The Michigan Daily-Sunday, January 29, 1978-Page~3 If JJ IF YU SEE tt I S HCAPPE1.WLZNLY Magazine postponed Just like everything else around here, the Daily, too, has been strongly, and somewhat adversely, affected by this blizzard of bliz- zards. Because our regular printers closed-the weather kept the workers away-we had to move up our deadline by five hours so we could get it to another printing office in time. But, with our smaller staff, overworked typesetters and earlier deadlines, something had to give. Unfortunately, that something was this week's Sunday Magazine. Do not despair! Weather-permitting, it will return next Sunday. And what a magazine it will be! We promise one last valiant and sentimental effort by Susan Ades and Jay Levin before they retire from their editorships. Say it ain' . ... Even heroes have their faults. But when childhood heroes such as "Batman' get caught doing crimes they fought so hard in the comic book pages, it's not so easy to forgive. David Greenberg, the real-life version of "Batman" of the "Batman and Robin" detective team, has been charged with defrauding the federal government and a bank of nearly $150,000. The detective-turned-Brooklyn-assemblyman ap- parently.kept nothing in the old utility belt to ward off criminal tem- ptations, and "Robin" couldn't help him out of this one. A federal grand jury in Brooklyn handed down a 14-count indictment including the fraud charges, and charges of obstruction of justice. The grand jury says Greenberg tried to influence witnesses to lie to the grand jury about the alleged fraud. Holy greenbacks, Batman! Things look grim for the Caped Crusader this time. Basketball The Indiana University basketball team wasn't the only one sequestered away from home because of the snow we've got here in the Midwest. But other teams didn't have it quite so cushy. While the Indiana players were snowbound in the Briarwood Hilton, the Miami, Ohio University players spent a night in jail, followed by a morning's work at a nursing home. "What is normally a four-hour trip from Toledo to Oxford turned into a 36-hour nightmare," said David Young, a Miami spokesman. The team was stalled in Vandalia because of the weather, but accommodations were difficult to find. About half the team stayed in the city jail and others stayed in the courtroom. Releases the next morning, the team filled a local need for volunteers at a nursing home, before hitting the road. "They served meals to patients, they helped men shave, and they made the beds," Young said. "A lot of the help at the nursing home hadn't been able to come in to work in 36 hours." The Indiana players, on the other hand, stayed on the fringes of town, spending time somewhere between their bedrooms and, presumably, the bar. Happenings . .in case you're tired of shoveling snow, studying or partying, there are a few things still going on .. . the fun begins at 3 p.m. in the sixth floor Haven Hall Undergraduate Lounge where. the Political Science Association will have a meeting to be followed by a trek (short) to Dooley's . .. or you can go to the International Center for a "Study in Jerusalem," also at 3 . . . at 7:30 p.m., the Prostitution Education Project (PEP) will sponsor a forum on prostitution from the feminist, civil rights and legal perspectivew in Alice Lloyd dor- mitory. Snow Ball Mention Buffalo, New York to a friend these days and she or he is liable to mutter something about the snowstorms which have been plaguing that town this year and last. The city is deserving of its reputation, and is celebrating the legendary drifts at its "First Annual Blizzard Ball" tonight. About 800 area residents will gather at a local mansion to mark the anniversary of a storm so severe it elicited the first declaration of a snow-emergency in the nation. But it's almost as if the city has invited a repeat performance this year. While we struggle over the drifts and try to dig our way home, Buffalo will be dealing with two uninvited guests: the storm we just got rid of, and another of about the same intensity, coming in from Canada to celebrate the "First Annual Blizzard Ball" with the second annual king-sized blizzard. 0 Do unto others In a battle rivaling killer contests in the dorms, the Goddard and Emanuel cooperatives in Oxford Housing are waging a full-scale "war." It all began Thursday, one Emanuel House resident says, when restless natives of Goddard House sent an envoy of masked marauders through the opponent's halls. The masked marauders made off with the firewood supplies of the party of the first part. Shivering, those residents could not let matters rest as such. So some Emanuelites went to their rooms, picked up the phones, dialing numbers of phones in the house of the party of the second part. Tying up those lines, they each (loudly) delivered the message, "Goaddard sucks!" Irritated, the party of the second part wanted to make the party of the first part realize they meant business. That night they mustered their forces to ensure Emanuel would be totally snowbound. Handpacking snow' into all the exits from Emanuel, Goddard residents sealed that house. Oxford's staff of resident ad- visors spent the next morning rescuing Emanuel House. And so mat- ters are. There are rumors of a retaliation, but the last attack would be hard to beat. Emanuel residents refused to disclose plans for the counterattack. On the outside ... not to bore you with the same old story, but here we go again. Those clouds overhead are going to stay a while 'longer, dropping chilly little white things on us at least through the weekend. Today's high will be 22 degrees, and we should expect at least an inch of snow. With the stuff that's already on the ground, you'll hardly notice that extra inch. It will stay cloudy through the night (which will get as cold as 10 degrees), and when you wake up, it will probably be snowing again. Expect another two inches of snow before Monday. Carter does about-face, approval of Project Se WASHINGTON (UPI)-President Carter, who once said he opposed the controversial Project Seafarer, has taken a controversial stand in favor of the installation of the submarine com- - munications system designed for I think we need Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Asked Friday if he supported putting a submarine*cor- in the system in the Upper Peninsulam Carter told a group of visiting editors munication system during a White House interview: like "Yes. I think we need a submarine communications system of that kind. When a submarine is submerged, it is e t i portant. imperative, in case our nation's to"ur naio alSe security is directly threatened to haves communication with them. u "THF ONLY means of fairly rapid *;, communication is with the very low frequency, ultra-low frequency tran- smission systems, and there are certain geographical or geological structures Carter in our continent that permit thisetran- possible effects of the radio waves that During the campaign, Carter said he smission of signals underneath the land are generated." was opposed to Seafarer, and his and water." "SO MY ANSWER is yes," he said in statement Friday brought immediate The system is designed to skirt response to a question on whether he concerned reaction from Michigan enemy surveillance by sending favored the Seafarer Project. "Yes, I state officials. messages from underground cables do think we need that communications through the earth's crust to submarines system but I am very committed to be THE NAVY'S original Seafarer plan 1,000 or more feet beneath the ocean's sure that nothing is done to disturb the called for 2,400 miles of underground surface. quality of life of the people there." cables buried in the U.P., sending radio The chief executive said he was con- Defense Secretary Harold Brown has signals through the earth's crust to cerned "of course, about the reaction of made his recommendations but the missile submarines submerged 1,000 people" in the area as far as environ- final decision on whether to go ahead feet or more in the ocean. mental questions are concerned, "and with the project will be up to Carter. He But this triggered widespread fears also to assuage their concerns about wasexpected to act withina month. the extreme low frequencv signaIs voices farer 'I am committer to be nothing sure that is done t0 disturb the quality of the life of the people of Michigan,' would be a health hazard, as well as.c- vironmental concerns. As a result of the opposition from Gov. William Milliken and others,, the Navy then offered a modified proposal for 120 miles of underground, cable at the Michigan site that would be connec- ted to an existing above-ground test station at Clam Lake, Wis. Local residents also opposed- the modified plan, which was sent to Brown. ANN ARBOR PREMIER The new film from the director of PINKFLAMINGOS "I dare anyone not to take John Waters seriously after- DESPERATE LIVING He rema ins the v sionary of camp and the den mother of the bizarre . . . This film is a TRIUM- PHANT example of the most vital bad taste in America." -Village Voice After PINK FLAMINGOS and Female troubles, now comes DESPERATE LIVING YY J --F-- - - - -M 4 a "sa w " va .+ 4;{YV 4.A 4; V{l;V {V YY ;4 4. U4. {;'t,. ?' +1f f1;A lJ Influenza outbreak kills 801, in 3 weeks; no vaccine found yet for 'Russian flu' strain ATLANTA (UPI)-A January out- break of influenza caused by two closely related viruses has taken a toll of 801 lives in three weeks, with yet another epidemic flu strain believed to be seeding itself in the general population, federal health officials report. The National Center for Disease Con- trol (CDC) reported the A-Victoria and A-Texas strains of influenza were causing widespread outbreaks in 15 states, regional outbreaks in 14 and ' sporadic cases in 15. FOR THE THIRD straight week; the number of deaths attributed to the in- fluenza outbreak climbed past the "epidemic threshold."- For the week ended Jan. 20, the CDC said mortality reports from 121 of the nation's major cities showed there were 848 deaths attributed to pneumonia and influenza, with 336 of those fatalities blamed on the current epidemic caused by the two flu varieties. The death toll for the two previous weeks was 465. States reporting the greatest number of influenza cases were Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Mary land, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oregon,, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Wisconsin. The CDC gauges influenza activity through reports from private physicians, and from state health departments and other sources of hospital admissions, school and in- dustrial absenteeism. FEDERAL HEALTH officials were still assessing the impact of a Russian influenza outbreak among high school students in Cheyenne, Wyo., the first documented occurrence of this flu virus in the United States. Dr. Robert Craven, a CDC fly surbeillance officer investigating the Cheyenne outbreak, filed preliminary reports indicating the Russian flu is an illness of children and young adults. "It appears that the illness is primarily in people under age 25," said Dr. Philip Graitcar, another CDC flu expert. "It does not appear that there are any deaths or serious complications in the Cheyenne outbreak," Graiteer said. "So far it looks like a disease in children." Craven said the Russian flu strain, for which no vaccine is available, probably was seeding itself in the general population. He said the virus was expected to start causing out- breaks across the country in about two weeks. 1 ' L I...LIZ RENAY " MINK STOLE "'SUSAN LOWE. EDITH MASSEY " MARY VIVIAN 'EARCE *. LAN HILL MLB Room 1 Sat., Sun. Showtimes: 7, 8:45, 10:30 p.m. Special Sun. Matinee: 1:30, 3:15 p.m. Admission $2.00 You Must Be 18 Metropolis Film Society Phoenix police say 'orch' n c PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP)-Police say a mentally retarded 20-year-old man has confessed to setting fire to one sleeping drunk and is a suspect in the torchings of two others. But authorities say they are powerless to arrest him or stop him from striking again. "These victims are helpless drunks and they're being victimized by them- selves and by a dangerous suspect who has no compassion and maybe is not even responsible for his actions because of his mental state," said Phoenix police detective Larry Stubbs. "WE'VE TRIED everything we can to get him off the streets," Stubbs said, "but it's not working. We have no legal means and it's really frustrating." Police did not identify the man, who psychiatrists say has the mental development of a 4-year-old, nor did they say whether he is cared for by friends or relatives. All three victims were sleeping on sidewalks or in doorways in an area of ~utod dark, smoky bars, crumbling hotels and warehouses south of the city's. rejuvenated downtown. Police said all were doused with a flammable liquid; and set afire as they slept.' The two latest attacks occurred last week, and both victims are still hospitalized in stable condition, authorities said. I- COUPON- 1 up GOURMET NATURAL FOOD RE XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX X CINEMA II A U AU. A ANGELL HALL SUNDAY, JANUARY 29 X HEAVY TRAFFIC X Director-RALPH BAKSHI (1974) x An animated satire of cabbies, drunks, manic-depressives, hipsters and muggers-in other words, the perfect Ann Arbor film. A cinematic parody of fantasy and sophistication by the creator of Fritz the Cat and Wizards. X 7, 8:30 and 10 p.m. $1.50 X ********************************** )< X Cinema Ilis now accepting new membership applications. Application x x forms are available at all Cinema Ii showings. x x x XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 2 for1 Special -COUPON- er Salad-- GET 1 FREE Good: SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY January 29-February2 3 NOT AVAILABLE FOR CARRY OUT GOOD AFTER 3 P.M. ONLY Longevity Cookery 314 E. Liberty STAURANT (313) 662-2019 $2.25, THE AVERAGE COST OFA CAB RIDE, COULD SAVE YOUR FRIEND'S LIFE. For free information, write to. DRUNK DRIVER, Box 2345 Rockville, Maryland 20852 -J MUSKET wq -Presents- Join The Daily! kL w a www www w w w izrl hfrinc OTrlw r I FASINDERS 1970l 1 I