M_ Sunday~ Johuar 21, 1 X73 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Sunday, JanuarV 21, 1 ~73 THE MiCHIGAN DAILY Page Seven SKI SPECIAL HEAD SKI SALE! HEAD 240'S-Reg. $1 15 NOW $79 HEAD 360'S-Reg. $155 ................ NOW $109 HEAD 710'$-Reg. $175 ... . .......... NOW $79 5NHOURS: BANKAMERICARD 2455 SOUTH STATE FR.-10-8:30 MASTER CHARGE 1 mile south of campus TUESDAY--10-5:30 SATURDAY-10-5:30 accepted 662-7307 wwIn In- FINANCIAL STRAITS Viability of proposed mass transit system questioned Second pilot refused to fly against Hanoi IContinued from Page 1) the "millage has no chance of pas- sing." AATA has decided the fare for an individual ride in the new sys- tem, regardless of distance or number of transfers, will be twen- ty-five cents. Monthly subscriptions may also be issued, with lower fares for senior citizens and under- privileged persons. AATA plans to provide several vehicles to accommodate severely handicapped riders. Comtran would divide the city into a variable number of zones de- pending on the time of day and the expected ridership. For instance, during the r u s h hours, described by Simsar as 6:30- 9 a.m. and 3-6 p.m. on weekdays,, the city would be divided into 11 zones utilizing 52 vehicles. On the weekends the city would, be composed of only four zones, utilizing 15 vehicles. Intra-zone transportation would be accomplished exclusively by dial-a-ride minibuses. The r i d e r would merely telephone a ispateh dsac-er, and be picked up at his home and taken to the destination by a single vehicle. Traveling from one zone to ano- ther is somewhat more complex. The rider again telephones a dis- patcher and is picked' up by a dial-, a-ride minibus. The minibus takes' the rider to a express bus stop. The rider then transfers to theex- presssbus. If the rider's destina- tion is not on the express bus route, another transfer to a mini- bus would be necessary. Simsar claims the major advant- ages of Comtran over the city's present mass transit system a r e convenience and speed. "Comtran is far more convenient than stan- dard passenger systems because we will go to the passengers, rath- er than have the passengers come to us," Simsar says. He adds that once the riders call the dispatcher they should arrive at their destinations within 30 min- utes, "unless a second transfer is needed which should be less thanI ten per cent of the time." WASHINGTON (A)-A second pi- lot has been charged with refusing to fly a combat mission against North Vietnam during the heavy Christmas bombing campaign, the Air Force has disclosed. The officer was identified Fri- day as Capt. Dwight Evans Jr., 26, a pilot of an F4 Phantom fighter-; bomber assigned to the 34th tacti- cal fighter squadron in Thailand. The Air Force said Evans balked at bombing North Vietnam on Dec. 18, the day President Nixon launch- ed the big air attacks against the; Hanoi-Haiphong area. On Jan. 10, the Strategic Air Command described Capt. Michael Heck, 30, of Chula Vista, Calif., a B52 pilot, as "the first and only" B52 crew member to refuse to fly combat missions in the Vietnam war. Heck, a veteran of 275 combat' missions, said he refused on Dec. 27 to go on because the "goals do not justify the mass destruction and killing." Both men are accused of failing to obey a lawful order and face possible court-martials. Both pilots are now assigned to administrative duties at their bases in Thailand while their cases are investigated. In acknowledging thecharges against Evans, the Air Force also acknowledged two previous cases of B52 crewmen in the United States who were discharged as con- scientious objectors. But the Air Force stood by its assertion that no other B52 pilots in Southeast Asia refused orders and denied reports that other bomber crewmen were quietly sent home after refusing to fly missions over Hanoi. The Air Force also said its rec- ords show that two other pilots had been discharged after refusing to fly combat missions during the Vietnam war. The Air Force spokesman said the two other pilots "refused to fly types of missions rather than a specific mission" and their of- fenses were not as serious as those of Evans and Heck. I'A Jill k _.. Bill UNDERGRADS-GRADS ! Join The Daily CIRCULATION DEPT Come in any afternoon 420 Maynard i For the hottest corned beef, pastrami, franks . . . HILLEL-i 429 Hill Sun. a16 p.m. f SUNDAY New Heavenly Blue MON., TUES., We D. Lightening 217 SASHLEY F2 M -2AM presents Future World's Lecture Series Tues., Tues., Jan. 23* Jan. 30 STANLEY KRIPPNER, Dir. Maimonidies Dream Research Lab "Developments in parapsychology in U.S. and Russia' WILLIAM 0. DOUGLAS, U.S. Supreme Court Justice "Future of our Political System" R. BUCKMINSTER FULLER, Designer, Mathematician, and. "Designing a Future World" Philosopher FRANCES LAPPE, Author "Diet for a Small Planet" "World Food Supply and the Future" 3035 Washtenaw across from Lee Oldsmobile Sun., Feb. 4 T T T T 8-10 P.m. ues., ues.,l ues., ues., Feb. 6 Feb. 13 Feb. 20 PAOLO SOLERI, Author "Future of Aesthetics" "Archology: The City in the Image of Man" CLEVE BACKSTER, Author "Evidence of a Primary Perception "Communication in the Biotic World" in Plant Life" Feb. 27 J. B. RHINE, Director Foundation for Research on the Nature of Man, Duke University "Psychic Phenomena and its Implications for the Future" DONELLA and DENNIS MEADOWS, Co-authors "Limits of Tues., Mar 13 LEARN To SPEED SPEED-READ that is .. . Now at last a course that is within everyone's budget and schedule and is GUARANTEED TO: DOUBLE YOUR -SPEED. " low cost-$25.OO " minimum class time- only three 2-hour sessions " simplicity- no machines or complicated aids to buy 9 trustworthy- a ntional company with a local base We want to help more people read more, therefore we are offer- ing this excellent, yet low priced speed reading course to this community. We believe this course will be worth everyone's investment. WHERE: Student Union-international ID A- l ^ _ft ENGIN- hR- 1NG The professional art of applying science to the optimum conversion of natural resources to the benefit of man." Stanford School of Engineering's wide-ranging programs offer qualified men and women exciting avenues to rewarding, satisfying, professional careers. The Stanford School of Engineering is searching for graduate students from among qualified majors in engineering, mathematics, and the sciences. A representative from the school will be on campus to discuss Stanford's ten engineering departments and interdisciplinary programs, research opportunities, the financial assistance available, and other aspects of engineering at Stanford. * JANUARY 22, 1973 Make arrangements to meet him through 0 ENGINEERING PLACEMENT SERVICE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING Stanford University TUNE-IN on the WNRZ Community Marathon I, Help Re-build the Community Center -and the People's Ballroom!' MON. and TUES. JAN. 22 & 23 YOU CAN BE A PART OF THIS COMMUNITY RECONSTRUCTION DRIVE BY: 1. Partying down at any or all of the 3 benefit concert-dances which will be broadcast LIVE over WNRZ-FM. Monday night-LIGHTNIN' and RADIO KING AND HIS COURT OF RHYTHM at Mackinack Jacks Tuesday afternoon-MOJO BOOGIE BAND and DIESEL- SMOKE/DANGEROUS CURVES at the Blind Pig (1-4 p.m.) Tuesday night-IRON HORSE EXCHANGE and LOCO- MOBILE at the Odyssey. "Limits to the Limits of Growth" Growth" T T ues, u es ", Mar. 20 MURRAY BOOKCHIN, Author "Ecology and Revolutionary "Ecology, Political Economy, and the Future" Thought" Mar. 27 Wed., Tues., Apr. 4 Apr. 10* LESLIE STEVENS, Author "EST" "Communication and Media: Toward a One World Mind" B. F. SKINNER, Author "Beyond Freedom and Dignity" "Learning for Human Understanding" ARTHUR C. CLARKE, Author "Profiles in the Future, 2001" "Life in the Year 2001" Fri., Sat., Sun., FUTURE WORLD'S CONFERENCE FESTIVAL Anrr 1 IA 1I