Page 10-Friday, January 27, 1978----The Michigdn Daily WhiteI (Continued from Page 1) No snow-related deaths were re- ported in the county yesterday, according to the. sheriff's depart- ment, but three deaths were reported' in the state. The storm--the worst heresince the Thanksgiving weekend blizzard of 1974--crippled transportation throughout the state and virtually, shut down Washtenaw, Jackson, Ottawa, Monroe and Kalamazoo counties. METROPOLITAN, Detroit City, and Willow Run Airports shut down early ii the day. Metropolitan, as of yesterday afternoon, had not yet i_ 1 wasn *P cancelled today's flights. By early afternoon, bus lines throughout the state were not operating. Amtrak, hindered by frozen switches and fallen power lines between here and Detroit, reported train delays of several hours. A spokesperson, how- ever, said train service will continue. Whether normal transportation schedules will be met today depends on the severity of the weather and road conditions. Ann Arbor buses will run today on special routes. Transportation within Ann Arbor was also curtailed. The Ann Arbor Transportation Authority (AATA) 4 I aEraiyz disbanded normal Dial-A-Ride and handicapped passenger services early in the morning, and city buses stopped operating after 2 p.m. Uni- versity bus service between Central and North Campuses and the Nite Owl service were discontinued after dark. Today's prospects for normal local bus transportation are uncer- tain. ROADS EVERYWHERE were clogged with drifting snow. All major arteries into Ann Arbor were closed, and a "Red Alert" was declared in the city andcounty. A "Red Alert" is a warning to motorists to stay off roads and highways unless an emer- gency exists.. According to Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Krasny, the city's most pressing problem during the storm was cars stranded in the middle of streets. John Milspaugh, the city's street superintendent, said the stal- led cars were hampering clean-up efforts already complicated by deep drifts and high winds. The city, he said, had 12 trucks clearing the streets yesterday. City schools were shut down, I es stat( cheering some 17,000 youngsters. Wiley Brownlee, assistant( superin- tendent for the school system, who made the decision to close the schools, said today's decision will be made early in the morning and depends on road conditions. Public libraries in Ann Arbor closed yester- day, but city offices remained open. POST OFFICES in Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti were open yesterday and will be open today, but mail pick-ups and deliveries were can- celled, and a postal spokesperson said that unless conditions improve, those activities will be halted today as well. Campus mail service was can- celled yesterday because many of the trucks were stranded outside the city. Scattered power outages were reported yesterday throughout south- eastern Michigan. "Our real problems deal with transmission problems. Overhead lines are down. We're getting quite a few calls from people out of service," said Robert Veentra, a spokesman 'U, for Detroit Edison. "The wors failures were in Monroe, bu stra estimated that between 2,000 Ann Arbor customer affected as well. "THERE'S NO telling w happen tomorrow, especial the predictions of more, sn heavy winds. We'll be here the clock in anticipation o lems," he said. A spokesperson for the M Consolidated Gas Co. said the ing of natural gas'in the ar sluggish but sufficient. The University joined man major midwestern schools surrendered to the harsh w Michigan State, Eastern Mi Indiana, and Ohio State Univ all cancelled classes. A FLURRY OF Universit ities ground to a halt. CRISP yesterday and will try to operations today. The Art h closed early, and groundb ceremonies for an addition University Law Library, sc for today, were put off. Dormitory food deliverie cancelled, but several dieticie they expect no problems today is not delivered. West Quad ician, Rosa Davis, said she g from grocery stores.Davis sa products, such as mild and had not arrived on schedu added that the University has milk in storage to last out the Yesterday's storm marke the third time in the last half4 that the University cancelled University President Robbei ing said such a decision is ma discussions with the Univ vice-presidents. "I CONSULT WITH the fi and academic executives," t The academic officer consul the deans of the various scho closes t power* takes recommendations from them. t Veen- It is literally impossible to close the. 500 and entire University because of the s were hospital, the heating plant and dormitory officials." According to Jack Weidenbach, the hat will University director of physical prop- ly with erties, "There is really no difficulty ow and right now as far as the physical plant around (of the University) is concerned, f prob- other than clearing away the tre- mendous amount of snow." Weiden- ichigan bach said he doubts water piper or supply- the University power plant were ea was harmed by the storm. In addition to those unfortunate iy other enough to have been caught in the which storm, yesterday's biggest losers veather. were local merchants. "For the re- chigan, tailers, Thursday and Friday are two ersities of their busiest days. The restaurants --no doubt about it, they're going to be hurt," said Chamber of Com- y activ- merce Director Jim Frenza. closed Most industry, he said, was shut resume down. duseum A survey of businesses near cam- reaking pus found most shops and banks to the closed. Of those which remained heduled open, only the bars seemed to be doing business as usual. s were A "Blizzard Special" at Dooley's-- ans said half-priced drinks--proved popular. y if food 's diet- got food This story, written by Jay Levin, was corn- id dairy piled from files from Daily staff writers yogurt, Richard Berke, Brian Blanchard, David ile, but Goodman, Gregg Krupa, Keith Richburg, enough Dennis Sabo, Pauline Toole, Sue Warner and P eris Barbara Zahs, and UP! dispatches. 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