~- ( I'YCO SEE NDS HAPELN CL>W The early bird gets the worm The art of scalping has taken on a new twist-advance sales. In the usual last-minute confusion over tickets yesterday morning, one ambitious young man decided to get ahead and take advantage of the ticket-hungry crowds walking by the Michigan Union. Figuring that the passersby were in the buying mood, the enterprising hawker yelled out, "Who wants Ohio State tickets? Get your Ohio State tickets, now!" Hope Woody Hayes didn't miss his chance. Carter quits the race President Carter quit ruinning early yesterday. No, he hasn't quit the presidential race, only a 6.2 mile road race near Camp David. Carter ran about four miles of the course before he began to tire, and his physician, running alongside, suggested that the president give it up. He is reportedly still in good physical shape, but who knows how far he'll go in 1980. Fonda gets cold shoulder The Saratoga Springs School Board in New York this week refused to allow Skidmore College to use the town's high school auditorium for a speech by actress and political activist Jane Fonda. Members of the school board, who have all refused comment on the subject since their vote, based their decision on a policy that states the use of facilities be denied to any person or organization whose presen- ce could cause picketing, rioting or a disturbance of the peace or anyone who plans to subvert or overthrow the government. Spokespersons for the college said the speech, scheduled for October 4, will probably be held on the Skidmore campus. Although the famous activist could not be reached for comment, sources revealed that she was not fond o' the move. Dong-ding-dong? Time is beginning finally to take its "toll" on 121-year-old London landmark Big Ben. Engineers hurried to the famous clock towering over Westminister Abbey yesterday when it struck a wrong chord and lost its first note. It chimed "dong-ding-dong" instead of "ding-dong- ding-dong." The strange sound was noticed in the quarter-hour chimes preceding the 11 a.m. signal. "We don't know the explanation yet and otherwise the clock .is going normally," said one official. And you thought Burton Tower had the only clock with problems. 4" Happenings SUNDAY FILMS Cinema II-Bandwagon, 7 p.m.; It's Always Fair Weather, 9 p in., Aud. 4, MLB. Cinema Guild-Long Day's Journey Into Night, 7 & 9:30 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. MEETINGS 1 Hiking 9lub.T1i:30pin..at R.ckhani.N.W. entry on .Huron.p t Gilbert and SullivanSociety,--8 p.m., Mich. Union (meeting room willbepostedthere) - Flute Guild-2:15 p.m., CadyRm. in Stearns Bldg., North Cam- pus. PERFORMANCES Eclipse Jazz-Summer Concert Series, 2-5 p.m., West Park. 'U' joins tribute to UN 'Year of Child' The Michigan Daily-Sunday, September 16, 1979-Page 3 W r By CAROL KOLETSKY On June 19 this year, children in wheelchairs lined up outside Mott Children's Hospital to raise a flag sent to them by the United Nations, marking the official opening of the International Year of the Child (IYC) in Ann Arbor. As part of the Ann Arbor tribute, Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations and World IYC Chair- woman Estafania Aldaba-Lim will make her only stop in the U.S. on Thur- sday, Sept. 20, 8 p.m. at Rackham Auditorium. The presentation is the fir- st of numerous IYC projects that will take place in Ann Arbor in 1979. THIS YEAR was designated the IYC by President Carter and the United Nations General Assembly. According to a U.S. National Commission pam- phlet on IYC, the "International Year" theme explores a given policy area and aims not to promote a world plan of ac- tion, but initiate action at local levels. Last spring, President-designate Harold Shapiro formed a 10-member committee composed of students and faculty to help plan and sponsor projec- ts for children on campus. The commit- tee held a project proposal competition for anyone in the University who wished to submit entries. Proposals were then reviewed over the summer and more than six received funding. Shapiro said he has made a firm commitment to provide a budget for funding more University projects for children. UNIVERSITY IYC Committee Chairman John Hagen said the IYC booth at the annual Street Art Fair in July, children's health exhibits in the center of Briarwood Mall, the Dance Department's production of the children's dance "The Unicorn and the Record," are recent examples of Ann Arbor's and the University's new com- mitment to the IYC. Various departments all over campus are drumming up ideas for the IYC, Tanya Kushing, assistant to Shapiro, said. Kushing said the School of Natural Resources is planning a curriculum for elementary schools which deal with the environment, and the Psychology Department is planning a study on "Black Families and the Medium of Television." Kushing added that the Center for Russian and East European Studies plans to schedule a lecture on "Com- parative Soviet and Adolescent Behavior." The old firehouse across from city hall is being converted over the next year to an experimental "HandstOn" museum in which :children can touch and handle exhibits to their heart's con- tent. WITH THE start of a new academic year, Hagen said the committee is ready to widen interest in the IYC on campus even further. Both on the national and local level in Ann Arbor, the IYC has been extended through June, 1980. THROUGHOUT THE year, Hagen said the committee plans to sponsor lectures, which may include such great speakers as pediatrician-author Helen Caldicott, a specialist on the effects of nuclear energy on developing children and Martin Wright Edelman, Director of the Children's Defense Fund. The committee will print a newsletter and prepare a full calendar of events. Funds remain for additional projects, and the committee is welcoming project proposals until Oct. 15. Hagen said all projects will be voted on and announced by the University Board of Regents. HAGEN ADDED that the group wan- ts "to involve all units of the University, and include both an academic and a celebration approach in defining this International Year." Hagen said next Thursday evening's program will begin with a multi-media presentation, written and produced by a crew at the Michigan Media Resource Center. Shapiro will speak on what the University is presently doing for children, and the University's future plans. After the presentation, Lim will speak on the global implicationsof Year of the Child, stressing the ERIC'S FACTORY CLOSEOUTS WARM UPS- 40% off retail prices WOMEN'S RUNNING SHOES Puma Tiger ALL SIZES $15-$20 closeouts MEN & WOMEN'S TENNIS/RACBALL SHOES Bancroft-$10.95 Brooks-$12.95 necessity of increasing our awareness of children and planning projects that will improve their quality of life. Hagen- said Lim has already visited 50 countries on her IYC tour. She is a Ph.D. graduate in clinical psychology from the University in 1942, the Univer- sity's winner of the "Most Outstanding Achievement Award" in 1965, and author of numerous books and studies about children's problems. Lim will lead an open question and answer session for all interested students and faculty on Friday after- noon, Sept. 28, in Angell Hall, Aud. C. She and a faculty panel of child- welfare,child abuse, child health, and other children's specialists will answer questions on the UN, UNESCO, and the IYC. looking for the intellectuoi side oftife? Read the Michigan Daily L Is. I I . , 4 'I' p OJECTT. b O CUTREAiCH p (PSYCH. 201)4 Interviews continue through this week ew v If interestedaI ca 764-9179 or stop by 554 Thompson (across from West Quad) -I Settings in the areas of: Child Care-Adolescence, Institutionalization,,De-Institutionalization, Psych. of Aging, Family Crisis, Community Psychology, Handicaps, Forensic Psychology and Personal Growth Groups MISCELLANEOUS Michigan Media Resources Center-Poets Talking (T.V. broad- cast), 6:30a.m., WJBK-TV. Michigan Media Resources Center-The Dickens World: "The Philosophy of Love" (T.V. broadcast), 7 a.m., WDIV-TV. Lord of Light Lutheran Church-Career Choice Workshop for Christians, 11:30-4:30, 801 S. Forest at Hill St. Ann Arbor Civic Theatre-Open house and season kickoff, 7-10 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. MONDAY FILMS Gargoyle Films-The Maltese Falcon, 7 & p.m., Hale Aud. Bus. ':School. Cinema Guild-Inuit (Eskimo) Film Series, 8 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. PERFORMANCES Carillon Recital-Hudson Ladd & Stewart Scharch, carillonneurs, 7-8 p.m., Burton Tower. Ark-Merle Travis & Jody Stecher, country music concert, 8 & 10:30 p.m., 1721 Hill. SPEAKERS Math 289 Seminar-Prof. Peter Duren, 5 p.m., 3212 Angell Hall. Center for Social Concerns-Abortion: Right to Life/Right to Choiee, 7:30 p.m., Catacombs Room of Holy Trinity Chapel and Student Center, 511 W. Forest, Ypsi. Center for N. Eastern & N. African Studies-Dr. Harold Hoelscher, "The Impact of the Current Situation in Lebanon on the American University of Beirut," 4 p.m., Lane Hall. Computing Center-Edward Franczak, "Introduction to MTS: 1," 7-9p.m., Aud. B, Angell. Mich. Asoc. of Gerontology Students-Harold Johnson, "Introduc- tion to the Certificate Program in Gerontology," 7:30 p.m., Conf. Rm., 520 E.-Liberty. Near Eastern Studies, Program on Studies in Religion, St. Mary's Chapel, and St. John's Seminary-Mitchell Dahood, "Recent Developments in Ebla Research," 7:30 p.m., Marquette Rm. of St. John's Seminary, Plymouth, Mich. EXHIBITS Great American Medical Show-9-5, Clements Library, S. Univer- sity. Mich. Museum of Art-Canadian Inuit (Eskimo) art, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., State at S. University. Museum of Art-Image and Life: 50,000 years of Japanese Prehistory, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Union Gallery-Lithographs by Paul Stewart and ceramics by Kathy Dambach, 10 a.m. to6 p.m. Slusser Gallery-Paintings and drawings by Richard Wilt, art professor, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Exhibit Gallery-Judith Jacobs' Works on Paper, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Kelsey Museum of Archeololgy-Carthage Then and Now, 9 a.m. to 4p.m. 4Bentley Historical Collections-Photo expibit on the career of Gerald Ford, 9 a.m. to 5p.m. Stearns Collection-Musical instruments, 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS Pendleton Arts Center-Musket Auditions, 7-11 p.m., Union. Lesbian Advocates' Office/Student Legal Ser- vices-Discrimination and Local Harassment: informal discussion, 7 \ _l izes 'M- a- mI U