Page 8-Saturday, Februar.y 18, 1978-The Michigan Daily Local farmer says parity plea needs support from Washington By MARTY LEVINE The main problem with the current American farmer's strike is lack of organization and a voice in Washington, according to local farmer Ronald Hesse, speaking at the Michigan League yesterday. "We got to have farmers atfederal and state levels," Hesse emphasized. THE FARMERS' goal is to get 100 per cent parity for their products; pay equal to their costs and adjusted as labor, machinery, and fertilizer prices go up each year. "We want to guarnantee minimum wage, but we don't want to take sub- sidization from Washington," Hesse said. In order to get parity, farmers must stop production, he added. "The only place we can hurt people is to take food away from them and that's very hard to do," Hesse said. "We're all individuals, scattered. I'm hoping that this movement will draw farmers together. " HESSE SAID he and many other farmers feel the recent farm bill passed by Congress is a "disaster." Of the $11, billion in the bill, only $1.9 billion is ac- tually backing up the American farmer and rancher. The other $9.1 billion is being used for school lunch programs, Federal Housing Administration (FHA) loans and a $5 billion food stamp allocation. Hesse dismissed charges that 100 per cent parity could force food prices up as much as 30 per cent, calling them "newspaper jargon." "The middle man is the one who's making the money," he said. The far- mers say government pressure should be transferred from them to cor- porations handling the products bet- ween farms and market shelves, Hesse said. Those companies raise prices up to 1,000 per cent, he charged. Agricultural corporations are now buying land, he said. "When (they) do take over the farm land, they're going to say, 'OK, Uncle Sam. This is what you're going to pay for this food.' And they're going to pay it, too." Dorm rates hiked *SPECIAL at the Bage! Factory 1306 S. University INTRODUCING ALWAYS FRESH, 7 days-.. (Continued from Page 1) The University is developing access plans in hopes of influencing a road building project underway by a local planning group. Robert Warner, Chairman of the Library Search Committee, told the Regents the new Library Director "must have much more administrative and managerial skills" than he or she would have needed even ten years ago. "They must have a foundation in technology" as well, according to War- ner. Among the ten criteria used by the Library Search Committee were: " understanding the mission of a major research library; * ability to provide leadership and articulate the multiple responsibilities of a major university library; " commitment to affirmative action and equal education opportunity, and " personal style which will inspire confidence throughout the University community. JOSEPH PAYNE, Warner's counter- part on the Education Search Commit- tee, said, "There has been a good deal of emphasis on the personal scholar- ship of the candidates." The criteria for selecting the Education Dean are similar to those for the Library Dean. Payne stressed, however, the need for "an energetic person." In other business, the Regents rejec- ted a motion by Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) calling, in part, for the Regents to "challenge any person who seeks to circumscribe the cherished and vital right of this University to govern itself." Baker's motion was in response to a recent University affirmative action agreement with the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Baker said the agreement is representative of a more general attempt by the gover- nment to control the University. He said this has happened in the past with disasterous results. Rate hike for, Detroit Edison LANSING (UPI) - A $35.4 million in- terim increase for the Detroit Edison Co. was approved yesterday by the state Public Service Commission, despite opposition from Attorney General Frank Kelley. The increase, unanimously approved by the PSC, will supposedly help Edison east its finan- cial difficulties, which were caused by increasing costs. Our New Cream Cheese Spreads: strawberry-blueberry vegetable-walnut 49C per sandwich on your choice of bagel (Good thru Feb. 28) "Expert in Tray Catering" The RFD Boys, a local bluegrass band, frequently strum away their Saturday nights at the Pretzel Bell. Bluegrass: RFD.-s le By DONNA DEBRODT There's a lot more to bluegrass than handclapping, toe tapping and singing along with the music, and there's a lot more to Ann Arbor's RFD Boys than bluegrass. The group commonly sprinkles renditions of oldies from the 50s among its bluegrass ballads, slipping away from the "mountain folks' music" just long enough to slip in a few "doo, wop, vops" for a change of pace. BLUEGRASS RFD-style is a mixture of classic ballads, complex harmonies, intricate solos from each of the bands four male members - all packed with emotion and skill. "If they didn't have other jobs and commitments, they could go nationwide and be one of the top bluegrass bands around," says Max Balden, manager of the Pretzel Bell, where the RFD Boys spend their weekends twanging away. But the bands members do, in fact, have other oc- cupations. Dick Dieterle, the fiddler and organizer of the group, is a pathologist. Charlie Roehrig works on his doctoral degree in economics when he isn't writing songs for the group or playing the guitar or mandolin. Paul Shapiro, the bass player, has been known to commute from Lansing, where he goes to medical school, on weekends. WHEN WILLARD SPENCER isn't building his home, playing the banjo, giving banjo lessons or restoring old cars, he could probably be found at the recording studio he owns. The RFD Boyshave already cut three albums at that studio and are working on the fourth, they say. The albums are simply named: RFD#1, RFD#2 and RFD#3. The RFD in their name stand for "Rural Free Delivery," a mail system designed for rural areas. "We wanted something country," says Dieterle. "RFD ac- tually began in Climax, Michigan. They even have a monument to RFD up there." THEIR BLUEGRASS following has grown from the day of their first performance at Mr. Flood's Party eight years ago. "Bluegrass has become a legitimate art form here. Ann Arbor is a great town for introducing something like this because of all the different kinds of people," Dieterle says. In the old days, their music was played before such audiences as the American Quarterhorse Association and the FLint Classical Music Society. "We were just trying for exposure, to have people listen to us," Dieterle explains. THAT'S NO longer the problem. Spencer's banjo playing ranges from a sort of per- cussion background to a front and center performance of complex rhythms, leaping to notes with an intensity which makes the audience stay on the edges of the seats. In addition to handling the guitar and mandolin in- strumentals, Roehrig also does the lead singing with a sincerity which lends new credibility to old ballads. SHAPIRO TAUGHT himself his slapping technique of bass playing while watching other players at bluegrass festivals. He also occasionally tries his voice at some singing. In the best of hillbilly fiddling traditions, Dieterle just lets his bow do the dancing across the strings. Thelnotes make the rattlesnake rattles on the fiddle shake just a bit. Dieterle says the rattles are there to "drive out the evil spirits." Some might say their music is driven by some form of unnatural spirits. "That was incredible!" says one listener after a_ Dieterle solo. "It's amazing," says another whenrSpencer finishes an improvisational solo on. the banjo. In between fast and furious bouts with the instrumen- ts and the music, the boys take a comic breather and ban- ter with the audience and among themselves. It's all part of the stage ,shove which consistently draws standing- room-only crowds to the P Bell on weekends. MARTY'S... GOES DUTCH TREAT WITH THEIR THIRD ANNUAL ... O DUTCH AUCTION SUITSr NOW THRU SATURDAY REGULAR PRICE $135 $155 $165 $190 $250 $275 WEDNESDAYS DUTCH TREAT $109 $139 $141 $1 b $224 $255 THURSDAYS DUTCH TREAT $99 $125 $135 $145 $209 $235 FRIDAYtS DUTCH TREAT $89 $109 $119 $129 $189 $215 DUTCH TREAT $79 $89 $99 $119 $175 $195, REGULAR $85 $90 $110 $125 $165 $200 SPORT COATS WEDNESDAY'S THURSDAY'S I'RODAY'S SATURDAY'S DUTCH TREAT DUTCH TREAT DUTCH TREAT DUTCH TREAT $75 $65 $55 $45 $79 $99 $109 $149 $179 $69 $89 $99 $139 $159 $59 $79 $89 $125 $149 $49 $69' $79 $109 $139 1 ,.N L A CASUAL SLACKS 14 DRESS SLACKS OFF SWEATERS 1/ Ski and Cardigans Fancy Wraps Patterned Crews & V-Necks. OFF others Our pledge to you .... Service, Sincerity, Satisfaction American Express " Master Charge Bank Americard LEVI JEANS ' $9.62 Corduroy $9.62 And Other Styles SPORT SHIRTS OFF EVERYTHINGFOR THE MANJ +ANN ARBOR F LANSING LEATHER COATS 1/2 LEATHER JACKETS TOP COATS 1/2 SUBURBAN COATS OFF 310 SOUTH STATE, ANN ARBOR Open Thursday and Friday 'Til 8:30 For easy access to Mortys New Rear Entronce, use the Maynard Street Carport .Dve to the East side of the a4th floor or above Take the elevator to the tst floor and out the exit to Mrtys. We wsill gladly validate your parking ticket. ;U Vi Looking for that Perfect Place? Then check the SUMMER SUBLET SUPPLEMENT appearing March 25 SNAKE-BIT YEAR SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - San Jose State had a losing football season in 1977 after three successful ones. Coach Lynn Stiles moaned about the misfor- tunes that hit his club. "Ten of our starting players under- went surgery, Stiles said. "That should have told me something but ap- parently I ignored it. I invited my in- laws to a game and guess what hap- pened? Mr father-in-law tripped on the stairs and broke a toe." THE HIGHLANOS 1 and 2 bedroom apartments includes security locsystem, drapes, dishwasher', lighted tennis courts, and pool Buses to aqd from campus daily 1693 Broadway, Apt. 302 769-36,72 Reaume and Doddes Management Co. Ann- This summer you can study in Paris with Parsons School of Design and earn nine academic credits. The seven week program provides students with an opportunity to draw upon the rich heritage of art and design only lParis can offer A major resource this summer will be The Ikmpidou International Center for the /arts' the world's most exiting new museum. EIxcursions to xoints outside I aRis are also part of the program. All courses carry three credits and include Painting. Museum I lai nt ini#. [)rawi ng. Visual Concepts. Fashion Seminar, The Writer Among Artists. rench History. History of Architecture. Interiors and i )ecorativu Arts. I [he Medi- evalMind as seen in' I )o1atinesque and ( othic Architecture and Sculpture. Academy and Avant Garde, and French I Anguage. The entire program. including nine studio and/or liberal arts credits, round trip air fare, accommodations with breakfast for seven weeks will cost $1,M). For mare information and an application mail the: coupon below or call (212) 741-8916.. . " 14 "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 e #. "THE FOOL HATH SAID IN HIS HEART, THERE IS NO GOD. THEY ARE CORRUPT; THEY HAVE DONE ABOMINABLE WORKS, THERE IS NONE THAT DOETH GOOD. THE LORD LOOKED DOWN FROM HEAVEN UPON THE CHILDREN OF MEN, TO SEE IF THERE WERE ANY THAT DID UNDERSTAND, AND SEEK GOD. THEY ARE ALL GONE ASIDE, THEY ARE ALTOGETHER BECOME FILTHY (The margin In the King James Version says the word here translated filthy is the Hebrew for "stinking!"): THERE IS NONE THAT DOETH GOOD, NO, NOT ONE!" This quote is the first three verses of the 14th Psalm, also of the 53rd of The Bible, God Almighty's Book of Messages to man. The New Testament confirms this appraisal of the natural man in Romans 3:10-12, as, indeed, do all The Scriptures from Alpha to Omega, from the beginning to the end. We need to be made "New Creatures" in Christ Jesus, and God's "So Great Salvation" provides the means by which this can happen to you: "Ask, and ye shall receive; Seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." Beware, however, of trifling and fooling around profanely and carelessly regarding your personal and individual relations with The Almighty in your church vows and membershipl in Isaiah 45:22-23, God says, "LOOK UNTO ME, AND BE YE SAVED, ALL THE ENDS OF THE EARTH: FOR I AM GOD AND THERE IS NONE ELSE. I HAVE SWORN BY MYSELF, has affected our own great nation - until recent years probably the most God-fearing and God blessed nation on the earth. By their own testimony Russian officials are fools in the sight of God, yet we gave them recognition a little over forty years ago, and now this corruption has so spread in our own land that we don't permit the recognition of God Almighty in our public schools, but give license to fools to teach our young the Russian devil doctrine that there is no God, or "God is dead!" Not only does God say that the fools who say there is no God are corrupt, but, also "they have done abominable works!" How guilty of the abominable works of oppression, persecution, mass murder, and no telling what else! They planned "abominable works" for many other nations and have been very successful in bringing them about. They planned "abominable works" for our nation, to bury us, to pervert the clergy, upset race relations, infiltrating nearly every phase of our lifel How successful they have been, and how we have fallen for itI May God have mercy upon us! "God's Word is true from the beginning, and every one of His righteous judgments endureth forever." Psalm 119:160. "Heaven and earth shall pass away, but My Words will not," said Christ, and the first recorded words of His after His bap- tism was stamp of approval of all The Old Testament -* see Matthew and Luke 4:4. The following quote is from a Historian concerning the anditionsabn.t the timen f the fal nf the Western rtionof I 1 &, ,IV # I f i