Ingmcr Bergman 1969 Page 6-Tuesday, October 23, 1979-The Michigan Daily COMPLETION NOW SET FOR SUMMER '81 SHAME Bergman's Heart of Darkness or Apocalypse Now. The director demonstrates how easily the veneer of civilized behavior is shed under 4he pressures of guerrilla warfare, An island is under attack and twoimusicians fall victim to the chaos of the moment. With MAX VON SYDOW and LIV ULLMAN. Wed: BUSTER KEATON NIGHT Thurs: BONNIE AND CLYDE Law CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:03 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 TONIGHT 7:30 PM-TROTTER HOUSE HATE CARTER! 'HATE CAPITA L ISM! A forum and discussion on the. current economic and political crisis in the U.S., and the socialist alternative. Guest Speaker: BRIAN MENDIS, UAW Local 140* Spartacus Youth League Forum funded by MSA *for identification purposes only lft CINEMA'II PRESENTS SALT OF THE EARTH + By ELAINE RIDE( Students yearning for tf days when a short cut 1 parking lot at the corner of' Monroe streets was unob bulldozers, barricades, an fences still have a while t years from now that lot w sformed into a grassy, t mall. At least, that is what it v on the surface. A closer ins reveal two large depressions-skylights, the of the new underground ad University Law Library. THE $9.2 MILLION, privz addition was originally sc complettion next spring, month delay in subcontr digging operations has pus] date to Summer, 1981. In 1977, when the Law Sc ni Development Committ Faculty Building Commit that a library addition wa they had to come up with a would not clash with the chitecutre of the existing bu Besides enhancing the ar the Law Quad, an undergr has the advantage of bein ficient. According to Archit Gunnar Birkets, who is chitect in Birmingham, square-foot structure shou 20 per cent less energy t parable building above gro is is easier to maintain co of heat and light undergrou THE NEW ADDITION 40,000 square feet of it usable space to stove 200, and micorfilm and to pr fices, study carrels, table library needs. library add BUT Birkets designed. the building in )UT keepingtwith his philosophy that an un- he good old derground building need not seem through the below ground from within. Ceilings will Tappan and be high and two bronzed glass structed by skylights-a light-well over 150 feet d wire-mesh long and a smaller triangular o wait. Two skylight-will provide natural lighting vill be tran- for the most-used areas of the building. ree-covered The main hallways will parallel the light-well, and the three floors of the will look like structure will be constructed "balcony- spection will like" to allow maximum light in- glassy flitration. Light reflectors and potted e visible tip ivy on the limestone face of the well will dition to the reflect light through the glass opposite, while at the same time giving users a ately-funded vi ew of greenery backed by the im- heduled for pressive heights of the Law Quad. but a nine- The top floorof the L-shaped building racted hole- will be used to house library staff of- hed back the fices, card catalogues, reference sec- tions, and microfilm. hool's Alum- THE INTERIOR of the new building ee and the was designed so that space is not com- tee decided mitted irreversably. According to s necessary, Birkets, only the elevators are per- adesign that manently situated. "The walls may be Gothic ar- remounted in different positions gilding. because they don't support anything," chitecture of explained the 52-year-old Latvian-corn ound facility architect. g energy ef- But the best thing about the new ad- tecture Prof. dition is that students, both gradaute also an ar- and undergradaute, will have open ac- the 77,500 cess to the stacks, no longer being for- ild consume ced to rely on library employee han a com- "carriers." Leary called this the und because biggest disadvantage linked with the nstant levels current library. nd. Birkets, also the designer of the will have Federal Reserve B nk in Minneapolis , mmediately and the Ford Motor Co. Visitor Recep- 000 volumes tion Center in Dearborn, said he )vide for of- believes that the result of his effort here s, and other will be a "pleasing extension of the existing Law Library." ltiton progresses (HERBERT BIBERMAN, 1954) After being named one of the Hollywood Unfriendly Ten during the com- munist witch-hunt of the '50s, Biberman took fellow-persecuted artists on location in New Mexico to produce this little-known masterpiece. A semi- documentary re-creation of the actual year-long strike of Mexican- American zincminers, it used mostly a non-professional cast; the drama centers on the complex, changing relationship between one of the strikers and his wife. Features inspiring performances by the women of local 890 of the International Union of Mine and Smelter Workers. (94 min.) ML B 3 $1.50 7:00& 9:00 Thurs: MOLLY HASKELL in person Special Attraction TONIGHT at Rick's American Cafe: 50's NIGHT * 50 Cover * 50C Mugs of Beer " 504 Shots MUSIC BY: "The Fabulous Clams" 611 Church One block South of South U. The Michigan Theatre Presents RICK NELSON TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23 8:00 P.M. Tickets $8.50 at the door or at these locations: WhereHouse Records-Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti Huckleberry Party Store-Ypsilanti Falsetta's-Ann Arbor Aura Sounde-Ann Arbor proceeds to support the Michigan Theatre WORKERS FOR J.A. Freedman, general contractors, are currently mold- ing concrete pilings that will provide interior support for the new Law Library addition, and constructing what will be three levels. Re searchers measure v solar -4 radiation (Continued from Page3) Baker described as "any device which gathers the sun's energy to heat or cool," is dependent upon the amount of solar radiation in the area. The only previously existing figures'on radiation are not precise according to Tom Grif- fin, an SRP research assistant. "They provide only a ballpark figure on the radiation in that area." "THE PROJECT started two years ago," said Baker, "but we have only been confident enough with our system to give out information for the last week." Michael Weber, a research assistant, explained that areas which receive less solar radiation require larger solar collectors "because of the variation of cloudiness and difference in latitude. Southern states receive more radiation from being closer to the equator so We need a bigger solar collector to produce the same amount of energy." The radiation levels were important to have because the data can help to make a collector more efficient. They can also be tised to compare the radiation in different regions and evaluate their conduciveness to solar energy. The data on radiation go into a com- puter which averages radiation levels. "The output is a floppy disk that holds two days of readings," said SRP research associate Dennis Kahlbaum. "It gives people with collectors a feel for how much radiation fell on that day," he said. "They'll know how big a collector has to be to heat a house." The SRP at the University hag a trailer which travels throughout the state to measure radiation. THIS ARCHITECT'S model of the underground law library addition at the University of Michigan Law School was designed by University Prof. and Birmingham, Mich. architect Gunnar Birkerts. The $9.2 million, privately-funded building will contain 40,000 square feet of immedaitely usable space and an additional 15,000 square feet of "raw" space to accommodate expansion. Anti-nuclear protesters demonstrate in Lansing NA' A B D Coltinued Iro m I'age : NURSING BOARDS ONE OF THE main speakers at the Flexible Programs rally was author Morland. "The United Th,,, IS a direre"ceStates government claims I've acquired dangerous knowledge about the hydrogen bomb. I am now going to KNshare this so-called 'dangerous:.' EDUCA TIONAL knowledge with you," he said. The facts CENTER he then gave out concerned the amount of nuclear weapons currently stock- FsPrpnfrmation p leats e 1piled by the U.S. Morland also said that the nuclear nsepower industry began as a result of a Tor LLiIFREE: Citi-2,3C1782change in the type of nuclear bombs eTOLL FREE: 800-223s1being built. "In 1964, MIRV's (clusters lontuertond ajorjS terr"'of smaller nuclear bombs) began to THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25-3:10 pm East Lecture Rm. Rackham 3rd floor DEFENSE and AID: POLiICAL REPRESS10N in SOUTH1 AFRICA since SOWETO Lecture by WILFRED GRENVILLE GREY Chief Executive International Defense and Aid Fund for Southern Arica The roots of D&A go back to emergency committees set up in South Africa and London in 1952 to orovide (a) leoal defense for nolitical orisoners in the replace the big hydrogen bombs. This resulted in a surplus of uranium and our capacity to convert it (to power). That is when nuclear power plants were born." Also at the rally was Andrea Chessman, Harrisburg, Pa. resident and "survivor" of Three Mile Island. Chessman spoke of the enormous fear generated in Harrisburg residents as a result of the accident last spring. "Every time we get sick, we wonder if it's the first sign of cancer," she said. "We no longer laugh at people who keep suitcases in their cars (ready for another evacuation)." Do a Tree 5th Avenue at Lileh St. 761-9700 Formerly Filt Forum Thater Will "/an be crucified for incorrectly conugating a Latin verb? a Favor: Recycle Your DailY Jr and TM AT I UW~ 4*.~g i~W'V it ~Z -~ ~. IU I