Page 4-Wednesday, July 22, 1981-The Michigan Daily Modern arcade, bings video gae e gam1es of future 4 (Continued from Page 3) ducive to loitering, truancy, dope dealing, and deviant behavior. He added that this responsibility lies with the owners and managers. He said hefeels they have been responsible and have sensed the needs of the com- munity in presenting such a place. THERE ARE also clean, light grey partitiops surrounding each of the video gamea which Kughndsaid creates a aen- ae of diviaion and privacy, which' promotes "greater communication with the machine." "It's the person against the machine," he explained. "As the scores increase, he is beating the machine." He added that that "makes you want to continue to play." These video games can "help you to unwind" Kughn said. The games can be relaxing after 3along, aggravating day, he said, because frustrations are re- channeled into another form which is controllable and your attention is redirected." THE SIMULATION Station is very "cost efficient entertainment," Kughn said. A rollercoaster couldn't feasibly be put inside of the building on Liberty, he explained, but the simulator can simulate one with basically the same effects at a much lower price. Kughn, a marketing and finance graduate, said he thinks Ann Arbor "of- fered a tremendous market" especially because of the University being here. He said the population is turning over almost completely every four years, which brings fresh faces wanting to try something new. With video games costing as much as $2,400 each, the company needed to set up in a promising area. "It's expen- sive," Kugho said. This type of center, however, has been very profitable in other areas, he said. THERE IS a Simulation Station in the Renaissance Center in downtown Detroit, Kughn said, which -is also owned by Kinop International, Inc., a Detroit-based company of which Kughn is an executive vice-president. They plan to open another one in Oakland Mall in Troy. Kughn said he did expect some com- petition from nearby pinball alrcades, but "not of particular concern." The local arcade managers, don't seem to be too worried either. Jay Dorrance, manager of Mickey Rat's on William St., said, " It's gonna be tough, but we're probably one of the best pin- ball places around." THE MANAGER of The Crossed- eyed Moose, which is just up the street from the Station, Jill Franklin, said she didn't expect too much competition because "our customers are pretty set on this store." Dorrance, like Franklin, thought many of his regulars would probably remain so. Several customers of both places con- fessed however that they , would be going to "check out" the new place to see what it was like. Subscribe Now to the t1 . 7M-0559 In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press, International reports Senate kills Democratic attempt to preserve benefit WASHINGTON-The Republican-controlled Senate yesterday killed a Democratic attempt to preserve the minimum monthly Social Security benefit. A short time later, the Democratic-controlled House approved a resolution to preserve the $122 minimum benefit, a resolution that House Republican Leader Robert Michel of Illinois called "meaningless." By a vote of 52-46, the Senate tabled, and in effect killed, an amendment by Sen. Donald Riegle (D-Mich.) to the pending tax bill that would restore the benefit. The Senate had voted 53-45 to end the minimum benefit on June 23. Today's congressional action came after President Reagan, accusing Democrats of playing "on the fears of many Americans" to keep the minimum Social Security benefit, said he woul go on national television to set the record straight, Design change may have led to Hyatt disaster KANSAS CITY, Mo.-A change in the original design of the sky walks in the Hyatt Regency Hotel doubled the stresson the part of the walkways that later pulled apart during the collapse that killed 111 people, the Kansas City Star reported yesterday ina copyright story. The Star's report said the design change doubled the stress on three steel box-beams supporting the fourth-floor sky walk, one of two that collapsed. Those were the beams that tore away from their ceiling-anchored moorings Friday night, the newspaper reported. Also yesterday, three dozen funerals were held for some of the 111 peple killed. More than 180 others were injured in the collapse. At least three lawsuits seeking a total of $105 million were filed by midday yesterday, naming the Hyatt groups and Crown Center Redevelopment Corp. as defendants. Justice dept. tells Chicago to desegregate schools WASHINGTON-The Reagan administration asked a federal court yesterday to reject a Chicago school board plan and compel it to more quickly desegregate the nation's third-largest school system. In an 82-page brief filed with U.S. District Judge Milton Shadur in Chicago, the Justice Department asked that the board be ordered to comply with a consent decree it signed with the Carter administration on Sept. 24, 1980, calling for desegregation by September of this year. The department was critical of aspects of the Chicago board's plan that would delay any mandatory measures-including busing-until September 1983. It also assailed the board's proposal to allow up to 70 percent white enrollment in any of the system's 625 schools. The department said the plan does not supply any rationale, as required by the consent decree, for the existence of schools that are 70 percent white in a system whose total enrollment is 18 percent white, 61 percent black and 21 percent Hispanic and other minorities. Hijacker forces Polish plane to military base in Germany BERLIN-A man armed with a grenade and a pistol hijacked a Polish Airlines plane carrying 50 people on a domestic flight yesterday and forced the pilot to land at a U.S. military air base in West Berlin. A U.S. military spokesman said the unidentified lone hijacker gave up shortly after the Polish LOT airlines plane landed at Tempelhof airfield. The man was taken into custody for questioning by American officials. The 49 adults and one child aboard were unharmed and left the plane shor- tly after the hijacker surrendered. The passengers were expected to return to Warsaw later, the spokesman said. It was the second plane of Poland's state-run LOT airline to be hijacked in seven months. The U.S. spokesman said that a hand grenade and pistol used by the hijacker were removed from the plane. Libyan faces murder charge OGDEN, Utah-A Libyan arrested while trying to leave the United States has been charged with killing a countryman who was resisting a return to Libya. The FBI said yesterday that it would seek to interview Mohamad Shabata, who was picked up Friday on a second-degree murder warrant as he stepped from an airplane in Chicago. Police said he was carrying $3,300 in cash and had airline reservations for Libya. The Utah warrant was issued hours after the bullet-riddled body of a man wearing a ring and clothes belonging to Nabil Mansour was found in the trunk of Mansour's car. An autopsy could not confirm that the man, who had been dead about seven days, was ,ctual y the 32-year-old Weber State 0 0 0