The Michigan Daily-Saturday, October 7, 1978-Page 3 Recycle Ann Arbor: Trash is their business I ; .... : ~ ..... . , F YOU SEE NEWS {ALW A1L DAJtY hopper stopper Late night Burger King diners Betty Rice and Renee Mann got a lit- tle more than they could digest Tuesday night. Sitting by the window in the Maynard eaterie, their midnight snack was interrupted by an urgent knocking on the panes above them. Casually glancing up at the disturbance, the women's eyes caught a set of buns - but not the kind that ordinarily hold burgers. No one else was around to receive the auspicious greeting as the women were the only customers at the time. Rice later remarked that she was glad she had finished eating her sandwich before the energetic exhibitionist came along. " Correction Yesterday's story about course evaluations contained an error. Barb Roberts, coordinator of the Student Course Evaluation Project, is with the Student Counseling Office in Angell Hall, not the Office of Academic Counseling. We regret the mistake. Take ten On October 7, 1978 the Michigan Supreme Court denied a request by three University students to rule on their right to register to vote in Ann Arbor. The students were appealing a decision by the Circuit Court upholding the city's refusal to grant the students permission to register in the city. Also that day, 2,000 people marched through Baltimore chanting and waving flags in support of nine persons charged with burning their draft cards. Happenings .. . .. are scheduled with early-risers in mind today. At 9:30, the Arbor Alliance and interested supporters will gather at the Michigan League and travel to Monroe for a noon anti-nuclear protest at the Fermi II nuclear power plant . .. for those whose minds awaken as early as the ir bodies, Karl Schaefer will discuss "The Physiology of the Self"their 9:30 in the West Lecture hlall of Med Sci II ... finally, Margaret Ran- dall, noed poet and longtime Cuban resident, will lead an "Informal Discussion on Educational Change" at 8 in East Quad's Greene Lounge. " On the outside .. . It will be mostly cloudy and cool on this first football Saturday in Oc- tober. Those who are lucky enough to be seated in the right sections of Michigan Stadium may be albe to avoid the widely scattered showers that are expected to descend upon us today. High temperatures will be in the low 50s, with a low in the mid- to upper 30s. While today's game has you shivering in the stands, take heart: the folks in the Upper Peninsula will be freezing their NCAAss's off under a mixture of snow and rain. By JOHN VOGEL Rich Ruyle and Jonathan Dreyfuss have to put up with a lot of garbage these days, but they don't mind. Trash is their business. The pair operates Recycle Ann Arbor, a non- profit organization which offers free house-to-house collection of recyclable materials. RUYLE, A University graduate, and Dreyfuss, a senior in the School of Natural Resources, started the operation last September after noticing the absence of a waste recycling pick- up program in the city. "I worked for a recycling organization in Boulder, Colorado a Jurors urged to ignore Digg s accomplishments couple of years back," Dreyfuss said, "and I wanted to start a similar program in Ann Arbor. I knew Rickwas also interested, and after tossing a few ideas back and forth, we formed Recycle Ann Arbor, and have been ex- tremely successful in our first year." It took eight months to lay the groun- dwork for the operation, but in May the first pick-up went successfully. There have beep ten subsequent trash gatherings, twice a month, in the area of west Ann Arbor bordered by Main, State and Liberty streets. The collec- tions take place on the first and third Saturdays of each month, the next one slated for today. "WE ARE VERY optimistic right now," explains Ruyle, "we have a 10 to 15 per cent participation rate on the west side, and we not only think that this will increase sharply, but also hope to expand city-wide within one year." Participants in the program are 'asked to do three things: put glass, steel, and aluminum in separate con- tainers, which will not be taken, bundle all newspapers, magazines and paper, and place all the materials at their driveways before 8 a.m. on Saturday.', The trash is collected in three flatbed trucks by the two directors and any volunteer help they can recruit. According to the directors, recycling is an important service, because it con- serves both energy and valuable resources, minimizes environmental degradation, and saves city money in collection and disposal costs. "We can no longer afford to view refuse as waste. It is a resource that must be' utilized. Our goal is to make sure citizens are aware of the importance and implications of conservation and of resource recovery from solid waste." THREE ARE three other recycling agencies in Ann Arbor, wpich offer only drop-off stations for materials. WASHINGTON (UPI) - A prosecutor urged a federal jury to ignore the civil rights accomplishments of Rep. Charles Diggs (D-Mich.) in deciding whether he illegally inflated the salaries of his aides so they could pay his personal and office debts. Prosecutor John Kotelly said the evidence is "overwhelming" that Diggs, 56, a congressman for 24 years and founder of the Congressional Black Caucus, intended to defraud the gover- nment. THE JURY OF 11 blacks and one white was expected to begin deliberations later yesterday. Diggs was indicted on 11 counts of mail fraud and 18 counts of filing false payroll vouchers, with each amount carrying a maximum penalty of five years in prison. Mail fraud also carries a fine of up to $1,000 and filing false vouchers; $10,000. Diggs admitted he gave raises to his employees and they paid expenses out of their salaries but insisted they did so voluntarily. KOTELLY ARGUED that Diggs' ac- complishments as a civil rights leader and in Congress are not issues in the case. "If this were a testimonial dinner, one could applaud Congressman Diggs for his accomplishments," Kotelly said. "But this is not a testimonial dinner." U IIi op e rsalila MN NEW PRICE dFFER ON OPTIONAL LIBRARY CHIPS for the 58 & 59md snap-on-cover Suggested List $35.00 Solid State Software plug-in modules. O U R R IC EOptional libraries for the 58/59 OUR PRICE ,*""-" include: Business Decisions, Applied Statistics, Securities S Analysis, Real Estate and $5 Investment, Aviation, Marine Navigation, Surveying, Leisure Library. .... and be certain to ask about the Cellar's Exclusive Warranty Support 6 as Ins trumen Is i ..I - - : _ - - - _ _ . _I