Page 10-Sunday, January 21, 1979-The Michigan Daily COUNCILMAN LOOKS AHEAD: The U.of M.'s Office of Major Events Presents THURSDAY, FEB. 8 AT 8 PM. HILL AUD.,ANN ARBOR Reserved seats are $7.50, $6.50 and $5.50 Tickets on sale now at Michigan Union Box Office Mon.-Fri., 11:30 to 5:30 (763-2071). Tickets also at Huckleberry Party Store in Ypsilanti and Falsetta Market in Ann Arbor. Sorry, we cannot accept personal checks. Smoking and beverages strictly prohibited in Hill. To order by mail send self-addressed stamped envelope and money order to: CHAPIN, Michigan Union Box Office, 520S. State St., Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Trowbridge: moving on By JOE VARGO In a little less than ten days, Council- man Ron Trowbridge will be leaving politics-perhaps permanently-for the podium. Trowbridge, a Fourth Ward Republican, is resigning from City Council, effective January 30. The for- mer Eastern Michigan University professor recently took a new post as a vice-president at Hillsdale College. TROWBRIDGE HAS no regrets about the time he spent in politics. He has served nearly two full terms as a councilman-a little less than four years. "It was a terribly educational and rewarding experience," said the literature prof. "It gave me a knowledge of how government fun- ctions. Perhaps most importantly, it made me more tolerant towards gover- nment and other political points of view. "I wouldn't have traded the years at City Council for anything and I'm leaving with a very pleasant taste in my mouth." AT THE HILLSDALE position Trowbridge will be in charge of editing books, papers and articles written at the college, as well as bringing guest lecturers to the school. He also plans to do more writing and public speaking. "The job was too good to turn down," Trowbridge noted. "I get to meet fascinating people that I would not normally encounter." Trowbridge lost a bid for a State Senate seat in the Republican primary last fall, edged out in a recount by a mere five votes by William Colburn, who in turn was defeated in the general election by Democrat Ed Pierce. Now, however, Trowbridge feels that his job at Hillsdale will be "more exciting than being a state senator." TROWBR.IDGE SAYS he doesn't plan on getting involved again in politics-at least not in the near future. "Politics is in my blood, and I can't say 'categorically that I'll never get back into it," he explained. "There's always an outside chance, but at this point, I'd have to say that I'm virtually done with politics." Hong Kon HONG KONG (AP) - Waving and grinning, 372 Vietnamese "boat people" from the tramp freighter Huey Fong stepped ashore yesterday after four weeks of misery and uncertainty aboard the stranded ship. The refugees were the first to leave the ship, which had been at anchor on Hong Kong's doorstep since Dec. 23 while its 3,300 cramped passengers begged for refuge from authorities in this British colony. C' g accepts b LOCAL OFFICIALS who had sent out a flotilla of patrol boats to bar the ship when it first appeared off Hong Kong, finally relented Friday after several Western governments offered to take some refugees already in Hong Kong camps, thereby making room for the Huey Fong passengers. The 372 appeared weary from their ordeal, but smiled at reporters as they stepped from small boats that brought -them in from the 2,290-ton freighter. Trowbridge Since Trowbridge was due up for re- election in April, Republican E. Ed- ward Hood, an Ann Arbor lawyer, has beenrappointed by Mayor Louis Belcher to serve out the rest of his term. oat people As they disembarked, one 15-year-old refugee girl collapsed from shock on the wharf in Kowloon, Hong Kong's twin city across the harbor. She was rushed to a hospital and a government spokesman said she was in fair con dition. THE OTHERS, bundled against the chilly breezes in clothes provided for them, were taken by double-decker buses to a former Royal Air Force base near Hong Kong's Kaitak Airport. The airbase was renovated recently under a contingency plan to house refugees. Thereathey will await resettlement overseas. Authorities said the first group to land comprised 67 families, and they would be the only group brought ashore yesterday. Reporters were not allowed to speak with the refugees as they disembarked. IMMIGRATION officials, mean- while, continued to interview those remaining aboard the Huey Fong. Police detained the captain and crew for questioning and seized the ship's log and other documents, Marine Director James Alexander told a news conferen- ce. The government had threatened the captain with a four-year prison term for refusing their orders to take the ship to Taiwan, its original destination. 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