4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 19, 1986 Students choosy about stereos By STEVE KNOPPER Stereos are a staple of college life. Although campus area stereo stores rely heavily on student business, they stress quality, rather than savings, to lure students to their cash registers. "We have hefty sales to students," said Les Harvey, owner of Sound Associates, Inc., on State Street. "There is a greater need for students to have their music - they're an immediate (sales) target. For other members of the community, it's more of a luxury." JOHN Allen, manager of Stereo Shoppe on William Street, said about half of his customers were University students, which is typical for a college town. But if you're looking for a discount, try somewhere else. "Discounts are not part of our philosophy," said Tom Scherer, a salesman at Hifi Buys on Main Street. Scherer said his store concentrates on setting up compact, high-quality systems that students can expand later. HARVEY said discounts aren't a high priority among student stereo shoppers. "It is our belief that the student is an extremely sophisticated buyer," he said. "We make a strong effort catered toward service. Students aren't looking for the cheapest thing, they're looking for the best value." Harvey noted that Sound Associates tries to shy away from frequent sales. "Sales are artificial," he said, adding that the store prefers a "solid philosophy of good prices all the time." Allen said the Stereo Shoppe offers service, warranties, and quality rather than sales or discounts. B U T for some students, promises of quality and warranties aren't enough. "I probably wouldn't buy around here," said LSA freshman Chris Bork. "Everything's inflated because this is a college town. There's a bigger market and therefore (dealers) can ask a higher price for things." Bork said that in buying a new stereo, he would "set up a price limit, and try to find the best quality within the price range." He said he used to feel intimidated by high-pressure salesmen and often left with more equipment than he wanted. Now he is more skeptical. Other students are less concerned with prices and sales pitches. "Students live on their stereos," said LSA freshman Bob Thill. Harvey said people buy stereos according to their attitudes, or what he -called "coolarity" - buying a stereo because it is "in." LSA freshman Lee Resnick said his stereo has "sentimental meaning" because his speakers are more than 30 years old. He recently bought new components, however, including a compact disk player and a receiver. "I wanted to have a compact stereo system with power," he said. "For the money I put into it, it's the best I could have ever gotten." Congress inquires into stock scandal PLACE YOURSELF HERE ' . ,. 'a: _ * *. i 4 enroll in SKI WEEKEND-l01 at CRYSTAL MOUNTAIN 00 Package includes: 2 nights JUST lodging in area motel, all area day & night skiing from per person 5 p.m. Friday thru Sunday' group rate departure, & all taxes. * * *GOOD TIMES FOR ALL* * * 22 Slopes, night & day NASTAR, free beginners lesson, rental equipment available, 22 Km's X-C Skiing with lighted night trail, movies, entertainment, heated outdoor pool. Group rates apply with 20 or more - super special savings for group organizers. ALSO AVAILABLE Ski by the hour lift tickets / Packages with meals For More Information, Contact Tim Hughes or Jeanne Cole at Crystal 1-800-321-4637 WASHINGTON (AP)-Huge stock market profits rolled up by Ivan Boesky through inside tips are likely to generate enough political pressure for congressional inves- tigations, industry experts say. The inquiry could expand into a look at new freewheeling financial techniques, such as the use of junk bonds, to capitalize on the merger mania that swept Wall Street in the early 1980s and now simmers at a reduced level. B O E S K Y, Wall Street's master arbitrageur who parlayed advance knowledge of mergers into a fortune, could be a witness as congressional committees early next year open hearings into the growing scandal. Legislation proposed would bar speculators who buy up sizeable blocs of shares in a company that is a takeover candidate from voting to approve a takeover. No one faces cancer alone. Call us. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY I I 1 I Normandie Flowers 1104S. UNIVERSITY 996-1811 r 1 Carnat S2for C i WITH THIS COUPON (Good Until 11/26/86) I One per customer per week L-----M --- --- Only those who held stock 30 to 60 days before the takeover bid would be allowed to vote on whether to accept it under the plan. "The jurisdictional question is kind of up in the air," said Julius Genachowski, an aide to Rep. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.). "Chuck wants to hold Banking Committee hearings and other people he has talked to on the committee want to hold hearings." JOHN STOPPELMAN, a Washington securities lawyer, said, "I don't think that insider trading is really the problem. There appear to be problems in the merger process...The Boesky case leaves open the entire merger process for public scrutiny." As for the Boesky case, he said it must be determined "whether Boesky is the only one who had inside information. I doubt it." Boesky tape recorded his conversations with employees and business associates for the last six weeks to three months to provide evidence for federal investigators, The Washington Post and New York Times reported yesterday. Students irked by Shapiro's committee (Continued from Page 1) on campus that is currently reviewing a report issued last summer by the advisory committee. Vice President for Research Linda Wilson gave the groups the entire fall semester to submit their recommendations, and the Board of Regents will vote on the proposals next semester. The advisory committee's guidelines advocate eliminating the end-use clause, which has been in effect since 1972, and replacing the clause with an openness requirement. The requirement would require that all sponsored research contracts be available for public inspection and that all research reports be published one year after the sponsor's funding period has ended, except under extraordinary circumstances. THE faculty Senate Assembly voted Monday to accept the ad hoc committee's guidelines, stressing that all research done at the University must be made available to the University community, said Assembly President Bill Stebbins, a psychology professor. He added that the proposal does not restrict classified research, but it does make it virtually impossible for the defense department to conduct secret research here because secret weapons research would not meet the openness requirement. The Senate added a statement that says that University researchers should not carry out any type of IN-BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTS Delco strike slows GM plants DETROIT-General Motors Corp. sent about 3,000 workers home yesterday when assembly plants in New Jersey, Kentucky and Delaware ran out of parts produced by the struck Delco Electronics plant in Kokomo, Ind., a GM spokesman said. Talks resumed yesterday between Delco and the striking United Auto Workers as GM officials assessed what effect the walkout would have on auto assembly lines. The 7,700 workers of UAW Local 292 walked out Monday in disputes over the transfer of some production work to Mexico and the subcontracting of some maintenance and skilled tool-and-die jobs to none union workers. Delco, a GM subsidiary, supplies electronic components critical to the manufacture of GM cars, and company officials have said there is no stockpile. House panel approves bill prohibiting local gun control LANSING-Legislation prohibiting communities from enacting their own gun-control laws was approved 5-2 yesterday by the state House Towns and Counties Committee. The controversial bill, which passed the Senate in June and could face a vote in the full House yet this week, would block handgun bans like those considered by Detroit and Ann Arbor. Members of the National Rifle Association and other supporters said the bill would establish uniform firearm laws across the state and prevent a patchwork of local ordinances restricting the freedom of hunters. But the Michigan Municipal League and other opponents argued the law would unfairly usurp the ability of local governments to develop their own solutionsto the crime problem. Soviets restart nuke plants, may have foregone changes WASHINGTON (AP)- The Soviet Union most likely has resumed operation of some nuclear plants without making the safety improvements promised in the wake of the Chernobyl accident, Energy Secretary John Herrington said yesterday. "Our best estimate is they started Chernobyl up probably too soon to do all the upgrades they said they were going to do," Herringon said after testifying at a Senate hearing. "We are reasonably sure they are operating reactors today without the upgrades they promised." Herrington called the improvements "major installations" that couldn't have been completed before the Chernobyl facility started up Sept. 29 - five months after a fire and explosion ripped through one of its four reactors and sent a cloud of radiation across the globe. Herrington also said the United States is having trouble getting information about two reactors the Soviet Union is building near Cienfuegos, Cuba, 180 miles from Key West. Court halts killer's execution TALLAHASSEE, Fla.-A federal appeallate panel in Atlanta yesterday halted the execution of suspected mass slayer Theodore Bundy less than seven hours before he was to die for the murder of a 12-year- old girl. A three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal said there was "insufficient time before Bundy's scheduled 7 a.m. electrocution to consider his attorney's arguments, and that "a stay of excution is mandated." The ruling came less than three hours after U.S. District Judge George Sharp in Orlando refused to halt the execution, and after the Florida Supreme Court unanimously rejected Bundy's last-ditch appeal. Sharp, who issued his 19-page order after almost 'seven hours of consideration, wrote that Bundy "failed to make a substantial showing of a denial of a federal right" in claiming that he was mentally incompetent to stand trial and act as his own attorney in the 1980 trial. Bundy's attorney, James Coleman, declined to comment on Sharp's decision. French seek auto exec. killers PARIS-Police said today that they suspected two women shot and killed the president of the state-run Renault automobile company. Investigators reportedly received a claim of responsibility in the name of the left-wing Direct Action terrorist group. The Agence France-Presse news agency reported the claim was made by telephone. A police spokesman would say only that a claim was being "verified." The news agency also reported a claim of responsibility was made in pamphlets scattered by the Raspail subway station, near the spot where Georges Besse was gunned down outside his home Monday evening. It said the pamphlets-were signed "Direct Action, Commando Pierre' Overney." Overney was a Maoist militant killed during clashes outside the main Renault plant at Boulougne, near Paris in 1972. Besse, 58, president of Renault since January 1985, was hit several times in the head and chest shortly after being dropped off by his chauffeur. Police said three 9 mm cartridge casings were found at the scene. Vol. XCVII-No. 55 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. Sports Editor.............BARB McQUADE Editor in Chief...........................ERIC MATTSON Associate Sports Editors........DAVE ARETHA Managing Editor..---..........RACHEL GOTTLIEB MARK BOROWSKY City Editor........................CHRISTY RIEDEL RICK KAPLAN News Editor ...................JERRY MARKON ADAM MARTIN Features Editor .............AMY MINDELL SPORTS STAFF: Jim Downey, Lian Erty A NEWS STAFF: Francie Allen, Elizabeth Atkins, Eve SOT TF:JmDweLa lhry le Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura A. Bischoff, Steve Gelderloos, Chris Gordillo, Shelly Haselhuhn, Al Blonder, Rebecca Blumenstein, Brian Bonet, Marc Hedblad, Julie Hollman, John Husband, Darren Jasey, Carrel, Dov Cohen, Tim Daly, John Dunning, Rob Rob Levine,,Jill Marchiano, Christian Martin, Eric Earle, Ellen Fiedelholtz, Martin Frank, Katy Gold, Lisa MasoGre McDonald, Scott Miller, Grog Molzon, Green. Stephen Gregory. Jim Hershiser, Mary Chis Jerry Muth. Adam Ochlis, Jeff Rush, Adam Scheftr, Jaklevic, Steve Knopper, Philip I. Levy, Michael Adam Schrager, Scott Shaffer, Pete Steminert, Douglas Lustig, Kelly McNeil, Andy Mills, Kery Murakamni. VolaO, B1ll Zolla. Eugene Pak, Martha Sevetsod, WendySaun Photo Editor.........................ANDI SCHREIBER Skubik, Louis Stancato, Naomi Wax. PHOTO STAFF: Leslie Boorstein, Jae Kim, Scott Opinion Page Editor. .........KAREN KLEIN Litucby, John Munson, Dean Randazzo Peter Ross. AssciteOpnio PgeEdtor .HNR PRK Business Manager ...........MASON FRANKLIN OPINION PAGE STAFF: Rosemary Chinnock, Tim Sales Manager.... .............DIANE BLOOM Huet Gayle Kirshenbaum, Peter Mooney, Caleb FinneManager. REBECCA LAWRENCE Southworzh. Classified Manager .......GAYLA BROCKMAN Arts Editor............................NOELLE BROWER Asst Sales Manager........DEBRA LEDERER Associate Arts Editor................REBECCA CHUNG Ass't Classified Manager.............GAYLE SHAPIRO Music................................BETH FERTIG DISPLAY SALES: Barb Calderoni, Irit Elrad, Lisa Film.................KURT SERBUS Gnat, Melissa Hambrick, Alan Heyman, Julie Books ................SUZANNE MISENCIK Kromholz, Anne Kubek, Wendy Lewis, Jason Liss, I I I I CRYSTAL MOUNTAI N (616) 378-2911 M-115 Thompsonville, Michigan 49683 VOTE IN THE CAMPUSWIDE JOINT ELECTIONS NOVEMBER 18th & 19th Election Who is Eligible to Vote LSA Student Govt. Positions All Registered LSA Students MSA Positions All Registered U of M-AA Students Rackham Student Govt. Positions All Registered Rackham Students * HOURS OF POLLING * SITE TUESDAY HOURS WEDNESDAY HOURS Fishbowl ...................... 8:45- 3:00 8:45- 3:00 MLB............................9:00-12:00 9:00-12:00 UGLI.......................... 7:00-10:00 7:00-10:00 Grad.........................6:45- 9:45 (North) 6:45- 9:45 (South) Education ...................... 9:30-12:30 Business.. . . . . . . . . . . 11:00- 1:15 Law.......................................... 11:15- 1:30 Frieze........................11:45- 2:45 Art..........................10:00-12:15 Music ......................... 12:30- 2:30 Medical Science ................ 7:15- 9:15 Natural Resources ..............12:00- 2:15 Public Health ...................-11:30- 1:30 C.C. Little ...........-.-........ 12:30- 3:30 Dental ........................ 11:45- 2:00 Rackham .................... ..4:00- 9:00 4:00- 7:00 EECS .......................... 8:00- 9:00 8:00- 9:00 Couzens......................4:00- 6:00 Aire~lvdI I- -- --,A-- -- A.lr%- A-1 f