The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, March 1, 1978-Page 3 I 'C. 'MU SEE WW O ltlWDW Notoriei ruvu 1i t my overdue Te 11 An arm and an arm So graduation is looming closer than ever before, and you still haven't found that golden career. You're beginning to say you'd give an arm or a leg for that perfect job. Well, you're not alone. Seattle's Bob Ingram is not only willing to give up one arm, he'll give up eight octupus arms, that is. Ingram and two friends have just started an octupus farm beneath Pier 30 on the Seattle waterfront. The enterprising businessmen applied for state permission to grow and harvest octupuses along the northwestern shore. The eight-tentacled creatures are fed by hand (another way to 1 ose an arm) three times a day, in an effort to make them marketable as bait for Alaska fishers. Of course, Ingram tries not to get too tangled up in his work. Happenings .:.. fire up at 10 when the Revolutionary Communist Youth Brigade sponsors a day of solitary with the striking coal miners in the Fish- bowl. From noon until 1 the group will also be in front of the Union. .Find out about backpacking in Europe at the International Center at noon... Or listen to Rudolph Linder speak on "Russia, China and the Steppe" in the Lane Hall Commons Room.. Also at noon, the movie "Bottle Babies" will be shown at 2040 Dana Building... The Ann Arbor Committee for Human Rights in Latin America will hold its weekly brown bag lunch at noon (of course) in Suite One on the third floor of the League ... Deciphher those boggling 1040's at a free income tajc clinic at 3 in Conference Rooms 4, 5 and 6 in the basement of the Union. There'll be free information, in- dividual assistance and coffee, too.. . University of Minnesota Prof. Michael Maratos speaks on "Models of Language Acquisition" at 4 in Schorling Auditorium, School of Ed... "Western Models and African Realities: Policy Making in East Africa" will be the topic of Goran Hyden's talk at 4 in MLB Lecture Room 2 ... "Bottle Babies" will be aired at 7 at Guild House, 802 Monroe ... the Ebony Film Coop spon- sors a benefit showing of Billy Jack at 7 and 9 in MLB 1.. . at 7:30 the Spartacus Youth League explains "Why the Working Class Needs a Revolutionary Party" in 220 Tyler House, East Quad... The Ann Ar- bor Bridge Club will have Swiss teams and newcomer games at 7:30 (partner guaranteed) at the First Unitarian Church, Washtenaw and Berkshire... at 8, Goran Hyden discusses "Small is Powerful: A Re- Analysis of the Role of Peasants in African Development" at the In- ternational center... the Pendleton Arts Information Center presen- ts Ken Feit, "The Fool and his Vision" at 8 in the Pendleton Center, second floor of the Union ... the Music School's Symphony Orchestra performs at 8 in Hill Auditorium. Somewhere over the rainbow Drive-in movies. Drive-in hamburger stands. Now there will be a drive-in rainbow. New Orleans artist Emery Clark has the backing of Mayor-President Woody Dumas for her plans to turn the city's Inter- state 10 bridge across the MississippI River into a "drive-in rainbow". She proposes paintint the bridge in 24 dazzling colors. "It's rather far out, but when you get to thinking about it, it's unique," said Dumas of the $2 million project. What's that about the rainbow at the end of the pot of gold? 0r On the outside -... The southern and eastern portions of the U.S. have once again received rain and snow. Here in Ann Arbor, a high pressure center will clear our skies by afternoon today and boost the mercury up to 230. These same clear skies, however, will drop our low tonight to a chilly 70. By JEFFREY WOLFF Unless you're an expert on University trivia, the odds are that you don't know what the Clements Library is, where it is, or what it does. It's the kind of place, Director John Dann observes, that seniors visit for the first time on their way back from commencement exer- cises just to satisfy an unfulfilled four- year curiosity. The Italian renaissance-styled building on South University is nestled between President Fleming's house and the UGLI. And with the monolithic structure of the Grad Library looming over it, the Clements appears to be a relic of ages past. This image is rein- forced upon entering the cavernous, an-. tique-filled main hall which creates an atmosphere closer to that of a holy shrine than of the typical University library. WHILE THE CLEMENTS Library doesn't match the UGLI in noise or in the number of crushed coffee cups adorning its floors, it is still far from under-utilized. And though its physical appearance may appear outmoded when compared with new University construction projects, the value of its contents as scarce and indispensable sources for primary research has become recognized nationally and even internationally. The library opened in 1923, housing over 20,000 books and manuscripts, mot from William Clements' private collec- tion. Clements, an 1882 engineering graduate, had a strong interest in history. Today the libarary possesses nearly 45,000 books, over 4000 volumes of newspapers, 350 manuscript collec- tions, 36,000 maps and thousands of pieces of sheet music of early Americana up through the Civil War. With $40,000 at its disposal for pur- chases-$15,000 from the University and the rest from its own fundraising efforts-the Clements has built itself in- to an invaluable primary source research library, not by expensive and dramatic acquisitions, but by a careful and well-focused selection process. Director Dann estimates he spends two hours a day culling through the over 1000 auction catalogues he receives an- nually in the process of choosing the 400 to 600 books and 100 manuscripts he will actually buy each year. THE MAJORITY OF ,purchases are under $50, and each item is first con- sidered for its value as a primary sour- ce in terms of uniqueness and research potential of its content. Donations of collections to the library, usually from University alum- ni, make up another significant source of material. But these contributions .rary' don't just appear on the library step; they require hard work an luck. As Dann explains, an a will often notify the library the great-grandmother has hundred and wrinkled letters in her atl nobody really knows what is in Dann will usually make trip vestigate just "for that one tim when those letters actually tur be real of historical merit." As a specialized collection o Americana, the Clements i primarily by PhD cand professors and other scholars, nual total of whom is somewher hundreds. Each must first me Dann to ensure that he is qual take advantage of the library's and precious resources. THE EXTENSIVE collec limited to material through th nobody ki 's door- War and focuses on major periods and d lots of movements-European exploration lumnus and settlement of the New World, the iat "his American Revolution, the westward Is of old movement and the Civil War. It begins tic and, where any collection on the New World them." should-with Christopher Columbus' to in- letter as printed in Rome in 1493 telling e in 100 Spainof his discovery of the West In- n out to dies. There are over 150 corresponden- ce to and from George Washington, not )f early all of which have great historical im- s used pact-like the one from Washington to idates, his dentist complaining about teeth the an- pains. re in the Many of the Clement's manuscripts et with and letters give life to facts previously' lified to just studied in history courses. There unique are Benedict Arnold's letters to and from the British, British military maps tion is three to five feet long depicting every he Civil house in a five-mile radius of New Jer- n1ows sey, a letter to Paul Revere from his wife advising him to stay out of sight, Cornwallis' epistle to London admitting his surrender to-the rebels. Of more local interest are Anthony Wayne's message that he had conquered Detroit from the Indians and a document giving Mackinac Island to the Indians. These are represenative of a collection which attracts 75 per cent of its users from outside the Ann Arbor area, with some even coming from abroad. Although the library's book division is used primarily by local students and professors, it too boasts some unique volumes. One of the most impressive books is an account of Magellan's cir- cumnavigation of the world written by one of the 35 survivors. One of the seven known copies of this book was recently sold at an auction for $110,000. Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN The Clements Library has a bit more class than the UGLI. The little-known library has a vast collection of historical books and documents and special permission is needed to use the facilities. Detroit to appeal ruling striking down police affirmative action, DETROIT (UPI) - When Coleman Young became the city's first black mayor .five years ago, he pledged to wipe out racism in the police depar- tment he had campaigned against with an ffirmative action hiring and promotion policy. Since then, his administration has more than doubled the number of blacks in the department and placed many in key leadership positions - from the precinct level to the front of- fice. BUT NOW the program has been ruled unconstitutional by a federal judge who held that it violated "the rights guaranteed under the 14th Amendment - a decision that could rival the Allen Bakke case in terms of racial precedent. City attorneys said yesterday they will appeal Monday's ruling by U.S. District Judge Fred Kaess to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincin- nati and predicted the judge would ultimately be overturned. ATTORNEYS FOR the white- dominated Detroit Police Officers Association, plaintiff in the case, said its outcome could be affected by the Bakke case now pending before the Supreme Court. Bakke claims he was denied admission to a California medical school while less-qualified black applicants were accepted. Kaess' ruling applies only to the promotion of sergeants in the depar- tment, but will effectively nullify the af- firmative action program as a whole unless it is overturned. Though deliberately avoiding the term "reverse discrimination," Kaess held that "racial discrimination is as indefensible when practiced against whites as when practiced against Young implemented a 50 percent departmental hiring quota in a move to wipe out what he called the police for- ce's "extremely racist attitudes." "Anybody who does not know that racism exists in the Detroit Police Department must live in another city or another planet," Young said at the tim. "any time you see a fuzzy-cheeked, white police officer calling some black woman 50-years-old 'Annie,' that's racism, pure and simple. Daily Official Bulletin Wednesday, March 1, 1978 Daily Calendar Ctr. Russian/E. European Studies: Rudolph Linder, "Russia, China and the Steppe," Commons Lane Hall, noon. Industrial/Operations Eng.: Joseph L. Engelberger, president Robot Institute of America, Danbury, Conn., "Industrial Robots," 229 W. Eng., 2:30 p.m.; Maurita Rolland, "On-Line Retrieval of Literature," 401 W. Eng., 4 p.m. MHRI: Steven Green, Rockefeller U., "Vocal Communication in Macaca Monkeys," E. Conf. rm., Rackham, 3:30 p.m. Natural Resources: Steven Moorhead, Richard Strong, 1040 Nat. Resources, 4 p.m. Ctr. Early Childhood Development Ed.: Michael Maratsos, University of Minnesota, "Models of Language Acquistion," Schorling Aud., SEB, 4 p.m. Statistics: J. E. Keith Smith, "Fitting Log-Linear Models," 451 Mason Hall, 4 p.m. Music School: Symyphony Orchestra, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: R. C. Richardson, Cornell U., "Helium 3 Magnetic Super-conduction Without Charge," 296 Dennison, 4 p.m. General Notice A woman who manages a large apartment com- ples, a real estate sales associate, and a property management firm vice-president talk about their careers at a workshop planned by "Real Estate and Property Management Careers" will be Tuesday, March 7, 9:00-11:30 a.m., East Conference Room, Rackham. Women who want to put a liberal arts eduction to work in the Ann Arbor area or are con- sidering vocational alternatives are especially welcome. The panel will be joined by other women with liberal arts backgrounds to talk about the practical realities of what they do and how to get started. A resource list of women in. the community will be available for people who would like to explore a field in detail. There will also be educational and technical resource materials. The CEW series, "Getting or Starting a Job: Workable Ideas from Women Who Have DonesIt" included workshops on starting your own business, careers in banking and finance, and administrative opportunities as executive secretary and ad- ministrative assistant. Information about local resource contacts for each field is available at CEW, 328-330 Thompson, phone-763-1353. HeyBaby.,. going my way? find out! Advertise in the Daily Classifieds under Transportation. CHARLIE CHAPLIN'S THE GOLD RUSH (at 78 10) The late great Chaplin as the Tramp goes north during the Klondike Featuring Rush of 1898. Possibly the best JAMES H.HAWTIORNE, silent ever made. Guest Artist-in-Residence BUSTER KEATON'S Wed.-Sat., March1-4, 8pm THE GENERAL SunMarch5,2pm (at 8:30 onMy) Power Center The Union Army steals Buster's lo- comotive and he tries all out to get it back. Possibly the best silent A Pay Howard sackir ever ode.Pulitzer Pt ize Winner ever made.Tony Award - BestPlay THURS: KING KONG (originol) M.Y Drama Critics' Award CINEMA GUILD $1.50 EACH SHOW $2.50 FOR BOTHPw Cn Bx f* OLD ARCH. AUD. the01 a arbor film cooperative presents: JOHN FORD FESTIVAL THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCE (John Ford, 1962) 7 ONLY-AUD. A Ford's most personal film, the poignant culmination of fifty years of filmmaking. Ford uses a simple story (a senator returns to a western town for the funeral of a pauper and tells an inquiring reporter the truth about the man who shot Liberty Valance) to explore the tension between reality and symbol, truth and legend. Probably the masterwork of one of America's greatest artists. "THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCE achieves greatness as a unique work of art with the emotional and intellectural resonance of personal testament."-Andrew Sarris. JOHN WAYNE, JAMES STEWART, LEE MARVIN, VERA MILES, EDMUND O'BRIEN, ANDY DEVINE. THEFSEARCHES 764-0557 A- Coleman Young: 'Any time you see a fuzzy-cheeked, white police officer calling some black woman 50- years-old 'Annie,' that's racism, pure and simple. And it happens every day.' C M.MA..C ft ~IAM