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October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 12

…" i i 9 - ;. r " c'f _ Y ® I III, a ', i , i : s r { . 'i r % . / S r s* t ;;;,, , y " Jtil. 'SAY' F- a '.., . Your First New Car. Think of all the good times you'll have with it: the places you'll go, the things you'll do, the people you'll see. It's something you'll remember your whole life. So we know how important it is to find the right car. That's why, when you walk into a Chevy dealership, you'll find 13 Chevys priced under $8,000*-and...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 13

…0 0 6 M Y T U R N BeKoind t Comuters We may have our creature comforts,j but there's no escape from the r questions and family obligations BY CHRISTOPHER M. BELLITTO commute to school have it easy. There's a washing You may think that those of us who live at home and j machine with no wait, a new tube of toothpaste in the medicine cabinet and, most important, a fridge stocked with food someone else has paid for. Not only that, but the phon...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 14

… ered the new sound but even managed, roles. Having worked on films in both cul- n one scene, to imitate Australian costar tures leads her to muse on the comparative Bryan Brown's assumed Scottish accent. advantages of each. "In the States there are "I had the advantage," she admits. "I not political restrictions-people get a lot lidn't have to be doing it exactly right more freedom in that aspect," she says. >ecause I was mimicking him. He ha...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 15

… 0 i TOP OF THE WEEK Singulr Actresses Two stunning debuts pair of promising actresses will make their debuts before American movie audiences this fall; each is "different" in ways that might ordinarily hinder or prevent an acting career. Marlee Matlin, who is hearing impaired, performs bril- liantly as a deaf woman in the film version of Mark Medoff's successful Broadway play, "Children of a Lesser God." Chinese actress Joan Chen has been ...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 16

…aying for the Big Time After 14 years on the road and thousands of club dates, Robert Cray's effort is paying off R obert Cray had thought that Portland perspective to the traditional would be the end of the road for now. blues treatment of love and its But after two weeks of traveling, per- frequent demise. "Right Next forming his smooth blend of blues and R&B Door (Because of Me)" takes in small clubs up and down the West Coast, the point of...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 17

…The Drive to Divest I enjoyed your cover story on college divestment enormously (NATIONAL AFFAIRS). It is encouraging to see college campuses once again participating in the fight for justice and truth. I am also pleased to report that, following two weeks of active dem- onstrations and sit-ins, the trustees of the University of Wyo- ming voted to divest themselves fully of all holdings in compa- nies operating in South Africa. ROCK SCHULER Un...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 18

… C L A S S I F I E D S Katharine Graham, Chairman, of the Board Richard D. Simmtnos, Prestident EDITOR-IN-CRIEF: Richard M. Smrith SENIOR EOITOR/SPECIAL PROJECTS: Lynnr Povich EDITOR Jrrold K. Footlick EXECUTIVE EDITOR: LynntrLangwa'y AIRT DIRECTOR: Robert J. George STAFF EDITORS: Barbara Burgowr, , nGvens, Jean STAFF WRITER: Johnt Schwatrtz STAFF REPORTER: Connrie Leslie PICTURE EDITOR: Nia Krikellasr Buttont EDITORIAL PRODUCTION: Ute F. Lan...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 19

…0 I didn't have a vacation. I had an adventure. Remote? Try ends of the earth. New muscles. New attitude. How to look smart...Uri aiipU. Newsweek On Campus Newsweek Sweatshirt On Campus $15.95 Polo Shirt $14.95 Newsweek On Campus What can you say about rapids named Upper Disaster and Lower Disaster? ---. Companionship. Until this summer, my only experience with the wilderness was demanding to go home early from summer camp. Outward Bound...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 20

…S Book in 1850. Many later stories have been simply two-voice conversations, resem- bling psychoanalytic cross talk or internal dialogue: as one of these nameless interloc- utors says, "I am a double-minded man." "Paradise" is more conventional than most of Barthelme's previous work, but no one will mistake it for some earnest novel in which "real" characters work out "real" problems in "real" settings. Barthelme's characters don't quite have...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 21

…0 .0 B0 OKS A Lost Tourist in Paradise Simon's young models provide all the sexual pleasure he can handle, but their unstable mix of high spirits and inscrutability is discomfiting "male fantasy," and they freely criticize both Simon's politics and his sexual per- formance. These women are onto him. But they stay. But only for the time being. This paradise is really only temporary shelter, and much care is given to creature comforts: mealtim...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 22

… I O A KNOCKO r 4 11 J1'. Tr *1 " " " " OURSOCKSOFF AND WIN $3000. The 1987 Honeywell Futurist Awards Competition Here's your chance to stop us in our tracks: Power-up your imagination and make a 25-year leap into the future. Turn your visions into two short essays, and you could win one of ten $3000 prizes plus a Honeywell summer internship. Call toll-free 800-328-5111 (ext. 1581) for an entry form and complete rules. Or write: Honeywell ...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 23

…0 0 0RM 6 . ____- _ RESUMES Charting a Smart Path A new guide from the College Board helps those who don't know what job to look for When a biology major becomes a medi- cal student or an education major becomes a teacher, it doesn't take clairvoyance to chart their career paths. But in her new book, "College to Career" (260 pages. The College Board. $9.95), Joyce Slayton Mitchell points out that more than half of all college graduates e...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 24

… 0 0 9 0 0 0S A r erkeBeat10 lbsM that I Full BloomCOUS load hursday night, 11:15, and Berke Breathed has one cartoon left to go. Over the past 29 hours, without stopping to sleep, he's drawn 13 days' worth of daily "Bloom County" strips. But, wanting to ship the panels at 12:43 on a flight from Denver's Stapleton Airport, 44 miles away, he has no time to waste. Working up to the last in the country, running in 999 minute because he likes...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 25

…r " "0 menial chores nor a dream job, the best pharmaceu internships offer the chance to learn a com- preciated L pany's entire operation-from the bottom pany vice p up. Jonathan Eig of Northwestern worked cause, says in the Washington bureau of the Los An- take sometf geles Times, where he both fetched medical it for comps prescriptions for reporters and wrote na- on major ac tionally syndicated articles. Still, he counts utive took I his su...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 26

… Hard at work: Producing two weeks of 'Bloom County' in one marathon session- without sleep who drew "Li'l Abner," and Walt Kelly, the cre- ator of "Pogo." Interestingly, while discussing "Peanuts" at one point, Breathed mistakenly says the name of one of his characters instead of "Char- lie Brown." "Freudian slip," he mutters. Frosty feelings: Of course there's another strip to which "Bloom County" has always been compared. From the first d...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 27

…U S urn a Getting comfortable with an IBM PC now can put you in a good position later. Familiarity with the IBM Personal Com- puter can give you a real advantage in school. And it can put you in good standing when you get out. Since IBM computers are widely accepted throughout the academic and professional fields, chances are you'll be seeing a lot of them. So while you may leave a lot of things be- hind when you leave school, PC know-how is...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 28

…p * Autographing an Opus shirt: The characters are so realistically beguiling that half of the strip's mail comes addressed to them JODY BOYMAN strip was so popular in Austin that it was reprinted in book form. And word of this promising talent traveled all the way to the Washington Post Writ- ers Group, a top newspaper syndicate. "I was over- whelmed by his work," says Al Leeds, now Breathed's editor and sales manager for Writers Group. "H...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 29

…0 11 1 BUSINESS REPLY MAIL FIRST CLASS PERMIT NO. 217 CLINTON, IOWA POSTAGE WILL BE PAID BY ADDRESSEE Reader Service Dept. P.O. Box 2762 Clinton, Iowa 52735-2762 1.1111 .1 111111.I ...1.11,,111 ,,,111 1111 I BUSINESS REPLY MAIL FIRST CLASS PERMIT NO. 217 CLINTON, IOWA POSTAGE WILL BE PAID BY ADDRESSEE * POSTAGE NECESSARY IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES NO POSTAGE NECESSARY IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES 1 1 I I I I 1 1 i 1 1 I 1 1 I I 1 1 1...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 30

…II NO POSTAGE I I IIIF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES BUSINESS REPLY MAIL ____ FIRST CLASS MAIL PERMIT NO. 250 LIVINGSTON, N.J. POSTAGE WILL BE PAIO BY ADDRESSEE The Newsweek Building P0O. Box 414 Livingston, N.J. 07039-9965 ' I lil' 11'I ~ li1 11'1 'l~ [ . I I ! 0 z 01 1 01,1 Q Q QQ. n.., . b n eet oC 17- °o cx a a. 0 i z tID yLi 0 LI 0C n n ; z o -I Li C 0 it l O C 0 da z ON Li 0 0 Pt 0. 0 A' 0 0 C O LILI 0 n Pt 0 0 Pt ...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 31

… 0 0 NormalMNan Strange W it. , _ 9 11rJ r Ijust draw until I reach that one hideous moment," says Gary Larson, the creator of "The Far Side.""That's what I relate to." And these days alot of people relate to School of dVery Hard kKnocks 5 w slWest Point cadets take to the hills in summer The 60-foot balance beam shivers like a wet puppy as West Pointer Allyn Lynd PHOTOS BY SUDHia takes slow, nervous steps along its Tanks for the memories: ...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 32

…3YM oZt( 3 r a u c 7 X07 Q ]S b2ta x a n I,< ,.OrC~j cm I y K f~ hD s x x ° y m'. ' Inp 2 Q O r- 1-m M a '"n r _ ZZ t g}~~~~~~~~~~~~- zo mmy o (' . cOc o .r1 J 1 O c ~ z l Z > i ? Oh , v Z < J o z- E-I" .+"J" ~U (D. " la mr c >rlh ,.a A rv 0 0? xz~ - x p.80"it0 b b e 23 y..m Z ..T .... Wi x'K Sr - . I \ - mmo ai. -r 4.3 v7 < , yw oy- °Z~ f°O b1 \ n . "~~ ~ ~ n; y 'l - O ' S -O Y .f Itii a0 "'0,0~~~~~<~ 7IJ.t< y ' N w:o f Iy a , -' ~ m . I~ lo....…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 33

…9 .- r .: 4.J'r MRn ." e: "".) I I To A)to A LL. 000 TO PFILL0)0. BRAD S00 SLATt-)G 0000)00 00. / ES-- 5oU -T- ER iOT-0) BACK. 00000 E00P000, TO MAKE 0VS G Er0OSE00 TO MEAT OOOSESS PREPOAA7100 FOR ouR JOOoSo. LOTE O0KOIo)T TKEEP.0 0 T~O C-O LOO Tow 0)0.00 -TOEEP u OF a TO KaUCk Uap To PBtry AuntoelTo . 00 0 I'M WA ITIaG. WELL., HERE GOES. 0 e 0 Y ri I I '600* or mail to: Army National x 6000, Clifton, NJ 07015 ,! i 17171 rE/ZIP US ...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 34

… 0 0 0 CS EG Disaster for higher ed? Reform would alter the status of scholarships, student loans and charitable contributions Facing a Taxing Proble The so-called "tax simplification" bill may raise some college costs and environmental-design schools are America's largest; the agriculture school is second largest. A&M has become a re- search heavyweight; its research budget tops $150 million this year. Though histori- cally weak in the h...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 35

…0 0 0 PHoTroS BY WILL w Displaying the bands that tie: Loyal Ags can't buy their class rings until they complete 9 Agie re No Jok Unique Texas A&M, long the butt of Lone Star humor, builds a brainier reputation T radition holds that sometime before on here people wouldn't understand." Thanksgiving, the students of Texas Tradition holds the Aggies like a moth- A&M University will begin building er's arms or a set of shackles-depending on The...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 36

…0O L0 C S SPORTS books rather than blockers. "I think it would be a good idea for all freshmen to sit out," he says. "With leaving home and ad- justing to all this work, I don't know what I'd do if I was playing football right now." G r a d e s Others, however, say their .dreams of gridiron glory have been unjustly derailed Proposition 48, the latest effort to make sure that by the new standards. Schools that offered players are 'student-athl...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 37

…0 "Mostly I'm mad because it wasn't my fault," says Glonek, whose school offered the sub- ject only at an honors level. Some administrators fear that reliance on the SAT and ACT is unfair to blacks, who historically have scored poorly on standardized tests. "[Those tests] are culturally geared and racially biased," says USC bas- ketball coach George Raveling, reflecting the view of many so- ciologists. "They've been used for years to keep bla...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 38

… 0 0 0 ANYTME. THE NEW DDEP ER2AMILS no private practice, a clinician who has no clinic, an untenured professor who has no ; :. academic credentials in literature, ethics , or religion-the subjects he lectures on most. Indeed, ever since he turned his back on traditional psychiatry and headed South in 1958 to observe the black children who were integrating public schools in New Orleans, Coles has ignored academic and professional conventio...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 39

…The Moral Life Robert Coles Of Children Moralist at Large '< 0 0 ANYPLACE. He is a child psychia- trist with no practice, a clinician with no clinic and an untenured pro- fessor who teaches at Harvard's law, medical and business schools ings Robert Coles lectures on OnTuesday and Thursday morn- "The Literature of Social Reflec- tion" to 400 undergraduates at Harvard. In the afternoons he teaches "Literature and Medicine" at Har- vard Medi...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 40

…p " . " " " 9 C O L L E G E L l FE Life in the Pit': Texas students awaiting space tough it out in Kinsolving basement Finding Beds for Brains With housing demand outstripping supply, some schools are seeking creative solutions A t the University of Texas in Austin last month, rows of beds, desks and portable closets made the Kinsolving Dormitory basement look like an army bar- racks. Appropriately dubbed "the Pit" by its residents, the n...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 41

…a s 0 w . SIU's VideoTIPLE Volunteers CHOICED m Three years ago Carbon- dale, Ill., lacked the full spectrum of cable-televi- sion programming-but South- ern Illinois University stu- dents still wanted their MTV. So volunteers from the campus radio station put to- gether their own music-video show. Since then, MTV has ar- rived. But SIU's spirited "The New Frontier" show has sur- vived by becoming a video al- ternative, developing a pla...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 42

…The Arican Express Real Life Planner s your chances for SAmerican Express* getting your right about getting tejob is the r done right. nd'then tadtoshed ices, product i ad setlh mnth i t : ' testing, manufactusrg troube-s hootig, mrkein -oyourbright ideas irosder tha y ight11fulty realize your ptenial dthe ~ pn teyour company. The entrepreneuratspri maoking broads~iwe e dust e in-h find th y the corporate it a r twit unt WHAT IS A...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 43

…0 The American Express ai Life Planner 0 0 The American Expreo eal Life Planner that his little slips of paper had slipped out of place, and he would have to mark his place all over again. "During a particularly boring sermon, I realized Ineeded something that would stick without ruining the'book," he says, and his thoughts quickly turned to a light adhesive already developed in his company's research lab by one of his colleagues, samples o...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 44

…If you're carrying cash on vacation, you're the tourist attraction. Whether your vacation takes you to scenic Europe or sandy beaches, you can be sure there's a large group of people antic- ipating your arrival. Pickpockets can spot you, distract you and take your wallet before you've taken your first picture. And if you're carrying cash, they can take your entire vacation. That's why it's so important to take American Express® Travelers Cheq...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 45

…0 0 The American Exprea eal Life Planner Every figure and idea that is not your own should be sourced in detail. The idea is that a person with absolutely no familiarity about the market you're trying to reach should be able to understand what you're talking about, what the num- bers mean, and where the numbers come from" Stern advises new business planners to work from the ground up in building expense and revenue estimates. "Don't come at ...…

October 23, 1986 (vol. 97, iss. 36) • Page Image 46

… -, 9 HOW TO SPOT AN INTRAPRENEUR- FRIENDLY COMPANY kay, we've established the fact that many companies offer a nurturing environment for their innovative and intraprising employees. But where do you go from here? How do you locate and select among those companies with an established commitment to intrepreneurial directly relatable to an unwillingness to promote and develop new ideas.) " How likely is it that you will be free to use the re...…

October 23, 1985 (vol. 96, iss. 35) • Page Image 1

…C, bt Sir t3nU 4IatlQ Ninety-six years of editorial freedom Vol. XCVI -No. 35 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, October 23, 1985 Eight Pages Police arrest 15 0 in CH protest Opposition expected again today By KERY MURAKAMI that he had either fallen or sat down in The second set of arrests came soon building or being arrested. The four Fifteen demonstrators, mainly the doorway. Demonstrators looking aft...…

October 23, 1985 (vol. 96, iss. 35) • Page Image 2

…Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 23, 1985 a Candy bar adds to 'U' commercialization By CHERYL WISTROM Here's a trivia question that any true Wolverine fan should be able to answer: What do you get my mixing milk chocolate, peanuts, sugar, corn syrup solids, peanut butter, invert sugar, partially hydrogenated soybean oil, cocoa, and vanillin? False teeth? Well, maybe. but when those ingredients are mixed in the right proporti...…

October 23, 1985 (vol. 96, iss. 35) • Page Image 3

…The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 23, 1985 - Page 3 HEALTH & FITNESS 'U' support group aids breast cancer patients By LAUREN SINAI When surgeons wheeled Linda Van- derpool into the operating room at St. John's Hospital in Grosse Pointe four years ago, she had read little about preast cancer and didn't know what would be done to her body. L She expected a biopsy to reveal that the lump in her breast was benign. When she awoke, she lea...…

October 23, 1985 (vol. 96, iss. 35) • Page Image 4

…I OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, October 23, 1985 The Michigan Daily Gheft hiantiy Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCVI, No. 35 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Nicaragua's' natural 0 enemies' Peace possibilities T sraeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres' announcement of a "possible blueprint" for renewed Mid-East peace process talks is ...…

October 23, 1985 (vol. 96, iss. 35) • Page Image 5

…ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, October 23, 1985 Page 5 'Plenty' offers picture of loneliness By David Schwenk CAN ONE find satisfaction after fighting a war? Meryl Streep puts this question to the test in her new film, Plenty. Her character, Susan, has personal qualities that allow Streep to show just how well she can act. She's sexy, emotional, and troubled by secrets from her past. While Plenty's success does not rely solely on M...…

October 23, 1985 (vol. 96, iss. 35) • Page Image 6

…Page 6 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 23, 1985 4 Taubman encourages well-rounded education (Continued from Page 1) Taubman started thinking about the formation of such a program after reading a magazine article in 1973. The article claimed that, at one time, the United States stood proud; sud- denly it became one of the most self- doubting, countries in the world. Taubman was disturbed by the fact that the average reader would re...…

October 23, 1985 (vol. 96, iss. 35) • Page Image 7

…Mud Bowl Saturday, 10:00 a.m. Corner of Washtenaw and South University _SPORTS_ Wednesday, October 23, 1985 Blue spikers rally to defeat Spartans Hockey vs. Bowling Green Friday, 7:30 p.m. Yost Ice Arena Page 7 The Michigan Daily Davidson's spikes spill Spartans By DARREN JASEY Two volleyball teams whose recor- ds aren't among the best in the Big Ten got together and provided ex- cellent entertainment for the crowd at the CCRB last night,...…

October 23, 1985 (vol. 96, iss. 35) • Page Image 8

…Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 23, 1985 6 Mallory vs. Ma :Michigan-Indiana game pits father, sons; mom neutral By JOE EWING When Eleanor Mallory comes to Michigan Stadium to watch her sons Mike and Doug play defense for the Wolverines against Indiana Saturday, don't be surprised if she doesn't cheer too loudly for the Maize and Blue. She's got another interest on the field. Bill Mallory, Eleanor's husband and Mike and Do...…

October 23, 1984 (vol. 95, iss. 41) • Page Image 1

…Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom j:j; b E LIE I3U i~Iai1Q Calico Clouds in the morning and a little bit of sunshine in the afternoon. Vol. XCV, No. 41 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, October 23, 1984 Fifteen Cents Ten Pages Mondale win not enough, profs say By DOV COHEN Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale's performance in Sun- day night's debate was good but may not be enough to ove...…

October 23, 1984 (vol. 95, iss. 41) • Page Image 2

…4 Page 2 -The Michigan Doily - Tuesday, October 23, 1984 Haitians attack U.S. po lic toward aliens MIAMI (AP) - The scene is a com- mon one: a small, rickety sailboat packed with hopeful immigrants crosses the 600-mile-long "Haitian Highway" to Florida, pursuing dreams of a new life. But the dream usually ends when a U.S. Coast Guard cutter stops the sailboat and takes all the Haitians on board. SINCE THE GOVERNMENT began its Haitian Migrati...…

October 23, 1984 (vol. 95, iss. 41) • Page Image 3

…Profs agree: Mondale won, but it may not matter (Continued from Page 1) which is preposterous for the 'Great Communicator!" he said. The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 23, 1984 - Page 3 Poles fear for life of kidnapped priest , '. ., , k w F A Sk a t d ' tt h 4 5 a+t H t However, Kinder was surprised that Mondale didn't drive home the Central American issue. "I was surprised he didn't spend more time on Reagan's admission about the CIA ...…

October 23, 1984 (vol. 95, iss. 41) • Page Image 4

…4 OPINION Page 4 Tuesday, October 23, 1984 The Michigan Daily d A step towards ending the arms race By Justin Schwartz What can we do to stop our ominous slide towards nuclear annihilation?. One major step is to vote "yes" on the nuclear free zone, proposal 1 on the city ballot,this Nov. 6. The nuclear free zone would prohibit work "a major purpose of which" is the research and develop- ment of nuclear arms. It would also create an oversi...…

October 23, 1984 (vol. 95, iss. 41) • Page Image 5

…ARTS Page 5 The MichigannDoily Tuesday, October 23, 1984 Page 5 I . .:.... . y.. . .... .. 'Psychedelically speaking: The skinning of the Furs By Andrew Porter sThe Psychedelic Furs will perform at center stage in Canton tonight to sup- port their latest album "Mirror Moves." Michigan Daily reporter An- ,drew Porter recently spoke with Furs bassist Tim Butler. The following is a transcript of their conversation: j Daily: Does much of...…

October 23, 1984 (vol. 95, iss. 41) • Page Image 6

…A Page 6- The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 23, 1984 Francois Truffaut dead at 52 I By Byron L. Bull F RANCOIS TRUFFAUT, the widely celebrated French director who spearheaded France's New Wave movement in cinema, died of cancer Sunday at the age of 52. Doctors at the American Hospital of Paris said Truf- faut had been admitted ten days earlier, and had lapsed into a coma, awakening only sporadically before his death. Apparently Truffaut...…

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