Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Saturday, June 1, 1985 Athletic dept. safe from tax crackdown (Continued fromPage1) "I've only got 13,000 tickets to sell and has been filled every Saturday, but see the game they're going to buy I've got people waiting in line for Mazer said, "I've been here when we the tickets." them right now," he said. didn't have the sellouts." Bill Mazer, a longtime member of While the new system may not ap- Mazer is one who doesn't think the the Athletic Board and former M club pear to threaten the athletic program rer owilldpass.tNeith e president agreed that the proposal right now it could do some damage in reform will pass. Neither does won't affect Michigan football. "Our the future. Canham, "I don t believe it will,mhe stadium is going to be filled everysaid.It will hurt the entertainment Saturday, you can bet on that," he "THE WHOLE system has been industry too much." said. built around business inducements," But Wallace thinks otherwise, "It's MAZER SAID even if the proposal said Wallace, "and that will even- does pass it won't necessarily cut the tually come back to haunt you. if it does pass, he said, "the taxpayer deductions. "Oh boy, are they gonna Right now the University has an ex- is going to be bearing the brunt of it - have a time enforcing it," Mazer said. tremely strong group of ticket which is defeating the whole pur- Canham doesn't think the reform holders. As Canham explained, "It's a pose." will hurt the basketball team either. family event." The football stadium IN BRIEF From United Press international Court halts release of Amway documents GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. - A Kent County Circuit Judge yester- day issued a preliminary injun- ction ordering a former employee of the Ads-based Amway Corp. to halt release of confidential com- pany documents. Amway attorney Thomas Mc- Namara said Donald Gregory, an editorial coordinator with the direct-sales firm for two years, released numerous confidential memos and other documents to the press and to attorneys for a group of former distributors who have filed a $120 million lawsuit against the firm. In that case, 156 former Amway distributors are suing the company in U.S. District Court for damages for what they allege was a con- spiracy between top company of- ficials and high-level distributors to force lower-level distributors to purchase "unwanted and un- necessary'' motivational materials. The suit alleges purchase of the tapes and books was a prerequisite to their growth in the company. Iraqi air raid strikes Tehran, injures 3 BEIRUT, Lebanon - Iraqi war- planes bombed Tehran in a rare daylight air raid yesterday, in- juring at least three people, and Iran said its air force launched retaliatory attacks on several Iraqi cities. The air strike on Tehran was the first carried out in daylight by the Iraqi jet fighters since they began raiding civilian settlements in Iran on Sunday. Most Iraqi raids are carried out at night to provide bet- ter cover. A military spokesman in Bagh- dad said the Iraqi planes hit selec- ted targets in mid-afternoon and residents in Tehran said they heard four loud explosions. Iran confirmed the at- tack on Tehran and said three people were injured in the raid, but it said nothing of two other Iraqi air raids on the northern city of Razvin and the central city of Kashan. Shiite forces declare unilateral cease-fire BEIRUT, Lebanon - Shiite Moslem forces declared a unilateral cease-fire yesterday in their fierce 12-day battle with Palestinian guerrillas that has left more than 400 people dead and at least 1,700 wounded. The cease-fire order coincided with the return of President Amin Gemayel from a three-day trip to Damascus and reports that Syria had agreed to send its army back to Beirut to help restore peace. "This cease-fire opens the way for evacuating the wounded and gives political efforts a chance to succeed," a Palestinian official said. "But one thing should remain clear. We will never hand over our weapons to anyone. We will fight and we will never allow anyone to disarm us." Soccer riots cause ban on British teams BELGIUM - Belgium declared a ban Friday on all British soccer teams in the wake of a stadium riot that killed 38 people,-and British soccer officials in London barred English teams from European competition for one year. Many of the victims were crushed in an avalanche of bodies and masonry when a wall collap- sed under pressure from Italian supporters who were fleeing an at- tack by hundreds of Liverpool fans. Suspects in baseball drug deals in custody PITTSBURGH . - Five people indicted on charges of distributing drugs to major league baseball players were in FBI custody yesterday and another suspect was expected to surrender. No major league players were indicted. PSYHOLOGY TODAY 1yr. PSI $12.97 COMPUTER AND CAR AND DRIVER 1 yr. CD $8.99 MODERN Whether you're interested in reducing tensions EECTRONICS 1 yr. al $12.97 A combination of advanced technological PHOTOGRAPHY 1 yr. MPS $7.98 between people and nations or just want to The world's largest computer magazine, this information and exciting auto photography. 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