a ;t. wr t 'ri , ,. 9JY A * V The Michigan Daily-Sunday, April 8, 1979-Pdae 3 i ;rYouSEE NE WS VAPPEN CALLtDAILY Hamourger helper The masses of students jamming into University libraries last week could be attributed to end-of-the-term blues, upcoming finals, or the fact it was National Library Week. Now even Ronald McDonald has turned against students bent on procrastinating their studies. A prominently displayed sign at McDonald's on Maynard Street showed Ronald McDonald giving some "sound" words of advice: "If you want to get ahead, head for the library." Thanks a lot, Ronald, when was the last time you were in a library? Take ten According to the results of a poll made public on April 8, 1969, 85 per cent of the University students supported the idea of establishing a University owned and operated bookstore. Little did they know that later in the year, the University Regents would vote to establish just such a bokstore - the University Cellar. Respondents to the sur- vey-conducted by the Student Advisory Board of University Relations-also gave an overwhelming stamp of approval to the University's trimester system. Happenings s SUNDAY FILMS Cinema Guild polanski's Repulsion, Old Arch., Aud., 7, 9:05 p.m. Union of Students for Israel - Operation Thunderbolt: The Real Story of Entebbe, UGLI multipurpose room, 7:30 p.m. SPEAKERS Kelsey Museum-Barbara Fiedler, "Carthage Then and Now" Kelsey, 2 p.m. Hillel Foundation-Auryeh Goren, Hebrew University, "The World of Some of our Fathers: Crime in the Immigrant Generation," Hillel, 1429 HillSt., 6:30 p.m. PERFORMANCES U-M Varsity Band-conducted by Eric Becher and Larry Rachieff, consisting of "Armenian Dances, Part I" by Alfred Reed; "First Suite in E-flat" by Gustav Holst; "Three Choral Preludes" by William Latham; "Children's March" by Percy Grainger; and "Variations on a Korean Folk Song" by John Barnes Chance, Hill Aud., 2 p.m. Music School-Euphonium Recital: Stearns Bldg., 3 p.m. Eva Jessye Afro-American Music Collection of the U-M School of Music-Violinist Sanford Allen will appear with pianist James Gem- mell. Concert program consists of "Sonata in A Major, K. 526" by W.A. Mozart; Doble Concerto sin Orquestra" by Roque Cordero; Sonata No. 2" by George Walker; and "Sonata in d minor, Op. 108" by Johannes Brahms, Rackham Aud., 4 p.m. Youth Band-works by NBeethoven, Shostakovitch, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. Gilbert and Sullivan Society-"HMS Pinafore", Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. Residential College-Chamber music concert, conducted by James Heirich, Residential College Aud., East Quad, 8 p.m. MEETINGS Jewish Professional Group brunch and planning meeting, 623 Gott, 12 noon. Wesley Foundation-gathering, 5 p.m.; shared meal, 5:30 p.m.; worship, 6:15 p.m., 602 E. Huron at State St. MISCELLANEOUS Symposium on Women's Issues-includes speakers and workshops (child care provided), East Quad, 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Vegetarian society-potluck dinner and picnic, bring food to share, shelter is Isle Park, 5 p.m. Native American Students Association-Ann Arbor Indian Pow Wow, Native American dancers, traders tables, crafts, North American jewelry; Cleary College Aud.,1-5 p.m. MONDAY FILMS Cinema Guild-Lost World, 7 p.m.; So This is Paris, 8:15 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. SPEAKERS Center for Russian and East European Studies, Center for Near East and North African studies, and Center for Chinese Studies-Owen Lattimore, "Inner Asia in World History," Aud. D, Angell Hall, 4 p.m. Museum of Zoology-Prof. Rollin Coville, U. of California at Berkeley, "Male Guarding Behavior in Solitary Wasps," MLB Lec- ture Rm., 2, 4 p.m. U-M Department of English-Theodore Sturgeon, award winning science fiction writer, Aud. 3, MLB, 4 p.m. PERFORMANCES Royal Lichtenstein, Quarter-ring Sidewalk Circus-fifteen acts in- cluding two narrated mime fables: "Freddie, the World's Most Unusual Frisbee" and "Froglegs," as well as balancing, hoop juggling, tightrope walking, fire-eating, and magic, Diag, 12 noon. U-M School of Music-U-M harpsichord students recital, works by William Byrd, Antonio de Cabezon, Frescobaldi, Couperin, Bach, and Scarlatti, Cady Room, Stearns Bldg., 8 p.m. U-M School of Music - Opera workshop, excerpts from "Carousel" by Rodgers and Hammerstein; "Marriage of Figaro" by Mozart; "Carmen" by Bizet; "Die Fledermaus" by Johann Strauss; "Old Maid and the Thief" by Gian Carlo Menotti; and "Daughter of the Regiment" by Donizetti; Recital Hall of School of Music Bldg., 8 p.m. Canterbury Loft-"Ten Faces of the Campus Rapists", student production in French and English, 332 S. State, 8 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS Public Health Student Association-World Health Day, CBS documentary on infant feeding, "Into the Mouths of Babes," 12:10 psm. Dr. Frank Faulkner, Director of Program. in Maternal and Child Health at School of Public Health, "A Healthy Child, A Sure Future," with an introduction by Carol Tice (U.S. Commission for I.Y.C.), "U.S, Activities for the International Year of the Child," Aud. School of Public Health (106 S. Observatory) 3:30 p.m. Israel Independence Day Celebration-Film and dancing with leading Israeli folk dance teacher, Ayalah Goren, "The Tribes of Israel, Their Cultures and Dances," Kuenzel Rm., Michigan Union, 4 p.m. Party and workshop with Ayalah Goren in Pendleton Rm., 8 p.m. Xanadu Co-op-Scottish Country Dancing, beginners welcome, 1811 Washtenaw, 7:30-9:30 p.m. Tlnr 'nnn A~foTr~nrvvnin------------------------------------- Di.. I t i 1 From AP and UPI GROTON, Conn. - About 3,000 anti- nuclear protesters, some draped in black shrouds, chanted and sang yesterday as the Navy christened the USS Ohio, the most powerful nuclear submarine ever built and the first equipped with Trident missiles. First lady Rosalynn Carter and Adm. Hyman Rickover, considered the father of the nuclear Navy, were among the dignitaries on hand for the ceremony at General 'Dynamic's Electric Boat shipyard. POLICE ARRESTED 230 demon- strators who tried to block the shipyard's main gate and charged them with disorderly conduct. Thirty-seven who declined to give police their names were also charged with resisting arrest. Protesters lined the streets near the Thames River shipyard, but huge con- struction bays hid them from view of the estimated 20,000 guests at the christening and their quiet demon- stration could not be heard. "We'll keep arresting them all day if we have to," Police Chief Joseph San- dora said as a caravan of school buses and police vans removed the protesters to the Groton jail and returned to pick up new loads. A SMALL GROUP OF Yale Univer- sity students conducted a counter- protest at the plant's gates, saying the Trident was "a triumph of American ingenuity and crucial for American defense." But the larger group of protesters chanted and sang their opposition to the Trident and to nuclear power in general. "This is like Harrisburg. It is uncon- trollable. You can't stop it," one banner said. Another urged the 12,000 invited guests attending the ceremony to "Please think of your children, please think of yourselves, please go home."' U.S. SEN. JOHN Glenn (D-Ohio), called the 24-missile Ohio the "most formidable strategic weapons delivery system ever devised." The 560-foot submarine will have more than 10 times the fire power of the Navy's first ballistic missile submarine launched 20 years ago. Each of the Trident I missiles' multiple warheads rpnt dl~ ha fiv tima'ha diers Money restricts P road repair options 3,000 protest new nuclear sub N. J4 repore my Las ive imesn e e estruc- of the SALT talks. tive power of the Hiroshima bomb. Annie Glenn, the senator's wife, MS. CARTER, in a speech, srid christened the Ohio with one swat of a "premature public debate on issues bottle of domestic champagne while the such as this can be damaging." - submarine's 154-man crew stood at at- She said the President "is not wiling tention on the deck. to accept a SALT treaty that is mit in GLENN, THE first U.S. astronaut to the best interest of our country andl hot orbit the earth, characterized the $1.2 verifiable. If he had been, he could have billion Trident submarine as a "truly done it in the past two years." ' significant deterrent to war. Ms. Carter, after the Ohio ceremony, "It also guarantees return an- spoke at a keel-laying ceremony for nihilation for any mistaken Soviet another Trident submarine, the.USS decision that a first-strike knockout Georgia, and marked her initials an the punch against the United States is even keel. Electric Boat has contracts " to remotely possible, as some doomsday build seven Tridents, the Georgia ,will scenario analysts have suggested," he be the fourth. added. Also attending the Ohio christening At the request of President Carter, were Navy Secretary Graham Clayton Glenn deleted 11 paragraphs of his Jr., Chief of Naval Operations Thomas speech that dealt with demands the Hayward; and Govs. Ella Grasso of United States should make of the Soviet Connecticut and Joseph Garrahy :of Union before signing a new Strategic Rhode Island. COUPON 10 FREE COPIES expires4/29/79 SELF-SERVE Limit 1 DOLLAR BILL COPYING 611 CHURCH-Next to Sec. of State -and aove Don Cisco's - - - - Milos Forman 196;1 FIREMAN'S BALL : The firemen of a small Czech village stage a ball in honor of their aged' chief; but the old man is quickly forgotten as the affair gives way to a torent of catastrophes. Foremost among the evening's disasters is the funniest and the most wonderfully demoralizing beauty contests ever conceived. the director of ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST. Czech w/ subtitles,. (73 min.) WED-Marcel Camus' BLACK ORPHEUS TONITE at Angell Hall, Aud. 'A' v 7 8:30, 10 $1.50 4 Arms Limitation Treaty. The senator, who said the President telephoned him to go over the speech, said he made the deletion because of the sensitive nature By RICK BLANCHARD Potholes and road repairs may have been fuel for recent political cam- paigns, but the real issue, according to Mike Anderson of the Washtenaw Coun- ty Road Commission, is money. Anderson, supervisor of road main- tenance for the county road system-the roads outside city limits-said the county would have fewer problems each spring if "we could build each road from the ground up. "THIS WOULD involve," he said last week, "100 per cent construction and a tremendous amount of money. "Each year," Anderson continued, "the ground under the road goes through several freeze-thaw cycles causing the ground to move and then crack the pavement. Water collects in these cracks and freezes, then, along with the pounding of traffic and ad- ditional freezing and thawing, we get potholes." The remedy for the potholes, which are the same procedures used in the city, is to patch and cover the problem. Materials for this hole plugging process are a summer hot mix, and a winter hot and cold mix of patching asphalt that the road maintenance crews dump in the holes then hope for the best. "AFTER THIS procedure we go to a seal coat-a mixture of liquid asphalt and stone suitable for roads of low traf- fic volume-in the summer months, this seals the road so water can't get in," explained Anderson. Anderson said that even though the Road Commission is only 19 per cent of the way through the year they are already 26 per cent of the way through their budget. "In the last three weeks we have used $14,500 (402 tons) worth of hot mix, $1,300 (80 tons) in cold patch, and $4,600 (80 tons) in gravel and limestone." Asphalt overlay, a resurfacing process requiring the grinding out of sore spots then covering with new asphalt, is the only semi-permanent repair, other than reconstructing the en- tire road, that the county Road Com- mission employs. ALTHOUGH THESE methods have been heavily criticized because they are a symptomatic treatment rather than a real solution to the problem, they are the only practical approach, accor- ding to Anderson. "The best answer," Anderson said, "would be to ask the state for more money to resurface the bad roadways." Currently the money for road repair and improvement comes from the vehicle highway fund which is com- posed of gas tax revenues and license plate dues. The allotment for each county, calculated from a 1970 census, is based 65 per cent on actual road mileages and 35 per cent on population. There is no federal money involved in road maintenance work, according to Anderson. Getting their "share of complaints" on road conditions from the generally urban county, the Road Commission repairs the problem spots according to where the worst conditions exist, .not according to traffic volumes. "For most people out there," said Anderson, "the worst road they have is probably, as far as they're concerned the only road they have. "We attempt with the best of our ability to address the whole system," Anderson said, "but because of the glaring lack of funds, we program the worst ones we have, and then go from there." MANN THEATRES " ILA ET MAPLE VILLAGE ISHOPPING (ENTER M769.1300 ADMISSION Adult $4.o0 No Posses on Weekends Child $2.50 YOU'LL BELIEVE A MAN CAN FLY SUPERMAN MARLON BRANDO GENE HACKMAN E L"UM 9r VWAWKRERR" 0 t F1 SHOWTIMES Mon-FRI 7:00 9:45 SAT. & SUN. 1:30 4:15 7:00' 9:45 4:15 9:45 SHOWTIMES MON.-FRI 1:00 SAT. & SUN 4:30 8:00 8:00 RVAfl I J ROMAN POLANSKI'S 1965 REPULSION Polanski's first film in English has the inspired casting of Catherine Deneuve as a fantasy befouled virgin torn between her craving for and loathing of men. Very scary. Mon: Walace Beery & Lewis Stone in LOST WORLD (free at 7:00) Monte Blue & Myrna Loy in Lubitsch's SO THIS IS PARIS (free at 8:15) Tues: Cukor's DAVID COPPERFIELD CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 Ann rborPow-Wow Sunday, Apri 8-1-5 pm Cleary College Audiltorium 2170 WASHTENAW, corner of Hewitt St.-YPSILANTI NATIVE AMERICAN DANCING