I' rCINEMA I Page 6-Friday, November 16, 1979-The Michigan Daily BIKE EUROPE OFFERS PENNY-PINCHING PLANS 1 4 ,, . t4 NORMA RAE rto4MI (Martin Ritt, 1979) Based on a true story of one woman's fight against worker exploitation by a southern textile firm, this moving film tells Norma Rae's story. Sally Field gives a Cannes Film Festival award-winning performance as the young, divorced mother who teams up with a Jewish New York union organizer to rally the community behind them in their fight for justice. With RON LIEBMAN and.BEAU BRIDGES. (1.14 m7.). ANAGELL HALL $1,50 7:00 & 9:15 7r- 1, A2 firm helps students travel Tomorrow:TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE DESTROY ALL MONSTERS Sponsored by the Michigan Council for the Arts Publicity sponsored b MSA The Ann Arbor Film Coopersfive Presents at MLB: $1.50 Friday, November 16 THE MAZE (Willian Cameron Menzies, 1953) 7 & 10:20 MLB 3 3-D is back. A spooky Enclish castle is inhabited by a strange freak of nature in this classic 1750's 3-D chiller. The special red and green 3-D glasses will be provided. Plus short: A 3-D featurette containing highlights from The Creature from the Black Lagoon and It Come from Outer Space. BARBARELLA (Roger Vadim, 1968) 8:40 only MLB 3 In this intelligent, underrated spoof of the '60's stereotypes, JANE FONDA PLAYS A KIND OF SEXUAL Alice-in-Wonderland in the year 40,000 assigned to locate a missing scientist. Along the way, she meets the usual sci-fitypes, plus an inept revolutionary and a handsome spaceman who makes love "the old way." A woman takes on technology and wins? Only in a Jane Fonda film, and one that deserves to be seen more often. With MILO O'SHEA, DAVID HEMMINGS. JOHN PHILIP LAW. Tomorrow- Hitchcock's PSYCHO AND Powell's PEEPING TOM at MLB 4; and Satyajit Ray's THE CHESS PLAYERS AT Aud. A. GREAT SAVINGS ON, NATURAL & HEALTH FOODS Giant Warehouse Sale-Up to 50 % below retail on natural foods-also vitamins, cosmetics, shampoos, juicers & appliances, books and much more. ONE DAY ONLY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER18- 10 am-4 pm At Midwest Natural Foods 170 Aprill Drive Left off Jackson Road at Curt Terova Cadillac ({ mile west of Wagner Road) By JAMES KOBIELUS Picture this: You and some friends are cycling through the lazy, hilly Brit- tany countryside during summer vacation. Though the pace has been leisurely, you are road-weary, so you stop for the night in a quaint farming village. The hospitable Britons invite you in for a night of folk dancing and drunken revelry-two cultures come together, new friendships are formed. The next day you continue on to another 'town, another adventure.. Idle fantasies? They don't have to be. There is an Ann Arbor firm that will expose students to a side of the European continent that tourists rarely see, and help them pinch pennies in the process. FOR THE PAST two summers, Bike Europe has brought college students together to take cycling trips throughout England, Holland, Belgium, Germany, France, and Luxembourg. Bob Brown and Tom Tiplady, co- owners of Bike Europe, describe their programs as a "very economical" way to see Europe. The tours offer a "whole Join The Doily, different flavor to the countryside," reported one University student who made the trip. The trips range in price from $450 for the two-week excursion to $600 for six weeks, not including hotel accommodations. The price includes round-trip airfare to and from London, campground fees, ferry tickets, and use of Bike Europe's vast library of travel information. The cyclist must provide his or her own bicycle, tent, food expen- ses, and repair expenses. The organizers of Bike Europe have tailored their tour packages to appeal to the casual bikei' who is interested in traveling the back country of rural Europe. Of the three tour packages of- fered, two proceed at a leisurely pace over smooth terrain, taking in 40-50 miles a day, settling down at cam: pgrounds each night. On the "six coun- try loop," the bikers start out in Lon- don, cycle through rural England, take a ferry across the English Channel, amble through Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg, Germany, and France, and end up in Paris. The "regional France" tour meanders through the backroads and small villages of rural France. For experienced bikers, Bike Europe offers a more strenuous jour- ney that traverses through the French Alps on the way to the Riviera. University student Jeff Rautiola, who traversed the six-country tour during Summer, 1978, said he thinks it is the "best way to spend a summer." Rautiola explained that he had never before traveled a bike hike that long, and he admitted that there were some problems. "We couldn't pack too much weight on our bicycles, so we had to keep our luggage down to a bare minimum," he said. He added that continual biking for weeks tends to weaken one's read end. THE MOST memorable times of his trip, Rautiola recalled, were when he met people in small towns along the route. "Most of the people we met were very friendly, especially the Ger- mans," he said. He fondly recalled a group of German campers who treated the bikers to bratwurst, and a German jogger who went out of his way to guide the lost bikers to a hotel on a rainy night. The organizers of Bike Europe are currently planning next summer's ex- cursions. For further information, they ask people to call 668-0529 or write BIKE EUROPE, P.O. Box 7928, Ann Arbor, MI 48107. Five SAID eandidates vying for LSA- SGExecutive Council "i16 17 -) :. ov 8-ati.' r la (Boliciic _ The Un[iv est -- '.of \Michian S 00 0of Musc .1 Opera Theatre (Continued from Page 1) LSA-SG. Mondry described educational development as a theme for the party. "It's a theme in the sense that when we all came together, that is what we all felt was the-most important role of LSA- SG," he said. SAID MEMBERS plan to push for educational development through a number of avenues. According to Wert, two of the major avenues are for LSA- SG to develop survey courses for those not majoring in a particular subject, and to increase student involvement in tenure decisions. Alonso agreed. He claimed that such courses should be offered "to provide an opportunity for students to think critically about the world - instead of being afraid of grade competition." On tenure, Alonso said, "Students should have an equal voice in selecting professors. Students are the best evaluators of teaching and should have extensive involvement in the tenure process." SAID also wants changes in the im- plementation of affirmative action policies in the University's student enrollment. Claiming that current policies are "wrong and unfair," Alon- so said the University should increase, its number of minority students. MONDRY SAID he strongly favors having a student representative on the Executive Committee of the college. Mondry called for the publishing of Executive Committee meeting minutes, the opening of its meetings to the public, and the eventual placing of students on the committee. "I can't believe," he said, "that the one and only committee which makes all final decisions for the college has no student input and is not even accessible to the students." Talmers said she was particularly in- terested in promoting the freshperson seminar program. "The seminars promote student-teacher contact and allow for a student to explore more specific areas of study," she said. Also on the SAID slate is vice- presidential candidate Kim Brower: Regents discuss salary lists; meet with MSA and SACUA (Continued from Page 1) after a recommendation made by the state attorney general. In April 1974, af- ter Eastern Michigan University disclosed its salary list, Dunn .once again asked the Regents to release their salaries. The Regents- refused on both occasions. The executive officers are expected today to tell the Regents that the state law should not be challenged, and recommend a change in the Univer- sity's policy forbidding public disclosure of salary information. During the afternoon meeting, the Regents heard from the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) about the current state of that group's operations, .and from members of the Michigan Republicans Club concerning a com- plaint it had about MSA's funding of several of the club's projects. THEN THE REGENTS were tole that research expenditures at th University increased 18.4 per cen during fiscal year 1979. In giving his annual report on the money placed in the University's research budget, Vice-President for Research Charles Overberger said the University has received "healthy in creases" in the amounts of outside research funds. "As far as the goals of the University go, we seem to be holding our own and are even doing a little better than an- ticipated," Overberger said. He added that the University is ranked fourth or fifth in the overall volume of research funds, and eighth or ninth in federal research funds. IN RESPONSE TO questioning, Overberger also said the executive of- ficers do not feel placing a full-time d e t e s r - person in Washington to help the University get more federal funds is a "productive" idea. "Our study is leading us to believe that a full-time person in Washington might in fact be a waste of money," Smith said. GARGOYLE FILMS presents RERECCA F Starring: LAURENCE OL IVIER Directed by: ALFRED HITCHCOCK" ACADEMY AWARD BEST PICTURE HALEAUD., Fri. Nov.16, 7 & 9p.m. COMING On I O DEC. 1st all $lond Man Wffh On lck Soe The University of Michigan Men's Glee Club LEONARD JOHNSON, Director Wayne State University Men's Glee Club HARRY LANGSFORD, Director IN CONCERT NOVEMBER 17, 1979-8:00 p.m. HILL AUDITORIUM Tickets: $4, $3, or $2 (student $1) MAIL ORDERS SEND CHECK TO: Ticket Manager, The University of Michigan Men's Glee Club 1024 Administration Building, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Hill box office open November 12, 9-5 - :, r 0 Econ Omists predict l'mild'1980 recession (Continued from Page 1) sreporting figures to the general public, uses price; comparisons _for only a select number of goods that consumers are likely, to purchase, such as food products and automobiles. The GNP- deflator rate includes price com- putations on such items as the price of steel and industrial chemicals. The Consumer Price Index figure for 1980 is predicted by the economists to be 9.3 per cent.I The economists base their recovery assumptions on postponement of scheduled Social Security tax increases and a "modest easing of monetary policy." To further stimulate recovery, "it seems appropriate to us to give careful consideration to additional tax stimulus programs in mid-1980," said. Shapiro, who presented the forecast to the con- ference audience. THlE ECONOMICS Department has been making such forecasts since 1953 using the "Michigan Model," a.,com- puterized system using both economic and statistical analysis. A huge number of figures are fed into the complex- model-which is constantly, being revised-to produce the forecasts. The reliability of the predictions vary from year to year;' but last year's predicted general trends were fairly close to reality. 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