The Michigan Daily-Sunday, February 12, 1978-Page 3 - ( F YV SEE NESHPE A1LD)AIY Lesbian mother's reprieve An admitted lesbian seeking custody of her adopted daughter has won a second chance in court, even though she's not sure she wants it. The Michigan Court of Appeals Friday sent the case involving Maragreth Miller, 38, a University instructor, back to Oakland County Circuit Judge Frank Frederick Ziem, who has denied an earlier petition for custody of the child. "That's good news and bad news," said Miller when she learned of the ruling. The good news is the ap- peals court apparently still feels there is a reasonable question in the case. The bad news is that we go right back to Judge Ziem, who has already made it clear he doesn't like lesbians and is quite sure they don't make good mothers." The daughter, Jillian, 11, has staved with her mother during the appeal process even though Ziem originally or- dered her placed in her father's custody. The appeals court ruled that Ziem should have given more consideration to the child's stated preference to stay with her mother. f ..- Happenings. ... there is a lot to do on this day of rest. Julie Badiee will speak on the "Islamic Art in the University Collections" at 2 p.m. in the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology. . . Benning Dexter will give a Music School piano recital at 4 p.m. in Rackham Auditorium. . . The Children's Health Fair will continue today at Bryant Elementary School at 2150 Santa Rosa Ct. from 1 to 4 p.m. free health screening service and health information for children under 18. . . the Comic Opera Guild will hold their annual meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Art Worlds at 213% S. Main St.. . . an Open House to celebrate the establishment of the West Branch of the Ann Arbor Library will be sponsored by the Friends of the Library in the Maple Village Shopping Center from 2 to 4 p.m... . the Broken Consort will perform a concert of medieval music at 4 p.m. in the Pendleton Room of the Union. .. a program of Siddha Yoga and meditation will be held at 1520 Hill St. at 2:30 p.m. . . . a In- ter-Cooperative Council housing new membership meeting will be held at 1:30 in the Anderson Room of the Union and all houses in the ICC will be open afterwards. Good day. U-2, again. It used to be that nostalgia was part of a fond remembrance of the days gone by. Now, the U.S. Air Force is using it to dredge up some not-so-fond memories. The U2 spy plane, which made Cold War headlines when the Russians downed Francis Gary Powers' CIA craft, will be put into production again and assigned, of all things, to peer across the Soviet bloc borders. The Air Force says this time it will be done "from a safe distance," but isn't that what they said the last time? ,just like in the comics.' In Garry Trudeau's comic strip Doonesbury, Uncle Duke the United States emissary to China becomes emotionally involved with his in- terpreter. Well history, or a reasonable facsimile thereof, has repeated itself. Leonard Woodcock has fallen in love with one of his staff members while serving as the U.S. Ambassador in China. Wood- cock announced that he will seek a divorce from his wife, Loula, from whom he has been separated for 16 years, in order to marry a member of his Peking staff. Declining to name the American woman he will marry, Woodcock said, "It won't cause any problems, but I'd rather they didn't learn of it through the press." Good luck Leonard and.. . well, whoever. Snow bound Just because most of our own snow troubles have been forgotten, we tend to forget other people have theirs. Take Boston, for instance. One staff reporter's parents told her "the snow is within two inches of the top of the front door . . we had to dig a 2 x 4 space in front of the garage door to let the dog out." Out there, they've noticed the same things we did. In addition to all the snow came lots of unfamiliar frien- dliness. When the state of emergency was declared after Monday'y blizzard, those infamous Boston drivers had to do without their cars-and hence, without much of their famed rudeness. "It's just not like when people have cars&then they honk the horn and yell out the window, 'You jerk!' This is quiet, a nice change of pace," said one air- port worker who made it to work on foot. On the outside.. . ... those of you who were waiting for winter to return won't have to wait long. It appears that our brief respite from demoralizing con- ditions will end late Sunday night. Our forecast calls forclear skies this morning with increasing cloudiness in the afternoon. The high will be 30 degrees. Light snow will begin late tonight and the low will be 14 degrees. On Monday the snow will continue with a slight chance of freezing rain mixed in for a little spice-and some slipping on the ice one would imagine. The high Monday will be 28 degrees. Snow will continue through Monday night with an accumulation of 3 to 4 inches by Tuesday. Don't pack away those snow shovels. It's only February. Daily Official Bulletin SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 12,.1978 Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri., 7-9 Daily Calendar Sot.. Sun., Wed.. 1-3-5-7.9 Kelsey Museum: Gallery talk, Julie Badiee, "IslamieArt in the U-M Collections," Kelsey, 2 p.m. Music School: Faculty piano recital, Benning Dex- ter, Rackham Aud., 4 p.m. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1978 Daily Calendar: 'P C)77 20CENTUR-FOX Physics/Astronomy: J. Kogut, Cornell U, "Quartz Confinement in Extreme Environments," 2038 Ran- dall Lab., 4 p.m. Biological Sciences: R: T. Paine, U-Washington, "The Structure of Intertidal Communities: Com- parative Studies on Convergent and Unique Aspect," Aud. 4, MLB, 4 p.m.a Music School: Honors Quartet, Rackham Aud., 8 p.m. NOW SHOWING SUMMER PLACEMENT Mon Tues Thurs Fri., 7-9 3200SAB 763-4117 Sot Sun. Wed 135-7-9 Camp Sequoia, Mi. Coed: Will interview Thurs., !jlli Feb. 169 toS. Openings include waterfront (WSI), ar- ts/crafts, riding -(western), archery, riflery. III Register in person or by phone. gi Lakeside Farm Camp, Mi. Coed and Watervliet, ((M. i n e T , b 1 9 5i.' " Lakeside Farm openings: waterfront (WSI), riding (Eng./West.), arts/crafts, drama/dance, sailing, canoeing. Register by phone or in person. Watervliet openings: waterfront (WSI), arts/crafts, nature, campcraft, biking instr., riding, secretary, cooks. WWJ-TV, Detroit, Mi.; Opening for broadcast CONTINUES EIGHT NATION TOUR: Sadat meets Israeli in Austria . r, 5' BUCHAREST, Romania (AP)-An- war Sadat reviewed the Middle East situation at a meeting in Austria yesterday with Israeli opposition chief Shimon Peres and called the talks "a new step in our cooperation along the road to peace and security for our nations." The Egyptian president then flew to Romania, the only Soviet bloc suppor- ter of his Mideast peace bid, to pick up his drive for international political and public support. DENSE FOG forced Sadat's jetliner to divert to the Black Sea resort of Con- stanta, 125 miles east of Bucharest, its destination. It was not immediately known if Sadat would be brought to Bucharest by car or train or if Romania officials would travel to _constanta to meet him there. Sadat, speaking at a news conference after talks with Peres at the 17th'cen- tury Klosheim Palace near Salzburg, described the meeting as a resumption of the stalled Egyptian-Israeli peace drive begun last November when he made his historic journey to Jerusalem. On his arrical in Salzburg yesterday morning, adat told reporters there is "sufficient momentun in the present peace initiative to achieve a final set- tlement." PARALLEL POLITICAL and military negotiations stemming from the Jerusalem summit have mired over Egypt's demand for self-determination for 1.1 million Palestinians living under Israeli rule since the 1967 Mideast war, and Israel's insistance that it keep a score of Jewish settlements in Sinai when it returns the war-worn peninsula to Egypt. Sharing the rostrum with Peres and Austrian Chancellor Bruno Kreisky, Sadat disclosed he had invited the op- position Labor Party chief to visit Egypt. However, he stressed that neither his talks with Peres nor his in- vitation were aimed at dividing the Israeli leadership. The Labor Party dominated Israeli politics from the Jewish state's incep- tion in 1948 until parliamentary elec- tions last May, when Labor lost to Prime Minister Menachem Begin's right-wing Likud coalition. PERES SAID he had not come to Salzburg as a negotiator and had received Begin's approval in advance for his meeting with Sadat. Sadat said details of future talks with Israel would beworked out by U.S. Assistant Secretary of' State Alfred Atherton, who is being dispatched by -President Carter on a diplomatic shut- tle to bring Cairo and Jerusalem back to the peace table. Kreisky, who met privately with Saat before the Egyptian sat down with Peres, said the Mideast leaders had shown "a certain willingness to establish contact," and the session became possible because both men were in Western Europe at the same time. SADAT IS ON an eight-nation tour to generate support for his peace initiative. Peres was in Hamburg, West Germany, for a Socialist International conference. While Sadat and Peres mkt in Salz- burg, Begin scheduled a meeting in Jerusalem with U.S. Ambassador Samual Lewis to review Sadat's Mideast discussions with Carter at Camp David, Md., last weekend. Begin said his cabinet would take up Mideast developments when it meets today and "we will be able to decide on the next steps." "There is reason to believe that' negotiations. . . between us and Egypt will continue," Begin told reporters Friday. a w, .5 HOURS Sunday Brunch 12-4, Lunch 11:30-4 Dinner M-Sat 5-12, ri &Sat 5-1, Sun5:30-12, 'x18 w. Ifbopt.am arbor.nti. 665-aas Ethiopians ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) - Ethiopian troops, backed by repeated air strikes, are advancing along the nation's vital rail link with the tiny state of Djibouti as part of the offensive to drive Somali forces from Ethiopia's Ogaden region, Western diplomatic sources said yesterday. In the past few days, the sources said Ethiopian ground forces have advanced some 55 miles from the town of Melo to Adigela in their bid to regain full con- trol of the railroad that links Addis Ababa with Djibouti. THE RAILROAD has been cut since June as a result of sabotage attacks by pro-Somali forces, and Ethiopia has since had to resort to bringing in military and other supplies by road from the Red Sea port of Assab. The Ethiopians are meeting with less success, say the sources, in their drive for the strategic town of Jijiga from the ancient, walled town of Harar. They control territory about 12 miles beyond Harar on the road to Jijiga and hold positions as far as Babile, said the sources. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVIII, No. ili Sunday, February 12, 1978 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0502. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning, during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. just for the health of it. Get moving, America' Physical Education Public information American Alliance for Health Physical Education and Recreation 1201 1 6th St N W Washington D C 20036 advancing For the first time, however, it is being unofficially admitted here that Cuban and Soviet military advisers are here in large numbers aiding the Ethiopian war effort. WESTERN intelligence reports put the number of Cuban troops here at 3,000, with several thousand more reported on their way by sea. In ad- dition some 1,000 Soviet advisers together with others from Eastern Europe and 2,000 South Yemeni soldiers are reported in the country. Suggestions that Cuban pilots are flying MIG forties in the Ogaden and that foreign^ troops are directly in- volved in the fighting are dismissed as untrue. " " - .4 CINEMA I Angell Hall-Aud. A Sunday, February 12 LOVE AND DEATH Director-WOODY ALLEN (1975) This film is rich with the sounds of classical music and the (distorted) images of Russian literature and Ingmar Bergman. Diane Keaton and Woody Allen clumsily masquerade them- selves as Spanish nobility in a futile attempt to assassinate Napoleon. A madcap adventure of outrageous humor. 7,8:458 10p.m. $1.50 Tuesday Night: Godard's TOUT VA BIEN eclipse jazz presents WOODY SHAW Hill Auditorium Fri., February 24 8:00pm TICKETS on sole Tues.. Feb. 14. 9-5 at UNION BOX, and 2/15 at Schoolkids & both Discount Rec~ords. $5.50, 4.50, 3.50. WOODY SHAW will conduct a FREE PUBLIC WORKSHOP Friday after- noon, Feb. 24, location to be announced. INFO: UAC-763-1453. Eclipse Jazz operates under the auspices of the Mojor Events Office, supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. A Discussion with Frederick Wiseman The Documentary filmmaker exfraordinaire who is renowned for such prob- ing works as Law And Order, High School & Titticut Follies will speak at:- 3:00 atthe Old Arch. Aud. Admission: $1.50; Two Wiseman films will be shown at 1 & 7 PRIMATE (At 1:00) an eloquent challenge of the humanity and: validity of "pure scientific research." 1974. WELFARE (At 7:00) A fascinating look at a New York wel- fare office and those it serves. 1975. Cinema Guild OLD ARCH AUD. .50 f or each f"im $1 .50 for a film & discussion. the ann arbor A/lM cooperative presents: 3.. - - Friday, Sturday,-Sdnday, Februaryl7, 18, 19 The Eighth Ann Arbor 8MM Film Festival Schorling Auditorium, School of Education 8MM filmmakers from all over the U.S. and Canada will compete for 1 41k $1000 in cash and prizes, given by an awards jury for excellence in the growing field of 8MM. Friday shows at 7 and 9 and Saturday shows at 2, 7, and 9 are all different. On Sunday at 7 & 9, the prize-winning films will be screened. . ADMISSION $1.00 per shows' Final evening of The Eighth Ann Arbor Film Festival Ann Arbor Civic Theatre A U D'IT'ION S Carousel by Rogers and Homerstein Feb. 13 - MASS MEETING-7:30 All adults trying out should attend this meeting for instruction and sign up for an audition time. Feb. 14, 15. 16 and 17 7:00-10:30 p.m.. AUDITION DAYS Come prepared w/song and be prepared to dance. Need all ages & all should be able to sing and dance. 35 ADULTS NEEDED, 6 CHILDREN. Don't Be Bash ful TAKE OUTA DAILY CLASSIFIED AD FOR VALENTINE'S DAY BE. NY VALUTIM! Feb. 19- CHILDREN AUDITION only time directors will see children. Auditions will be held at the AACT Workshop Bldg. a ... .(off W. Washington) 6-7:30 t 201 MulhollndY Want The Inside Scoop? C' e; v ' r . / q ,,, A Valentines Day Love story': Musket's WEST SIDE STORY announces Opening Night March 16 as COUPLES NIGHT. Anyone who buys 2 tickets for opening night on Valen- tines Day, gets 504 off any ticket! POWER CENTER ft I gel, lJ / SUBSCRIBE TO ,