Parking problems space out Ann Arbor drivers HELD OVER! __ _ _2nd W EEK,... NO 2-6264 SHOWS AT: 1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:30 The Most Explosive Spy Scandal of the Century! By BOB SCHREINER Having a car in Ann Arbor may or may not be a luxury. In fact, with the parking situation the way it presently is many people believe the automobile is too much of a bother. Those who don't have cars see them as a blessing, while owners are becoming increasingly perplexed as the situation gets worse. The problem is very simple: there are too many cars and not enough places to park them, even though the number of parking spaces in the city has stead- ily increased each year up to its cur- rent total of 5,000. The problem began about five years ago, says Lt. Robert Conn, head of traf- fic Enforcement for the Ann Arbor Po- lice Department. Then, he says, no one anticipated Ann Arbor's large popula- tion increase. But now parking space is at a prem- ium and must be policed more closely. This duty falls to Conn, who issues traf- fic violation notices. "Most of our staff are cadets who are employed on a limited duty basis," he says. "They are going to school at the University or at Eastern Michigan, and, they usually work about two or three days a week. There are no sworn police- men normally giving out parking tick- ets." Conn flatly denies that "meter maids" have a required quota of tickets to write every day. "These people follow the law and u s e common sense," he says. "If anything, they give out' far less tickets than they could." About 1,000 tickets are issued every day and Conn estimates that up to 150,- 000 cars circulate daily through t h e city. The number of ticketed vehicles is less than one percent of the total. "In proportion to the total number of cars," Conn maintains, "violations are really very low." The purpose of the parking meter system is to insure consistent turnover of all available parking space in the city, Conn adds. And despite any short- comings the system has, he is quick to defend it "It works, there's no doubt about it," he claims. "There is a much more ef- fective turnover through parking meters than parking structures. I can see no alternative that can do the job as well. Nationwide, everyone wants to find a better way - but if there is one, no one knows about it." Conn is also quick to point out that it "costs' a lot of money to collect money. In fact," he says, "to effectively en- force the law to the fullest would be self-depleting. T h e more you collect, the more it costs." John Robbins, director of parking and the traffic engineer, also sees a definite traffic problem facing the city. He sees the need for more "all-day type parking instead of the short-term kind." Robbins reported that there are pres- ently 1,452 street parking meters, 764 off-street meters, and 3,092 parking spaces in lots and car ports. Together these yielded a total revenue of $478,664 for the first 6 months of 1969. However, the difference between operating expenses and revenue was only $30,000. Robbins estimates total in- come from 1969 to be $1,046,960, while he places operating expenses at $1,055,250, in which case the city stands to lose around $10,000. Robbins believes the parking situa- tion in Ann Arbor, will remain un- changed in the near future. He said the closest thing to positive action now is the study of a proposed plan for the construction of several "satellite" park- ing structures in the outskirts of the city. Shoppers would park their cars in them and ride buses into the city proper. There also appear to be no plans to install more parking meters on residen- tial streets or within the city itself. Last year there was a proposal before Council to install parking meters in the downtown area and the University "in- ner fringe." At that time Council put a hold on the establishment of any new meters. This ban has not been lifted. This picture looks brighter, however, compared to the prediction Robbins makes for 5 or 10 years from now. "In the long haul period of time," he says, "and through traffic projec- tions, it is a fairly safe assumption that there won't be any on-street parking at all. On-street parking will be eliminated to make way for growing traffic." A UNIVERSAL PICTURE " TECI-NICOOR 1 . Persons under 18 not admitted From the country that gave you"I,AWOMAN" "INGA"and "I AM CURIOUS" (YLLW the by The Associated Pr ess and College.-Press Service Q S"r~idgitn Datit i page three 'FANNY HILL' is a "porno-classic!" -ARCHER WINSTON "1nthere with sex and love ,m - :a $iithe Way!" 'R>'. Jerry Gross and Nicholas Demetroules. new... and from Sweden Oistrbuted by CINEMATION INDUSTRIES' COLOR by DeLuxe S iS- of'Lunl SUN., MON., TUES. 7:15 and 9:00 BECAUSE OF THE OVERWHELMING RESPONSE TO THIS PROGRAM WE ARE BRINGING BACK THE BEATLES MOVIES FOR SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ONLY BEATLES DOUBLE FEATURE A 10-DAY RESTRAINING ORDER to halt both a threat- ened nationwide railroad lockout and the strike against the Un- ion Pacific that prompted it was granted by a federal judge yes- terday. U.S.yDistrict Court Judge John J. Sirica said the 10-day delay will give Congress a chance to take whatever steps it deems neces- sary in the wage dispute between four AFL-CIO unions and the na- tion's railroads. "In this case, there is no question that irreparable injury would be suffered" by the unions, railroads, and public if the strike and lockout were permitted to continue, he added. THE UNITED STATES is giving Nationalist China thirty- four old F100 jet fighter bombers. The planes, which will be taken out of storage, are being provided as part of a program to modernize Formosa's air force. Money to supply modern F4 Phantom fighters was dropped last week from a compromise foreign aid bill. * .' * * . SENATE DEMgOCRATS plan to renew their drive to win a $100-a-month minimum Social Security payment for the individ- ual. The increase sponsored by Senate Majority leader Mike Mans- field and Sen. Robert C. Byrd {D-W.Va.>, represents a 56 per cent increase over the present benefit of $54-a-month. Mansfield said, "It is obvious no one can live on $64 in these times. The Nixon administration opposes the $100 minimum as too costly, estimating the annual cost at $2 billion. * * * * CHIEF LEABUA JONATHAN, prime minister of Lesotho, has seized control of the government. Jonathan declared a state of emergency and suspended the con- stitution following elections which he declared invalid. Charges of vote rigging, intimidation, and ballot box stuffing have been made in' connection with the elections, the first for the new nation inside, South Africa. Jonathan said he expected the state of emergency "to be very short-lived indeed" and would not ban the opposition. * * * * THE U.S. VIETNAM COMMAND ackowledged yesterday that there have been periodic air-to-ground engagements in North Vietnam since the bombing halt 15 months ago. The strikes were made "from time to time" in response tQ North Vietnamese anti-aircraft fire or missiles. They were not made public because they were considered to be "insignificant." WASHINGTON fAit - President Nixon's proposed expan- sion of the Safeguard antiballistic missile system was chal- lenged yesterday by the Senate's Democratic leader; who fore- cast a price tag reaching $50 billion and demanded "Where the hell is it going to end?" "What is going to happen to people?" asked Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana, "if weapons spending is to be boosted. "The issue is of such magnitude that I believe another de- bate . . . is in the offing," Mansfield said in an interview. The last one locked the Senate in defense debate for two months, and ended on Aug. 6 Sunday, February 1, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three ABM proposal STOP WORRYING% I a 4 IS ON TiE WAYI The Co~i~iIdes of THE BEAhES .rmoreConofiulthmnever...inCOLWRl WTUANCOLOU ADIIEDAtTIST8meI -Associated Press Announces railroad lockout John P. Hiltz, chief negotiator for U.S. railroads announces a nationwide lockout of union workers. The lockout was in retalia- tion for a union strike against the Union Pacific. DAILY OFFICIA L BULLETIN Mmmmra~mmt .... x"e~m."e.:;s: ,.gmW.ns.#EW#Ero rCOLObDex 'II " 8 '" -:°~c l United Artists adults-$1:50 children-75c Yellow Sub-12:30 and 3:30 Help-2:00 and 5:00 SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ONLY not continuous with "FANNY HILL".. UVJ "iFIM. OUM with a 50-50 roll call vote which defeated an amend- ment to block the first phase of the Nixon ABM proposal. That involved deployment of ABM missiles, radars and com- puters at two sites to defend U.S. offensive missile installations, and the purchase of land for 10 more. Nixon said Friday night he has decided the system should be ex- panded to provide a defense aroundU.S. populationdareas against a possible future attack by Red China. The President said Secretary of Defense Melvin R.; Laird would announce the details within 30 days. While Nixon said such an area defense would be "virtually in- fallible" against attack by a min- or nuclear power, Mansfield said major questions remain unansw- ered about the vulnerability and reliability of the Safeguard sys- tem. "The President has resurrected the Chinese threat which he said, about a year ago, if I remember correctly, he couldn't buy," Mans- field said. "If we go ahead with this huge . . .combination system, we had better realize that it will cost in the tens of billions of dollars- in my opinion well beyond $50 bil- lion," he said. "The question is, where is the money coming from-what does it do to our domestic problems- what will be the reaction in t h e Soviet Union - will we become involved in another arms race?" Mansfield also questioned what such a move would mean to the strategic arms limitation talks now under way with the Soviet Union. GUILD H OUSE 802 MONROE MON., FEB. 2 - NOON LUNCHEON 25c MERILEE OAKS, Dept. of Development Psych.: "Psychological Effects of all Contraceptives," "..;.the Pill and Personality" TUES., FEB. 3 - NOON LUNCHEON Due to popularity--more origami SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 1 Day Calendar Degree Recital: Jack Roberts, piano lecture recital: School of u sic Re- cital Hall, 4:30 p.m. International Cntr.: "Mchaelangelo, The Last Giant" and "East Germany, Land Beyond the Wall, 7:30 p~zm. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2 Student Relations Committee*Meet-' ing: Agenda. 1) Minutes, 2) Report of OSU Police Committee, 3) Funding. of the IM 1idg., Council Rm. 3540 SAB,' 10-12 a.m. High Energy Colloquium: D. Clne, U. of Wisconsin, "Direct Channel Boson Production in NN Collisions" P & A Colloq. Bin., 4:00 p.m. Engineering Mechanics Seminar: Dr. E. 0. Tuck, Dept. of Mathematics, Univ. of Adelaide, Australia, "Unsteady Flow of a Viscous Fluid from a Source in a Wall", Rm. 311 West Engineering Bldg., 4:00 p.m. Lecture:aFormer DetroitMay y r Jerome Cavanagh, "The Urban Scene: Politics and Pressures," Rackham Hall, 4:15 p.m. Phi Beta Kappa Lecture: Prof. J. E. Bardach, Sch. of Nat. Resources, "Af- (Continued on ;Page 6) The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. - Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier. $3.00 by mail. Judge i DELAND, Fla. (A') - A federal judge told Volusia County school officials yesterday that he expects complete s c h o o 1 desegregation next w e e k despite Gaov. Claude Kirk's order prohibiting forced busing. - U.S. Dist. Court Judge Charles R. Scott said in a telegram to school board attorney John Mat- tingly that Scott's pupil desegre- gation orders a1.e "still in fiull force and effect The court ex- pects full compliance with those orders." The Volusia school board had voted yesterday to ask the judje for a hearing on what it should do about the conflict between his ruling and Kirk's executive order barring school officials in Volusia and .Manatee Counties from using forced busing and several other methods to e n d segregated schools. "Your request for an emergency hearing is respectfully denied," Scott.said in the telegram. Gerald Mager, Kirk's legal aide, declined to comment on the judge's decision, when contacted at his office in the capitol at Tal- lahassee. Mattingly saidi he would have to recommend to the board that it obey the court and not Kirk. "I certainly as an attorney and officer of the court am never go- ing to tell the board to disobey a federal court order," he said. 1 I MAK IS oen 9a.m. -3p., serving sandwiches,. soups cereals, coffees and pastries Cetc. BUT: We can't be open nights anymore because we're losing too much money after 3:00 p.m. We've talked over a lot of alternatives, and the only possibility of re-opening at night is to ask for membership fees of $5.00 per month per person. Until we do get enough subscriptions to open nights, we will continue to be open only days, from 9:00 to 3:00 p.m. Your subscription entitles you to come in six nights a week (we will be closed Sundays) from 6:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m., a chair, part of a table, a floor, a ceiling, lights, heat, and maid service. We need at least 270 subscriptions before we can re-open nights, and at least that same amount each month to continue to remain open nights. Does this community want a place for quiet conversation, chess, chamber music, and a decent cup of coffee? NAME ADDRESS PHONE _ ~ ...,L cn Creative e Lt4 leti) I ... FEBRUARY U. OF MICH. 6-SAM FULLER, Film Director CINEMA GUILD, 7 P.M., ARCH. AUD. $1.25 8-LOUIS FALCO and Featured Dancers MODERN DANCE, 8:30 P.M., HILL AUD. $2.75 12 & 13-THE CONCEPT! Off-Broadway Show THURSDAY, 8 P.M., FRI., 7:15 & 10 P.M., TRUEBLOOD, $2.75 15-TOM WOLFE, Author of Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test LECTURE AND WORKSHOP, 3 P.M., TRUEBLOOD $1.25 19-JOHN BIGGERS, Black Artist SLIDE LECTURE, 8:30 P.M., ANGELL HALL AUD. A $1.00 AZFESTIVAL 20-MILES DAVIS and RON CARTER 21-CANNONBALL ADDERLEY, WILLIAM FISCHER and ALVIN BATISTE DO YOU HAVE A SOCIALLY RELEVANT DISSERTATION ? WE'D LIKE TO TRY TO FUND IT CONTACT THE RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT GROUP 802 MONROE ST. DAN HARRISON - ROGER ROMAN 764-5288 (or leave message 764-7480} 22.99 Ladies' & Men's 'H-ouston 14" tall SCHNEIDER WESTERN SUPPLY 2635 Saline Road Ann Arbor, Mich Ph. 663-0 111 Only 2