Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Saturday, July 23, 1983 Senate delays draft- aid law deadline .,~n~ ni d to aiv ctdents more By JACKIE YOUNG A measure passed by the U.S. Senate Thursday would extend the deadline for students to comply with a law linking financial aid to Selec- tive Service Registration. The law requires all male students applying for federal financial aid to sign a form certifying they have registered with the Selective Ser- vice. Under the proposal, which must receive final approval from the U.S. House of Representatives, univer- sities would still ask students to sign a certification form, but federal aid could not be cut until the end of Sep- tember. Currently the deadline is Sept. 1. T:he measure, tacked on as an amendment to a defense spending bill, would only be a "grace period" to ease the burden on financial aid offices processing student ap- puications ana ogv ~uu g time to return the forms. University students should still rush their aid forms into the finan- cial aid office, to avoid delays in processing their applications, said Thomas Butts, the University's assistant to the vice president for academic affairs who works in Washington. Butts said the amendment may be stalled, if the House of Represen- tatives doesn't get to the vote before their August recess. Sen. Daniel Moynihan (D-N.Y.) in troduced the delay amendment which passed 56-40, in an attempt to help students who might be away for the summer and would not be aware of the changes, said Mike McCurry a spokesmen in Moynihan's office. AFSCME local reaches tenative agreement with 'U' By DAN GRANTHAM agreement was reached five hours af- After two months of negotiations, the ter Phillips came into town Wednesday. University has reached a temporary Phillips works for the Michigan Em- contract agreement with its service and ployment Relations Commission, a maintenance workers union. state agency. James Thiry, the University's per- Dwight Newman, president of the sonnel director, said the agreement union local could not be reached for was reached Wednesday but he refused comment on the contract yesterday. to discuss the details of the contract un- til union members have voted on it. THE 2,100 service and maintenance Read workers are represented by Local 1583 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AF-a SCME). Union officials have scheduled a vote U se on the contract for next Tuesday. Voting will take place in Rackham Lec- ture Hall from 10 a.m. to noon and from C ifi 2to5p.m.Daly Thiry said labor mediator Edmund C I as ifie Phillips was "very helpful," in moving the stalled talks along. The temporary The Michigan Daily. Vol. XcIII, No. 26-S Saturday, July 23, 1983 TODAY Juggling act FOUR UNIVERSITY of Florida students are in New York City this week doing what has helped them get through college so far: juggling. The Jongleur Jugglers are competing against more than 1,000 jugglers in the In- ternational Jugglers Convention, a twirling, tossing, throw-and-catch affair considered the "Olympics of juggling." Zoology major Bob Summers and engineering student Mike Stillwell, both from Orange Park, started the group. "Mike and I used to perform at high school activities," Summers said recently. "We met our third member of the act, John Creveling, while he was juggling at Gator Growl and we decided to pull together to make a team." Craveling, a teacher from Ocala, Fla. joined the group in 1979, three years before philosophy graduate student Yvonne Wetherall of Tampa joined them. The four practice once or twice a week for three hours. They do their show about four times a month at parades, parties, nightclubs, banquets, and betefit fund-raising activities. Will they graduate into pro juggling? "Unfortunately, because of career moves, we'll probably not be together for too much longer," said Stilwell. "But if we could, we'd juggle our lives away." Canoe snafu A hand-carved canoe displayed in a museum as an example of 19th cen- tuiy Indian woodcraft turned out to be the 45-year-old creation of a 20th cen- tury boy who dreamed of river adventure. John Kildow of Richland, Wash. saw the canoe when he visited the North Idaho Museum in Coeur D'Alene last weekend, and said he hollowed it from pine in 1938, when he was 13, to fulfilla lifelong dream of paddling northern Idaho waterways in a replica of an Indian canoe. Kildow said his canoe was stolen years ago by someone who flooded it and left it at the bottom of a lake. The craft probably will remain on display at the museum, board member Carl Krueger said this week. "Maybe we won't have to put up so much information on it now," he said. When the canoe was found last year, one official of the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management called it "a piece of workmanship that only someone with experience in the trade could accomplish." HAPPENINGS SATURDAY" Highlight The Performance Network will present the musical, "Cabaret," tonight at 408 W. Washington Street. The show starts at 8 p.m. Films CFT - Allegro Non Troppo, 7:35 & 10:30 p.m., Bruno Bozzetto's Fan- tasies, 9 p.m., Michigan Theater. Peace Corps - The Toughest Job You'll Ever Love, 8 p.m., International Center. Performances Student Theatre Arts Complex - "Chapter Two," 7:30 p.m., Michigan Union Ballroom. Music At Mid Day - Bradley Brookshire, harpsichordist, 12:10 p.m., Pen- dleton Room, Michigan Union. Meetings Ann Arbor Go Club - 2 p.m., Mason Hall. Miscellaneous Intercooperative Council - 50th Anniversary, open house at all co-ops, all SUNDAY Films CFT - Fiddler On The Roof, 6 & 9 p.m., Michigan Theater. Performances School of Music - Wayne Owens, bass-baritone, 2 p.m., Recital Hall. Performance Network - "Cabaret," 6:30 p.m., 408 W. Washington. MONDAY Performances School of Music - Carillon Recital, 7 p.m., Burton Tower. Meetings Tae Kwon Do Club - 6 p.m., outside, behind IM Building. Ann Arbor Support Group for the Farm Labor Organizing Committee - 7:30 p.m., 308 E. William. Christian Science Organization -7:15 p.m., Room D, League. Miscellaneous Renaissance Universal Club - Slide show, "The Underlying Unity," 8 p.m., Crowfoot Room, Michigan Union. American Cancer Society - Fresh Start Stop Smoking Clinic, 4 p.m., Ann Arbor VA Medical Center. I 4 I 4 (ISSN 0745-967X) The Michigan Daily is edited ann managed by students at the Univer- sity of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates: $13 September through April (2 semesters); $14 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published tri-weekly Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $3.50 in Ann Arbor; $5 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420tMaynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI. 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and sub- scribes to United Press Inter- national, Pacific News Service, Los Angles Times Syndicate, and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. News Room (313) 764-0552, 76- DAILY. Sports Desk, 763-0376; Cir- culation, 764-0558; Classified Adver- tising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. Edtorin Chief. News Editor. Opinion Page Editor. Arts Editors .... . . Sports Editor.... .BARBARA MISLE ..... BETH ALLEN ..... JIM SPARKS .-BILL HANSON ..MARE HODGES JIM BOYD JIM DWORMAN NEWS STAFF: Cheryl Boacke, Halle Czechowski, Dan Grantham, Georges Kovanis, Koren Tenso, Michael Weston, Jackie Young. Business Manager . ..SAM SLAUGHTER IV Display/Classifieds .aa e ....... . ..".PAM GILLERY A s DiEp r . LINDA KAPTAN iance ,,Mnager......""""DENA SHEVZOPP Sales Repres.ntaties.. PAM KAPLAN New Student EditionS oles5.. .."."LIZ LEVY-NAVARRO GENERAL STAFF: Mark Hiselmon, Barry Hunt, Ben. SPORTS STAFF: Mik Berres, Katie Blackwell, Dan, Coven, Jeff Faye, Jim Gindin, Paul Helgren, Steve Hunter. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Doug McMahon, Elizabeth Scott. -1