IFYU SEE N165 AVPEN CAtL.L 6-AJ Wearin' o the green Do not lose heart, 0 leprechauns of Ann Arbor. With St. Patrick's Day a mere month away, plans for the First Annual Ann Arbor St. Patrick's Day Parade are well on their magical way: The committee delegates have a meeting slated for Tuesday evening with the Irish Club of Ann Arbor to elicit support for the gala celebration. So get star- ted with your floats, bands and costumes now so you won't be left blue on the day o' green. For further information, call Brian at 668-8031. Correction In an article about 76-GUIDE in Thursday's paper, we incorrectly stated that GUIDE staffers can tell callers what movies are playing on campus. GUIDE operators have now informed us that they usually refer such inquiries to the University operators. x0 Food for thought. Ann Arbor's People's Food Co-op is soliciting new members. Beginning tomorrow, the non-profit co-op will open its doors to all in- terested persons. The co-op will also hold regular orientation hours next week. For further information, call 761-8173. Take Ten - On Feb. 17, 1968, the Literary College's (LSA) Curriculum Com- mittee recommended that the faculty abolish all academic credit for courses in the Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC). The commit- tee's recommendation blasted the reading materials in some ROTC courses as "conjectural, non-analytical, cheaply motalistic, and often blatantly propagandistic." Eventually, ROTC course credit was abolished from all LSA courses. The Michigan Daily-Saturday, February 17, 1979-Page 3 WORKERS GET COMPANY CONTROL Bullard proposes job bill By MARY FAR'ANSKI Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor), chairman of the House Labor Commit- tee, has introduced legislation that "will make possible the saving of jobs in many communities where companies have decided to move elsewhere." The legislation, introduced in the House earlier this week, would allow employees of "run-away" plants, with the help of their community, corporate officials, union representatives, and the Labor Department, to incorporate and take over the plant. The bill would mandate the Department of Labor to set up a "Program of Assistance to Worker Owned Corporations' to aid employees in locating funds in order to. keep the plant, and thus their jobs, in Michigan. The Labor Department would also help the employees with management training and other assistance that may be needed. THE LEGISLATION is the first of its kind in the country to be seriously con- sidered, a state official said. Bullard is expected to discuss the proposed bill with the House Labor Committee soon. An "employee-owned corporation," according to the bill, is a. business operation and the management rights are represented by voting stock which may be owned only by the employees of the operation. Fifty per cent of the stock must be owned by the employees. Bullard said between 1967 and 1974, some 200,000 jobs were lost in Michigan due to the closing of some 4,000 plants. However, many jobs have been saved in Michigan, Indiana, and Vemont because of employee takeover of "run- away" plants. Amercel, formerly the Mississippi Structural Steel Company, located in the Lansing area, has been taken over and is operated by its 160 employees soon after the steel company moved elsewhere. Many plants have closed down or moved out of state for several reasons: retirement by the owners, takeover by a conglomerate, relocation of production in another state to maximize profits, and closure because of anti-pollution regulations. The bill will contain a "sunset clause" because this is a trial approach to saving jobs. At three and one-half years after the bill's passage, the Labor Department will hold hearings to evaluate activities under the bill and to suggest continuation, modification, or termination of the bill. .j #e ~C feb.16 & 17 8pm Slauson School 1019 W. Washington Tickets: 665-5129 also at the door Do a Tree a Favor: Recycle Your Daifly 'V q Anti-nuke group gets Markley Council money LINA WERTMULLER'S 1977 SOME OF THE MUPPETS were at a loss for words when they heard about the $370,000 lawsuit. Kermit gets slapped Kermit the Frog and the rest of the Muppet gang have been slap- ped with a $370,000 lawsuit. Two Illinois manufacturers filed the suit Thursday in a U.S: District Court in Manhattan, New York. The plain-' tiffs, Ronald and Alfred Falese, and Gem-Dandy Inc., of Madison, N.C., charged the Muppets Inc., and Children's Television Workshop of withdrawing an offer to use the characters on a line of children's belts. Both manufacturers said they lost sizable amounts of money in promotional efforts as a result of the Muppets' change of heart. Ker- mit or Miss Piggy were not available for comment. Happenings FILMS Cinema Guild - Wertmuller's Night Full of Rain, 7, 9:15 p.m., MLB, Aud. 3. Cinema II - Warhol's Chelsea Girls, 7 p.m. only, Angell Hall, AudA. Film Festival - The Ninth Annual Ann Arbor 8mm Film Festival, 2, 7, 9 p.m., Schorling Aud., School of Education. Mediatrics - Close" Encounters of the Third Kind, 6:30, 9, 11:30 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Barrister's Society - Bel Ami, 6, 8, 10 p.m., 100 Hutchins Hall. Markley Council -,Phantom of the Opera, 10 p.m., Markley Hall. Markley Council - Hunchback of Notre Dame, 8 p.m., Markley Hall. East Quad Midnight Cinema Production -O Lucky Man - 9 p.m., midnight, R. C. Aud. PERFORMANCES PTP/Russian Festival - Gogol's The Inspector General, 8 p.m.,. Power Center. Canterbury Loft - Beckett's Ends and Odds and Fizzles, 8 p.m., 332 S. State. Chamber Orchestra Society - The Romantics and Beyond, 8:30 p.m., Vandenberg Room, Michigan League. Musical Society -Andres Segovia, 8:30 p.m., Hill Aud. Ark - Rosalie Sorrels, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill. Choral Music - Camerata Temporanea, 4 p.m., Holy Trinity Chapel, Forrest and Perrin Streets, Eastern Michigan University. Coffee House - The Night of the Seventeenth, sponsored by the Friends of the Hebrew Day School of Ann Arbor, 9 p.m., Hillel Social Hall, 1429 Hill St., $5 per person, or $2.50 late special after 10:30 p.m. Percussion Recital, John Bannon, 2 p.m., Recital Hall, School of Music. Voice Recital - John Dalke, bass, 4 p.m., Recital Hall, School of Music. Piano Recital - Kwi-Hyun Kim, 6 p.m., Recital Hall, School of Music. Cello Recital - Cynthia Bloom, 8 p.m., Recital Hall, School of Music.- SPORTS Women's Synchronized Swimming - Michigan Invitational, Figure, 9 a.m., Routines, 1p.m., Bell Pool. Women's Basketball - U-M vs. Michigan State, 2 p.m., Crisler. Hockey - U-M vs. Wisconsin, 7:30 p.m., Yost Arena. MISCELLANEOUS Canterbury Loft - Workshop in mime, movement and im- provisational theater, 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Call 994-4693 for infor- mation and registration Women and Science Workshop - Three speakers and discussion groups in Biology, Chemistry, Math, Computer Science, 10 a.m., 296 Dennison (P and A Building). Victory Dance - Fund raiser for Margarth Miller, 9 p.m., 150 Unitarian Church, 1917 Washtenaw, $5 donation. Blood Pressure Clinic - Michigan Heart Information Center, 9 a.m. to noon, 3800 Packard Rd. Black Law Students Alliance - Midwest Regional Conference, Workshop: Summing .Up to Move Forward - Black Leadership in the 80's, 10 a.m., Workshop: Affirmative Action, 1:30 p.m., Pre-Law Con- ference 1:30 p.m., Finals of Moot Court Competition, 3:45 p.m., Law School. Banquet and Dance, 7 p.m., Michigan Union. By JOHN GOYER Markley Hall Council passed by one vote Thursday night a proposal to give Council funds to the Detroit Edison Shareholders Initiative, a campus political group ,that opposes nuclear power plant construction in-state. The Shareholders Initiative is com- posed mainly of students who own stock in Detroit Edison. They plan to use the Council funds for a campaign to stop Detroit Edison from continuing the construction of the Femi II nuclear power plant in Monroe, Mich.' ACCORDING to Shareholders Initiative member Bob Jordan, a Literary College freshman who asked the dorm Council to donate $50, the organization will also ask for funds from Mosher-Jordan and South Quad dorm councils at their next meetings. Earlier this week, however, both Couzens and Alice Lloyd Councils post- poned voting the funding request. According to Couzens Council president Pat Singer, Couzens put off a vote on the fund request until next week because the discussion at last Sunday's meeting became too "heated." Couzens resident Karen Engram said Jordan presented his proposal poorly. "He just asked for the money," said Engram. Singer said Jordan's request took about half an hour to present. At- the Markley meeting Thursday, where the resolution to donate funds passed, Jor- dan spoke for only a few minutes before asking for a vote. Markley president Dan Lettvin said after the meeting, "If he'd made it longer here, I'm not sure that it would've passed." JORDAN SAID that when he spoke at the Couzens Hall meeting, students raised questions about the issue, and Daily Official Bulletin SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1979 SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB 73-4117 Menasha, Otsego, Mi. Opening for engineering students in elec. and mech. fields. Position location is north of Kalamazoo. Further details available. INTERVIEWS: Camp Maplehurst, Mi. Coed. Will interview Mon. Feb 19 from 1 to 5. Openings include waterfront (WS1), arts, crafts, nature, sports, and many others. Register by phone or in person. Camp Tanuga, Mi. Coed. Will interview Weds. Feb. 21 from ito 5. Openings-waterfront (WS), ar- ts/crafts, sailing, tennis, nurse and cook. Register by phone or in person. National Music Camp, Interlochen, Mi. Will inter- view Thurs. Feb. 22 from 9 to 5. Openings-need staff with recreational background, instrumental music people, waterfront (WSI), arts/crafts, stage crew, and food maintenance. Register by phone or in per- son. Camp Sea Gull, Mi. Coed. Will interview Friday, Feb. 23 from 1 to 5. All staff positions open at this time. Register by phone or in person. Camp Sequoia, New York, Coed, will interview Mon. Feb. 26 from 9 to 5. Openir , include arts/craf- ts, drama, riding instr., (Engl), athletics, and others. Register by phone or in person. MANN THEATRE mxVLLGET ' MAPE VILAGE SOPPING CNE Starts Friday, February 23rd "THE DEERHUNTER" Starring ROBERT DENIRO [PjGJnitedAtsts j Showtimes MON.-FRI. SAT. & SUN. Ends Thursday, 3:590 February 22nd YOU'L L BELIEVE A MAN CAN FL Y many said they did not have enough in- formation to vote. Jordan said that students wanted to see the other side of the nuclear power issue presented. He added that some students thought the money should be for parties, not for political in- volvement, and said he was pretty shocked that students atCouzens didn't want to get involved. "I think the issue is whether we deal with it at all," said Mark Halliday, a Couzens council representative. Halliday said most students are not in- formed about the issue, and those that were informed are about evenly divided for and against nuclear power plants. "IF YOU.OPEN up the dorm gover- nment to political questions, you are kind of opening a Pandora's box," said Halliday. Halliday said the dorm coun- cil has to limit itself to questions direc- tly concerning the dorm. Ray Kahn, Markley vice president, said he was glad Jordan came to talk to the Council. "Students tend to be ex- tremely apathetic," he said. Markley president Lettvin added, "Believe it or not, the students were interested in it.I just don't think they were up for a long Zaher Mansour, another Couzens resident, said that it is not an issue dorm councils should contribute to, sin- ce student opinion, on. nuclear power:. plants is divided. "It's too touchy an;, issue," he said. Joel Treuhaft, Alice Lloyd Council president, said Alice Lloyd tabled the request because of Council policy to not vote on new business. CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00--9: * The Ann Arbor Filmooperative presents at MLB 3 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17 WOMEN IN LOVE (Ken Russell, 1970), 7 & 9:15-MLB 3 A masterful adaptation of the D.H. Lawrence novel, and an encyclopedia of filmmaking technique. Russell is restrained and brilliant in his most consistent and intelligent film. "It is difficult to recall another film that has so success- fully recreated the past with a depth that brings to life every snapshot we have seen of the time."-Judith Crist. Stars GLENDA JACKSON in an Oscar- winning role; ALAN BATES, OLIVER REED, JENNIE LINDEN. Sunday: Winner's Night-Ann Arbor 8mm Film Festival Monday: MURDERS IN THE RUE MORGUE & THE GHOUL & CURSE OF THE DEMON NIGHT .FULL OF RAIN In Wertmuller's first film in English, CANDICE BERGEN gives what may be her best performance as an American photographer who marries an Ital an communist-journalist. GIANCARLO GIANNINI is the journalist, who ten years later has had enough of her and the party. Romantic comedy with plenty of verbal abuse. By the director of Swept Away among others. Sun: Richardson's TOM JONES Mon: IVAN THE TERRIBLE PART I (free) Announcing a TRAVEL SEMINAR TO APPALACHIA " MARCH 3-11, 1979 " For foreign and American students L holars " PURPOSE: -To learn about the culture, problems and history of Appa- lachia -To mutually share ideas and values, music and dance -To visit the Great Smoky Mountain National Park and sur- rounding scenic areas " COST: $100 (covers food, transportation, and lodging), Contact the ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER 921 Church 662-5529 (weekdays) 665-6575 (evenings & weekends) THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIX, No. 116 Saturday, February 17, 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); $13 by mail, outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail outside Ann Arbr. OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 When in Southern California visit UNIVERSAL STUDIOS TOUR "'SAME TIME, NEXT YEAR': SAME LAUGHS ANY YEAR! A sharp and amusing entertainment, with a tear or two lurking just beyond the laughs." - Charles Champlin, L.A. Times "'Same Time Next Year' belongs to the Neil Simon school of play writing. But it's more racy, penetrating and touching...the characters never lose their humanity." - Stephen Farber, New West Magazine "A warm and charming story. Alda and Burstyn make an excellent team."- Regis Philbin, KABC-TV "Goodness laced with laughter is what 'Same Time, Next Year' is filled with. - Gene Shalit, NBC-TV The Miisch Corporation presents Ellen Ada Burstyn AlanJ 4 same 4dme, Next iear ELLEN BURSTYN and ALAN ALDA in"SAME TIME,NEXT YEAR" a. A Walter Mirisch/Robert Mulligan Production Screenplay by BERNARD SLADE - Based on-the stage play by BERNARD SLADE Produced on the stage by MORTON GOTTLIEB - Music by MARVIN HAMLISCH Produced by WALTER MIRISCH and MORTON GOTTLIEB - Directed by ROBERT MULLIGAN A (UniveprsalPictur Ti irlr , R)Nnw a n t!t RI II