ne vicnigan vaiiy-bunday, ctober 1, 1978-Page 3 1 trYOU SEE SE.A RPEN CLL Z.DAJLY Take Ten Red China marked its 19th anniversary with an announcement that Mao's 26-month-old purge was to be widened to "purify" the 17 milion members of the Chifiese Communisty party. Also on Oct. 1, 1968, presidential candidate George Wallace travelled to Flint and at- tacked the Supreme Court and "federal bureaucracy in general." Said Wallace to a bearded protestor: "You'd better have your say now, because when I become president you'll be all through in this coun- try." The hand-shake shuffle It looked for a while as though it would be a big day for the two U.S. Senate candidates: Democrat Carl Levin was slated for a Far- mers' Market appearance, followed by a hand-shaking session at the Duke game; and incumbent Robert Griffin had also planned to promote his campaign just before kick-off time at the stadium. Well, Levin showed up yesterday morning to compete with tomatoes for the attention of potential voters-only to discover he couldn't politick-un- der the Market roof. He resigned himself to grabbing hands as shop- pers left the market burdened with bags of apples and cabbage. But, politics being what it is, things evened out. A careful half-hour search for Griffin at the announced gate revealed only his stickers (including a mysterious "I urge you to vote for Bob Griffin," without any reference to the speaker). No Griffin. And Levin? Oh, he had decided to go talk to steelworkers instead. Ann Arbor's too much trouble. Happenings . . ... begin today with a 25 kilometer March of Dimes Bike-a-thon at 9 a.m. The bikers are meeting at the corner of N. University and State Streets; then at 11:30, poli-sci. students and faculty are meeting in front of the Union for a departmental picnic in Dexter-Huron Metro Park; the second and final day of the annual Fall Art Fair and the fir- st-ever Michigan Union Arts Open House will open at 10 a.m. and run through 6 p.m. in and around the Union. Today's demonstrations at the fair include printmaking at 1 p.m., leaded glass at 2 p.m., batik at 3 to 5 p.m., and weaving, also at 3. Move on to an introductory lesson on Siddha mediatation at the Siddah Yoga Dham, 1520 Hill St. at 2:30; then at 4, the School of Music will present "Encores From In- terlochen" in Rackham Auditorium; and Hillel will celebrate the Jewish New Year with orthodoz services at 7 p.m. and reform services at 8 p.m., at 1429 Hill St., and conservative services will be held at the Mendelssohn Theatre in the League at 7:30 p.m.... .. on Monday, happenings begin at the Student Publications Building with Michiganensian graduate portraits being taken from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; beginning at 10 a.m., Chabad has services for Rosh Hashanah; George Gawrych will speak on "Social and Political Con- ditions in Turkey, 1977-78" at the Center for Near Eastern and African Studies bag lunch at noon in the Commons Room, Lane Hall; the Muslim Student Association presents Umar Hassan to speak on "The History of Islam in America" at 4 p.m. in the MLB lecture room Ii; also at 4, New York University Law Professor Aryeh Neir will speak at Rackham Amphitheatre on "Defending Freedom for the Enemies of Freedom: American Nazis and Free Speech"; at 7 p.m. the Women's Studies Film Series continues with "Taking Our Bodies Back: The Women's Health Movement" in MLB Auditorium 3; Lovejoy's Nuclear War will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Kuenzel Room of the Union; and at 8 p.m., the Ann Arbor Committee for Human Rights in Latin America will present the movie "Mexico: The Frozen. Revolution" at 1433 Mason Hall; also at 8 will be two recitals spon- sored by the School of Music: an organ recital by Timoth Wissler in Hill Auditorium and a student piano chamber music presentation in the Recital Hall in the School of Music. 0f On the outside . . Grayskies will continue to envelop the area today. The mercury should reach a high of 63 and a low of 48. Railroads begin rolling again By The Associated Press Union pickets who virtually shut down the nation's rail transportation system for four days honored their leader's call to go back to work yester- day under a court order. Spokesmen for railroad lines across the nation said trains were beginning to roll. "We had trains rolling within a mat- ter a hours," Union Pacific spokesman C. r. Rockwell said in Salt Lake City. "We've got everything running that there is to run." IN HUNTINGTON, W.Va., Chessie spokesman Willis Cook said normal operations were expected to resume "very shortly. Everything has to get rolling again . . . the coal mines, the shippers ... all industry is involved in a think like this." The strike that began July 10 by the Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerks against the Virginia-based Nor- folk & Western Railway grew to tran- scontinental proportions last week as the union threw up picket lines at 73 other carriers providing N&W with mutual aid pact financial assistance. The clerks struck in a dispute over job elminations due to automation and union representation of supervisory personnel. THE PICKET lines were honored and the movement of manufactured goods, raw materials, agricultrual products and Amtrak and commuter passengers on 200,000 miles of track came to a halt. The picket lines started coming down Friday night following U.S. District Court Judge Aubrey Robinson's tem- porary injunciton reinforcing President Carter's back-to-work order. Railroad officials said perishable goods would get priority as shipping resumed. "Reports coming in through the night and this morning to clerks union President Fred Kroll indicate that just about all pickets have been removed," Henry Fleisher, spokesman for the union, said in Washington yesterday. "The union is in virtually complete compliance with the court order. Reports from the field indicate great satisfaction with the anti-reprisal feature of Judge Robinson's order." The union had asked Robinson to or- der railroads . not to take reprisals against workers who struck or refused to cross picket lines, and until the judge agreed, Kroll would not order members back to work. ..' .. . .... -... ... ... .. . .- .. . . . . r :: : : ;r'r': , {: :{: . " t ............ ........... ............ ............. .............. ............. .......... ............ ............ ......... ........... FRIDAY OCTOBER, 27. 8:00 p m. CRISLER ARENA, ANN ARBOR Reserved Seats $8.50-$7.50 Tickets go on sale Wed. Oct. 4 at Crisler Arena in Ann Arbor at 11 am. Tickets also at all Hudsons and Huckleberry Party Store in Ypsilanti. Sorry, no personal checks. Beginning Thurs., Oct. 5 tickets at the Michigan Union Box Office (M-F 11:30-5:30 763-2071). Tickets also at all Hudsons and at Huckleberry Party Store. To order by mail: send self addressed stamped envelope and money order or certified check only to: _ r THE BEACH BOYS Michigan Union Box Office 530 S. State Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 l University of Michigan's Office of Major Events presentation. «. a WE GOT THE NEIl TO YCO °4 w'4o ~ w ' .o k 2 o 0 0 e t o0 y. & ° o @~ . ~ ~0 s@@ 0 sy0 0 @ . °' A-- / '0 . °i' i QC f' r ! Q.@ y °"' ' a w @ r o4 ,$ a o w b , @t. ., °,s a@ q ®4 @a ' 10 °° @ ., o 0., 0 @ 4' A.%p " xy , ; ' yy , ; R @ a @' o0 a l ° 4 G , c Nt g 0 c, 4 e °0 ' 40 C, .a w p ' t a+A t° o 0 ' C. . @ , ' a o a 0 a0"' a s p 0R .w te'tt 0@ o @ @ 4 @ o @ °v1t f .c Y 1 °wi w O S0a ^ o , w ; R, a0a ; 0'L4Y 'e4 e a e a@00° O.w°p ' '4 a@ G &y A " 4 't'@Y @ o -b -b 44e t0 p a ° a ,y w~o o +t a o 'L 'oI ' 4r' P t C ti tit0'7" wky . Q J°0'of w~ / S. A '0 .. 4 VS )U x = .. _. .._- =._. =' _- A Guide to the Campus of The University of Michigan The first official guidebook to those unique and historic buildings which mark a campus rich in tradition. Handsomely illustrated with photographs and a new aerial map of the campus, the guide is de- signed to enhance visits to the Ann Arbor campus of the University of Michigan and will prove invaluable to alumni as well as students and their families. paperbound $3.95 THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS P.O. Box'104 Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106 Send me copy(ies) of A Guide to the Campus of The University of Michigan @ $3.95 per copy. Payment is enclosed. Name 20UU A. o 21 hours after our deadline The Daily received word over the wire that Pope John Paul I was dead. The Daily was just then returning from the printers in Northville- tp late to add any new information. Dedicated Daily newstaffers contacted Editors .nd the Shop Superintendent to produce a Daily extra edition on the Pope's death. An extra edition was deemed impossible but Daily Staffers did not give up. They decided to improvise by copying the wire service release, press-