The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, May 13, 1980-Page 11 B That tl between television Neverthe more tha Mock trials highlight seminar y GEOFFREY OLANS presiding over a trial on center stage of Education (ICLE) last Friday and of the economist as an e: here are obvious similarities the Power Center for the Performing Saturday. and the art of advocacy in trial law and drama: any Arts. IN ADDITION to the trial demon- Special attention in t n producer will freely explain. The trial was one of four demon- strations, the program-entitled "Ad- program-which refers t Bless, -t could have seemed strations that highlighted the Thirty- vocacy in the '80s"-featured various responsibility to promot in a trifle unusual that a U.S. first Advocacy Institute sponsored by lectures by prominent law professors of his client-was given t( xpert witness, general. the advocacy o an attorney's e the interests o "The case of the difficult plaintiff-against multiple defendants." Attendance at this year's program was the largest ever according to representatives from ICLE, as 1,376 at- torneys from all over the coun- try-seasoned veterans and new law school graduates alike-gathered together. THE TRIAL demonstrations were carried out by an array of lawyers of national-reputation, including Murray Sams, Jr. of Miami and W. McCoy Otto of Pittsburgh. Various different styles, techniques, and strategies illustrated methods of introducing evidence, discrediting an adversary's testimony, and obtaining winning verdicts. Differences in approach were quite apparent, according to audience mem- bers, during the final summations, where mockery and all sorts of enter- taining histrionics contrasted with solemn exhortations and emotionless faces. ATTORNEY MURRAY SAMS, Jr. cross-examines a witness as U.S. District Court Judge Douglas during Saturday's Advocacy Institute trial demonstrations. Prime interest rate drops full percentage point to 16.5% WI4AT'5 thIEU'TrI~~-rT 4¢LETTER WO'RDzFM 77EMOVM T'149T MAKES YOU PLL/SH B~ER ELEP.VING&' By United Press International Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. led the way yesterday in lowering the prime in- terest rate a full percentage point to 16 per cent, reflecting lower short- term interest rates in a stalling economy. Record-high interest rates have been in a virtual tailspin for the last three weeks following a peak in inflationary expectations. Businesses and con- sumers have sharply curtailed credit use, instead of borrowing and buying at any cost, in the belief that everything will be more expensive tomorrow. CONTINENTAL Illinois Bank of Chicago and several other smaller banks followed Morgan's move to 161/2 per cent. The prime, which is the interest rate -banks charge top corporate customers for short term loans, was 20 per cent last month and 11 per cent last June. Economists generally believe the recession began in March when the Federal Reserve, in trying to reduce the 18.1 per cent annual inflation rate, widened its tight money policy with regulations sharply restricting credit growth. THE ECONOMY virtually turned on a dime. Consumers slowed buying and began paying off existing debt at a faster rate. Up to its neck in high-interest, short- term debt as the recession began, businesses' fled back to the bond market. The Fed, apparently concerned about "overkill," recently began easing up by making more reserve funds available to banks for loans and by lifting the three per cent surcharge it imposed on big borrowers from the discount win- dow. But loan demand continued to dwin- die. The federal funds rate - the in- terest banks charge one another for overnight loans of excess reserves - has dropped to around 10 per cent from 20 per cent at the end of March. David Jones, chief economist at Aubrey G. Lanston & Co., said the prime may fall to about 14 per cent by June. Executives attending last week's meeting of the Business Council in Hot Springs, Va., predicted the prime rate may fall below 10 per cent by the end of the year but said inflation probably would sink to the lower double digits, still high by historical standards, and an indication the underlying causes of inflation are still in place. S '01980 BRIGHTON PRODUCTIONS. INC. OFF-CAMPUS COLLEGE WORK STUDY POSITIONS NOW AVAILABLE * PLANNING INTERN " CANNING CENTER COORDINATOR " PLACEMENT COUNSELOR " YOUTH COUNSELOR * TEACHER AID * SWIMMING INSTRUCTOR " RECREATION ASSISTANT * SENIOR HOME AID * RECEPTIONIST " CLERK /TYPIST " FAMILY LIVING ASSISTANT " RESEARCH ASSISTANT " RECYCLING STATION ASSISTANT " DIRECTOR OF MEN'S SOFTBALL LEAGUE * DIRECTOR OF WOMEN'S SOFTBALL LEAGUE AVERAGE WAGE $4.25 Call Moh-Fri 8-4 T-C Urban Corps 484-0380