U OF M FOLKLORE SOCIETY Presents New Lost City Ramblers Old Time String Band Music at its very best TONIGHT-8:30 P.M. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre ALL SEATS $3.00-only a few hundred left TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: ANN ARBOR FOLKLORE CENTER, 516 E. William or Mendelssohn Box Office before the concert COMING MARCH 24 AND 25! Dance Concert Weekend at Power Center I African Moder n Ballet Featuring University Dancers and guest artist GAY DELANGH E of Lucas Hoving Dance Company Friday, March 24 and Young People's Matinee Saturday, March 25 at Saturday, March 25, 8:00 p.m. $2.00 at 2:30 p.m. $1.00 Get your tickets now at Stanger's, 307 S. State St., Ann Arbor ne -ws brief by The Associated Press THE CITIZENS ADVISORY COUNCIL onthe Status of Women called on President Nixon yesterday to personally recom- mend passage of the equal rights amendment for women, which is being debated on the Senate floor. The council, part of the U.S. Dept. of Labor, particularly ex- pressed its concern for "discrimination in public elementary and secondary education because of the wide influence it exerts on attitudes and self-images of young women and young men." The council recommended that groups interested in education "foster the review of local public school systems to determine the degree of sex discrimination." They also called for appointment of a woman to the Supreme ICourt. CALIFORNIA'S SUPREME COURT refused yesterday to grant a rehearing of its 6-1 decision outlawing the death penalty under the state Constitution. In its Feb. 18 ruling, the Court declared that "death may not be exacted as a punishment for crime in this state". With the court's latest action, the decision would become legally effective Monday. It commutes the death sentences of 102 men and five women to life imprisonment. The court however, did modify its decision to say it did not mean that persons such as Angels Davis who face what formerly were capital charges should be freed on bail. A 72 YEAR OLD GERMAN-BORN man was being brought toI Pasto, Columbia, yesterday for fingerprinting and further investi- gation into a magazine's claim he might be Martin Bormann, . Adolf Hitler's hunted deputy. Columbian police said the man, identified as Juan Ehrmann, is: not under arrest, but is merely being questioned regarding hisI identity. In Johnnesburg,, South Africa, Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal said he doubted Ehrmann is Borman. "Every time we get information that a. prominent Nazi is living in a country with a bad climateI such as in the jungle, I am very skeptical." He added that he found. that most of those Nazis he has traced choose countries with climates similar to Europe. THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION said yesterday it will crack down on the use of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) around food to keep the widely used industrial chemical from be- coming a health hazard. New regulations were proposed for PCB use around livestock feed, in food containers and in other materials which could lead to human consumption of the chemical. The chemical has been linked with liver and genetic damage to laboratory animals and with human skin disorders. Although not a pesticide, it is chemically similar to DDT and in the past may have been confused with traces of the pesticide found in the environment. THE PRICE COMMISSION yesterday announced new, sharp- ened guidelines for utility rates, but warned the nation that bigI increases will be necessary to pay for the service it wants. Commission Chairman C. Jackson Grayson Jr. said the regulations would require reductions in some requested rate increases but, not inI others. He had no estimate of how much utility rates might go up: under the new rules. iff4c M frkI .L- &I&z Ann Arbor, Michigan Saturday, March 18, 1972 SUMMER HARVEST Organic gaIrdAeNnEVkeepsgo ng By DIANE LEVICK ~ait' Sick of eating "plastic" food grown or processed with God- knows-what chemicals? Then Ann Arbor's Community Organ- ic Garden may have the ans- wer. Last summer over 500 people were involved in planting and caring for seven University-do- nated acres on North Campus. Withoutzchemical insecticides or fertilizers, they raised and harvested a large and successful variety of crops - everything from cabbage to pineapples. Action is already under way for this summer's garden, with the first work day set for April 1. The garden's manager, John Remsburg, welcomes all partici- pants in what he says should be "as great a learning experi- ence as last summer." Remsburg, a Natural Resourc- es grad student, expects more of the land to be planted this year as many plants have al- ready been started in a green- house. What will be grown? "Any- thing unusual," says Remsburg. "Any weird kind of plant that's edible." In addition, he hopes to start "aquaculture" on the land: rais- ing fish in agriculture ponds. He also has an eye toward lives- stock and more "on-the-site" re- search. An appartus called a "digest- er" will decompose the garden's cut grass and dead leaves, pro- ducing useful natural gas. "This is another way to use waste as a resource instead of just calling it junk," explains Remsburg. "The gas can be used as a fuel to run a stove, for instance." Other possible additions to the garden include a pick-up truck' and a windmill, which would be used to produce electricity there. Remsburg, who will teach a Pilot Program course on organ- ic gardening at the site, feels the garden means more than just agriculture. "Working on it teaches self-sufficiency and bal- ancing your life-style to the en- vironment," he adds. Financially, the garden is on firm ground. A local seed com- pany has donated all the seed that is necessary, and money still remains in a Department of Health, Education and Welfare grant received last July. The Ecology Center, which'helps co- ordinate the project and refers -Daily-Rolfe Tessem Last year's crop at the Community Organic Garden volunteers, has managed the University funds provided for the garden. The Ecology Center is also helping to sponsor a new group called GROW. The program will provide over 200 acres scattered around Ann Arbor that are free for organic gardening. Anyone interested who can provide his own seeds can participate. R e m s b u r g hopes the main North Campus garden will en- courage and serve as an exam- ple to these satellite sites. The only donations needed for the North Campus garden at this point are for a couple of salaried workers, according to Remsburg. He would like to have them work 30 hours a week at the site to answer ques- tions for the curious and over- see operations. Citing increasing interest in organic gardening from various campus groups, Remsburg com- ments, 'This thing is turning into an octopus. There's a lot of potential for it this summer." Meanwhile, Community Or- ganic Garden and the Ecology Center haverbeennsponsoring a seminar series in the UGLI multipurpose room. Speakers have been discussing ecological- ly sound methods of dealing with the environment. "I'd guess the successor to Residential College-style living. or black dorms," Remsburg speculates, "will be ecological habitats. Students there would monitor an alternative com- munity, learn about energy flow through it, and really learn how to live with the earth." The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone:, 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. "'4 .4 10th Annual Ann Arbor in the Architecture Auditorium FRIDAY-Shows at 7, 9, and I11 SATURDAY-Special afternoon show at 1 P.M. Evening shows at 7 & 9 only SUNDAY-This is winners night. Shows will be in BOTH the Architecture Auditorium and Auditorium A. Consult Sunday ad for further information Single admission-$1.00 MORE INFORMATION-662-8871 Join The Daily CIRCULATION DEPT. Come in any afternoon 420 Maynard I a MARCH 19 IN CONJUNCTION WITH WORLD WEEK UNITED NATIONS SYMPOSIUM "The Peace Keeping Role of the U.N." DR. JAMES 0. C. JONAH from Sierra Leone. Political Advisor to Gunnar Jarring's Middle East Mission I 3 i I I I F, Ste i rdesses 2 P.M. UNION BALLROOM I 1 I i I i I G i '; 3 i M C "The United Nations: Past Achievements, Future Hopes" A PANEL DIALOGUE JEROLD M. DESMOND from the United Nations, Economic and Social Affairs expert on Urban Development DR. LLOYD HUGHES Visiting Professor, School of Education, previously associated with UNESCO DR. HAROLD MAGNUSON Assoc. Dean, School of Public Realth; Consultant to WHO 3:15 UNION BALLROOM "Soviet Foreign Policy and the United Nations" AMBASSADOR V. SAFRONCHUCK from the USSR delegation to the United Nations 8:00 P.M. UNION BALLROOM Ambassador Safronchuck's speech will be followed by a discus- sion, questions, etc., from the audience. ALL PROGRAMS ARE FREE ! Sponsored by the Foreign Student Board 1S' FINAL WEEK! STEREOVISION -1 For the Student Body: LEVI' Corduroy Bells CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty $1.50 8:30 ANDY COH EN U I THE UNPUBLISHABLE NOVEL IS NOWAMERICA'S MOST CONTROVERSIAL FILM! R "b e s t fingerpicker s i n c e Danny Kalb." -Dave Von Ronk RAGTIME GUITAR and PIANO ANNOUNCES REPLACEMENTS FOR CANCELLED SCHEDULED FILMS BREWSTER McCLOUD'S FLYING MACHINE will NOT be shown. INSTEAD we wil show RATED 1421 Hill STREET 76 IgS1 Bryan Forber's campy mad-cap comedy: THE WRONG BOX3 EASTMANCOLOR WITH CHRISTINA HART " MICHAEL GARRETT EXECUTIVE PRODUCER WRITTEN AND DIREClED BY LOUIS K. SHER " ALF SILLIMAN JR FPIPTH FOUM FIFTH AVENUE AT NRI DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR INFORMATION 761-9700 K X SAT. & SUN. 2-3:45-5:30-7:15-9 Late Show Sat. 10:45 Subscribe -The Michigan to Daily with MICHAEL CAINE, PETER SELLERS, JOHN MILLS, RALPH RICHARDSON, and PETER COOK and DUDLEY MOORE (of "BEDAZZLED") "So fantastic and explosive that it virtually pops right out of the screen! A crazy, merry tale . . . Somewhere between black humor and elegant, uninhibited camp"'-The New York Times "A Victorian romp, continually diverting."-Hollis Alpert, Saturday Review "Take a number of Britain's top talents, add one part Oscar Wilde, to two parts Mack Sennett, mix with melodrama, romance, high comedy and hysteria, serve it with stylish wit in a lovely-to-look-at Victorian setting and you wind up with . . . the right movie' and an irresistibly delicious delight."-Judith Crist, NBC Today Show "ONE OF THE YEAR'S TEN BEST'-Judith Crist, New York World Journal Tribune; Joseph Morgenstern, Newsweek Based on the novel by Robert Lewis Stevenson and Lloyd Osborne. Music by John Barry FUNERAL AND MILITARY AIRS played by THE TEMPERANCE SEVEN SAVE UP TO $600 ON NEW '11 Toyota's Full Factory Warranty 19 TO CHOOSE I I a FRI. "SUPERB"-N.Y. Times & SAT.' MARCH 24-25, 00000000 0000000 0000000 00000000 0 Juilliard Repertory Company 0 00000000000000000000000000000 "WOMEN BEWARE WOMEN" 'V "INTERVIEW" -