rage Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Two VHE MICHIGAN DAILY New lab dedicated Access (Continued from Page 1) Esch chided the public for destroying the Great Lakes and urged co-operation with GLE- RL's research in "dedicating ourselves to making the Great Lakes one of our country's great national resources again." NOAA Director Wilmot Hess said he hoped that the Univer- Rocky hit with new back taxes (Continued from Page 1) under $22.6 million, pending later recomputation of state and city taxes. HIS TOTAL income for the period was just under $47 mil- lion. Rockefeller sent identical letters to Sen. Howard Cannon (D-Nev.) and Rep. Peter Ro- dino Jr. (D-N.J.) who are the chairmen of the two committees considering the Rockefeller nomination. The lengthy opening state- ment Rockefeller presented to the Senate committee on Sept. 23 gave no indication that the tax figures were subject to pos- sible revision due to audits. CA u we I sity would be "a source of strength for GLERL" and that t0 iles the lab would "offer a challenge to the University.E UN DEoRSCRETARY pposed of Commerce John Tabor was also on hand to express Presi- dent Ford's support for GLER- L's efforts. (Continued from Page 1) The laboratory was set up to The portion of the students' focus on predicting the lakes' file to be made open under th 1 future physical, chemical and present version of the bill would biological properties. By inves- include letters of recommenda- tigating their total ecology, re-, tion for admissions, test scores, searchers hope to increase high school counselor's com- man's knowledge and manage- ments, o r i g i n a appliati;n ment of the Great Lakes and forms and "b a c k e r cards," to solve specific problems in- which provide the comments of cluding pollution and erosion college counselors. for the benefit of the 35 million THE BILL affects all educ- people who live in the eight- tional institutions on the ele- state Lake region. mentary, secondary and uiver- The new project's first task sity level. In cases where the will be to continue the research students have not reached ma- of the International Field Year jority age, the same rights ac- for the Great Lakes, a joit corded the adult students would program with Canada to im- be g r a n t e d to the pupil's prove understanding of the en- parents. vironment of Lake Ontario. One The measure provides ;he of the lab's long-range plans University 45 days to comply is a complete study of lake with its provisions after it be- circulation - how the water comes law. After that time, si- moves and what forces direct it. dents could take legal acti->n THE LOCAL facility permits to demand a response to their the study of water chemistry, request to examine the filesi biology, sediment and ice. Re- Kwaisz explains that te new searchers will make use of data amendment would probably ex- analysis, lab experiments, and empt from student perusal oily field experimentation at the Lake Survey Center in Monroe. personally signed letters of rec- Lak SuveyCeterin onre.ommendation written with the ® understanding that the material would be kept confidential. This change would only affect letters written before the bill becomes law; those signed afterward would be available to students. -- - KWAPISZ STATES that the CANTERBURY HOUSE amendment would not prohibit 218 N. Division-665-0606 students from examining test Holy Eucharist at noon at scores, faculty comments or the Canterbury House. A meal fol- controversial "backer cards. lowing. Last w e e k, the American * * Council on Education (ACE) 'L and six other higher education If you don't think the Koster-Elden race could change your life, please read this appeal. Pretend, for a moment, you need help. Your landlord is trying to evict you, but you are fighting to stay. Maybe he or she won't return your damage deposit, $400 in cash. You're contesting an unfair traffic ticket that will bite into your pay. The auto repair shop has gypped you, and you want some money back. Only one person will decide the outcome of your case-and it won't be your police chief, or Senator, or President. You'll stand before the next Fifteenth District Court Judge. One day you might find a notice on your stoop, demanding that you appear in court at a time when you're supposed to be to work. If you're a parent at home with the kids you'll have to find, and pay, a sitter. That's the best hour for at- torneys, true--but did anyone consult you first? Even the small claims court sits between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. The way the district court is run now encourages you to plead guilty and pay a fine for violations you may not have even committed. Because it's cheaper than exercising your rights. Don Koster wants the district court to serve the people, first. Not the $50 per hour attorneys or the city's general fund (as Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS JUDITH JAMISON and Kelvin Rotardier of the Alvin Aile City Center Dance Theater dance "Portrait of Billie" in rehearsal for the company's opening performance at th Power Center last night. The group treated the packed ha to a fantastic range of dance styles. Ailey dance troyp dazzles fllcrowd the city's obsession with traffic tickets suggests). what a Judge Don Koster will do: Here's " He will open the court to working people by holding regu- lar sessions in the evenings and on weekends. " He'll push for a drop-in day care center for all full-time parents-- plaintiffs, defendants, witnesses and jurors-- who must spend a day in court. " He'll pro v i d e for counseling and information to both plaintiffs and defendants in the Small Claims Division, where attorneys aren't allowed to practice. " He'll work to simplify the legal forms in Small Claims Court and in landlord/tenant cases so that people don't need three years of law school to understand what is hap- pening to them. " These are just some of Koster's innovations, which would serve the people first. But to help make district court work for the citizens of Ann Arbor, Don needs help-from you. Don has been financing his low-cost campaign mostly with contributions from work- ing people, old people, students (and happily, a few wealthy liberals, too)-anyone who can help. Unlike the incumbent, Don refuses to solicit funds or accept public support from lawyers who would be arguing cases before him in court. So, if you could send us $1, $5, $50, any dollars, you will be a tremendous help. Could you volunteer a few hours and chip in some campaign work? Please send us this coupon-- and help make the Fifteen District Court work. .....................w................................." to: KOSTER FOR DISTRICT JUDGE COMMITTEE Reva Reck, Coordinator * 206 Nickels Arcade/Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108/994-3030 I I r I * Please find enclosed a contribution of $1- $5__ $10 $25- Q I would be willing to volunteer some time as a campaign a worker. r I Q You may use my name in a signature ad. s * sgnatu.----. UNIVERSITY CHURCH O THE NAZARENE 409 S. Division M. Robert Fraser, Pastor Church School-9:45 a.m Morning Worship-11:00 Evening Worship-7:00 FIRST UNITED METHOD CHURCH r State at Huron and Washin; 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Wo Services. Sermon: "The God Called a Fool." 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-C School for all ages. 9:00-12:30 p.m. - Nu Care. 10:30-11:00 a.m. -Coffee vers ation-Fellowship. Worship service broadca WNRS (1290) AM and V (103) FM from 11:00 to each Sunday. WESLEY FOUNDATIO Sunday, Oct. 20: 4:30 p.m.-Program on munity Involvement. 6:00 p.m.-Supper. 6:45 p.m.-Celebration. Thursday, Oct. 24: 6:30 p.m. - Wesley G Program and Dinner. Cal 6881 for details and locati UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. Alfred T. Scheps, Pastor Sunday Services at 9:15 at 10:30 a.m. Sunday Bible Study at 9 Midweek Worship Wedni Evening at 10:00. * * * LORD OF LIGHT LUTHE CHURCH (ALC-LCA) (Formerly Lutheran Stude Chapel) 801 S. Forest Ave. at Hill S Donald G. Zill, Pastor Sunday Service at 10:30 UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST Presently Meeting at YM-YWCA, 530 S. Fifth David Graf, Minister 3:00 p.m. - Sunday We Service. Students Welcome. For information or tra tation: 663-3233 or 662-2494 UNIVERSITY REFORME CHURCH, 1001 E. Huron Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, Ministers 9:30 a.m.-Church School 10:30 a.m.-Morning Wo 5:30 p.m.-Student Supp * * * FIRST CHURCH OF CHRI SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Sunday Service and S School-10:30 a.m. Wednesday Testimony] ing-8:00 p.m. Child Care-Sunday, un years; Wednesday, throu years. Reading Room-306 E. erty, 10-9 Mon., 10-5 Tues "The Truth That Heal CAMPUS CHAPEL Pastor: Don Postema 10:00 a.m.-Morning Se b f~a Srious~. b Ho 'LtA tae a Po -Pd. Pi. F a.m. p.m. IST gton )rship Man hurch rsery e-Con- ist on i t t t CHURCH, 306 N. Division - 8:00 a.m.-Holy Eucharist. 10:00 .m. - Holy Communion and Sermon. * * * FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Ronald Cary, Campus Minister 502 E. Huron St. 10:00 a.m.-Worship. 11:00 a.m.-Church School. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.-Amer- ican Baptist Student Fellowship. All students welcome. VNRZ * * * would be kept confidential. 1 noon WELCOME TO ANN ARBOR "The Act forces institutions THE EVENING opened with FRIENDS MEETING to choose between such options Choros, described as "varia- N: (QUAKERS) as going through hundreds of tions on a Brazilian quadrille," 1420 Hill St.--668-9341 student files to destroy certain designed by anthropologist :ind1 Com- (if no answer, 769-3354, records or, despite the commit- pioneer black dancer Katherine 971-4875, 665-2683) ment to the rights of the third Dunham. Although the troupe Silent Meeting for Worship- parties, making the re.:ords did a faultless job on this hbs- Sunday, 10-11 a.m. available to students." torically interesting choreog- First Day School, nursery/ Kwapisz says he is confident raphy, the contrast in vitality irads, high, 10-11 a.m. an open records measure will between this and all the omer 1 668- Adult Forum, 11-12. be implemented this year: 'We numbers serves only to demon- on. Potluck every first Sunday, don't intend to lie down 3n the strate the strip-mined sterility Business meeting every third struggle for student rights to of a formal balletic abstraction q Sunday after worship. privacy." of a formal ballroom style in D a i 1 y Morning Meditation Because of the University's the same tradition. The f mk in- (546 Walnut St.), 8:30-9 a.m. hesitation to release material terpolations are jarring. Wednesday Sack Lunch (1073 deemed confidential, officials Dudley Williams warmed up and East Engineering), 12-1 p in. are considering purging files of slowly on Ailey's A Song for Worship-sharing Groups (in such information before the You, but the result was worth 15. homes), Tues. / Wed. / 'Ihurs. measure becomes law, accord- the wait. When he gets going, esday eves. ing to Ed Dougherty, assistant: he dances all the way to his Friday Evening Family Night to the vice president for aca- (1420 Hill St.), 7:30-11 p.m - demic affairs. But he adds that finger tips, but his pelvis never RAN s to r i e s, discussions, games, such a move appears highly unlocks; it was difficult to tell crafts, singing and dancing for unlikely. whether this was directed or nt all ages. American F r i e n d s Service t. Committee (AFSC), 1414 11ll a.in. Bail & Prison Reform, 761- 8283, 761-8331.r Friends International Co-op, (Continued from Page 1) of Mace, illegal in the state. 1416 Hill St., 761-7435. students, most of them males, An unidentified white male in Friends L a k e Community, remained in the vicinity of the his late forties proclaimed, "The 19,720 Waterloo Rd., Chelsea, school, milling about on street people of South Boston are a 475-8775. corners and passing a single blnch of animals." )rship Movement for a New So.'iety tattered copy of a tabloid called Yesterday's city-wide school (MNS), 665-6083. "White Power" from hand to attendance represented a dip World Peace Tax Fund, Box hand. The cover of White Power from the previo'is day. School nspor- 1447, Ann Arbor. was emblazoned with a swastika officials said 72.8 per cent of . * * *, and two-inch headlines pro- Boston's 94,000 public school FIRST PRESBYTERIAN 1 claiming in c a p i t a 1 letters, students were in their class- D CHURCH, 1432 Washtenaw Ave. I "Black Terror Spreads." rooms yesterday, down 1.5 per Ministers: Robert E. Sanders, RUMORS OF violence to come cent from Thiursday. John R. Waser, Brewster H. next week circulated through THIRTY-FIVE per cent of the Gere, Jr. the crowd, and one student al- black students and 28 per cent ." "Where Christ, Campus and ready appeared prepared for of the whites were present for rstiip. Community meet" any combat he might encounter, the opening of classes this. er. Worship Services at 9:30 and From one pocket of his worn morning at Hyde Park High, 11:00 a.m.-Sermon Title: "The brown leather jacket he pro- according to official reports. At ST, Church With the Golden Roof." duced a set of brass knuckles, South Boston High, only 22 per * * * and from the other a still more cent of the whites showed up, BETHLEHEM UNITED menacing band of steel. In ad- as compared to 43 per cent of unday CHURCH OF CHRIST dition he carried a spray can i the blacks. These statistics fol- 423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149 Meet- Minister: Orval L. E. Willimann 1 der 2 10:00 a.m. - Worship Service ia and Church School. pes played fopr jur igh 61/ Lib- S. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL D (Continued from Page 1) Nixon re-election committee. Li-Dean, "Are you going to put out DEANWOpeddgit (Catholic) ,WOpeddgit .-Sat. 331 Thompson-663-0557 a complete disclosure? Isn't that i a year ago to the same charge, st. Weekend Masses: the best plan . . . That'd be my took the stand Wednesday as - Weekend Masses: view on it.". tofrtpoecto ins.H Saturday: 5 p.m. and midight. Despite Nixon's contention cuirntlyisrosecutin wit ne t Sunday: 7:45 a.m., 9 a.m., while still in office that he four-yer prison term. rvice. 10:30 a.m., noon, and 5 pm. knew nothing of the involve- -ear chrs7ntepd (plus 9:30 a.m. North Campus). ent of his aides until March On the March 17 tape played * * * 21, during the March 17 tape he for the jury of nine women and ANN ARBOR CHURCH is heard saying to Dean: "It's three men, Dean says he also 3ULTZ OF CHRIST your view the vulnerables are:, ought to be listed among 'the * 530 W. Stadium Blvd. basically, Mitchell, Colson, Hal- vulnerables." (one block west of deman, indirectly, possibly di- You, why?" Nixon asked. U of M Stadium) rectly . . " Dean: "Well, because I've Bible Study - Sunday, 9:30 HE WAS referring to former been all over this thing like a Adv a.m.-Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Atty. Gen. John Mitchell, for-. blanket." - Worship-Sunday, 10:30 a.m. 1mer White House counsel Nixon: "I know, I know, but' and 6:00 p.m. Charles Colson, and Haldeman, you know all about it, but you I Need Transportation? C a 1 Nixon's top aide. didn't, you were in it after the - -- - -- -- Anna- t (i I E By MARNIE HEYN associations asked Congress to delay implementation of the bill to allow time for legislators to! hear the educators' grievanmes.! An ACE statement lists five grievances concerning the kgis- lation and charges that the measure is ambiguous in five key spots. THE LETTER contends that the act gives students access to "records which were solicited I from third parties with an ex-E plicit commitment that theyI The Alvin Ailey City Center Dance Theater outshone their legend last night and delighted' a rafter-packed Power Center! audience in their first of three performances for the University Musical Society. The company sailed through a program of pieces by the brightest lights in the black American dance pantheon; the historic and stylistic range is But the best was metaphor ally last. The Wedding by Pe Primus, another black danc anthropologistfof note, is exhilirating African epic sound, color, and motion t by itself is worth the price admission. Bostonl lowed the general trend this. of higher attendance r among blacks than whites. But the official figures reported the number of dents who arrived for cla in the morning. At Hyde P High School, the scene of lence earlier this week, m students came only to sign i Home Room and then dep Truancy laws are not b enforced. Alicia Silberio, a student Hvde Park High School, cl ed, "I just signed into H Room and left by the side d Ninety per cent of the k do it. You can't leave by front door because it's gua ed." IN OTHER developments, t commanding officer of of t Nptional Guard unit aler early this week by Massac.M setts Governor Francis Sarge announced that the 450 troo presently on duty would be placed Sunday by fresh unit "We are replacing one of well-trained troops with other set of equally w trained troons," General cholas Del Torto asserted. Sneaking at the Natio G'vird armory on Comm wealth Avenue, far from scene of the hostilities, Del T to refused to speculate on h long the Guard might rem on standby alert status. " will keep men on alert until go-ernor decides no more are needed." he said. MENWHILE, on the tn floor of the armory, it was parent that Del Torto was s inadvertent. In any case, t number is a fine example the first-person singular gen and is a sensitive insight i Leon Russell's music. Judith Jamison is brilliant, always, with Kelvin Rotard in John Butler's Portrait Billie. She moves with drama integrity from stylized c singer into a beautiful bl pas de deux, large, formal, a sensuous, into a duel of ider ties and ends alone again w her pride and betrayal. AILEY ALSO choreograph the fourth piece, Blues Sui which uses traditional mu and weaves together many t ditional black dance motives to a thoroughly entertain medley. Special honors go Sara Yarborough, Tina Yu and Sylvia Waters for their freshingly unliteral House of Rising Sun, Estelle Spur and Clive Thompson for fu and tender Backwater Blu and to Masazumi Chva sweet klutziness in Sham. MONEY BACK I i