The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 16, 1979-Page 3 Turkish gov't loses ele " .:, ..4 Premiere says he'll re~ ANKARA, Turkey (AP) - Turkish Premier Bulent Ecevit announced his resignation yesterday because of an election defeat that gave more power to the opposition, forces led by former premier Suleyman Demirel. Ecevit said he would formally submit the resignation of his government to President Fahri Koruturk on today. The decision came after three hours of meetings involving the Cabinet and the leadership of Ecevit's moderate leftist Republican People's Party. "OUR GOVERNMENT has lost a majority in the Parliament. The elec- tion results as they reflect in the Parliament necessitate a change of government," Ecevit told reporters af- ter emerging from the meetings. The premier's party, which took power from Demirel's Justice Party in 1977, lost all five Assembly seats being contested in mid-term elections Sunday as well as crucial seats in the Senate. In the elections, Ecevit's party drew 29 per cent of the vote in the Senate elections, while Demirel's party got 49 per cent. ECEVIT'S government has been plagued by gang fighting and terrorism. At least 2,100 persons have been killed during its tenure. Inflation reached 100 per cent, unemployment rose and there were shortages of goods ranging from gasoline to light bulbs. Demirel had called for Ecevit's resignation but declined to say whether he planned to form a government him- self or take the country to early general elections. His aides said privately Demirel favored installing a caretaker government headed by an independent until such elections. The next regularly scheduled general election is set for 1981. According to unofficial but complete returns in the elections for 50 of 183 Senate seats, the Justice Party cap- tured 33. The Republicans got 12, down from the previous 24. The Moslem Fun- uign today damentalist National Salvation Panty got four and the ultra-rightist National Movement Party one., In the more powerful 4504seat Assembly, the opposition now holds a slim majority of 227 seats, compared;to 220 for Ecevit's party, State nuclear standards low Daily Photo by LISA KLAUSNER MEMBERS OF THE Recycle Ann Arbor organization discuss with Mayor Louis Belcher (second from right) a proposal to ex- teid a curbside recycling pick-up service to the entire city. Pictured left-to-right at the Recycle Ann Arbor Open House program last Sunday are: Kerry Sanford, Georgia Cline, Jonathan Dreyguss, Rich Ruyle, Mayor Belcher, and Chris Harker. EWSHREDDER oN HOLD: ity recycing plan may expand By BETH PERSKY w The city of Ann Arbor may set an energy conservation trend if Council members apiprove a plan to expand the current curbside recycling program. According to Mayor Louis Belcher, the city will contract with Recycle Ann Arbor to extend a recycling program to include the entire city within the next . five years, if the Council gives the go- ..,ahead within the next month. : RECYCLE ANN ARBOR, a non- profit community organization, curren- tly picks up newspapers, cans, and bot- lIes on the first Saturday of each month x in an area bounded by Main, Stadium, and Liberty Streets. Belcher said the recycling plan would designate .the current program in the 'west side of the city as a test program. 'he city would direct its efforts toward encouraging participation in that area; the curbside pick-ups would gradually -expand outward,. eventually sup- plementing the current city garbage Pic - p ffgrt,. . P iegoiog, to bediiie eergy savers, we've got to start here," Belcher told a group Sunday at Recycle Ann Arbor's open house. "There's nothing definite until we get all eleven votes (of the Council), but I think we'll probably get something worked out," he said. THE RECYCLING program could eliminate the need for a garbage shred- der, the funds for which were recently approved by Ann Arbor voters. Belcher said he plans to delay pur- chase of the shredder and use it only as a last resort. "The shredder's a nice piece of equipment, but all it does is shred up (the waste) and make it more fine. It's okay as a third or fourth step in the process," he said. Problems associated with landfills could- also be reduced with the recycling plan. The city recently spent $160,000 for 104 acres of landfill next to the present landfill site on Elsworth Road. Within seven years, however, this landfill will be used up, according to Recycle Ann Arbor coordinator Gary Lussenden., , 4 e IN ADDITION.to Belcher's commen- ts, the Open House also included speeches from State Senator Ed Pierce (D-Ann Arbor) and State Represen- tative Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor). Bullard said that Michigan, which was "one of the first states to pass the returnable bottle law, can take the lead in this (recycling) approach to conser- vation." According to Recycle Ann Arbor co- founder Jonathan Dreyfuss, who also made a short speech, the organization's efforts "haven't been (even) a drop in the bucket of the waste stream.'" Nevertheless, he said, what is picked up on one collection "would sustain a coun- try in the third world for a year or longer." A display depicting Recycle Ann Ar- bor's past efforts and a slide show detailing the complete recycling effort were included in the open house program. Both displays were housed in a shelter constructed from recycled wood and cement blocks. By LANI WIEGAND LANSING (UPI) - Michigan is im- proving its ability to handle a Three Mile Island-type nuclear accident but still has a way to go, a Nuclear Regulatory Commission official told a joint legislative committee yesterday. Consumers Power Co.'s Big Rock nuclear plant, at Charlevoix and Palisades plant at South Haven rnk below the national average for meeting federal safety requirements, said James Keppler, director of the NRC's Midwest region. KEPPLER SAID Pennsylvania - where the Three Mile Island incident occurred - was much better prepared earlier this year to handle a nuclear ac- cident of that scope than was Michigan. "I think Pennsylvania was probably in better shape than a lot of states," Keppler told a meeting of the Special Joint Committee on Nuclear Energy. Michigan presently has three operating nuclear power plants, two more under construction and scheduled to open by 1983 and one in the planning stage. CONSUMERS's Midland plants, ten- Broadway's Most Honored Play of the Season Winner of Four Tony Awards rt tatively scheduled to open in 1982, were designed by Babcock & Wilcox Co., the same firm that built Three Mile Island. But Keppler said stricter safety stan- dards imposed since the spring ac- cident might delay the Midland plants' opening until costly modifications can be made. Michigan thus far is one of several Midwest states that have failed to provide the NRC with an acceptable nuclear emergency plan, but Kepper said he expects the state to submit a revised plan soon. "MY PERSPECTIVE of Three MIle Island is I don't think we ever though that kind of an accident could happen, he said. "We focused more on major types of accidents."' Testing standards for plant operators have been stiffened, Keppler said. CINEMA I Presents( HIROSHIMA, MON AMOUR (Alain Resnais, 1959) An actress in Tokyo making an anti-war movie meets and falls in love with a Japanese architect. Immediately Resnais introduces' us to things within things-the filming of a film within a film; on actress playing an actress who is in the midst of a part; an anti-war film within ap anti-war film. Resnais subtly mirrors the many layered levels of our lives, carefully and skillfully placing his boxes within boxes, his meaning within layers of meaning. Screenplay by Marguerite Duras. (88 min). ANGELL HALL $1.50 7:00 & 9:00 Friday: THE INNOCENT r" k i -G5 FILMS SAnn Arbor Film Co-op-Francois Truffaut Night, Stolen Kisses, 7, 10;20 p.m., Bed and Board, 8:40 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Cinema 11-Hiroshima, Mon Amour, 7, p.m., Aud. 3, MLB. _- Cinema Guild-Interiors, 7,9:05 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. 7, 9:05 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. School of Music-Der Rosenkavalier, 8 p.m., Michigan Theatre. SPEAKERS Anatomy Department-Dr. Volker Herzog, University of Munich, "Membrane Retrieval in Secretory Cells", noon, Room 5732, Med. Sci. Ecumenical Center/International Center-lunch series, Mary Alice Rice, Amy Perone, "Human Rights Issues of Reproductive Freedom-Abortion-Yes or No?", noon, International Center. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints-Vernon Cooley, "A Church for All Seasons", 1 p.m., Alumni Room, McKenney Union, Eastern Michigan University. College of Engineering-P. Rabinowitz, University of Wisconsin, Math Department Colloquium, 4 p.m., 3201 Angell Hall. Department of Geology and Mineralogy-Turner Distinguished Lee- tures, Prof. Alden Carpenter, University of Missouri, "Origin of Metal-Rich Brines in Sedimentary Basins", 4 p.m., 4001 C.C. Little. English Department - Wesley Morris, Rice University, "The Irrepressible Real-Jacques Lacan and Post Structuralism", 4 p.m., Rackham Conference Room. 'Bioengineering Program-Stanley Sternberg, "Parallel Methods in Image Processing", 4 p.m., 1042 East Engineering. Kelsey Museum -Robert Bianchi, Brooklyn Museum, "Patron and Artist-The Funerary Arts of Roman Egypt", 4:10 p.m., Tappan Hall, Room 207. PERFORMANCES Major Events-Kenny Loggins in concert, 8 p.m., Hill Auditorium. School of Music-percussion students recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. - MISCELLANEOUS Student Organization, Activities and Programs-leadership series, "Leadership is Everybody's Business", 11:30 a.m., Conference RRooms 1, 2, Union. Computing Center-"ALGOL Debugging for Beginners", noon, 1011 NUBS. Recreational Sports-nutrition clinic, "Nutrition for the Fitness En- thusiast", 7 p.m., 2230 CCRB. Sufi Order-Inquirers class and dances of universal peace, 8 p.m., Weslley Lounge. Union Gallery-"Upper Peninsula Artists", exhibition of prints, Daily Official Bulletin TUESDAY. OCTOBER 16.1979 D~aily('a lendar: Computing Center: ALGOL Debugging for Begin- ners. loll NUBS, noon. y Anatomy: volker Herzog, U-Munich, "membrane Retrieval in Secretaory Cells," 5732 Med Sci. II, Noon. English:. Wesley Morris, Rice-U., "The Irrepressible Real-Jacques Lacan and Post Struc- turalisms,"'W. Conf., Rackham, 4p.m. Bioengineering: Stanley Sternberg, "Parallel Methods in Image Processing," 1042 E. Eng., 4 p.m. Kelseyz; robert Museum, "Patron and Artist-The Funerary Arts of Roman Egypt," Tappan Hall, Rm.. 207. 4: 10 p.m. Recreational Sports: Nutrition clinic, "Nutrition for the Fitness Enthusiast," 2230 CCRB, 7 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: R. Savit, "Understanding the Phase Transitions in ZN-Symmetric Models," 2038 Randall, 4 p.m. OCTOBER 26-28 FRI & SAT-8m-SUN -2pm & 8Dm POWER CENTER PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM Tickets available at PTP ticket office Michigan League PHONE: 764-0450. Hours: Mon-Fri 10-1 & 2-5pim Also at all HUDSON'S outlets Woody Allen's 1978 INTERIORS Woody Allen pays homage to Ingmar Bergman in an entire film and the result is tears and laughter. Three unhappy daughters, all with careers, are brought together when their father is remarried to a vulgarian, and their mother subsequently tries to kill herself. Featuring the instantly-acclaimed classic sequence with adhesive tape. With E.G. MARSHALL, GERALDINE PAGE, MAUREEN STAPLETON and DIANE KEATON. Wed: Grant & Bergman in NOTORIOUS t1ft . r ' A Invites You ToP Join H im For: Soup and onlyGarden Salad Tues. Oct. 161 iaS(O 1140 S. University 668-8411 Mon.-Sat. 11 A.M.-2A.M. Sun. 3 PM.-12 A.M. - pen Huse1 For Graduating Engineering and Science Majors* October 23- The Union- Kuezel Room 1.6 p.m.-Open House 7 p.m. -Presentation, Question & Answer Period * Engineering-EE, ME, Industrial & Opera- tions, ChemE, Computer and Control, Materials & Metallurgical. Other-Engineering Sciences, Computer Science, Math Texas Instruments will host an open house on the above date and location for seniors and graduate students who are interested in learning more about opportunities in technical careers at TI. Representatives from TI organizations, who will be recruiting herelater this fall and spring, will be present to describe their organizations' activities and oppor- tunities and answer questions you may have. Students are invited to drop in any time from 1-6 p.m. for an informal discussion with our representatives. CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 i .3 FLASH1 Are Your Organization Members Laughing at You? Do You Have Problems Under- standing Your Constituency's Needs? Then RUN don't walk to Tuesday, October 1-6th's workshop LEADERSHIP IS EVERYBODY'S BUSINESS Conference Rooms 1 & 2, Michigan Union