1cU SEE Xls HAPPEN CAL WDALY Re-using the refuse It makes spring cleaning a lot more simple if you don't let those stacks of newspapers pile up in the basement.Recycle Ann Arbor, a non- profit corporation, will conduct its monthly pickup of recyclable materials on this Saturday. Recycle Ann Arbor, which has operated for eight months, is based on the belief that reusing rather than burying resources saves energy and reduces pollution. Residents need only bring recyclables to the curbside of your own home by 9 a.m. Saturday for pick-up. It is requested that newspapers, magazines, and other paper be separately bundled and securly tied. Metal cans should be flattened and the labels removed. Glass should be clean and sorted by color. Aluminum and cardboard will also be accepted. Further questions should be directed to Jonathan Dreyfuss at 665-6398. Jazz-less Earle A lot of jazz fans were disappointed last night when they showed up at the Earle, a local club, only to find that the band they had come to hear wasn't there. The University of Michigan Jazz Band was originally scheduled to put on a fundraiser to help pay for its planned trip to the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland this summer. But, according to a band spokesman, a contractural dispute came up, and the band was forced to cancel. "We apologize for this disappoin- tment," said the band's business manager, Jon Diamond. "We hope to make it up to our fans in future appearances." Other benefits will be scheduled, Diamond said. Pack for this party Two frats are getting together for a bash Friday at 8 p.m., and within two hours from that time, a couple from the party will be winging their way to Miami Beach for a free weekend in the sun. At 8:30 p.m., members of Phi Delta Theta, a fraternity at the corner of South University and Washtenaw, will host brothers and their dates from Phi Gamma Delta for a dream lottery. For $10 a head. members of the two frats can take a chance that Friday will be their lucky day and buy a ticket. The fortuneate brother will win tickets for a plane out of Metro, reservations in a Miami Beach hotel, and $100 worth of fun money. We've heard one brother was turned down for a date to the af- fair. She didn't know him well enough to join him for a sunburn. Never knew it differently Often it is easy to take certain policies and procedures for granted simply because "that's the way things have always been," but yester- day marked the ten-year anniversary of some University policies that are worth noting. The Literary College (LSA) a decade ago yesterday voted overwhelmingly to open its meetings to the public and the press. Meanwhile, LSA's Curriculum Committee shelved a proposal that voting student members be seated on the committee. At the time the committee seated three students who served in only an ,ex-officio capacity. Also on that day, the Residential College (RC) Curriculum Committee voted to eliminate comprehensive examinations which were traditionally given to RC students at the end of their sophomore year. Take ten On Jan. 31, 1969, initial steps restricting Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) programs were being felt on U.S. college campuses. On that day, the Dartmouth College faculty voted to reduce credit for ROTC programs and to eliminate credit entirely after three years if the programs were not moved off campus. Days earlier, Yale faculty members voted to give ROTC courses extracurricular status and to withdraw academic credit from such courses. The University of Michigan's Literary College eventually followed the downgrading of military programs on other campuses and abolished full academic credit for ROTC programs. Happenings FILMS Ann Arbor Film Co-op - The Grateful Dead, 8:30, 10:45, Aud. A, Angell Hall. Cinema Guild - The World of Apu, 7 and 9, Aud 3 Modern Language Building. Center for Japanese Studies, A Geisha, 7:30, Ugestu, 9:10, Old Arch. Auditorium. PERFORMANCES UTP - In celebration, 8 p.m., Trueblood Aud. Frieze Building. MEETINGS Career Planning and Placement - graduate students workshop, 4-5 p.m., 3200 SAB. Project Transition - recruitment and orientation meeting for com- panionship program for elderly foster care residents, 7 p.m., Unitarian Church, Fellowship Room, 1917 Washtenaw. Ann Arbor Committee for Human Rights in Latin America - plans for the upcoming benefit for the defense of Mexican exile Hector Marroquin, 7:30 p.m., Michigan League, third floor, Room B. MSA Special Projects - Students Concerned About Suicide, 7:30, East Quad, Room 126. LECTURES Center for Russian and European studies - William Lockwood, "Minority Status and Economic Change; The Croats of Eastern Austria," noon, Lane Hall, Commons room. International Center - "Summer '79 Europe", noon, International Center Recreation Room. Journalism - Larry Hatfield, 12:10,2040 LS&A. Engineering - Rodney Tabaczynski "The Use of Structured Tur- bvulence Philosophy in Developing Models and Correlations", noon, West Engineering Room 246. Microbiology - Howard Urnovitz, "Negative Regulation of the Im- mune Response to WEIH - 3B Myelomomocytic Leukemia in Synthetic BALB/C Mice," 2, Med. Sci., II, North Lecture Hall. Mass Communicaton Research Program - Charles Tilly, "Studies in Conflict in 19th Century Britain," 3:30, 2549 LS&A. Center for Japanese Studies - Van Craig Gessel, "Cripples, Clods and Cowards; Three Views of Modern Man In Contemporary Japanese Literature, 4, Lane Hall Commons Room. Chemical Engineering, Brice Carnahan, "The Fortran IV Programming Language", 7:30, Natural Science Auditorium. MISCELLANEOUS Mad Hatter's Tea Party - Art Print Sale Benefit, 9-5:30, Union and Fishbowl. Undergraduate History Association - Students-Faculty Tea, 3-4:30, History Department Lounge, 3rd Floor, Haven Hall. LSA-SG - Pick up applications at 4003 Michigan Union for College Committee and LSA seat interviews to be held February 3. On the outside PRICE INCREASE WORRIES MEMBERS: The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, January 31, 1979-Page 3 Co-op bakery faces problems By STEFANY COOPERMAN Wildflour Bakery has been supplying non-profit institutions and health- conscious Ann Arborites since 1972, when the cooperative began baking at Pizza Bob's in the wee hours of the morning. Six years later, the bakery puts out 4,700 loaves per month, rents facilities, and still faces financial distress. The bakery, located on N. Fourth Street, is next door to the People's'Co-op. Perhaps the location is a bit far for most students to travel for their bread and goodies, but 12 interested persons gathered last week to discuss a price increase at the bakery's community meeting. At the co-op decisions are made by a consensus of employees, volunteers, and community members. The co-op members claim it is their Pope draws jubilant Guadalajara crowd policy to ". .,. never make a decision that one or more members object to strongly. Most often we work on it and talk it out." BREAD BAKING, group interaction, and the social implications of prices are issues that concern the collective. Two goals of the bakery are to supply bread to the community at a reasonable price and to retain an egalitarian system in its division of labor. Jobs and ad- ministrative chores are rotated among members. Other factors besides labor and ingredients are taken into the con- sideration of pricing policy. Wildflour keeps the price of whole wheat bread artificially low because, according to employee Jean Marvel, "We want to sell a bread that is affordable to anyone." The recently voted price in- crease keeps whole wheat at $1.02 for a pound-and-a-half. At one time food co-ops were a popular alternative to supermarket chains. In the words of co-op employee Dave Dillon, who paraphrases E.F. Schumacher, "small is beautiful." This philosophy is embraced at Wildflour, but is not prevalent enough in the com- munity to bring in enough customers to support the bakery. FOR THE PAST 18 months em- ployees' salaries have remained at three dollars an hour, while the cost of living has increased. Co-op employees earn $80 a week. Little argument at the community meeting was raised to stop the increase of salaries to $120.00 a week. Jean Marvel said, "We think that $4 an hour is a real livable wage." If the bakery can squeeze by the financial pinch, it will continue to provide the social services that are as important to Wildflour as is bread. The co-op is a part of the Ann Arbor Deferred Sentence Program, under which sentenced offenders may opt to work off their time at the bakery asa volunteer labor. Often participators in this program become involved with the bakery and remain to help long after their time is up. EMployees say, ". . . the (thee program) -provides a rewarding ex- perience. They sometimes come in with a very unhealthy attitude and leave with a very healthy one." Anyone is welcome to volunteer at the bakery. For an hour of work one receives a loaf of bread and a 17 per cent discount for the week that may be used at any of Ann Arbor's five food co- ops. Members stress that Wildflour is not a membership co-op but it "belongs to the community itself." GUADALAJARA, Mexico (Reuter) Pope John Paul II arrived in Mexico's second largest city yesterday on his triumphant six-day tour of this Latin American nation with plans to drive through packed streets and meet with poor people, convicts, workers, and student priests. Most offices and factories in Guadalajara, which has a population of 2.4 million, were closed to allow the fer- vently Roman Catholic residents to catcha glimpseofthe pontiff. THE POLISH-BORN pope arrived from Mexico City, where he had to resort to a helicopter to reach a recep- tion at a school because massive crowds were blocking the roads. Pope John Paul was certain to win the hearts of Guadalajara by paying homage to its most prized relic - a small statue of the Virgin Mary made of dried sugar cane paste and given to local Indians by Spanish Friar Antonio de Segovia in 1524. The statue, known as Lady of Zapopan, is believed to have miraculous qualities and is usually placed in the center of the altar of the 17th century Basilica of Zapopan, but for many months each year it is taken in processions to different parishes of Guadalajara. THE POPE, the leader of the world's 700 million Roman Catholics, was due to travel around Guadalajara in motor- cades and also by helicopter, allowing him to see as many people as possible during his one-day visit. From the city airport, where he arrived aboard the jet of Mexican President Jose Lopez Portillo, Pope John Paul was due to fly by helicopter to the poor district of Santa Cecilia, to a soccer stadium to address a mass gathering of workers, and to a square outside the state jail. From the jail, the 58-year-old pontiff was due to drive through the city to ad- dress mass congregations outside Guadalajara's 16th century cathedral D. ul OfficialBulletin WEDNESDAYJANUARY 31.,1979 Daily Calendar: Center Russian/E. European Studies: William G. Lockwood, "Minority Status and Economic Change: The Croats of Eastern Australia," Commons Rm., Lane Hall, noon. Journalism: Larry Hatfield, San Francisco Examiner, 2040 F, LSA, 12:10 p.m. Microbiology: Howard B. Urnovitz, "Negative Regulation of the Immune Response to WEHI-3B Myelomonocytic Leukemia in Syngeneic balb/C Mice," N. Lee. Hall, MEd., Sci., 1I, 2 p.m. Career Planning/Placement: graduate students' worksho-, "Effective Interviewing Techniques for Academic Positions," 3200 SAB, 4 p.m. Center Japanese Studies: Van Craig Gessel, "Cripples, Clods and Cowards: Three Views of Modern Man in Contemporary Japanese Literature," Commons rm., Lane Hall, 4 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: W. Fairbank, Stanford-U., "Search for Fractional Charge in Matter," 296 Den- nison, 4 p.m. and the Basilica of Zapopan and then to the city seminary to meet theology students before flying back to Mexico City. THE POPE ends his Mexican tour with a stopover in the northern in- dustrial city of Monterey on his way back to Rome. Before leaving Mexico City yesterday morning, he was given a mildly en- thusiastic reception by a throng of Catholic school children. Crowds blocked 10 blocks on either side of the school, making it impossible for the pontiff to travel by car and for- cing him to take a helicopter to the reception. As the pope's white helicopter landed on the grounds of the Miguel Angel In- stitute, a sea of banners swirled over the crowd amid roars of "El Papa, El Papa, rah, rah, rah.", The pope clapped his hands in rhythm to the cheers and spread his arms wide apart as if to embrace the multitude. THE MG11GANDAILY Volumie LxxxIX, No. 101 Wednesday , January 31, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters) ; $1:3 bymal outside Ano Arbor. mail Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7,00 by mail outside Ann Arbor. ITS COMING! A SUPER SPECTACULAR EVENT MICHIGRAS '79 Sat., Feb. 10-8 pm-The Union To find out more call UAC: 763-1107 Apu Trilogy: Part 3 THE WORLD OF APU This film concludes the trilogy describing the life of Apu. Through an arbitrary sequence of events, Apu marries a young girl: the consequences of this un- expected liaison bring to the film some of the most emotionally moving scenes ever made. In this film Ray has managed to encompass the image of the contemporary Indian man on the road toward becoming part of the modern world. (103 min.) FRI-OBSESSION SAT-LOONEY TUNES REVIEW Part 6 TONITEat MLB 3 7 &9-$1.50 The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at Aud A WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31 THE GRATEFUL DEAD (Jerry Garcia, 1977) 8:30 & 10:45-AUD A A unique experience in multi-track stereophonic sound. A spectacular free- form cartoon by Gary Gutierrez gets the show rolling in a peak of hallucino- genic splendor. Director Garcia calls the film "a movie metaphor for a dead concert"; its sheer technical excellence will sweep you into the 'musical maelstrom and communal spirit of the Grateful Dead. ANN ARBOR PREMIERE. Friday: THE TALL BLONDE MAN WITH ONE BLACK SHOE and THE THIEF OF PARIS WEDNESDAY IS MONDAY IS ADULTS FRI., AT.,SUN. "BARGAIN DAY" "GUEST NIGHT" EVE.& HOLIDAYS $3.50 $1.50 until 5:30 TWO ADULTS ADMITTED MON THURS EV. $3.00 FOR PRICE OF ONE I ALLTI4EE $2.50 WAYSIDE THEATRE "Wilderness Family 3020 Washtenaw Phone 434-1782part I MON, TUES, THUR 7 & 9 FRI 7 & 9:25 SAT 1-3-5-7-9:25 SUN & WED 1-3-5-7-9 I I m% M 1)9 2 ----"L -,-a- -I m