national )er! Battalion/Page 11 September 9, 1982 ■Talks continue, teachers strike er njtiooi 3-EI^ 'hat htir gra, h off, a Dalt ited. 'AA-'n'l source] letter i ate las, • Chat ?a$2( iin ofgj used toj ed anti Federal i the ini' not ?tter. outs ouseii] chedi •urtoni iuentlt smuj i consp United Press International Teacher strikes in Michigan, Illinois, Pennsylvania and Ohio dosed schools for more than !00,000 students today, promp ting angry parents in at least one district to set up their own picket lines to protest the walkouts. In the largest threatened strike in the nation, Detroit teachers set a Friday deadline |for a strike vote if no contract igreement is reached. They roted Tuesday to extend their )ld contract 72 hours and con tinue negotiations allowing clas hes for the city’s 211,500 stu- Idents to open on schedule [Wednesday. New York, New Jersey and [Washington state teachers also [were negotiating new contracts [over pay and class time. In Illinois, where teacher [strikes affected 45,000 students, parents and children in Pala tine-Rolling Meadows District 15 marched Tuesday to seek a [settlement of the strike in their district. One girl carried a sign 'reading, “Let Me Go Back to I School.” In Michigan, teachers in [seven school districts walked out Tuesday, joining four other dis- kricts. About 4,000 teachers and I more than 78,000 students were 1 affected. The latest strikes included ■ Kalamazoo, Waterford, South- ■ field, Ferndale, Troy, Traverse ■ City and Suttons Bay. Still closed ■ by strikes that began last week ■were Lake Orion, Fenton, Novi land Lake City. Almost 3,500 Pennsylvania ■ teachers were striking 14 school ■ districts, leaving about 87,000 students on summer vacation. Two of the latest strikes in cluded Central Bucks School District in the Doylestown area and the Greater Nanticoke Area District in northeastern Pennsyl vania. Teachers in nine other districts were threatening strikes. Illinois teachers were also striking East St. Louis, the Wood River-Hartford Elementary School District downstate, Wheaton-Warrenville District 200, the Palos area and West Chicago. The East St. Louis school board issued an ultimatum to 1,100 teachers who have been on strike since Aug. 31, saying they would be docked a months-salary and dropped from insurance benefits if they did not show up for work next Monday. Teachers who report will lose only four days’ salary under the board’s announce ments. Contract talks were broken off and no date was set for re sumption. Schools have stayed open, but only a few teachers and students have been report ing to classes. In Ohio, about 273 teachers were striking the North Olmsted District in suburban Cleveland for the fifth day, affecting 5,600 students. Schools remained open with administrators and non-striking teachers manning classrooms. About one-third of the district’s bus drivers failed to show up for work Tuesday in apparent sym pathy for the teachers. No new talks were scheduled. Study: uglier have smarter United Press International SAN FRANCISCO - Nice looking guys finish last in the race for status while their uglier counterparts come out with better jobs and better educated wives, according to a study reported by [.Richard Udry and Bruce Eckland of the University of North Caro lina Tuesday at the 77th anruial meeting of the Amer ican Sociological Association. A woman’s attractiveness was unrelated to education, occupation or personal in come, but attractiveness affects adult status though marriage to a high-income husband, Udry and Eckland said. For males, however, the findings were quite different. The least attractive men have the most education and job status, the researchers said, citing a study of 601 men and 745 women. The job sta tus rating decreases with attractiveness and only the “outstandingly” good-looking men attain jobs as prestigious as less attractive men do. The study used data from a 1970 Explorations in Equality of Opportunity survey of men and women who were ques tioned during their high school sophomore year in 1955. Research assistants then used high school pictures to rate the atractiveness of the respondents. The study showed more attractive women had more highly educated husbands, while the opposite was true for men. men wives The survey showed less attractive men performed bet ter in school and had sexual relations at a later age than better-looking males, while there was no such correlation for women. The fact the more attrac tive men had less-educated wives was explained by “the high level of sexual activity and the low academic achieve ment of the better-looking males.” “Perhaps being good look ing gives a man so many heter osexual opportunities he loses sight of other objectives and marries at an earlier age, thereby probably marrying a younger woman than the less good-looking man and, there fore, a woman with less educa tion,” said Udry. Court allows workers state, federal benefits United Press International NEW ORLEANS - The Louisiana Supreme Court has ruled that offshore oil workers injured on rigs on the Outer Continental Shelf can apply for compensation benefits under both state and federal law. The court Tuesday over turned a lower appeals court ruling that would have pre vented a New Iberia man from collecting benefits from Louisiana Worker’s Compensa tion as well as the federal Long shoreman and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act. Dan Thompson injured his hand March 9, 1980, while working for Teledyne Movible Offshore Inc. of New Iberia on a rig 4 miles off the Louisiana coast in federal waters of the Outer Continental Shelf. For several decades, Louisiana courts heard workers’ Police arrest third suspect in “junk food profs” death med ruestJ loon aid, ■veral is sum it of rnett' die nts mayor] maid mad) it at notfil ;t was only idUll United Press International NEW YORK — Police sear ching the “meat rack” area fre quented by male prostitutes arrested a teenager Tuesday in the slaying of the University of Florida’s “junk food professor” and said two young men already charged in the killing were pros titutes. The suspects were held pend ing a hearing to determine whether they should be extra dited to Florida. Police said one of the suspects was cooperating with their investigation and had agreed to return. The three were believed to be the same suspects charged two weeks ago in Gainesville, Fla., with forging checks in the name of Professor Howard Apple- dorf, 41, who was found suffo cated in his apartment Friday in what police called a ritualistic, possibly revenge killing. Food was smeared on walls, spelling out the word “redrum” — murder spelled backward — in a scene similar to the horror movie “The Shining.” Police said the suspects were released from jail last Thursday when Appledorf unexplainedly dropped the charges. The popular professor slowly suffocated last Friday in his apartment while his killers mun ched on submarine sandwiches, police said. The third suspect, 15, was arrested just after midnight Tuesday in a section of Manhat tan known as the “meat rack” because of its concentration of male prostitutes, police said. Au thorities in Gainesville said they could not release the name of the Wilton, Conn., teenager. Paul Everson, 19, of Rollin- dale, Mass., charged with first degree murder, was arrested in New York Tuesday. “All the detectives in the sec tion of New York where we be lieved the suspects to be were carrying photographs of him (Everson),” Capt. Richard Ward of the Gainesville Police Depart ment said. “One of the Manhattan de tectives spotted this guy walking down the street, and he ran across and picked him up.” The other suspect, identified as Gary McNichol, was charged earlier Tuesday with first- degree murder. He was arrested in Manhattan, driving Apple- dorPs car, after a long chase. He told detectives he would waive extradition to Florida at a hear ing in New York. “We understand this fellow (McNichol) is talking, but that’s all we can say right now,” Ward said. “We understand he has waived extradition and we can have him back here as soon as we can get him in front of a magis trate up there.” Ward insisted the killing had no apparent sexual overtones although he said Everson had been arrested for prostitution. New York detectives also identi fied McNichol as a male prosti tute. Authorities had trouble iden tifying the suspects because of their many aliases. Appledorf, 41, gained na tional attention for his bioche mical analysis of fast foods in the 1970s and was nicknamed “the junk-food professor” when he touted the nutritional value of McDonald’s hamburgers. His body was found gagged, blindfolded and propped against a sofa Sunday in his ran sacked, lakeside condominium in Gainesville. Three plates with sandwiches on them and wine glasses were set in a neat semicircle around the body. An empty fourth plate and an upturned wine glass \yere beside the body. The pro fessor was smothered with a can vas tote bag filled with water wrapped around his head, and pillows and towels placed over his face. Appledorf had been a profes sor at the university for 15 years. VAN TO: First Christian Church (Disciples) Bryan LEAVES: Commons — 9:15 Northgate Post Office — 9:20 Dr. John Hoyle, Church School Teacher Mike Miller, Campus Minister 846-1221 mmjrm c NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY RESTAURANT Offers both a lunch and dinner menu including a variety of Seafood, Poultry, and Beef Dishes seven days a week. 3231 East 29th Street Experience Fine Dining in a Unique Atmosphere Bryan Hours: I I a.m.-9:30 Sun.-Thurs., I I a.m.-l0:00 Fri.-Sat. vV\ ALPHA CHI OMEGA SORORITY f ‘i announces their FALL RUSH INTERVIEWS Monday, Sept. 6 — Thursday, Sept. 9 4 p.m.-7 p.m. AXCl Apt. #47 Sausalito Interested Women come by or call: V/ i Pi Kappa Alpha presents their g FALL RUSH 1982 Thursday, Sept. 9 Free Beer & Punch -JCA_/VOe/S£ r 30) BJTT/.E’ Al/E. ~17gl ''JSS*- woops FMNom* WAITS CAACTEOA Terri Melton Julie Purler AXO Apt. 696-5828 696-3285 696-5516 All parties begin at 8:30 at the PIKE house For information, call: 696-6871, 779-8997 TAJAV Debtors work for government United Press International WASHINGTON - The Educa tion Department is moving to identify and collect from its em ployees who have defaulted on federal student loans. Education Secretary Terrel Bell, who earlier announced a computer check for workers who still owe Uncle Sam for their edu cation, said Monday his agjency is now changing procedures to make it easier to dock their wages. At the same time the White House is backing legislation that would allow the government to garnish wages for back debt with out first going to court. Now, court judgement must be mac before pay can be docked. Thousands of federal workei have defaulted on governmei student loans and, in an emba rassing and ironic twist, many t them now work for the Educ; tion Department. The government was embai rassed by Senate hearings in Jui at which Sen. Charles Percy, F Ill., called it “outrageous” tht more than 37,000 federal worl ers are delinquent debtors. The government is owed $1. billion in delinquent guarantee student loans. piiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiHiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiMiiimiimiiiiiiimi GC t r. x /STUDENT VERNMENT S A M UNIX'E RSI TV JUDICIAL BOARD INTERVIEWS • 2 GRADUATES • 2 SENIORS 2 JUNIORS 2 SOPHOMORES APPLY IN SG OFFICE UNTIL SEPT. 10 5 P.M. NOT AFFILIATED WITH DORM JUDICIAL BOARDS compensation suits by Louisiana residents injured outside Louisiana while engaged in work with a substantial connec tion to the state. The justices ruled that treatment also should extend to offshore workers. In case of recovery under both federal and state compen sation schemes, one award would be credited against the other to avoid double recovery. SPALDING OTEY CRISMAN HOGAN STUDENT GOLFERS DON’T MISS THESE VALUES! si ^Fooljoy-FJ^^I GOLF SHOES Rag. tIOt.OO $52 88 L^.*ub!:* w ' d, ia PROLINE DISCOUNT PRICES! 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