;, The Michigan Daily-Saturday, April 7, 1979-Page 3 UGLI RESPONDS TO SUGGESTIONS: Smok ing poi planned ;FMUSEE N PNLV OWVUL ..MNY Better late On the front page of yesterday's Daily was a bulletin reporting that several areas of the city were without power Thursday night because a wind storm had knocked down some lines. You couldn't have read about it yesterday morning, however, since our printing press was without the juice due to the outage. It was a long 12 hour delay, but the paper was finally born late yesterday afternoon, just in time to scoop the six o'clock news. We apologize for the inconvenience. Cheers and chills Patrons consuming spirits last Saturday night at Dooley's got a thrill a la Three Mile Island. At midnight, Dooley's workers turned down the blaring music and told the crowd the Ann Arbor Police has asked them to evacuate the premises because of a nuclear explosion in nearby Monroe, Michigan. Many customers reportedly fell for the an- nouncement until a friendly "Happy April Fool's Day from Dooley's" ended the suspense. Outreach A report by the Psychology Department which was to outline major changes in Project Outreach, has been postponed, according to Outreach Director Shula Reinharz, so that final revisions can be discussed more thoroughly. The report was to be given to the Literary College Executive Committee for final approval, and will probably be ready by the end of next week. Correction In an article yesterday on the MSA elections, we quoted a Tom Sullivan. Our source was in fact Jim Sullivan. Sorry, Jim. What's in a name? For Ann Arborites who've waited for years for signs of possible corruption between the town's Democrats and Republicans, there could be hope. After smoothly introducing several citizens who had reserved public speaking time before City Council Thursday night, Mayor Louis Belcher stumbled repeatedly over the pronounciation of one citizen's last name, before finally giving up. The mystery man stepped in front of Council and carefully spelled out and pronounced his last name: "A-d-a-m-o, and I'm-the chairman of the Ann Arbor Democratic party." The Republican mayor replied laughing, "I'r sorry, that's why I didn't know your name." "That's quite understan-. dable," Adamo responded. Never have Humphrey Bogart's words been more appropriate: "Louie, this could be the beginning of a beautiful friendship." Search goes on With fewer than fifty names left on the list of possible successors to Robben Fleming, the search for a permanent University president continues. On Wednesday- night Regents Robert Nederlander (D- Birmingham), Thomas Roach (D-Grosse Pointe), Deane Baker (R- Ann Arbor), and Gerald Dunn (D-Lansing) met with members of the student and faculty advisory committees in two separate meetings. Members of the student committee described their meetings as a general information session, during which the groups discussed how the students were reducing the list of nominees and how they could make decisions based upon information limited to published material and resumes. Faculty hear Harold Johnson declined comment on the purpose of his group's meeting with the Regents. Take ten Democrat Robert Harris and four Democratic City Council candid- tes won an upset victory in Ann Arbor's city elections on April 7, 1969. The election brought city government under Democratic control for the first time in 30 years. That same day, the Literary College faculty extended the pass-fail option to language courses and ruled that four years of high school language is enough to exempt students from taking such courses. Happenings FILMS Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Paths of ;lory, 7, 10'20 p.m., The Killing, 8:40 p.m., MLB Aud. 3. Mediatrics-Steppenwolf, 7,8:45, 10:30 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Cinema II-Outrageous, 7, 9p.m.; Angell Aud. A. Cinema Guild-Slave of.Love, 7,9:05 p.m., Old Arch Aud. Pound House-Children's films, Anansi the Spider, 1, 2:30 p.m., 1024 Hill. PERFORMANCES Rhyme Space-Poetry readings by Martha Merrill, Kees Snoek, Debra Dudley, Richard Hitt, 2-4 p.m., Pendleton Room, Union. UAC/Musket-Bernstein's On the Town, 2,8p.m., Power Center. Music School-Euphonium Recital, 8 p.m., Stearns Bldg. Residential College Players-Between Women: Faces of Frien- dship, 8 p.m., Res. College Aud. E., East Quad. Gilbert and Sullivan Society-HMS Pinafore, 8 p.m., Mendelssohn Theatre. Men's Glee Club-120th Anniversary Concert, 8p.m., Hill Aud. SPEAKERS Ann Arbor Center for Independent Living-Toni Haney, vocational counselor, "Disability and Employment," 1-4 p.m., Washtenaw Coun- ty Comm. College, 4800 E. Huron River Drive, Ann Arbor. Hispanic-American Lecture Series- Tlomas _Rivera, Univ. of Texas, "Strategies of Hispanics in Higher Education," 2 p.m., Rackham Amph. MISCELLANEOUS Recycle Ann Arbor, Inc.-Pickup of recyclable materials in area bounded by Main-St., Liberty St., Stadium Blvd. on Ann Arbor's west side, 9 a.m. Air Force ROTC-Basketball tournament for charity, 9 a.m., Huron High School. School of Nat. Resources-Symposium on "Fisheries and Native American Rights: The Michigan and Northwest Experiences," 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Dining Hall 4, South Quad. East Quad-Symposium on Women's Issues: For Everyone," workshops, speakers, films, entertainment, 9:30 a.m.-10 p.m., East Quad. Washtenaw County Comm. College- "As the Child Grows," a Saturday fair for parents and child care staffs, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Washtenaw County Comm. College Student Activities Bldg. Alice Lloyd/Pilot Program-Art Therapy Workshop, silkscreen, in- structor: Susan Gail Baker, 1-4 p.m., Klein Lounge, Alice Lloyd. Minority Student Services/Native American Students Assoc.-A2 Indian Pow-wow, 2-5 p.m., 8-11 p.m., Cleary College Auditorium. U-M Folklore Society-Square and Contra Dance, 8:30 p.m., Hillel BY WILLIAM THOMPSON In order to clear the air in the con- tinuing debate over Undergraduate Library (UGLI) smoking policy, the library staff will conduct a student poll on the issue April 9 through 27. Since the UGLI instituted tighter restrictions on smoking last fall, both camps in the smoking controversy have lodged complaints in the UGLI suggestion box. "SOME WANT TO ban smoking everywhere and some want it (smoking) allowed everywhere," said Barbara Hoppe, secretary of the UGLI, about the complaints. Hoppe is part of a five-member UGLI staff committee which is respon- sible for devising a new smoking policy. Hoppe said the group will draw con- clusions from the student poll during the summer and that a new policy will be ready to go into force at the begin- ning of the fall term. The committee devised a question- naire for students to complete which lists several alternative smoking policies ranging from the current rules permitting smoking only in smoking rooms, to permitting smoking in half the basement, or all of one or two floors. RESPONDENTS CAN also vote on whether to permit smoking in the coffee lounge, although the sight and sound center will remain non-smoking. Questionnaires will be available at the UGLI eference desk on Monday. "There's . an assortment of com- binations that could conceivably work," said Hoppe. "We did not put down all smoking or all non-smoking" because it was not a realistic choice. THE CURRENT policy, instituted. last fall, came in response to student demands for an increase in non- smoking areas. Previously smoking had been prohibited only on the second floor whichled to "a ton of complaints in the suggestion box," according to Hoppe. No matter what new policy is chosen, enforcement of the rules will remain a problem for the UGLI staff. "The staff doesn't want to enforce it," claimed Hoppe. "That's not anybody's job here." She pointed out that the UGLI does not have security guards like the Graduate Library. MANN THEAT MAPLE VMUM SNOPPING ENE 769.1 300 ADMISSION Adult $4.00 No Passes on Weekends Child 52.50 YOU'LL BELIEVE A MAN CAN FLY SUPERMAN RLON BRANDO . ..NE HACKMAN ELEsID SY a wKU U OS~ ~ t1 ii' Mon-FRI 1:30 4:15 SHOWTIMES 7:00 SAT. & SUN. 9:45 7:00 9:45 9:45 'U, prof. 0 U.S. should use new work model SHOWTIMES MON.-FRI 8:00 By BETH ROSENBERG Adapting the Japanese idea of per- manent employment in single jobs would reduce worker turnover and en- courage long-term goals, in the U.S., according to a University sociologist. Comparing job mobility patterns in Yokohama and Detroit auto plants, Prof. Robert Cole, associate chairman of the Sociology Department, said workers who continuously acquire new skills and roles have less motivation to change jobs frequently. CAREER ENLARGEMENT involves the use of company resources to train, educate, and upgrade the position of blue collar and lower white'collar em- ployees, and to retain them for most of their work years," Cole said. In theory, Cole said, equal emphasis is placed on the development of worker potential and productivity. In practice, he explained, the emphasis is on productivity. The lower a person's occupational status, Cole said, the more he or she fears a lay-off. Employers in Japan received partial government grants to cover partial wage payments to tem- porarily unemployed workers. "IN THE UNITED States, only unionized employees have property rights in their jobs. And even unionized workers have little protection from economically-based dismissals," he said. Cole said he isouncertain about the impact of his study, but he knows there is a strong interest in theJapanese em- ployment industry by Americans. "I think the Japanese draw on basic motivational principles which are relevant in any society," said Cole, who spent the last year in Japan on a Fulbright grant. "THE JAPANESE learned a lot from American social scientists, and they ac- ted faster than we did," said Cole. Cole has been studying Japanese workers for the last ten years, and has spent four and a half years in that coun- try. To research his 1971 study on Japanese blue collar workers, Cole worked on an assembly line at an auto factory and a dye plant. The sociologist recommends policy developments with incentives for em- ployers to retain and train their current employees. During slow periods, unemployment insurance subsidies would go straight to the firm instead of the worker. Japanese workers aren't any happier than American workers, Cole said, because "Japanese workers have higher expectations than Americans so they are often frustrated." 1:00 SAT. & SUN . 17,;'s* 8:00 1 4:30 Medlatrics presents STE PPEN.WOLF (Fred Haines) Max Von Sydow stars in the title role as a loner who is torn between bourgeois respectibility and his wolfish impulses. Based on the novel by Herman Hesse. Sat, April 7 Nat Sci Aud Admission $1.50 7:00. 0:45, 10:30 :, Richard Benne~r 1977 OUTRAGEOUS* Outrageous tells the story of Robin (CRAIG RUSSELL), a Gay transvetite hairdresser in Toronto and his diagnosed-schizophrenic woman friend. When she escapes from a mental hospital and moves in with Robin,-he cares for her far more successfully than the institution ever could. However, Robin is fired from his job when he starts doing drag at vwork and so moves onward and upward to make it big in NYC as a female impersonator. The girl does wonderous things with Streisand, Garland, Davis, Mae West, Carol Channing, Pearl, Ella, Tallulah, with a most stirring, "better-than-the-orig- inal" Peggy Lee. Based on a story from the "Butterfly Ward" by Margaret Gibson, OUTRAGEOUS has shown to sell-out houses across Canada, in London, New York, and Ann Arbor. "Uplifting."-D.W. (100 min.) Six honored with Guggenheims Six University professors have received Guggenheim Fellowship Awards in the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation's 55th annual competition. Prof. John Kingdon, political science, Prof. Ladislav Matejka, Slavic languages and literatures, Prof. Joel Smoller, mathematics, Prof. Donald Tinkle, zoology, Prof. Hal Varian, economics, and Prof. Gary Wither- spoon, anthropology each received fellowships enabling them to conduct a year's continuous work in their respec- tive fields. The fellowships are awarded on the basis of demonstrated accomplishmen- ts and strong promise. a, SUN-Milos Forman's FIREMAN'S BALL WED-Marcel Camus' BLACK ORPHEUS TONITE at 7&9 Angell Hall, Aud. 'A' $1.50 (I 'I r NIKITA MIKHALKOV'S (Ann Arbor Premiere) 1976 SLAVE OF LOVE This highly-acclaimed and most popular film to come out of the Soviet Union in memory makes its debut. One of the three films-within-films on our schedule (see HIROSHIMA MON AMOUR & DAY FOR NIGHT). Is it . any coincidence that all of them are love stories? SLAVE OF LOVE is set in the Russian countryside, for from the revolution that is simultaneously taking place in the cities. Stunning color photography. In Russian with subtitles. Sun: Polanski's REPULSION CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 The Ann Arbor film Coprif ve presents at MLB 3 Saturday, April 7 PATHS OF GLORY (Stanley Kubrick, 1957) 7 & 10:20-MLB 3 Kubrick's anti-war film is still one of the most cool-headed assaults in cold- blooded murder; a riveting, stunning meditation on cowardice and justice. Full of bril ant dialogue and action sequences. Stars ADOLPHE MENJOU, KIRK DOUGLAS, RALPH MEEKER, and un unnerving TIMOTHY CAREY as Private Ferol. THE KILLING (Stanley Kubrick, 1956) 8:40 only-MLB 3 "Kubrick's first Hollywood film-tailor-made for an Oscar. In my part as Nicky, a bigoted killer hired to shoot a race horse, I had to fire a double- barreled shotgun and drive a small MG sportscar out of which I had to jump 18 times before they got the right shot. The role was diabolical in that I had to con a black guard at the parking lot in order to get near the horse ..." -Timothy Carey. With STERLING HAYDEN and ELISHA COOK, JR. Monday: THE MASK OF DIMITRIOS & THE UNDERCOVER MAN o o4 e*14d i. A we. cj. 1.0 Aryoi' Goren'i, Hebrew We~v.: ". h e W or l4 off-Sorft J O ur q lt1 C f*)nth, M rn 1-hb rIQce: 4111el1 FOUI'ATOA1 14t WIt St (.i