rOU SEE EWS A3P01n C&L AY Next to last chance The deadline is fast approaching for those interested in register- ing for the November election. Tuesday, Oct. 10 will be the final day for new voters to put their names on the rolls. Those who have previously voted in Ann Arbor need not register to vote here. Those who have relocated since the last time they voted (and who among us hasn't moved recently in this highly transient community) should get their new address to the city in order to be able to vote in their new precincts. Look out for voter registration tables in the Diag and on the first floor of the Michigan Union Monday and Tuesday. City Hall, cor- ner of Fifth ave. and Huron St., will also take registrations during business hours-and until 8 p.m. Tuesday. The Ann Arbor Public Library, corner of E. William St. and Fifth ave., is nother registration site. By the way, address changes may be given to the City Clerk's of- fice by phone. Call 994-2725. Now get with it. 0 Correction .. . In an article on the drinking age proposal yesterday, we mis- takenly reported Michigan's drinking age is scheduled to go up to 19 in January. The one year hike is actually scheduled to occur December 3, 1978. 0 Happenings... If you manage to recuperate in, time from a hard day's night of football revels, head over to Hilled at 11 a.m. for a meeting of the Ac- tion for Soviet Jewry in Human Rights. . . from noon until 5:30 the Free China Student Association is sponsoring a Free China Cultural Day in Conference Rooms 3,;4, 5, and 6 of the Union ... back at Hillel at 12, an Israeli dance group will perform ... and if you stick around there until 1, you can participate in an informal dance session yourself ... a 10-mile "Walk for Hunger" will help raise money for hungry per- sons all over the world. If interested in donating some legwork, meet at the First Presbyterian Church at 1432 Washtenaw at 1:30 . . at 2, the Outing/Hiking Club will gather at Rackham's Huron St. entrance ... Margaret Randall will deliver an "Informal Talk on Contemporary Cuban Culture" at the Guild House at 3... Open Singles invites all unmarried adults to a "What's on Your Mind" discussion and party at 8 p.m. at 1434 Collegewood in Ypsilanti ... if you are married, or would rather learn about Japance dancing, Music Professor William Malm will present a talk entitled "Japanese Bugaku as a Reflection of An- cient East Asian Culture" at 8 in the Rackham auditorium.. . MON- DAY... what better time than early Monday morning to have your yearbook graduate portrait taken! Stop by the Michiganensian office at 420 Maynard, Monday-Friday, or call 764-0561 from 9-9 for infor- mation .. , advance registration for a Washtenaw Community College course on first aid techniques is being taken now. Call 482-2230 for details . .. the national director of the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry, Glen Richter, will speak on "Soviet Jewry in the Post- Shcharansky Era" at 1:00 in the UGLI Multi-Purpose Room . . . if you'd like to chat with LSA Dean Billy Frye and members of the Geograhy Department, or at least partake of some donuts and coffee, show at the Dean's Tea, 3:30 in the Geography Department Lounge, 4th floor LSA,.. at 4:00 in the Rackham Amphitheater Dr. Aryh Neier, national executive director of the ACLU from 1970-78 will lec- ture on "Definding Freedom for the Enemies of Freedom: American Nazis and Free Speech" ... for those who've at one time or another had the inclination to join Robin Hood's Band of Merry Men, the University Archery Club will be shooting in the Coliseum at 6:30 ... then switch to a bit of Virginia Reel with free square-dancing lessons from the A-Squares in the Union at 7. . . also at 7 the Women's Studies Free Film Series is showing four films in MLB Aud. 3: "Battered Women: Violence Beind Closed Doors, Incest: Victim Nobody Believes, Rape Culture, and Child Abuse: Cradle of Violence ... the Nuclear Concersn Film Series is showing More Nuclear Power Stations" in the Union's Kuenzel Room at 7:30 ... President Fleming will deliver his "State of the University Address" in Mendelssohn Theatre at 8, along with the presentation of faculty awards.. . and the Undergraduate Political Science Organization is sponsoring a speech "Camp David: War or. Peace," to be given by Raymond Tanter in the UGLI Multi-Purpose Room at 8. On the outside The freeze was expected to his Ann Arbor overnight, according to weather forecasters. The overnight low was expected to be in the mid 20s. The afternoon will bring slightly warmer termperatures under partly sunny skies. The high should be about 54o*. Better pick up some woolens. The Michigan Daily-Sunday, October 8, 1978--Page 3 Carter may help Fitz From staff reports ment to travel through Michigan, other In a private White House meeting Democrats plan to visit the state on Friday, President Carter told William , behalf of Fitzgerald and other can- Fitzgerald he is unsure as to whether he didates in his party. will come to Michigan to stump for the VIce-President Walter Mondale will. Democratic candidate for governor. campaign in Michigan Oct. 19 and Carter said if he does campaign for Senator Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) the state senator, he won't come to has agreed to keynote a $100-a-seat din: Michigan until the final days of the ner honoring Fitzgerald in Detroit on race, according to Fitzgerald Press Oct. 22. Secretary Larry Good. Good said a Car- During the meeting, which lasted for ter visit hinges on whether the less than 30 minutes, Good said the two President can open up some time in his Democrats discussed state funding schedule. troubles and the Macomb County sewer While Carter hasn't made a commit- problem. CLAUDE CHABROL 1968 LES BICHES Glamorous Frederique takes up with the enigmatic Why. Tritignant is attracted to both women. The sense of the double, the shifting of love and hints of sadd-masochism merge with Chabrol's Hitchcockian sense of cinematic form. Violence arrupts amidst calm and beauty. I CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 and 9:15 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG JAMES MINTON DISPLAYS a drawerful of maps located on the eighth floor of the graduate library. The files behind him contain over 200,000 maps from all over the world. 'U' map library LORRAINE W. GRAY 1978 BABIES AND BANNERS: Story of the Women's Emergency Brigade ANN ARBOR PREMIERE-A stirring portrayal of the long-hidden role of the Women's Emergency Brigade in the historic Flint sitdown strike of 1936-37. A dramatic testimony of the courage, intelligence and fore- sight of working women engaged in struggle. "Filmmakers Gray and Goldfarb deserve a lot of credit for letting these union women do their own talking-the talk shines with intelligence and candor-and for choosing and organizing old film clips of the actual strike into a compelling whole."-Barbara Hoover, Detroit News. Film historion/producer Lyn Goldfarb ond Brigade Lt. Nellie Besson Henrix will be present to answer questions and participate in discussion following the first showing. Benefit for The Organizing Committee for Clericols. Co-sponsored by Campus Labor Support Group. } j WED: Cuban Film Festival-THE LAST SUPPER-MLB 3 FRI: LOONEY TUNES REVIEW Part 5: Chuck Jones CIN E MA11tonight at ANGELL HALL AUD. A CINE A .7 and 9 $1.50 points te By TONY BLOENK direction Any student who had to scour the diag are used in search of a classroom she or he never routesa knew existed, or tried to explain to a ownersh passing motorist how to avoid one way The lib streets en route to North Campus, collectio knows the invaluable power of maps to of the l put the world in perspective. the coun In the words of noted cartographer P. some in E. James, "Like an ant upon a rug, the Nat man may know very exactly the nature retails a of the fabric near by, but the general sections design is beyond his range of vision." mean da mean da "IF THIS BIT of wisdom intrigues cabbage you, or if you simply have trouble The ra finding your way around, you might old c make a trip-to the Map Library on the thousand eighth floor of the Graduate Library. century The map room, open weekdays from 1-5, is "research and reference TIlE I oriented," but used by "more than of 2000 geographers," according to head counties librarian James Minton. pictures Although he complains "Americans cities. are not map conscious," Minton said All atl that students in as wide a range of are cata subjects as library science, history, both the sociology, and engineering daily preuse and the the library's 200,000 sheet maps and rom. S various multi-lingual atlases. retrieve way in, distance and location, maps d by urban planners in plotting and lawyers in settling land hip disputes. brary, which houses the largest an of maps in the state and one argest university collections in try, has its share or rarities. Of terest to the curious might be tional Atlas of Japan, which t $350. The atlas' more detailed feature such tidbits as the ate of the first warbler and the ate of the first sighting of the butterfly. are maps found in the 75-year- ollection number several d, some dating from the 16th and valued as high as $6,000. LIBRARY also has a collection aerial photos of Michigan and a small number of satellite of Michigan and selected U.S. ases, maps and reference titles alogued with call numbers in second floor public catalogue card catalogue in the map Staff assistance is required to the maps from their files. oom materials generally do not e, although many maps may be pied. Some materials may he the second floor reference desk when the map room is closed. MINTON POINTS OUT that school studies are not the only reason that might draw people into the library. Besides aiding travelers in finding _,eC i Map r circulat photocol held at t for use m pse,* * The NEW 2 TOMORROW BRU BECK QUARTET Dave Darius Chris Dan OCT. 13, 14-8:30 pm with guest appearance by JACK BROKENSHA Music hAi CENTER 350 Madison Avenue, Detroit BOX OFFICE: 973-7680 MIESTONE JAZZ STARS Ron Carter Sonny Rollins McCoy Tyner HILL AUD.-8 P.M. $3.50,4.50,5.50 Tickets available Mon. 11:30-5:30 at Michigan Union Box Office and 6:30-8:00 at Hill, also Schoolkids and both Discount Records. For more info-763-1453. * * * * * * * * Take 1-94 to, southbound 1-75. Use Madison Ave. exit Next Attraction: SAN FRANCISCO BALLET' Oct. 18-22 Tickets by phone with MC, VISA or at door: $9.50, $8.50, $7.50, $5.50 V R - MEN OF LEI MfNCHA A MUSKET PRESENTATION MANN THEATRES Wed. xVILAGE TWN MAseats $1.50 MAPLE VILLAGE SHOPPING (ENTERl s $ AGE SHO00wuntil 4:30 F h a If -ISHOW re ETIMES Sat-Sun-Wed 1:30 4:00 1 / 6:30 9:05 Mon-Tues- E 1LThurs-Fri 6:30 9:05 i TICKET ORDER FORM ('irrlndanta tickents desired-