Ma , Remarkably long stories - Pretentious, esoteric music I1 Wll CIIa zin : Seance: Friedrich Nietzsche " The (artsy-fartsy) List b IcEt igan Ikl Ninety-seven years of editorial baloney VOL.=LxWxH AMANDA ARBOR, MICHIGAN- THE EARLY 25th CENTURY COPYRIGHT 1987, ROB EARLE PUBLICATIONS Prostitute Jan Brady, ,nailed in sex ring By HUGH JARDON Jan Brady, the eldest daughter of Mrs. Brady, was arrested last night and charged with running a prost- itution ring on Fourth Avenue. Leo Heave-me, Director of Uni- versity Public Safety, claims he was working undercover last night when he encountered Brady who said, "What's cooking good looking? Want to have a groovy time with me?" Heave-me then presented Miss Brady with his badge, pulled the gun he had with him because, said Heave-me, "she was being quite unruly," and brought her in for booking. Miss Brady refused to comment on the arrest but family spokes- woman and housekeeper, Alice, said that "Mr. and Mrs. Brady are terribly saddened by the whole thing. We never thought that Jan would turn out like that. She seemed like such a model child, especially when the poor kid had the measles along with Marcia and Cindy and the boys. She helped r make everybody happy, which just put such a smile on Mr. and Mrs. Brady's faces." When asked if she had been aware of Jan's prostitution ring, Alice replied, "We never had any idea. She called home every Sunday and said that she was just having a groovy time in Ann Arbor. How were we supposed to know that she was dealing in sexual fulfillment?" Jan was released on bail early this morning which was posted by Mr. and Mrs. Brady who said they were going to ground her for a week without any TV. See BRADY BUNCH, Page 7 I Reagan caught with hand in cookie jar By ALS HYMER A federal grand jury indicted President Ronald Rea- gan yesterday on 37 counts of senility. Meanwhile, leaders on Capitol Hill announced the formation of a select Congressional Committee on Ser ility to investigate the charges and possibly recommend im- peachment. The bipartisan committee will be chaired by Representative Claude Pepper (D-Fla), who himself has a history of falling asleep during his daily excursion to the Congressional Cafeteria. Reagan denies the allegations brought against him by colleagues and advisers. They include: mistaking Fawn Hall for wife Nancy qn more than one occasion; not disclosing the disappearance of his jelly bean jar as the real reason behind his recent anal prostrate surgery; not accurately informing the public that his California ranch is in reality the George Burns Home for the Aged and the Mentally Lame; and diverting Girl Scout Cookie revenues to Rev. Sun Myung Moon and the Unification Church. PRESIDENTIAL Spokesman Martin Fitzwater denied Reagan's involvement in the scandals. Many administration officials including Secretary of State George Schultz were not surprised by the allegations. "Finally someone has learned the truth about Rea- gan. He can't even count to 21 with all of his clothes on. How was the American public stupid enough to elect him once, let alone twice?" Schultz said. The alleged diversion of Girl Scout cookie profits to support mass marriage activities of the Unification church were unveiled by a source inside the Reagan family. The informant, known only as "the banana swallower" insists that Reagan has long believed that the Reverend Moon is "a real swell fella." THE PRIMARY defendant in the "seniligate- cookie diversion" case, 11-year-old Ingrid Kock, the niece of the White House janitor, invoked her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Witnesses report having seen Ingrid and her parents burn Girl Scout cookie order forms in the family bar- becue pit. Reagan, through a spokesman, denies any in- volvement with the Girl Scouts of America. "I want to get to the bottom of this whole mess just like everyone else does. I've told you everything I know. I am responsible for the actions of my subordinates and I only wish they would come forth and tell me everything," he said. Pepper thinks, however, "Reagan clearly must know something. The question is what he knew, when he knew it, and when he forgot it.", See GIRL SCOUT, Page 99 Y ooow vch ! Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY LSA freshman Joe Schlabotnik squirms in agony after a tennis ball struck him in the genitals. Schlabotnik also suffered a hernia when the ex- cruciating pain caused him to bend over backwards. Rev. Bakker blasts 'Price is Right' By MORT CHESTER Preacher Jud joined the fray of religious ministers attacking Jim Bakker yesterday by calling the minister a "Satanic backtracking on the 2-record set of Christ." Jud, who has charmed Diag listeners with his eloquent yet obnoxious tirades, said Bakker "ought to be burned with all those other wierdos, yogurt eaters, and condom-distributing secular human - ist losers." Jud was only one of a series of ministers who has come out and condemned Bakker for having an affair with his secretary. Others involved in the fray include the Rev. Robert "Win" Schuller, Jimmy Swaggart, and Or - al "The eight million dollar man" Roberts. GAME show host Bob Barker also became involved in the debate after one minister attacked the "Hour of Power." The "Hour of Power" is the nickname of both a religious show and Barker's own "The Price is Right." "I thought they were attacking my show. As if I don't already have enough troubles worrying about Vanna White and that little Sajak wimp," Barker said in an un - characteristicly harsh tone. "Those fundamentalists have always been after me. They hate when I remind people to get their dogs spayed or neutered at the end of the show." Many of the preachers have been reluctant to forgive Barker's mistake and have attacked him repeatedly. Pat Robertson called the showcase showdown "a hoax and a ripoff. I'll bet that wheel's fixed." The Rev. Jimmy Swaggart attacked the clock game as "stupid." Secular humanists have been watching the religious civil war with intense interest. "We all knew they were loons," said Norman Lear, founder of the Love Boat and People for the American Way, a secular humanist group. "Jimmy Swaggart has succeeded in doing what very few people could do," said Lear. "That is, make Jerry Falwell look like a moderate." In a related development, Play- boy has announced it will capitilize on the religious war. The magazine announced it will come out with a May theme issue of "Women of the PTL." PTL stands for "People That Love." i 'U' to build shantytown in Diag to solve housing crunch By ANITA HOLM The University will build a shantytown on the Diag to provide an alternative for students affected by the housing shortage and high costs of living in Ann Arbor. "We feel this is the best choice for students who cannot find or afford off-campus housing. A shanty- town would be inexpensive, centrally located, near classes and the libraries, said Robert Huge, Director of University Housing. He also added the Diag is well-lit and safe. Although the shanties will be built over the sum - mer, students will not move in until Fall,1988 so that University warmth-designers can figure out a way to heat the shanties during the winter. University officials are als'o considering building a neighboring shantytown in the Law Quad if the housing shortages persist. Huge said about 150 shanties will be built, including a central shanty containing eight showers and twelve toilets and sinks for those students who cannot make it to the buildings surrounding the shantytown. Students will need a shantytown I.D. card in order to gain access to the central shanty, and will only be allowed ten minutes to use the "Washanty." This will be enforced by security guards, according to Director of University Public Safety Leo Heatme. Security guards will also be on hand to enforce the previously repealed party policy, which will be in effect in Shantytown, to ensure the noise levei irom the shanties does not bother nerds studying in the library. Huge said the shantytown came as a result of many student groups who protested the current housing crunch. "The Diag is an ideal location because students love to 'hang out' there anyway," Huge said. The best advantage to building a shantytown is that it doesn't cost much because the University can get materials from local scrap yards and junkyards, and the Diag is really the only space close to campus where the University can build, he said. "Students don't really care about where they live, as long as it's cheap and they have a good time," Huge said. Sherie Vartan, a University housing advisor, agreed that a shantytown would alleviate a lot of the problems students bring to the housing office. "Students are always complaining about not find- ing the housing they want - It's too expensive, it's scary, it's ugly, I hate my roommates,' I've heard it all!" Vartan said. "A lot of students will choose to live in the shantytown instead of dorms, so entering dorm lot- teries will stop being such a traumatic experience because less people will enter them. Vartan added that as many people who can fit in the shanty can live there, thus further alleviating the costs to the student.-_ Cool dude Daily Photo by JOHN MUNSON University President Harold Shapiro gets his ear pierced in an attempt to identify with the students on cam- pus. "I want to relate to the students. No more three-pieced suits for me, just jeans, a T-shirt and some really cool shades," said Shapiro. PIRGIM disbands after obtaining MSA funding INSIDE Nobody's interested and nobody cares, do you? By MISS QUOTE-ME The Public Interest Research Group in Michigan decided unan- imously last night to disband imm- ediately, refusing financial support from the Michigan Student Ass- embly. Although the environmental group has fought for over five years to establish a refundable fee system, PIRGIM members said the goal THE GROUP also expressed concern that the greatest environmental hazard on campus was leftover PIRGIM campaign posters. "Our poster campaign was really effective, but I guess it defeated our purpose," said PIRGIM member Wendy Sidehand. Several PIRGIM members disagreed with the plan to leave campus when it was proposed as bank service charges and bar drink prices." The members spent their final days surveying the fees students pay on the Student Verification Form, including MSA fees, school and college government fees, and the recently approved PIRGIM fees. "Wesurveyed the MSA fees and found that the money going to gonna throw it all away, all of our efforts," said MSA President-elect Ken Whine. "We really thought this refundable system was finally going to work." "I guess it shows that PIRGIM members are willing to dedicate themselves to what they believe in, but they don't really know what to do when they get there," Whine Moral Majority leader Jerry Fal - well is a "credit to his race" and should run in the 1988 Presideas - tial elections. COMMIES, PAGE NEVER Opus sets to "rock da house" with the Beastie Boys, a 25-foot phallus and naked women. ARTS, PAGE SEX Michigan football coach Bo Schembechler has diarrhea. wIfflo I I