Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY .THE..ICH.GA. DA_.Y Kiwanis sale: Bargains galore! Friday, February 8, 1974 Preliminary trucker (Continued from Page 1) wanis Club member Sallie Spring- er. There were mothers with chil- dren in tow, students looking for cheap furniture, the old looking for remnants of the past. All min- gled in search of the jackpot, and jackpots there are. ANTIQUES, JEWELRY, TV's, ice skates-the treasurers that fill- ed the three story building were endless. Even puppies, an upright grand piano, and a limousine awaited eager shoppers. In the three days of the sale, crowds will ruthlessly pick through the merchandise that Kiwanis club members collected from the com- munity throughout the year. Explains Springer, "Three weeks before the sale, the ladies sort mounds and mounds of goodies. When we start, the rummage is piled right to the ceiling. We have everything from soup to nuts, everything except room." home. The largest beneficiary is the Forney Clement Foundation for Crippled Children at the Mott Chil- dren's Hospital. This year the Kiwanis Club hopes to top last year's $30,000 profits. BUT THERE is more to the sale than bargains and charity. Sport- ing 'Have a Good Day' buttons, the 100 Kiwanis workers smiled amongst the p u s h i n g jostling crowd, communicating a warm sense of camaraderie. "I enjoy the sale because I get to meet with many people I don't see from one year to the next," says Springer. "It's the one big thing where the Kiwanis wives get together." For the most part, the friendli- ness was shared by the customers. The excitment and the fun ran tampant, and the prices were great. Coats went for $10, refriger- ators went for $50. "WE'VE COME here for 20 years," said one woman. "I used to be able to outfit all my kids here. Now I think the prices are too high. I don't have to come anymore, but I still love to strike a good bargain." Most of the things are the usual household junk found at rummage sales, but some is valuable. A deli- S C i 5 a f r 1 t j f i!{i r i cately embroidered dress made in will begin tomorrow afternoon., ag reem en t 1918, still in excellent condition, is "Our storerooms are full of selling for $100. John Powers, the more," said Springer. "Bargain-* man in charge of the antiques, ing on Saturday is the only way (Continued from Page 1) said, "If no one buys it, we'll give we can sell it all." accept the proposed settlement. it to a museum." By 11 a.m. on the last day, "IT'S A SELLOUT," said Roger The jewelry department boasts loudspeakers will announce bags Galloway of Overdrive Magazine, a 22 carat gold watch. of "goodies" on sale for low, fixed one influential organization which prices. Anything that's left over, pushed for the shutdown that has PRICES WILL remain set throu'gh the Salvation Army will take for brought guerrilla warfare tactics tomorrow evening, and bargaining free. in some areas and left more than Anti-McDonalds protest staged (Continued from Page 1) m SPRINGER SAYS the sale's pur- pose is to aid people in disposing of their rummage while giving it to others who want and need it. Profits are donated to the club's community projects which include 4-H clubs, Boy and Girl Scouts, ENACT Centers, and a juvenile PHI BETA SIGMA FRATERNITY, Inc., DELTA RHO CHAPTER PRESENTS Three Dog Nighit and CHAMBERS BROTHERS 3 s I i . MID EAST PERSPECTIVES ISRAEL AND SOUTH AFRICA: partners in apartheid HERB BOYD, Black Studies Department, Wayne State University WHY THE ENERGY CRISIS: Arab blackmail or capitalist fraud? ROBIN MAISEL, Socialist Workers Party WHY THE MIDDLE EAST PEACE WONT HOLD. ASHAF EL-BAYOOMI, Professor of Biophysics and Chemistry 7 P.M.-FEBRUARY 8, 1974 ANDERSON ROOM, MICH. UNION Young Socialists Alliance Organization of Arab Students mated diversion for noontime passersby. One marcher, having donned a paper mache elephant's head rep- resenting the council Republicans, who tend to favor the new restau- rant, danced hand-in-hand with a disheveled Ronald McDonald cari- cature. Several others in the merry mob carried cardboard boxes painted like gargantuan "Big Mac" con- tainers emblazoned with the slo- gan "a quarter pound of crap." The demonstration culminated several months of concern and out- rage over the proposed greasy spoon-and a plastic spoon at that. BESIDES destroying the Nickels House - "an oasis of greenery"- with its lush ivy and handsome garden, the citizens fear that the IMcDonalds will bring a flood of cars, garbage, and other plagues. McDonalds has tried to placate the critics byhdesigning a unique building for the lot next to the arcade. "It will be a real special animal," comments one company representative. Under the proposed plan, there would be no garish golden arches. The two-story structure is suppos- edly designed - through land- scaping and lighting - to fit in with the older surrounding build- ings. SHABBAT SHALOM Traditional Service- 6 p.m. Liberal Service-8 p.m. Torch starting-9 p.m. FRIDAY, Feb. 8 HILLEL-1429 Hill St. EVEN THESE assurances, how- ever, do not satisfy the opposition. "The thing will be the best look- ing ugly McDonalds in the world,' said one of the demonstrators. "It will be an outrage . . . an in- sult to the people who live anc work in the area," lamented an- other. The McDonalds representative claims traffic won't be a prob- lem since the eatery will be a "walk-in facility" and that two em- ployes will be hired exclusively tc pick up the discarded cups, pap- fers, and other trash that encircle fast food joints like a blanket of snow. snTHE HOUSE and its owner Ms. B. Nickels Hall, whose grandfather built the place, have a lot in com- mon. A PERFE CT OUTOFYOUR MATCHES BEFORE THEY PUT THE UFE 4y~.rayOUT OF YOUR FORESTS, . P i a 1 r They both came into the world shortly before the turn of the cen- tury. Although now grey and weathered by the years they re- main warm and friendly. Ms. Hall spends most of her time' sitting in the prim, pastel yellow livingroom; a heating pad across her knees provides some comfort from the chronic arthritis she suf- fers. SHE DOESN'T want to leave the: home where she has spent over half a century. But it's the leaving that hurts - not McDonalds mov- ing in. "I always expected to be carried' out of this house feet first," she says, "But I never planned to get arthritis either." By going to a warmer climate, CRISLER ARENA, U of M Campus Ma rch 15, 1974 8 p.m.4 negotated 100,000 workers laid off. "They sold these guys down the river." More layoffs and more violence were reported yesterday, and warn- ings of food shortages by the week- end were issued in the Northeast. The Washington settlement was reached by negotiators for the gov- ermment and for some of the liter- ally dozens of independent 'truck- ers' groups which have sprung up overnight to represent drivers who own their own rigs and do not 're- ceive hourly wages as do the Teamsters. BUT THE INDEPENDENTS are highly disorganized among them- selves, and drivers and spokesmen for groups of strikers across the country said they were not satis- fied. The truckers' spokesmen who made the agreement said they needed 48 hours to explain it to independents. A few of the truckers and their spokesmen took a wait-and-see at- titude until they could hear details of the proposal; spokesmen for two of the groups of independents said yesterday afternoon they fa- vored acceptance of the offer. But most drivers and trucker spokesmen reached in a spot check yesterday said it was too little, too late.. Mvs. Hall nopes to ease her condi- A SPOKESMAN for Michigan tion and escape the heavy tax bur- drivers said he opposed the settle- den the house carries because of ment because it would apparently its location, pass on to consumers higher fuel "THERE ARE manygcosts which havesbeen absorbed by "TER AE ay good mem- truckers. He said the public ories in this house," she says, si- wouldn't "put up with it"and multaneously smiling and blinking eventually many truckers would back tears. "But I feel hemmed in lose their jobs to cheaper forms of and they (McDonalds) can keep up transportation. the property better than I am able State police patrols continued to to now." post armed guards around convoys Despite Ms. Halls' wishes, other of trucks carrying caritical sup- people won't let the campaign to plies, and National Guardsmen keep the Nickels house from going stood watch over the highways of the way of all other homes in the eight states, but the violence con- area die with yesterday's protest. tinned. They are currently circulating An explosion was set off on the petitions to halt the McDonalds. In surface of the Pennsylvania Turn- three days, nearly '2,000 people pike just before dawn yesterday; have signed the petition. a rock was hurled through a win- dow of a Greyhound bus on the THE EFFORT reminds a friend same highway, injurying one. wo- of how Ms. Halls' father-Stafford' man. In Minnesota, a grocery truck Nickels -- once shamed the city in- driver was beaten, truck tires to repairing the street in front of ere s ashtrue traleshot was fired the house.t- After repeatedly asking the city THE SHUTDOWN continued to to fill a large pothole in the then strike hard blows at the economy, unpaved Maynard St., the exas- amid predictions of more similar perated Nickels waited until afterj actions and pending food short- a heavy rain had filled the crater. ages. He then took out his fishing pole The agreement that led to the nd n hatrnoondan nlatest government actions was an- ah n spnthehaf.Teodangnounced shortly after 5 a.m. fol- telinedinthe hexda. Teradwslowing a six-hour bargaining 'ses- repared he ext ay.sion involving the truckers' six- Unfortunately, to day it will pro- man negotiating committee, Penn- bably take more than fishing ex- sylvania Gov. Milton Shapp and peditions, demonstrations, and pe- three administration officials head- tition drives to convince the city to, ed by special presidential assistant save Stafford Nickels' house. W. J. Usery. * -r . $6.50 $5.50 $4.50 TICKETS AVAILABLE BEGINNING FEBRUARY 11th AT: Michigan Student Union, Hudsons, Grinnells, Discount Records (S. University) SORRY NO PERSONAL CHECKS ACCEPTED GIVE THE GIFT OF LIFE AT THE U-M STUDENT BLOOD BANK MON., Feb.11... 11 a.m.-5 p.m. TUES., Feb. 12... 11 a.m.-5 p.m. WED., Feb. 13... 11 a.m.-5 p.m. THUR., Feb. 14.. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 2nd Floor-Michian Uninn '1 I NUMUSIC presents SID BLAIR with VISIONS "THE 12 PIECE ELECTRIC JAZZ EXPERIENCE" PIONEER HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM SAT., FEB. 9 Absolutely the Finest New Big Band Anywhere Tickets at Discount Records $2.00 1235 S. University New Morning Book S. 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