Page 2-Saturday, July 25, 1981-The Michigan Daily irish nationalists to rally in Dublin today 4 BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - About 500 Irish nationalists marched toward Dublin yesterday for the second mass rally in a week to show support for the IRA hunger strike by eight in- mates at the Maze prison. Two of the hunger strikers - Kieran Doherty, 25, and Kevin Lynch, 24, - were near death after more than two months without food. PREPARING FOR the worst after last Saturday's bloody clashes between police and demonstrators outside the British Embassy in Dublin, the Irish government canceled all police leave, called in 2,000 reserve officers from nearby towns and put the army on standby alert. Relatives said both Doherty and Lyn- ch, who have refused food for 64 days and 63 days, respectively, were lucid but the Britain's Northern Ireland Of- fice said "their condition continues to deteriorate." THEIR DEATHS would make them the seventh and eighth Irish nationalists to die in the prison protest. An estimated 500 supporters of the hunger strikers and their demands for political prisoner status neared the end of a 50-mile march to Dublin that will culminate today with a mass rally. Organizers said they expect 10,000 people to attend the demonstration. Wearing black arm bands and holding black-bordered flags, the mostly youthful demonstrators began their march Wednesday at Newry, a town just over the border in Northern Ireland. The marchers held giant placards reading, "Don't let any more die" and "Your T.D. (member of parliament) is dying" - a reference to Doherty, who was elected to his post from prison. A similar rally last weekend drew 17,000 demonstrators, who attempted to storm the British Embassy in Dublin. Another swimming creature possibly useful to all LONDON ' (UPI) - Important to shift more and more of the burden of questions still hang over the tiny feeding the people of the world to crustacean called krill, the food resour- swimming creatures. In the quest to ce in the cold waters of the Southern determine their usefulness, resear- Ocean that my be one of the answers chers in Utah plan to raise thousands of to the problem of feeding an over- pounds of lobsters on the edge of the crowded world. Great Basin desert. The great fishing nations continue to gather the test harvests from the THE PLANS to graze their herd of waters near Antarctica to determine lobsters 800 miles from the nearest what contribution krill will provide the ocean has typified what has become a human diet. continually expanding effort to make KRILL IS under two inches long and more use of swimming creatures. is the central link in the Antarctic food In another development, the town of web because of its habit of swarming in Archbold, Ohio has a carp festival for colossal numbers. A German fishery three days and nights. The proposal to research vessel once caught 33 tons of make krill a viable foodstuff has fur- the crustacean in eight minutes. ther focused attention on the efforts to Lately, researchers have attempted make swimming creatures useful to all. Debt Act inches along (Contnued from Page i) specifically opposed the federal gover- allow the release of IRS address infor- nment's plans to allow private collec- mation. tion agencies to collect money owed the The spokesperson, Mary Buckler, government. said the ACLU views those provisions Sen. Percy testified Monday that he as an unacceptable relaxation of the believes the release of such addresses standards of the Privacy Act. "will not violate the established THE ACLU has not, however, privacyof the taxpayer." TONIGH T T HRU SUND AY PRESENTS Join The BOBBY LE WIS & THE CR CKER A K B ND Daily Arts Staff Today Gingerbread men, etc. B USINESS WAS SO GOOD at Omaha, Nebraska's only "X-rated bakery"that it went out of business. Demand was just too high for delicacies shaped like human lips and other body parts, one of the bakers said. "We didn't know how big it was going to get," said Lori Gnader, 20, one of two housewives who placed a want ad one Sunday saying, "You name it, we bake it." Immediately, more than a half-dozen orders came in. And Mrs. Gnader took'to her oven with help from neighbor Janet Baer, 24. Eventually, business got too good. "We didn't have time to do it, so we quit," Mrs. Gnader said. They're still baking wicked pastry for friends who ask. And because of the interest from thesingle ad, they sense they might have stum- bled onto something. "We haven't seen anything like it around here," she said. "So we'll probably go back into business after a while." l Today's weather Increasingly cloudy today with a good chance of thundershowers by after- noon. Temperatures should be mild with a high in the mid-80s. Q Happenings ... SATURDAY Films CFT-Warner Bros. Cartoons, 1, 3, 5, 7 & 9 p.m., Michigan Theater. Miscellaneous The Art Fair-all over, all day. Eckankar--Open House, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., 302 E. Liberty. St. Vladimir's Parish-litergy, 10 a.m., St. Francis of Assissi Chapel. Call 994-3148 for more info. MONDAY Miscellaneous People's Anti-War Mobilization-Panel discussion, "How to Fight the Reagan Program of Cutbacks, Racism, and War," 7:30 p.m., Ann Arbor The Michigan Daily Vol.XCI,No. 48-S Saturday, July 25, 1981 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street. Ann Arbor,. Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates:$12 September through April (2 semesters): $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor: $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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