The Michigan Daily-Saturday, May 15, 1982-Page 5 CONVENTIONEERS FLOCK TO DORMS For rent: Drm rm w air, 'U' vu By AMY GAJDA Maids and air-conditioning aren't typ- ical dorm room fare for students, yet in summer you can find both luxuries in many University housing facilities. The services make dorm-life bearable for the many conventioneers who come to Ann Arbor each summer for workshops and mini-courses. In summer, the housing staff ensures that dorm life changes drastically to accommodate the nearly 16,000 conven- tioneers who are enrolled in programs sponsored by their individual organizations, said Nancy D'Angelo, the convention coordinator for Univer- sity housing. "WHAT COULD be a better place to board the students than at student dor- ms," D'Angelo said. Bursley, Alice Lloyd, Couzens, Stockwell and Fletcher halls are the only dorms not used for summer housing. "The cost is less than a hotel, only 'It's been a long time since I've experienced dorm lifestyle.' magnitude of probler with the group. Sh elementary and junior ents from the Gifted S about $12 per night for a single room," said Leroy Williams, director of housing information. "Plus, the con- ventioneers are together and therds less distraction ina dorm," he said. The extras the incoming groups receive are those offered by any hotel. Along with in-dorm maid service and air-conditioning, housing also provides conventioneers with television sets and "a totally different menu (then the students have), of course," said one food service employee. "THE FOOD IS very good and abun- dant," Shirley Spann, a convention banker now staying at MoJo, said. Despite such abundancy, it's not all -Dick Huttenlocher, as the most problemati "BECAUSE THEY bank conventioneer easily bored, they ha around," D'Angelo sai happiness in the conventioneers new- ago, they found time to found dorm life. Barbour elevator." N "We try to tell them the dorms have sity simply disconnec floor bathrooms," D'Angelo laughed, upon the arrival of tt commenting on the number one said. problem among the primarily post- Conventioneers mus college-years guests. "It says so right dormitory with app in the contract." University summer s BUT, AS Dick Huttenlocher, another "Frankly, I don't thinl banker, said "It's been a long time sin- in Markley know the ce I've experienced dorm lifestyle." tioneers staying in Convention group sizes range from 12 Williams said. of the University of Utah's Japanese Dave Grech, an Intef student population to the 400 North in Markley, said the American Benthologists (who research haven't bothered him the bottom of the sea.) as much as the food. Yet group size does not equal the ms D'Angelo has e ranks the 50 'high school stud- tudents Institute Lc. are bright and ve time to fool d. "A few years rewire the Betsy Now, the Univer- cts the elevator :he students, she A share Markley roximately 250 chool students. k many students ere are conven- the building," flex junior living conventioneers yet, at least not Federal judge throws out A bscam conviction, WASHINTON (AP) - A federal judge threw out yesterday the conviction of -former Rep. Richard Kelly (R-Fla.) and, in a condemnation of FBI tactics, cast a new legal cloud over the entire Abscam investigation of congressional corruption. U.S. District Judge William Bryant dismissed all criminal charges against Kelly, wiping out his Jan. 26, 1981 conviction by a federal jury for bribery, con- spiracy and other federal crimes. SAYING THAT "our public servants are not recruited from the seminiaries and monasteries," the judge ruled that Kelly had been the victim of im- permissible government entrapment. During the Abscam operation, government under- cover agents posing as Arab sheiks attempted to lure members of Congress, videotaped by hidden cameras, into accepting bribes in return for legislative favors. Kelly was among six members of the House who were convicted. Sen. Harrison Williams Jr. (D-N.J.) also was con- victed, and his resignation under threat of expulsion on March 11 made him the last to leave his office in the wake of scandal. In St. Petersburg, Fla., Kelly said he couldn't rejoice in Bryant's decision because the entire Ab- scam episode was sad for the nation. "I'm really kind of a bomb around here," he said as he met repor- ters in the office of his attorney, Anthony Battaglia., "Because I'm not feeling very elated, I'm not feeling very happy." "I THINK THE whole episode is a very serious situation as far as the country is concerned," Kelly said. Minor quake rocks Mount St. Helens VANCOUVER, Wash. (AP)- Lava was pushed from the crusty dome in- side Mount St. Helens yesterday in an eruption described as "a whisper," and a steam plume rose several thousand feet into the air. Spotters in a small plane reported. seeing glowing rockfalls on the nor- theastern side of the stadium-sized dome and a light dusting of old ash kicked up from the crater floor and fell on the northwestern flanks of the volcano. THE LATEST activity, which A.B. Adams of the University of Washington geophysics center termed a "minor eruption," came four days before the second anniversary of the May 18, 1980 blast that flattened 150 square miles of timber, sent an ash cloud around the world and left 60 people dead or missing. "It came in with a whisper rather than a roar," Adams said of yester- day's eruption. "Itappears at this point that it's non-violent." The mountain most recently erupted A little more than a month ago. THE STEAM plume rose to 16,000 above sea level over the southwestern Washington volcano at about 3 a.m., then dissipated. It was detected by National Weather Service radar in Por- tland, Ore., about 5 miles to the south- west. Several vigorous blasts of steam, dust and old ash also rose from the top Hof the lava dome periodically. Moderate earthquakes continued to jolt the mountain and Adams said a harmonic tremor which began about 1 a.m. continued for some time. Oc- casional gas emissions also were detec- ted. A HARMONIC tremor, detected on sensitive seismographs, usually in- dicates the movement of molten rock inside the volcano. The red zone hazard area around the mountain was closed at 11 p.m., leaving about 300 loggers temporarily without work. If it had been a major eruption, winds would have carried ash to the northeast to an area between Stampede Pass in the Cascades and Wenatchee in central Washington, the National Weather Ser- vice said. SINCE THE May 1980 eruption, the volcano has had five explosive erup- tions, six non-explosive dome-building eruptions and one explosive dome- building eruption. During dome growth, molten rock pushes into the floor of the crater. Previous dome-buildingeruptions have left a mound of hardened lava 680 feet tall-75 feet higher than Seattle's space Needle-1,800 feet wide and 2,000 feet long. The latest round of activity began Tuesday and the U.S. Geological Sur- vey issued an eruption advisory. It was upgraded to an eruption alert by late Thursday with scientists predicting an eruption within 36 hours. rl'u,'y mDL syJL.. Id-Ir .1 Daily Photo by JACKIE BE! Future stars Although they may not be typical Wolverine recruits, these two aluminum walk-ons anxiously await the startof the upcoming football season, L: 1