,Page Iwo THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February l ,1, 1973 Page ~TwO JHE MICHIGAN DAILY sunday, February 1 1, 1913 AP Photo Cruising with Reuben A workman puts the final touches on his hot rod Friday at the opening of the National Rod and Cus- tom Car Show in New York. Perhaps the most controversial roadster at the show is the "Love Ma- chine", the $100,000 car commissioned by Penthouse Magazine, which has a customized bed for its interior. Me at shot bums rep 4 Perky's legacy to island rather batty PERKY, Fla. (UPI) - Standing on this tropical island like an in- congruous Dutch windmill without its blades is a weatherbeaten monument to man's fight against the mosquito - Mr. Perky's bat tower. An inscription scratched in concrete says: "Dedicated to good health at Perky, Fla. by Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Perky. March 15, 1929." Righter Clyde Perky was a big and energetic land merchant, at- tirad in white English linen suits tailored for him in Cuba; jovial and well-liked. He cane from Denver, fell in love with the Florida Keys and envisioned a prosperous future for the sunbathed islands. But Perky had a faulty heart. He died in 1940 at the age of 62 when he went to his mother's funeral in Miami, 30 years before his vision came true. In 1929, black swarms of mosquitoes and salt marsh sand flies clouded Perky's horfzons. Bats, he had heard, could devour mosquitoes at a prodigious rate, and he was determined to make a home for them. "People don't know today what mosquitoes are," said Fred Johnson of Key West, the man who built Mr. Perky's bat tower. "In those days, we didn't have any insecticides, spray planes or foggers. "On Perky Key, the mosquitoes were so thick in the evening, they would form a blank print of your hand when you put it against a window screen," one islander, Fred Johnson, said. "They would suck your blood right through the screen. "About the only think I could do was drain a few ponds and dip a sponge soaked with oil into others," he added. "At night, you had to stay indoors. Although the Monroe County commissioners laughed about the idea, to the folks on Perky Key, running an ill-fated gamble, on a sponge farm which Perky hoped would tide him through the de- pression, a tower - which the bats could call home - was worth trying. "I'd seen a bat wipe clean with one swoop a screen covered with mosquitoes," Johnson related. "And we hadbats in the Keys." Perky had heard of the bat towers in Texas. A "Dr. Campbell" had designed them and written a book entitled "Mosquitoes, Bats and Dollars." Johnson said Perky commissioned a close friend, Steve Singleton, to travel to Texas to investigate. He was shown seven bat towers in the vicinity of San Antonio. Singleton brought their design back to Perky who directed Johnson, his building superintendent, to construct one. "No bats ever showed up," Johnson said. Mr. Perky's bat tower still stands. And it is the only thing left to show that Perky lived here. This island, 16 miles northeast of Key West, is now called Sugar Loaf Key, a new tourist development. Perky, Fla., no longer exists. HOUSES WANTED: -TO RENT -WALKING DISTANCE FROM CAMPUS Ann Arbor Tenants Union 1528 S.A.B. 761-1225 M-F 2-5 P.M. 1 The Board of the th.nna ba i! 5,' 0 5 5i v I ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE AUDITIONS Feb. -12, 13, 14 7:30-10:30 PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE ROLES: 3 WOMEN, ages 30-50 4 GIRLS, ages 14-19 3 MEN, ages variable Many non-speaking roles j for girls of all ages 201 Mullolland (off W. Washington) is holding interviews for new members. If yOu are interested come to: Rm. 164 East Quad 8 P.M. Sun., Feb. .4 11 I I WABX present ... The Incredible . . . The Outrageous DAN HICKS AND HIS HOT LICKS "Super Hero of 20th Century Music .." -Rolling Stone also special guest star -} ' COLOMBO, SRI LANKA (Reuters) - It was not all peaches and cream at the first regional conference of vegetarians which ended here last Thursday. In fact, they barely got down to the meat and potatoes of the conference. Delegates from only four countries, less than half those originally expected to attend, turned up for the six-day meeting-because the other delegates refused to be inoculated against small- pox. Many countries-including Sri Lanka - require visitors to have smallpox inoculations. Many vegetarians conscientiously object to inoculations against smallpox because the vac- cine is produced by the lymph-glands of cattle deliberately injected with cow-pox. The problem of .smallpox inoculations looks likely to be raised again at the world congress of vegetarians in Sweden in December. The regional conference here, which was sponsored by the London-based international vegetarian union, was to prepare the ground for the world congress. The conference also called for world peace through vegetarianism. Opening the meeting at the end of Janu- ary, former president of the international vege- tarian union Francisco Marquis de St. Innocent, of Spain, said: "Peace through war is sheer stupidity." One delegate pointed out that many of the world's greatest thinkers had been vegetarians, including Plato, Socrates, Plutarch, Ovid, Tols- toy, Voltaire, Milton, Isaac Newton and Bernard Shaw. "One of in years! BOB EGE the best movies A rare gem!" -Aaron Schindler and his GROUP Appeals Court decision shocks Alaskans, dims pipeline hopes ANCHORAGE, Alaska (cP) --bia declared, the 146-foot right-of-! Alaskan leaders have reacted withs shock to a. U. S. appeals court rul-t ing which again has sidetracked, at least temporarily, construction of a pipeline to tap the oil riches of< the Artic Slope. The 150-page opinion made pub-t lic in Washington late Friday ov- erturns a lower-court decision byf ruling that an extra-wide federal! land corridor for the proposed 789-. mile oil pipeline violates provisions of the Mineral Leasing Act of I 1920. "This is the worst possible op- inion that could have come," said an aide to Alaska Gov. William Egan. Hence, U. S. Circuit court of Ap- peals for the District of Colum- The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second lass postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor,{ Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 bys carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail! (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). way the Interior Department has proposed granting to Alyeska Pipe- line Service Co., is illegal. Alyeska is a consortium of sev- eral oil companies with interests in the Prudhoe Bay oil fields of the Arctic Slope. It was not clear immediately what legal alternatives were left open to Alyeska and Interior De- partment attorneys. F~ Meanwhile, Alaskans - includ-' ing Egan and U. S. Sens. Ted Stevens and Mike Gravel - were talking about seeking congression- al amendment of the 1920 right-of-1 way law to circumvent the deci- sion, Egan said he was sure there will develop a "unified effort in Con- gress" to review the right-of-way MaxvonSydow LvM Uflmann The Emigrant NOW AT MIDDLE EARTH I DALI MAGRITTE HUNDERWASSER LABISSE VASARELY 215 s. STATE ST. M-Th. 10-7 1 SATURDAY, FEB. 17-8:00 P.M. MASONIC AUDITORIUM Tickets $4 and $5 at Masonic Aud. B.O., Hudson's and Grinnell's A GOLDEN GOOSE PRODUCTION CAPRA FESTIVAL TALKS BY FRANK CAPRA TONIGHT AND TOMORROW SUNDAY: IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE James Stewart, Lionel Barrymore, Donna Reed, one of the director's favorites. Jimmy Stewart flirts with despair until he sees his life in a different light. (7:00 & 10:00 p.m.) PERSONAL APPEARANCE AFTER 7:00 SHOW ONLY. $1.50 MONDAY: DOUBLE FEATS RE: BITTER TEA OF GENERAL YEN AND LADY FOR A DAY Two rarely-seen Capra features, the first his most "artistic" film. The second was the pic- ture that established him as a major director. (show starts at 7:00; personal appearance after second feature) $2.00 ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM provisions. i, MITIGATE YOUR PROBLEMS ! Sometimes in marriage or in man/woman living relations, love does NOT "conquer all." Especially true if we have not prepared for the differences which may arise because each partner comes out of o different cultural/ethnic/racial/religious back- ground. COME, ENTER INTO A SEARCHING CONVERSATION FOR SEVERAL SESSIONS AT NOON LUNCHEON-35c GUILD HOUSE-802 Monroe Beginning Wed., Feb. 14, 12 noon INFORMAL; NO LECTURES, NO AUTHORITIES _., Vladimir Nabokov's tale of suspense and cruelty. t NWEDNESDAY- New Morning takes pride in presenting TONY RICH- ARDSON'S film of Vladimir Nabokov's novel Laughter in the Dark "Nicol Williamson drawn to the enticementsof Anna Karina. His sensitive delineation is largely restrained, but he matches that reserve with bursts of passion. Miss Karina, beautifully seductive in explicit scenes in and out of several beds, makes a striking schemer whose lusts for money and her lover are rudimentary."-N.Y. TIMES. "As sensual and exciting as anything I have seen on the screen in a long time. A hypnotic nightmare which I found absorbing and fascinating. Builds to heights of seething passion."-Rex Reed. Anna Karina, Nicol Williamson, Jean-Claude Drouot 110 mins. color ..: v .r.a,.r ....:k. .1... -:-? ~wn...t :"i..dS~t::-.;;v...i3.h.{":..?i. .k:'.r.....:.::::. i I have it on the Best L of Authorities.- that Ringo Starr is The Magic Christian. x. i NEW WORLD FILM CO-OP 665-6734 1Y UAC-DAYSTAR PRESENTS ai 2 JAZZ GREATS IN ONE CONCERT herbie emansmaa ncacm and special guest star freddie SAT, FEB. 24 an alternate THE KIBBUTZ Fri 10-9 Sat. 10-6 A LECTURE BY EDWARD I. PARSONS member of Kibbutz Kfar Blum MONDAY, FEB. 128 P.M.,at oHILLEL,1429 Hill society s GERSHWIN KASNR SF MS MAR EAU Present A WOODFALLI FILM LAUGHTER IN THE DARK" COLOR by DelUxe 7:30 9:30 PERSONS Mod. Lang. Aud. 3 NOTAIF $1.25 Friends of NR i] I