The Michigan Daily- Thursday, October 8,1992 -Page 3 Experts say Perot knows marketng WASHINGTON (AP) - Political operatives may scoff at Ross Perot's campaign methods, but marketing experts say the Texas billionaire is using classic business sales techniques. "The first step of persuasion is making people painfully aware of how much they need what you are selling," says Tom Reilly, a subur- ban St. Louis consultant who ad- vises companies on how to improve marketing techniques. In his 30-minute ad Tuesday night on CBS-TV, Perot gave view- ers a detailed version of what he thinks is wrong with their economy and President Bush's handling of it. In so doing, "he paved the way for selling the solution" during a sec- ond 30-minute spot Friday night on ABC, Reilly said. That could be a tough sell, since Perot's recommendations include higher taxes and deep cuts in popular government programs. Jack Trout, a Greenwich, Conn., advertising consultant, said Perot has cleverly sugarcoated the bitter Socialist party candidates to promote labor . " . ' During his first TV ad, Presidential candidate Ross Perot points to a chart that lashes out at former government officials who became lobbyists for other countries. pill he is asking Americans to swallow by calling his program "shared sacrifice." "That does a good a job with some bad news," said Trout, co-au- thor with his business partner Al Ries of the book "Marketing Warfare." The experts said Perot brings to the political stump the same skills that made him a legend on the IBM sales force, where he once took only a month to fill a sales quota for an entire year. "All of persuasion is built on a simple model; obviously he understands that model," said Reilly. This is the second in a three-part series on third-party candidates running for local, state and national office in the Nov. 3 election by Lauren Dermer Daily Government Reporter Michigan voters who see a need for a labor party and unity in the in- ternational working class may opt for the socialist alternative when they pull the lever Nov. 3. Candidates running on the Workers League ticket - a party seeking to advance socialist ideol- ogy - are on the ballot in four Michigan congressional districts. The party also has a presidential and vice presidential candidate. Larry Roberts is the candidate for the House of Representatives in the 13th Congressional District, the dis- trict representing the campus area. Roberts said the party wants to pro- vide leadership for a workers' revo- lution and the beginning of a Labor Party. "The only way to begin dealing with the problems is to attack them politically," he said. "The people who control the wealth are a small elite - it is a dictatorship of the rich over society." The Workers League candidates are running on the premise that President George Bush and oppo- nent Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton are lying to the people about the interna- tional economic crisis and will "unleash an unprecedented attack on the working class," the Worker's: League campaign literature states. Members said the party advo- cates a revolutionary political movement to establish a government that will reorganize the economy based on human need instead of profit. Roberts, who said he joined the party in 1972 to fight racism, said the movement must take place inter- nationally because the development of capitalism has pitted working classes of different races and ethnicities against each other. "The only way the working class is going to unite is if they unite in- ternationally. They have one com- mon enemy - the capitalists of their" own countries," he said. The party also advocates equal education, universal health-care, public ownership of banks and key manufacturing industries, and the abolition of the Pentagon and the ' Central Intelligence Agency. The Workers League presidential ticket consists of Helen Halyard for president and Fred Mazelis for vice-president. Haylard is the Workers League assistant national secretary. She has led campaigns against plant shut- downs, school closings, budget cuts and mass evictions in Detroit, where she has lived for 11 years. Mazelis participated in the found- ing of the party in 1966. He is a leader in the party's campaign of the International Labor Defense Committee, established to defend victimized war prisoners. Halyard, Mazelis, and Roberts have not previously held any public offices. The Workers League - based in Detroit - publishes a weekly newspaper, The Bulletin. Study shows *margarine linked 'to heart disease WASHINGTON (AP) - First red meat, then milk and now mar- garine. Even the butter substitute of choice for millions of health-con- scious people may cause heart dis- ease, an Agriculture Department study shows. USDA's $1 million study, funded in part by the shortening industry, found that oils used in margarine, vegetable shortening, and store- bought cakes and cookies raise blood cholesterol levels. And that can increase the risk of heart disease. The culprits are trans fatty acids, which are produced when manufac- turers convert vegetable oils made from corn or soybeans to a solid or semisolid margarine or shortening used by food companies in baked goods. USDA's study showed those trans fatty acids in partially hydro- genated oil raised blood cholesterol levels in much the same way as certain saturated fatty acids. Joseph Judd at USDA's Human Nutrition Research Center in Beltsville, Md., said the study does not link the increase in cholesterol levels to heart disease. "At this point, we really do not have all of the evidence to relate trans fatty acid to heart disease be- cause in cardiovascular disease there are many factors such as hyperten- sion, blood clotting, obesity, diabetes," Judd said. USDA's findings are preliminary and were based on a study of 58 healthy adults who consumed each of four experimental diets in a random manner. The experts say watch overall fat intake and eat a balanced diet with lots of fruits and vegetables. Some say consumers shouldn't rush home to clean out the refrigerator and the kitchen cupboards of the latest sus- pected villain, while others recom- mend replacing that bottle of corn oil with olive oil. Possible GM strike at plant worries workers ANDERSON, Ind. (AP) - Workers at the General Motors Corp. parts plant targeted for a strike next week said yesterday they want to keep working but believe a show- down is needed now to protect their jobs in the future. "Sometimes you want to go out (on strike), but then you're afraid they'll close the doors behind you," said Jean Smitherman, who has worked at GM's Inland Fisher Guide plant for 22 years. "The whole thing is kind of scary." United Auto Workers officials yesterday sent GM a five-day notice of intent to strike at the Anderson plant, which produces the exterior lighting for about 95 percent of GM's cars and trucks. The workers had asked for the notice in August, when talks on local issues stalled. If the continuing ne- gotiations fail, the workers could walk off the job as early as 10 a.m. Oct. 14 - five working days after the notice was received. Smitherman said their greatest fear was that GM would eventually close the plant. Shirt tales LSA senior Andy Russel buys a "State Sucks" T-shirt from Michael Paul yesterday on the corner of South and East University avenues. t 0 c x r Correction Dolly Holek, a designer at University Flower Shop, was incorrectly identified in Wednesday's Daily. Foggy highways result in multiple collisions ANN ARBOR (AP) - A series of chain-reaction collisions on a fog- shrouded highway early yesterday left 30 people injured in a more than 50-car pileup, police said. Northbound U.S. 23 near Pittsfield Township was closed about 8:30 a.m. while authorities struggled to untangle two pileups. A third accident occurred in south- bound lanes, said Washtenaw County sheriff's Sgt. James Westrick. Drivers were only able to see about 20 feet because of thick fog, he said. "I heard it before I saw anything, suddenly these people were right in front of me," said Susan Davey of Tecumseh. Westrick said 25 people were taken by ambulance to area hospi- tals. Five were able to drive them- selves, he said. The injured were treated at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in Ann Arbor, the University of Michigan Medical Center, Beyer Hospital in Ypsilanti and Saline Community Hospital. Lt. Richard Tyler said cars were being towed to a rest area near the accident site. The majority of the' cars were totaled, he said. "We're lucky no one was killed," he said. "People were getting hit three or four times." The National Transportation Safety Board said 6,804 people were killed in accidents on foggy highways from 1982 to 1991. Student groups Q A.I.D.S. Coalition to Unleash Power, meeting, East Engineer- ing, Baker Mandella Center, 7:30 p.m. Q Haiti Solidarity Group, meet- ing, First United Methodist Church, 120 S. State St., Pine Room, 7:30 p.m. U Hillel Foundation, Opportuni- ties in Jewish Communal Ser- vice, Hillel,1429 Hill St., 7p.m. U Institute of Electrical and Elec- tronics Engineers, technical luncheon, Electrical Engineer- ing and Computer Science Building, room 1311, 12:30- 1:30 p.m. U Intervarsity Christian Fellow- ship, meeting, Natural Re- sources Building, room 1040,7 p.m. U Korean Student Association, co-chair elections, Michigan Union, room 1209, 7 p.m. U Michigan Journal of Political Science, meeting, Dominick's, 5:30 p.m. U Palestine Solidarity Commit- tee, study group/meeting, Michigan Union, Tap Room, 8 p.m. U Pro-Choice Action, meeting, MLB, room B 137, 7:30 p.m. ball, CCRB, main gym, 8 p.m. Events Q AmericanMovement for Israel, mass meeting, Hillel Founda- tion, 1429 Hill St., 7 p.m. Q "Capturing the Spirit: Por- traits of Contemporary Mexi- can Artists," Smithsonian exhibit, Ann Arbor Public Li- brary, 343 S. Fifth Ave., lower level Multi-Purpose Room, 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Q Career Planning and Place- ment, Employer Presentation: The Chase Manhattan Bank, Michigan Union, Kuenzel Room, 7-9 p.m.; Employer Pre- sentation: The Procter & Gamble Co., Michigan Union, Pendleton Room, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.; Generating Career Ideas, CP&P Program Room, 4:10- 5:40 p.m. Q "Conquering the Phallus," George S. Rousseau public lec- ture, Rackham, East Conference Room, 4 p.m. Q "Local Structure of High T, Superconductors," Depart- ment of Chemistry, Chemistry Building, room 1640,4 p.m. Q Michael Cameron, double bass- ist guest recital, School of Mu- ceptions of the Japanese Cin- ema," Brown Bag Lecture Se- ries, Lane Hall, Commons Room, 12p.m. Q Robert Jones & Mike Stevens, performance, The Ark, 637 1/2 S. Main St., $7.75 students and Ark members, $8.75 others, 8 p.m. Q U-M Network for Cultural De- mocracy and Programa in American Culture, labor film series, Angell Hall, room 2235, 7:30 p.m. Q U-MPre-Med Club,mass meet- ing, Michigan Union, Pendleton Room, 6:30 p.m. Q U-M Ski Team, mass meeting, Michigan Union, Ponds Room, 7:30 p.m. Q William Matthews, reading from his work, Rackham, Amphitheatre, 5 p.m. Student services Q Northwalk Nighttime Safety Walking Service, Bursley Hall, lobby, 8 p.m. - 1:30 a.m. Q Psychology Undergraduate Peer Advising, Department of Psychology, West Quad, room K210, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Q Safewalk Nighttime Safety U I Looking for experience in advertising? I