The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 19, 1988-- Page 11 Ford probe sales soar DETROIT (AP) - With little advertising and less fanfare, the Fofd Probe is speeding through dealor showrooms, keeping most buyers waiting at least six weeks for delivery of a car that ay be carving its own market niche. Since its formal introduction last May, the Probe, built beside the Mazda MX-6 at Mazda Motor Manufacturing USA Corp.'s Flat Rock plant south of Detroit , is being sold three months in advance of assembly line runs, Ford Motor Co. analyst Ray Windecker said. Delivery time can vary depending on what kind and color automobile a customer wants.I The American car-buying public got a dose of what Ford had in mind months before its formal introduction. The news media, specifically the automotive magazines, sang the car's praises. "By the time cars were introduced, more than one-third of the car- buying age populous was aware of the car," Windecker said. "I don't think there's been that much excitement about a domestic car since a Taurus," another Ford that was introduced in December 1985, said Beth Fusco, an auto analyst with Moody's Investor Services in New York City. "They did a lot of :advance promotion for the car in magazines," she said. "I thought that was a pretty sophisticated send-off: I think they did a good job promoting it, and, I think the car is selling itself." r Probe's base price is $11,490 " with a 2.2 liter, four-cylinder engine, y The car, with hidden headlamps and a swept-back rear deck, can be t upgraded with a turbocharged engine k and option packages to $17,292. Co-op residents clean house Every year, residents of the University's Inter-Co- operative Council have a "work holiday" where all residents pitch in to clean, fix up, and make general repairs of the buildings and grounds .of the co-ops. The concept of a co-op is that all residents share in the chores, ranging from housecleaning to planning and preparing meals. Co- ops have been operating since the early 1930s. In the top photo, Anh Tuan Hoang, an Art School sophomore, Elliot Appel, an LSA senior, Mike McCormick, an LSA senior, and Aaron Alizadeh, a Residential College junior (left to right) clean kitchen utensils. Outside, Appel helps LSA Sophomore Chris Lamar test a new sump pump that was recently installed at the Minnie Co-op. JESSICA GREENE /Daily 'Idaho forests grow green one year after fire CASCADE, Idaho (AP) - While many lament the fires that have charred much of Yellowstone National Park, a wilderness that went up in smoke just one year ago already displays lush and diverse greenery that attracts herds of elk. "The fire created more wildlife habitat than anything we could have ever done," Forest Ranger Morris Huffman said of the Deadwood Summit fire in the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness in the Boise National Forest. The fire 250 miles west of Yellowstone burned more than 50,000 acres during the summer of 1987. "It's a natural mosaic now, with open meadows and stand of timber," said forest spokesperson Frank Carroll. "A forest that was just getting older and deader has not been beautifully revived." Federal land managers, rocked by criticism of their hands-off approach to dealing with naturally sparked wildfires in wilderness areas and parks point to Deadwood Summit as an example of a good burn. It's a tough sell. Fires this summer have charred more than 1.5 million acres in and around Yellowstone. An early decision to let the flames go unchecked within prescribed boundaries ignited a firestorm of controversy, and Interior Secretary Donald Hodel has said a change is likely. Idaho Gov. Cecil Andrus, a former Interio secretary, and others have called the "let burn policy a prescription for disaster, especiall during the region's worst drought in decades. But while the tourist-dependent communities surrounding Yellowstone look with apprehension at changes nature will tak generations to escape, others say Deadwoo Summit is, and Yellowstone will be, an ecologically healthier place as a result o being burned. e d n f UM Newsin The Daily 764-0F'" GET IN VOLVED! Michigan Join the following Committees or Commissions: Campus Governance Rules & Elections Communications External Relations Development Minority Affairs Women's Issues Student Rights Peace & Justice Academic Affairs International Students Health Issues Budget I Student Assembly- 3909 Michigan Union 9-5:00, Monday-Friday Tel.: 763-3241 MASS MEETING - - -