number was down 41 percent from the same period in 1984. The city also is asking citizens to turn on outside lights at night, keep flammable trash out of alleys and trash containers and watch for suspicious activity. Police ready for pumpkin parties (continued from Page ) Corbett said the city employs a few extra officers on Halloween night for the safety of the trick-or-treaters. Nearly all of the trick-or-treaters steer clear of student housing, so ybu might as well feed the Butterfinger bars to the dog. "I don't foresee anyone showing up," said Tom Villanueva, an engineering sophomore who lives at 912 S. Forest St., about a block from an area that is highly populated by Ann Arbor families. Jean Demmer, a Business Administration senior who lives in the Forest Harris Apartments at 1001 S. Forest St., said she hasn't bought any treats for potential trick-or-treaters. "From what I understand, the people who lived in our apartment building last year said no kids came by," she said. THE HALLOWEEN trad- ition started back during the festivals practiced by the Celtic peoples of England, Ireland, and Scotland to celebrate the dead. Skipping all the boring stuff in between about missionaries taking forever to convert these "pagans" to a "true" religion, we quickly fast- forward to the infamous Salem witch trials. In all, 20 people were hanged for supposed offenses such as making potions of obscene and blas- phemous materials. ASSISTANT EDITORS Gale Research Company, a major publisher of reference books for libraries worldwide, is seeking candidates for editorial positions to do research and writing for our books. 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STATE COUPON SUAVE LOTION j39'Ya 10 oz. Expires 11/7/86 SPEED STICK STATE COUPON DEODORANT j77 2.5 OZ. Expires 11/7/86. Associated Press Waldheim blackmailedA Austrian President Kurt Waldheim, shown second from left in 1943 as a Nazi, reportedly was threatened with blackmail into becoming a communist agent in 194748 by intelligence services in Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union for alleged war crimes, the Washington Post reported yesterday. The Washington Post also reported that Waldheim had acknowledged that he took part in the Nazi "pacification" of 1942 in which thousands of Yugoslav citizens were killed. 'Visually find need for readers (Continued from Page 1) computing equipment, they do rely on tape recorders to record lectures and to listen to master tapes of textbooks. Because they depend on the recorders, most students have their own, according to Deborah Corby, secretary for Disabled Student Services. The University loans tape recorders to visually impaired students on a first-come first-serve out of the Office for Disabled Student Services. Recently, the office purchased eight new recorders. The Graduate Library and the UGLi each have one recorder to loan. But Thompson complained that neither library runs regular maintenance checks on their (equipment. Corby confirmed this and added, "It's hard when you have to repair a recorder and replace it." She said all the recorders in her office are frequently checked out. The Disabled Student Services and Student Counseling Services offer volunteer readers for visually impaired students. Corby said the service has worked well except for a ,lack of readers in September. "In the beginning of the semester it 'definitely is a problem," she said. - I TIRED? Try a futon. ENERGETIC? Fly our kites. GREAT LAKES FUTON 2 0 5 N. M a i n S t. ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 6 6 3 - 2 2 0 2 HOURS: M-F 10-8, S-S 11-5 STATE COUPON SUAVE SHAMPOO or CONDITIONER 16 OZ. 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