4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 5, 1986 Inquiring Photographer By Andi Schreiber = The Daily wants to know the answer to the most popular question on campus, "How was your summer?" Stu Harris, LSA junior: My summer was ful - filling but not relaxing. I worked in New York City for a commercial real estate company, Coldwell Banker - they're number one in the country. The best part about being back in Ann Arbor is having the stir- fryed chicken special at Dunburi. Cindy Feuer, LSA junior: It was fine but I craved Ann Arbor, just the easy-going, friendly element. It's like a vacation to come back, one that lasts nine months. Summer is a time for work. Marc Hazzard, engin - eering junior: Well, it was nice but it was too much work. I was a stockperson/shoplifter chaser at Perry Drugs. I'm glad to be back on campus, like here on the Diag. I got everything out of Detroit that it had to offer. k Wendy Jacobson, LSA junior: It was fun. I was a waitress near my cottage in Northport, Michigan. I made tons of money in tips. I was such a bad waitress that my customers felt sorry for me. Alok Ghosh, LSA senior: I got obstreperously trashed for seven weeks in amazing London. Lady Di looked sweet at the Royal Wedding. I I Gloria Kim;LSA senior 1/2: Excellent! Patricia Allen, LSA freshman: Great. I went to Tennessee, Missi - ssippi, Kentucky, and the Bahamas. I visited family in the South and just partied in the Bahamas. My brain is getting reoriented now, I didn't use it a lot during the summer. Brant Hinrichs, engin - eering senior: Very good. I was in New York working in Brookhaven National Lab. I was working on a high energy physics experi- ment for a U-M professor. I grew spir- itually because I found a good church/fellowship group out there. Jane Schwartz, LSA junior: It was amazing, the best summer of my life. If you ever get the chance to study in Europe, don't pass it up. I studied in Spain and traveled to Florence and Paris. I spent three days in the Louvre. Steve Molitor, LSA returning freshman: It was alright. It was my first summer as a civilian. I just got out of the army a few months ago. I was in Jamaica for three weeks. It was nice because it gave me a chance to relax. IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS Two ballot proposals blocked LANSING- The door to Michigan's Nov. 4 ballot slammed shut yesterday on a proposal to curb utility rate increases, a day after a bid to permit the death penalty in Michigan was closed out. The state Supreme Court rejected a last-ditch request by the Michigan Citizens Lobby to reconsider its bar to proposals on the death penalty and limiting utility rate increases for unfinished or unneeded power plants. The Supreme Court voted 6-0 to turn down the request, saying, "It does not appear the (earlier) order was entered erroneously." On Wednesday, the Michigan Court of-Appeals rejected "for lack of merit" a suit to get the death penalty proposal on the Nov. 4 ballot. Also Wednesday, Ingham County Circuit Judge James Giddings made a similar ruling on a lawsuit filed by the Citizens Lobby in an attempt to salvage its utility rate proposal. Stock market reaches a high NEW YORK- The stock market soared to record highs yesterday, propelled by a wave of buying by professional program traders. Analysts said hopes for lower interest rates and intensifying enthusiasm for oil stocks helped the Dow Jones industrial average surpass a peak that had stood for more than two months, and carried several other market indicators to new highs as well. Dow Jones' average of 30 blue chips jumped 38.38 to 1,919.71, topping the previous closing high of 1,909.03 set on July 2. It was the fifth largest point gain ever recorded by the average, and the biggest since it climbed 39.03 on March 14. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange reached 189.42 million shares, the seventh biggest total ever, against 154.31 million Wednesday. Knowledge of trade proposalA denied by Soviet spokesman MOSCOW- A Soviet Foreign Ministry spokesman said yesterday that he knew nothing about a proposed deal to release American reporter Nicholas Daniloff, jailed for six days on suspicion of spying. U.S. officials in Washington said the State Department has proposed Daniloff be freed in exchange for temporarily releasing a - Soviet physicist arrested in New York on spy charges. Under the deal, Soviet U.N. employee Gennady Zakharov would be released into the custody of the Soviet ambassador until his trial. There also would be an understanding that he might be swapped in some future deal with the Soviets, the U.S. officials said. Soviet Foreign Ministry spokesman Gennady Gerasimov, asked about the proposed deal, told a news conference yesterday he did not know about such a proposal and said, "I am an official spokesman. I can't comment on things that are being done unofficially." Romanian family seeks asylum WASHINGTON- Seven Romanians visiting the U.S. Capitol - a man, his four sons and their grandparents - yesterday asked police officers for asylum in the United States. The Romanians, who approached a Capitol policeman outside the building's East Front, were questioned by officers with the aid of several congressional staff members attempting to act as interpreters, said the Senate's sergean t arms, Ern t Garcia. Capitol Police Chief James Carvino said routine questions were posed to the family and their answers were being relayed to the. State Department, where the request for te.mporary asylum wasp evaluated. Garcia said the family told Capitol Police they had previously : requested asylum from the Swedish government but had been t turned down. But Ulf Hjertonsson, chief of the political office at the Swedish « Embassy here, said in a telephone interview, "No, no such thing happened." Random tampering blamed for Cup-A-Soup poisoning CAMDEN, N.J.- The cyanide death of a man who ate chicken noodle Cup-A-Soup was almost certainly a case of product - tampering but it appears to be a random incident, a prosecutor says. Larry Hicks, a spokesman for Thomas J. Lipton Inc., said authorities found that the mix's envelope was slit and the box was punctured. "It all points to a product tampering," Hicks said. "It appears to be a random incident. There is no indication of any retribution against the store or the individual," said Dennis Wixted, first assistant county prosecutor. He added that there have been no calls claiming responsibility or making threats. Louis Denber, of Runnemede, died after eating the soup Monday. He told his girlfriend that the soup "tasted funny" and "didn't look right," Asbell said., Denber took about two sips, threw the soup into the sink and then became violently ill, the prosecutor said. (t le fit tgan ' gIl Vol. XCVII No.2 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~ t. k, I . Tuesday Lunch Lectures CURRENT WORLD ISSUES: AN UPDATE 12 Noon At The International Center - 603 E. Madison St. September 9: The Philippines - What Hope For The Future? Speaker: MICHAEL CULLINANE, Center for S&SE Asian Studies Sponsored by The Ecumenical Campus Center and the Philippine-Michigan Club ,. 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M-3 Officially Licensed DEAN BAG "MAXEY CHAIR" " Our U of M Bean Bag "Maxey Ch offers soft (but rugged), form fitti Editor in Chief...................ERIC MATTSON ManagingEditor............RACHEL GOTTLIEB News Editor......................JERRY MARKON City Editor.......................CHRISTY RIEDEL Features Editor....................AMY MINDELL NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Rebecca Blumenstein, Nancy Braiman, Harish Chand, Dov Cohen, Tim Daly, Rob Earle, Ellen Fiedelholtz, Martin Frank, Lisa Green, Stephen Gregory, Steve Herz, Mary Chris Jaklevic, Philip Levy, Michael Lustig, Kery Murakami, Peter Orner, Eugene Pak, Martha Sevetson, Wendy Sharp, Susanne Skubik, Naomi Wax. Opinion Page Editor...............KAREN KLEIN Associate Opinion Page Editor............................HENRY PARK OPINION PAGE STAFF: Rosemary Chinnock, Gayle Kirshenbaum, Peter Mooney, Caleb Southworth. 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