I r ~r~~sr tE j 1Cf Ouch Two unfortunate Ann Arborites were pistol whipped, bound with adhesive tape, and robbed of $70 and four pounds of marijuana late Thursday night, according to a report taken by Ann Arbor City Police. Police said that one of the two complainants answered the door of their Rosedale Street home at 11:50 p.m. and was greeted by two men wielding a shotgun and a pistol. The en burst in, clubbing and binding the two men inside. The robber then reportedly demanded marijuana and ransacked the house. Police said that neither victim was hospitalized, and expressed no surprise that the theft of the still- illegal cannibis was reported to them. "I don't consider anything that happens in Ann Arbor to be strange anymore," said a senior member of the AAPD. He added that the complainants would not get their marijuana back should it be recovered. However, it seems doubtful that the case will be solved, since the police have no description of the armed robbers, no description of their getaway car, and no suspects in the case. Take ten The monthly closed meeting of the literary college faculty on Jan. 13, 1969 was abruptly adjourned whentover 25 students refused to leave the room in which the meeting was to be held. The students, chiefly representing the Radical Caucus, had intended to participate in scheduled discussion of required courses, and had seated themselves in Aud. A, Angell Hall to do so. But then-Dean William Hays cited a Regents' bylaw restricting the meeting to faculty members. When the students wouldn't leave, the faculty decided, by a two-to-one vote margin, to break up. Happenings FILMS Cinema Guild - Sleeper, 7, 9:05 p.m., Old A&D. Ann Arbor Film Co-Op - Saturday Night Fever, 7, 9 p.m., MLB, Aud. 3. PERFORMANCES Faculty Recital - R. Reynolds, horn, Paul Makanowitzky, violin, Paul Boylan, piano, 8 p.m., SM Recital Hall. SPEAKERS Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales, "Chicano Community Organizing in the 1980's," 2 p.m., Lawyers Club Lounge. International Association for the Advancement of Appropriate Technology for Developing Countries - Elliot Berg, "Appropriate Agricultural Technology,," Ali Mazi, "Dimensions of Appropriate Technology," 10 a.m., Rackham, East Conference Room. SPORTS Women's Basketball - U-M vs. IndianaUniversity, 2 p.m., Crisler Arena. Men's Swimming - U-M vs. Minnesota, 3 p.m., Matt Mann Pool. Wrestling - U-M vs. Iowa State, 3:30 p.m., Crisler Arena. Hockey - U-M vs. Colorado College, 7:30 p.m.; Yost Ice Arena. Women's Swimming - U-M vs. Shroeder swim team, 7:30 p.m., Matt Mann Pool. Men's Gymnastics - Big Ten Invitational, 7:30 p.m., Crisler Arena. Dirty words Anyone who's ever been to a Regents meeting or City Council gathering knows which buzz words are likely to surface: "input," "feedback", "impact," "facilitate", "utilize" (never just "use"), and so on. But good news: someone's fighting back. Provost John McCall of the University of Cincinnati - who happens to be an English professor - has sent a memo to all departments warning that any vice president, dean, or other administrator saying or writing the forbidden words will be fined 25 cents. "Input" and "feedback" were the first words banned, and McCall said others will be added to the list each month. Among the words that soon may be expensive to utter are "hopefully," "proactive," and "utilize." That impacts on us just fine. Smile and take a swig If the University isn't well known enough for its football players or researchers, now people around the country will know us as the place where students under 21 have to drink alcohol on the sly. An NBC group showed up on campus yesterday to do a spot on the new 21-year- old drinking law. They said Norma Qharles, the correspondent, would be going to bars and that the item might run as soon as this evening. Cheers. Here comes the Fuzz Ingenious collectors take heed, New York's Wendy Ward Ehlers believes she has the largest and rarest collection of its kind anywhere. Ehlers collects laundry lint, and along with other household debris like rusty nails, used teabags, and unused cereal, she creates some unusual artistic masterpieces. "Booberry (a children's cereal) on Lint," "Lint with Dried Red Peppers," and Ehlers' Homage to Rothko's Homage to Matisse" (also in lint) are some of the great works she has created. The works are mainly spoofs of famous pieces of art, and when they were exhbited in Ehlers' home county museum with other more "respectable" artworks, they drew angry response from art lovers. Ehlers' latest project is a "lint museum." She sent letters to sixty celebrities asking for their laundry lint but got only seven responses. But one response was from cartoonist Charles Adams, who proffered not only his dryer lint, but, in a separate plastic bag, a bonus labeled "pocket fuzz." Pass the leg According to the Department of Agriculture, we're eating more chicken and less red meat, more hamburger and less steak, more sugar and less candy. We ate a little more in 1978 than in 1977 - more crop food and about the same amount of animal. While we managed to take in less beef, fruit, and coffee, it turns out we managed to down turkey, chicken, eggs, dairy products, fish, potatoes, vegetables, melons, cereals, sweeteners, and vegetable oils in larger amounts. You probably ate more than your weight in meat - 155 lbs. worth - and 15.4 pounds of candy. There was no data on consumption of tooth paste. i 1 Pope: Superpowers exploit troubled nations Z VATICAN CITY (AP)-Pope John Paul II indirectly accused the U.S. and the Soviet Union yesterday of exploiting regional conflicts "to ensure power over the world." The Polish-born pontiff, speaking in French in an address to the diplomatic corps, expressed particular concern over the turmoil in Iran and the Viet- namese conquest of Cambodia. ALTHOUGH HE did not single out in- dividual countries, it was clear he was referring to superpower rivalry when he said the world is split "by ideological divisions linked to various state systems." "We follow the dramatic events of Iran and we are very attentive to the news from. Cambodia anti all the populations of Southeast Asia who have already.been so tried," the pope said. The U.S. has backed Shah Moham- mad Reza Pahlavi in Iran and has war- ned foreign'governments not to inter- fere in that country's internal problems. Russia backs the Vietnamese and the Cambodian rebels who ousted the Cambodian regime last weekend. "ONE CANNOT transform a search for solutions into a fighting program to ensure power over the world," the pope said. "Searching for justice is the main sign of our times. He listed respect for human rights as the biggest world problem and said it requires "concerted action by gover- nments and all men of good will." The pope called for a global effort to deal with the problems of nourishment, health, international economic cooperation, arms reduction' and the elimination of racism. THE 58-YEAR-OLD pontiff again ex- pressed concern for Lebanon-"A country torn by hatred and destruc- tion"-Northern Ireland and the Middle East. Vatican observers said the papal statements also appeared to be aimed at the upcoming Latin American bishops conference in Puebla, Mexico, where the pope is likely to face challenges from those advocating the Marxist-influenced "theology of liberation." More than 250 bishops from the world's most overwhelmingly Roman Catholic countries are expected to at- tend the two-week conference to be opened by the pope Jan. 27. The theme is: "Evangelization in the Present and the Future of Latin America.'s The pope said the Vatican's mediation effort to defuse a long- running feud' between Argentina and Chile has "already achieved positive and precious result." The Argentine- Chilean dispute involved ownership of 10 islands in the Beagle Channel and 48,000 square miles of ocean around them off the tip of South America. The Michigan Daily-Saturday, January 13, 1979-Page 3 Join the Arts staff!' N OW WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO? There are large, corn-fed men at the door of every tavern especially hired to make sure that you don't have any fun; the rotating sign in front of the Ann Arbor Bank. on the corner of South U. and East E. reads nine degrees, again, and you can't frolic in the Arb with that significant other. You could sit by the heater and read what other people have to say about movies, plays, dances, concerts, and records, or you could lumber off to the Daily (in the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard) and write your own articles for some other sucker to read. We do. At the Daily we enjoy free tickets to all kinds of events and free records, and write for a challenging readership. There will be an informal meeting upstairs at the Daily Sunday at 5:30 p.m. (come in the back door). Dress: informal. 4U WOODY ALLEN'S SLEEPER 1973 The best (only?) science fiction comedy ever made, in which the inimitable Allen style spoof's everything: sex, robots, A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE, cloning, Nixon, revolutions, beauty pageants, Rod McKuen & health food. The future will never be the some . . . in color too. With ALLEN as the 20th century reject & DIANE KEATON as his pleasure-seeking, scattered-brained love interest. SUN: BOGART in THE CAINE MUTINY MON: MAN RAY experimental films, TUES: THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI Daily Official Bulletin I. CINEMA GUILD HAL ASHBY TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OLD$ARCH.1D $15 Saturday, January 13,1979 SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB-7634117 U.S. Dept. of Justice, Managemt./Finance, Wash- ington, D.C. Student must have completed first year of law. Work involves computerized legal research data and law clerk duties. Apps. and further details available. HEW, Social Security Admin., Baltimore, Md. Computer science opening for students having com- pleted Junior year. Also, economic opening for graduating seniors/grad students. Further details available. HEW, Bethesda, Md. Summer Intern Program open to medical students/Public Health Majors. Fur- ther details available. U.S. Dept. of Justice, Bureau of Prisons, Milan, Mi. Summer Intern Program available. Apps. and details available. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington, D.C. Six months intern program for graduating seniors/grad students in foreign policy ffield. Deadline for applying Feb. 1. Details available. Governor's Office, State of Illinois. Summer Fellowlship Program. Open to all Illinois residents. Student must have completed Junior year by Sept. '79. Fields-social services, law, business, accoun- ting, engr., econ., many others. INTERVIEW: Camp Tamarack, Coed, Mi. Ortonville, Brighton. Will interview Thurs., Jan. 18 from 9 to 5. All positions open at this time. Register by phone or in person. Summer Intern Program, U.S. Dept. of Justice; Managemt, Finance. Grade GS-7. Must have com- pleted first year of law school. Further details available. Dept. HEW, Bethesda, Md., Summer Intern Program open to medical students, Public Health Majors. Further details available. U.S. Dept. Justice, Bureau of Prisons, Milan, Mi. Summe Intern Program available. Apps. and details available.. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington, D.C. Six months intern program for grad. seniors and grad students in foreign policy field. Deadline for applying Feb. 1. Further details available. Governor's Office, State of Illinois. Summer Fellowship Program. Open to all Illinois residents who will be at least Juniors in college by Sept. '79. Fields-social services, law, bus., accounting, ed., engr., econ., many others. Deadline Mar. 1, '79. Fur- ther details available. COMING HOME The Sixties come alive again in this drama of love and war. Contrary to the gore and pillage documented in Hearts and Minds, Coming Home depicts the home front with its embittered veterans and those loved ones left behind. The insistent beat of such artists as RICHIE HAVENS and the ROLLING STONES com- bine with the superb cinematography of Haskell Wexler to create a backdrop of Sixties paranoia and passion against 'which the tender love affair of a paraplegic Viet vet and a Marine officer's wife develops. JON VOIGHT won Best Actor at the Cannes Film Festival with his sensitive, but powerful per- formance as Luke. Also starring the incomparable JANE FONDA, with BRUCE DERN. SUN-Glenda Jackson in MARAT SADE CINEMA I TONITE AT 7:00 & 9:15 ANGELL HALL AUD. A $1.50 m s UAC SPECIAL EVENTS presents: CORK.GONZALEZ CHICANO ATTORNEY, ACTIVIST, and AUTHOR Speaking: Saturday, Jan. 12, 1979 Lawyer's Club-1:00 PM (FREE) Pope John Paul HI G NOP' vo s y O a ~ " k- Voo V EMMAN WALLACE DEAN MUHAMMED Head of the Nation of Islam in the West -Speaking Sunday, Jan. 13, 1979 Hill Auditorium-1:00 PM (FREE) ii THlE MICHIGAN D)AILY' Volume LXXXIX, No.86 Saturday. ,January 13, 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; $7,00by mail outside Ann Arbor. ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE presents The Good Person of Szec/wsn by Bertholt Brechtk Jan. 10--13 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre I I CURTAIN 8 PM 2 i mw