The Michigan Daily-Saturday, February 3, 1979-Page 3 1F J SEE NEVSHA EL":'L ) Y New location The Center for Afro-American and African studies has moved its offices to the second floor of the old Architecture and Design Building, next to CRISP. The Center had been located at 1100 S. University until last Monday. The Center, which is a unit of the Literary College, offers courses in a variety of areas, including Afro-American history and politics, according to Anthropology Prof. Niara Sudarkasa, an instruc- tor in the program.' Response to refuse Jonathan Dreyfuss' telephone hasn't stopped ringing since Wednesday, when we ran an item describing Recyle Ann Arbor. Recycle Ann Arbor is a non-profit organization which picks up recyclable refuse from your curbside the first Saturday of every mon- th-if you live in the Old West Side, an area bounded by Liberty, Stadium, and Main streets. Apparently 'reyfuss has received calls from interested people who live in all parts of Ann Arbor. Dreyfuss said he wishes he could expand his pick-up operation, but currently he is unable to do so. He urged interested parties-from the Old West Side-to call him at 6656398. Take Ten On Feb. 3, 1969, nearly 1,000 students staged a three-hour sit-in at the administration building at Michigan State University to protest the firing of Bertram Garskof, an assistant professor psychology. One student said that Garskof-whose courses were basically unstructured and open to much student input-taught "us to think for ourselves." Also on that day, S.I. Hayakawa, then Acting President of San Fran- cisco State College, told Congress that militants were using Nazi-like tactics in their protests. Hayakawa is now a Republican U.S. Senator from California. Happenings FILMS Ann Arbor Film Festival-Animation Festival, 7, 10:20 p.m., Supershorts, 8:40 p.m., MLB Aud. 3. Mediatrics-Silver Streak, 7, 9:00 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Cinema Guild-Seven Beauties, 7, 9:15 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. Cinema II-Looney Tunes Review, Part 6, Program A, 7, 10:00 p.m., Program B, 8:30 p.m., Angell Hall Aud. A. Markley Council-Shampoo, 8,10:30p.m., Markley Hall. PERFORMANCES PTP-"Side by Side by Sondheim," 8:00 p.m., Power Center. UTP-Storey's "In Celebration," 8:00 p.m., Trueblood Theatre, Frieze Building.. Musical Society-Russian Festival/Moscow Philharmoic, 8:30 p.m., Hill Aud. French Experimental Theatre-"Tutuguri," 8:00 p.m., Canter- bury Loft, 332S. State. LECTURES Wesley Foundation-"Third World Perspectives," 8:30 p.m., Wesley Foundation, 602 E. Huron at State St. , International Association for the Advancement of Appropriate Technology for Developing Countries-Tom Weisskopf, "Economic Aspects of Introducing Appropriate Technology for Developing Coun- tries," 10:00 a.m., Rackham East Conf. Room. MISCELLANEOUS Pound House Children's Center-Etnic Fair and Film Festival, 12:45-3:30 p.m., 1024 Hill St. Canterbury Loft-workshop in mime, movement, and im- provisational theatre, 10:00 a.m.-12:30 p.m., 332 S. State. UAC/UPC Mini-courses-sign-up at Ticket Central in the Union for Belly Dancing, Sign Language, and Basic Investments mini- courses next week. Frugal administration Democrat Attorney General Frank Kelly became acting governor yesterday, for only the second time in 17 years, and immediately took advantage of the situation. Kelley is fourth in the constitutional line of succession and, yesterday Gov. William Milliken, Lt. Gov. James Brickley, and Secretary of State Richard Austin were all out of the state. "Kelley's action-packed, cost-cutting administration began at 8 p.m. yesterday without expensive inaugural pomp and circumstances," and will end at 2 p.m. today, again without expensive frivolities such as a farewell address," said a tongue-in-cheek press release from his office. Kelley's first term as acting governor of Michigan was in January, 1969. Motivation for morning College students are notorious for sleeping through early morning classes, but a wake-up service like the one offered at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas could help students get out of bed on time. Gary and Jeff Burkman last month began advertising for par- ticipants in Raider Call, a system which guarantees a call from a member of the opposite sex at a specified time each morning, Monday through Friday. Each subscriber wakes up to a voice of the opposite sex, and each day during a one-month period that voice belongs to a different person. Aided by a special business telephone, the phones of a man and a woman ring simultaneously each morning. When they an- swer, they can talk to each other for two-and-a-half minutes. The ser- vice lasts without repeated voices for a month. At the end of the mon- th, customers gather for a party. "If a person is shy," said Gary Burkman, "it may take a few calls to get into the swing." The service is scheduled to begin Monday. Frampton sued by 'inspirational' Penny Peter Frampton is being sued for half of everything he owns by a woman who says she was his inspiration. Penelope McCall, who lived with Frampton for five years, filed suit with the state Supreme Court in Westchester County, N.Y., claiming she is entitled to the money because she spent five years being his "live-in partner, aide, and in- spiration." "This is nothing personal between Peter and me," ex- plained McCall. "It's just a business thing. I came back from the Bahamas last summer and he told me he wanted to live alone ... I had no car and no finances." However Frampton, a multi-millionaire, is seeking to have the suit dismissed on the grounds that New York State law does not grant unmarried partners the right to claim each other's possessions. Groundhog Phil's prediction Punxsutawney Phil, the nation's number one groundhog, pre- dicted yesterday that winter will last another six dismal weeks. Phil crawled out of his burrow on Gobbler's Knob in Punxstuawney, Pen- nsylvania at 7:30 yesterday morning and spotted his shadow. Accor- New environmental travel group organizes trips to exotic places By CRAIG FEIGEN Jules Verne journeyed to the center of the earth; Dante traveled to Heaven; Carlos Castaneda visited Ixtlan. Although these exotic destinations may be difficult for others to reach, students can journey to the towering Himalayas, trace ancient trade routes to Tibet, or backpack among active Andean volcanos in Columbia. Journeys, a new environmental- oriented travel organization, plans six 4-5 week trips to Nepal, India, Sri Lanka, and Columbia in the spring, summer, and fall of 1979. JOURNEYS WAS founded by Will and Joan Weber, two doctoral can- didates at the University's School of Natural Resources, after they led ten Ann Arbor residents on a trek to the Mt. Everest area of Nepal in 1978. Journeys attempts to provide "small group travel experiences of mutual benefit to the traveler and the culture visited," according to Weber. / "We see this as an almost anti- tourism kind of program," he added. "We want to give people a personal, authentic appreciation of what ittis like to live in these areas. We prefer local style accommodations and avoid lavish facilities and activities which might be' inappropriate to the host culture." Weber, who is a former Nepal Peace Corps volunteer, notes the problems which careless tourism may cause in fragile environments. Traditional culture may wither, local food and scarce fuel supplies may dwindle or become prohibitively expensive, and outright environmental damage may occur, he noted. IS ANTI-TOURISM the wave of the future? The Webers think it may be. "The best thing that could happen would be for the tourist industry to steal this idea," Will commented. "As it is now, the foreign tourist pays a high price to see areas that are unique because the tourist's own cultural trap- pings and technology have not penetrated. "Ironically, much of the money paid for the privilege of experiencing such iplaces supports the very influences that threaten to strip away the uniqueness," Weber said. AFTER THEIR Mt. Everest trip last summer, the Webers spent time in other areas of Nepal, India, and Sri Lanka, making contacts and discussing the concept of a traveler-supported "Earth Preservation Fund (EPF)." The Webers founded EPF, and ask trip participants to contribute about $100 to help support localconservation efforts in the areas visited. "The money that we are able to raise may not seem like very much here in the U.S., but in a developing country that can accomplish a great deal when used in local programs," said Bradley Gross, another former Peace Corps Volunteer and leader of the Columbian expedition. "WE FOUND mpany people, including local school officials, Buddhist lamas, government development experts, and national environmental leaders who share our optimism," Weber said. Through EPF, Journeys will try to distribute seeds, seedlings, conser- vation equipment, and educational materials at a community level as part of the group exploration. EPF will also support existing programs of the Sri Lanka Wildlife and Natural Protection Society, India's Bhratpur Wildlife Trust, Nepal's Nature Conservation Society, and volunteer projects of the National Development Service. "WHEN THE trip is over, we expect participants to feel as we have felt in the past: that they have received gifts of friendship and knowledge and will want to give something in return," commented Ms. Weber. "We do this through a sharing of ideas and more tangibly through con- tributions to EPF," she concluded. "We know of no other conservation- oriented travel program which visits unique natural environments of the world and at the same time, makes a tangible and direct contribution to protecting the areas visited," Weber added. Do a Tree a Favor: Recycle Your Daily MANN THEATRES WVILLAGE MAPLE VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER X69-1300 ADMISSION Adut-$4.00 Child-$2.0 PG UndedArbists SHOWTIMES MON.-FRI. 6:30-9:00 SAT.& SUN. 1:45 6:30 3:45 '9:00 Tickets onSole 15 Minutes Prior to Showtime YOU'LL BELIEVE A MAN CAN FL Y SUPERMAN MARLON BRANDO r GENE HACKMAN SHOWTIMES MON.-FRI. SAT. &SUN. 7:00-9:45 1:30 7:00 Tickets on Sale 30 Minutes 4:15 9:45 Prior to Showtime Lina Wertmuller's SEVEN BEAUTIES 17s GIANCARIO GIANNINI romps through this usual (that is bizarre) Wert- muller melange of politics and sex as a small-hood living down his reputa- tion as the "monster of Naples." By sheer incompetence and a sense of misplaced pride, he is wanted for murder, committed to an asylum and ends up in a concentration camp fawninq over a beastly woman com- mander. Internationally, it put Wertmuller (director of SWEPT AWAY) over .the top as the woman director a teature (so tar). With SHIRLEY STOLER, FERNANDO RAY and in forboding color. SUN: THE LAST PICTURE SHOW CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 A9:15 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 _ _ _ __ daily Official Bulletin I C F PART,-r TONITE ONLYI. CINEMA 11 ANGELL HALL AUD. A 2 Completely Different Programs Program "A"-7& 10 Program "B" - 8:30 ONLY Saturday. February 3, 19711 SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB-763-4117 INTERVIEWS: Fresh Air Fund, New York, Coed. Staffing for four camps-get in on it. Will interview here Wed. Feb. 7 from 9 to 5. Many openings including water- front (WSI), arts/crafts, gen. counselors. Wide range of opportunities-work with innercity children, handicapped or standard camps. Register by phone or in person. The time has come-Cedar Point will be here-the place to spend the summer and earn money too. Will interview here Wed./Thurs. Feb. 14-15 from 9 to 5. Register in person or by phone. JCC Camps, Coed. Mi. Will interview Mon. Feb. 12 from 10:00 to 4:00. Openings include supervisory positions (21, general counselors. Register in person or by phone. Camp Chi, Wisc. Coed. Will interview Mon. Feb. 12 from 9 to 5. All positions are open at this time. Also, openings of interest to social workers, arts/crafts, waterfront WS, athletics, sports, etc. Register by phone or in person. Announcement: Gruman Aerospace Corp.. New York. Ten Masters Fellowship in a work study program for the summer. Fields of study-areospace technologies. Further details availble. Deadline March 1. TILE : MICIIGIN DIIAL, Volume 1.XXXIX. No. 101 Saturday. February 3, 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 12 semesters): $13 by mail. outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor: $7,401by mail outside Ann Arbor. ADULTS $1.50 DOUBLE $2.50 KIDS $.75 DOUBLE $1.25 Looney Tunes Review returns with its 4th collection of classic Warner Brothers cartoons. As always, no cartoon from a previous Review is repeated. Our selections this term are from a 25-vear soon (1937-1962), and include such classics as Duck Amock, Bully for Bugs. Little Orphan Airedale, the 1947 Oscar-winning Scentimental Over You, Super Rabbit, a rare WW 11 Bugs Bunny propaganda film, and 14 others. Directors featured will be Chuck Jones (Hollywood's greatest cartoon director), Friz Freleng, Robert McKimson, and for historical perspective, a few ealy Tex Avery entries will be on hand. When Warner's was good they made the Hollywood cartoon at its best: fast, unpren- tentious, witty, and grown up. Disney tried to make us cry-Warner's made us roll in the aisles. Starring Bugs, Daffy, Porky, Pepe, Elmer, Yosemite, Tweetie, Foghorn, Roadrunner, Inki, etc. Sun: WORD IS OUT .i I WEDNESDAY IS MONDAY IS "BARGAIN DAY" "GUEST NIGHT" $1.50 until 5:30 TWO ADULTS ADMITTED FOR PRICE OF ONE, A L.S FRI.,SAT,, SUN. EVE. UHOLIDAYS $3.59 MON.-THIURS. [Vt. 30 __ :1 CAMPUS , STARTING FRI., FEB. 9th "LORD OF TH E RINGS" "LORD OF THE RINGS" I I I I P r I MON., TUES., WED., THURS.7 &9 FRI.7 & 9:25-SAT. 1-3-5-7-9:25 S WSUN. 1-35-7-9 NO WEDNESDAY MATINEE 1RUTH GRO BUD CORT [GP] J s _ E Imm ,-U 9'