The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 19, 1978-Page 3 k~ . !f U SEE N&S &AP" CALL WDALY Join us Future journalists of America (and even those just looking for a fling at the reporter's life) are cordially invited to attend one of the upcoming Michigan Daily orientation meetings for new staffers. The first gathering is today at 7:30 in Bursley Hall's East Lounge. Tomorrow night, Markley's Piano Lounge will be the site of the new member session, and Thursday, the Daily office at 420 Maynard will be the place to come at 7:30 p.m. See you all then! Tricycle tribulations Those of you who had been anxiously awaiting the chance to do some wheelies in the Union Activity Center's (UAC) Trike Race scheduled for last'Sunday afternoon were sorely disappointed when the race, along with the rest of the Fall Festival was canceled due to the rain. But take heart, three wheel fans, UAC officials say they will reschedule the festival soon. Happenings ... ... begin at 10 a.m. with an exhibition of Oriental Art at Union Gallery. The show runs until 6 p.m., and includes prints from Japan, China, Tibet, Nepal and Thailand ... Then at noon, the International Center presents another in its series of luncheons. The speaker is Prof. William Porter, whose topic will be the Italian press . .. At 1 p.m., the Turner Clinic offers a workshop on stroke prevention, which will run till 3:30 . .. Then at 4 p.m., James Krolik, director of career counseling for graduate students, will talk on Bioengineering ... Followed by a presentation entitled "There is No God but God," in the Modern Language Bldg., Aud. 3, sponsored by the Ethics and Religion program at 4:15 p.m. .. On into the evening, WCBN and WRCN will be holding a mass meeting at 7 p.m. in the Kuenzel Room, Michigan Union, for students interested in joining the news and sports departments . .. At 7:30 p.m., the L-5 Society meets in Conference Room 5, Michigan Union. There will be a slide show and discussionof space colonization .. . And the Undergraduate Political Association meets at 7:30 in 2003 Angell Hall, featuring department chairman Sam Barnes as guest .. . Then from 8 to 10 p.m., the mini-course "Raising Green Plants" will be held in the Pendleton Room, Michigan Union . .. Also starting at 8 is an introductory lecture on trancendental meditation, sponsored by the Students International Meditation Society, in the UGLI Multipurpose Room . .. And a film series on world religions offers a viewing of The Long Search at 8 p.m. at the Ecumenical Campus Center, 921 Church. Hey, buddy! Providence, Rhode Island Mayor Vincent "Buddy" Cianci, who according to articles in New Times magazine and the Providence Journal-Bulletin was accused of raping a woman at gunpoint while attending law school in Wisconsin, won the Republican mayoral primary in Providence last Tuesday with 96.6 per sent of the vote. The newspaper stories y and magazine articles were ' published this summer. According to New Times Cianci paid the alleged victim $3,000 for her silence after the woman's father pressed charges some 18 years ago. Cianci denied the o charged vehemently and said he will file law suits against both publications. Neither New Times nor the Journal-Bulletin have heard from Cianci's attorneys. Observers say they believe the charges in the newspapers have reinforced Cianci's image as a Vincent Cianci "fighting maverick". On the outside ... ...There will be a chance of thundershowers today. The high temperature will be in the mid 80s, while the overnight low is expected to be in the upper 60s. ART&TECHNOLOGY Four Events Presented by the Department of Humanities College of Engineering/The University of Michigan Handicapped bus plan draws flak By GARY GERESY Officials for two area transit authori- ties have voiced strong objections to a plan recently announced by Governor William Milliken that would require all buses be modified for handicapped access. At a Michigan Department of Transportation public hearing held September 11, spokespersons for the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority (AATA) and the Southease Michigan Transit Authority (SEMTA( argued against the governor's plan, which bears a $1 billion price tag. LARRY SALCI, General Manager of SEMTA, said SEMTA's main objection to the proposal lies in making mass transit sufficiently available to the handicapped. A person confined to a wheel chair, he said, would not be able to move about in even a few inches of snow. "We are not against the handicapped," Salci continued. "We just feel that a second system should complement (line buses." An example of such a secondary system is AATA's Dial-a-Ride program, which provides door-to-door mini-bus service for the handicapped. AT THE HEARING in Lansing, Ann Arbor transit officials said they opposed Milliken's proposal. IN his testimony, Salci alsq hinted that the plan was merely a vote-getting move by Milliken. "I don't think it was a political move by the governor," Salci said, "but in November of 1976 the governor vetoed a bill that would have allowed us to purchase some new buses. We had to wait until last August before we could purchase them,," he said. State regulations ushered in by Milliken's plan would equip each bus with a hydraulic lift, and would provide a single accommodation per bus for persons in wheelchairs. Les Sinclair, a representative from the governor's office, also spoke at the hearing. He told transportation officials that cities would not be able to afford the cost of equipping buses for the handicapped. Sinclair requested additional state funds to help the cities in conversion. * DISCO * JAZZ * BALLET Daily Official Bulletin * MODERN AT DANCESPC 3141/2 S. STATE Schedule & Fees Posted On Door or Call 995-4242 for information TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1978 Daily Calendar: Turner Clinic: Strokes: Prevention, treatment, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LIX. No. I Tuesday, September 19, 1978 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscriptionrates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail, outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail outside Ann Arbor. if you see news happen call 76-DAILY recovery, Turner Clinic, 1-3:30 p.m. Environmental Studies: B. LOW, "Ecology," 1528 CCL, 3 p.m. Bioengineering Program: James Krolik, "What Will You Do When You Graduate?", 1042 E. Eng., 4 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: George Phillies, "Light Scattering As A Probe of Molecular Motion," 2038 Randall Lab., 4 p.m. During the winter, when hunting con- ditions are good, a wolf eats an average of five to 10 pounds of food a day. MICHIGAN WOLVERINES Vs. THE FIGHTING IRISH of NOTRE DAME AT THE SECOND CH ANCE Play by play by BOB UFER * BIG 8'x10'SCREEN * FREE POPCORN " %APRICE BEER * 30Q HOT DOGS LIMITED QUANTITY advance sale tickets $3.50 RENT A COMPUTER TERMINAL Aar Tired of waiting in line for a terminal? Rent one for $79 per month! Includes keyboard, video monitor, and phone coupler. Ready to use. Buy one as little as $890. The Computer Store of Ann Arbor 310 E. 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