'Thursday, March 20, 1975 THE MICHIUAN DAILY U' TurS It's a wordly affair You say you can't get to Tokyo or Seattle or Montreal to see the World's Fair? How about Ann Arbor? The U-M International Center is bringing together cultures from all over the world at Ann Arbor's World's Fair, March 21-23 at North Campus Com- mon. The World's Fair is an annual event, put on by the U-M foreign students' associations. This year, over 13 countries are participating, portraying "Life Around the World," the Fair's theme, through dress, food and cultural displays. For 15 years, the World's Fair has attempted to cross po- litical barriers through cultural sharing. This year, for instance, Indian students will show how the art of batiking is done. Greek costumes and Filipino handicrafts will be displayed, and spec- tators can see a Korean demonstration of Tad Kwon Do. Slides and films will also help bring "Life Around the World" to Ann Arbor. In addition, a variety show, featuring folk-dances, songs and fashions will provide international entertainment. Food, important to any culture, will also play an important part in the World's Fair. An assortment of international dishes will be provided, from Turkish coffee and desserts to Chinese eggrolls. The World's Fair will be held 6 p.m. to midnight tomorrow; noon to midnight Saturday, March 22; and noon to 6 p.m. Sunday, March 23. U-M buses provide free transportation to the Fair at North Campus Commons, 2101 Bonisteel. Tickets for the World's Fair are one dollar for adults, 75 cents for children under 12, and 50 cents for the variety show. For groups of 25 or more, one dollar covers general admission and the variety show cost. Tickets can be bought at the door, or be- fore the Fair at the International Center, behind the Michigan Union. MARY MILLER * * * Call in the reserves Although few students realize it, the mysterious people behind the reserve desk do more than they are given credit for. The employes not only do such dull things as checking out books, but they also get to collect fines, reshelve the books and listen to complaints on how bad their system is run. "We haven't gotten that many complaints this year except when the book isn't there," according to Robin Roberts, a stu- dent supervisor. People do complain when they have to get new identification cards though, but this is because a cracked card breaks one of the brushes in the IBM machine and there are ten brushes in each machine. The employes have some gripes themselves and if the stu- dents would follow the rules, they could end these complaints. Rick Wisz, a third year employe behind the desk states that "people copy numbers down incorrectly," letting the student look for the wrong book. Deborah Sears say that "basically the stu- dents are pretty nice," but adds it would help if they would "print more clearly." Suggestions to help yourself and the employes save time when you want to check out a book are first of all, read all the signs. Secondly, if people want to avoid long waits, don't come right on the hour. *n *.WENDY STALO Mobility mania The majority of American men move to a new home at least once during their adult lifetime, according to a professor in the University Dept. of Social Work. Since 1971, Dr. John Tropman has been conducting research on the effects of geographic and occupational mobility on the American male. Using data compiled from a national sample taken in 1962, Tropman has attempted to define the relationship between mobility and such factors as mental health, marital status, and occupational achievement, in order to find out whether moving about the country has a positive or negative affect on the individual. "My interest with regard to social work has to do with to what extent geographical mobility affects needs for certain social services such as marriage counseling," says Tropman. "For instance, we know from our research that a greater proportion of 'mobile' American males are hospitalized for mental illness than of those who don't move around. This is also true in terms of divorce and remarriage," he added. However, Tropman has also found that some qualities of family life are improved by moving around. "Mutual help is both expected and given, and the quality of the (family) relationship flourishes with less frequent contact," he claims. Some of the most important results of Tropman's research concern race. "Here's what's fascinating-black men can't seem to escape their racial status, whether they're moving or not. The black movers make only half as much money as white non- movers, and in general their occupational achievement is about half that of whites," said Tropman. Tropman has also been interested in the effects of mobility upon social status. "In the main, we see movement as being good, but there's a sub-value in people that equates men moving around with fear-the fear of the drifter, the bum. "Another offshoot from my research has been that of values. Americans tend to view movement up the social and financial ladder on the "outside" as tantamount to movement up Jacob's ladder on the inside," he added. "But both of these topics are un- substantiated and necessitate a great deal more research." TOM PRESTON Prof. Michael Meyer Professor of Jewish History H.U.C.-J.I.R.: Cincinnati Lectures Thursday, March 20 "WHEN DOES THE MODERN PERIOD IN JEWISH HISTORY BEGIN?" 4 P.M. at MLB, LECTURE RM. 1 Sponsored by the Dept. of History Proqram on Judaic Studies 8 P.M. at HILLEL, 1429 Hill St. "THE HUNDRED YEAR REVOLUTION: REFORM JUDAISM AT THE CROSSROADS" Special auto benefits may end DETROIT (P) - Special un- employment benefit funds at Chrysler and General Motors are expected to run dry this spring. leaving more than 130,- 000 laid off auto workers in bleak financial straits. Chrysler's fund could be ex- hausted by the first week of April and GM's could run out by mid-May due to massive, un- precedented industry layoffs, ac- cording to United Auto Workers (UAW) union projections. THE Supplemental Unemploy- ment Benefit (SUB) funds, a unique cushion designed to see auto workers through temporary layoff periods, weresnot de- signed to cope with recession- level furloughs. Laid off assemblers who now collect an average $170 a week in SUB pay and nemployment compensation, will lose an av- erage $90 a week when the funds run out, leaving them and their families with $30 a week in- come. In some states, where unem- nlovment compensation is high, flrloughed workers stand to lose less than half their .current pay. Tn Michigan. for example, max- ium unemploymenthcomen sa- tion is $106. among the blehest in the nation. A worker there may only lose $64 in SUB pay. BUT !N states where jobless benefits are low, exhaustion of SUB pay can be devastating. Unemnloyment pay in Indiana and Mississippi is no more than 0 a week, lowest in the na- tion. There, laid off auto work- er5 could lose $110 a week in SUB benefits. "It can be a real nightmare for those peonle," said an offic- ial at the UAW, which has been tnrshing frantically for vast im- nrnvements in state unemnlov- ment benefits to meet their members' needs. Chrysler's SUB picture is the bleakest of the four major auto- makers, union officials say Page Three COME TO THE GRAND OPENING OF ** * featuring the finest in contemporary cinema, theatre, and community pro- grams. OPEN HOUSE THURS.-SAT., MARCH 20-22 *~ ** Refreshments, Entertainment * EVERYONE WELCOME! +* 605 E. WILLIAM '> r"w:r" Stiff original works of graphic art-etchings, lithographs,- by leading 20th century artists Pablo Picasso Johnny Friedlaender Marc Chagall Salvador Dali, Alexander Calder Joan Miro Georges Rouault Victor Vasarelv and others. AP Photo Dogged down Odd Bull, an 80-pound bulldog from Tuscaloosa, Ala. proves once again that you can't es- cape Uncle Sam as he joins the ranks of his human counterparts, mulling over the all too familiar 1040A tax form. VALUE QUESTIONED: CIA raises Soviet sub WASHINGTON (01) - An at-} tempt by the Central Intelli- gence Agency to raise a Soviet submarine intact from the depths of the Pacific Ocean was well worth the risk of public dis- closure, several congressional leaders and a senior naval of- ficver said 'yesterday. Others, however, expressed strong doubts that the potential gain of intelligence about Soviet submarines was worth the esti- mated $350 million spent on the project. "IF THE CIA can spend $350 million with which to pay How- ard Hughes to raise obsolete 18- year-old submarines, then I think ths agency needs a cost- benefit ratio," Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho) said. "No wonder we're going broke." Published accounts estimated the total cost of the operation at between $250 and $350 million. The "submarine was raised to the surface last summer- by a. salvage vessel unit built espe- cially for the project by Hughes,I the recluse billionaire. Although salvaging a sunken craft in international waters is not illegal, the operation has caused a furor in Washington due to the diplomatic implica- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXV, No. 134 Thursday, March 20, 1975 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d a i l y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area);1 $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tues- Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.00 local mail (Michigan and Ohio) ; $6.50 non- local mail (other states and foreign). day through Saturday morning. LOOK FOR THIS SYMBOL it could be your opportunity to be part of the most exciting assemblage of people in history tions. A FULL DAY after published reports of the operation appear- ed, there was no public reactionj from the Soviet Union. Ameri- can diplomatic sources in Wash- ington said a serious break in detente with the Soviet Uniont was considered unlikely. The diesel-powered G-Class Russian submarine was located by the U. S. Navy in 1968 after it went down. Seventy Russian officers and seamen were lost following a series of explosions on board the vessel, which sank to a depth of about 17,000 feet, 750 miles northwest of Oahu, Ha- wail. Adm. Hyman Rickover said yesterday useful information could be gleaned from recovery of Soviet submarine remains even if the sub was an older model whose technology had been overtaken by later ad- vances.k "You can get some idea of how they the Russians develop- ed their submarines and their missiles," Rickover said in a brief interview. "You can see how they do things." BUT Rickover, the Navy's top expert on nuclear propulsion and nuclear submarines, said, "I have had obsolutely nothing to do with" the reported recov- ery by the Central Intelligence Agency of part of a Soviet mis- sile-firing submarine from deep in the Pacific last summer. The Defense Department re- fused to discuss the report or its implications in any way. There were indications that the CIA operation was a tightly held secret known to very few military or civilian officials in the Pentagon. I ro I NOTICE Non-Native Speakers of English All speakers of English as a second language are invited to take part in an Experimental Test of English Language Proficiency to be given at RACKHAM LECTURE HALL AT 7:00 P.M. ON THE 20TH OF MARCH. You will receive $5.00 for approimatelyx 1-1 V/ hours of your time. If interested you must call and register at the following number: 764-2416. *No ELI Student Currently Enrolled in the Intensive English Courses Are Eliqible for the Test at This Time. 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