The Michigan Daily-Thursday, March 23, 1978-Page 3 F MUSEE Ews ' Pm.CzDAJY Fishy business We've all heard of "an eye for an eye," but "a fish for a fish?" The latest buy-one-get-one-free gimmick, coming from McDonald's and the Ann Arbor Pet Supply, entitles each purchaser of a Filet-o-Fish sandwich to a free goldfish. Observers are speculating McDonald's may soon work out a similar deal with cattle-raisers offering a free cow to any purchaser of 3000 Quarter Pounders (with cheese, of cour- se). Bull Runs, The First Michigan Volunteers is an historical association of Civil War enthusiasts who make their livelihood recreating mock Civil War battles and demonstrations. Last Monday night, the Volunteers petitioned City Council for permission to bring their show to Ann Arbor for the spring open house of the Cobblestone Farm Association on May 21. There will be a flag raising and lowering ceremony, a sabre demonstration, a rifle firing, and a cannon firing (powder only, of course, for the sake of neighborhood windows). But lo, this is, as they say, "the silly season," with an election just two weeks away, and one Democratic Councilman who asked not to be identified,.couldn't resist the opportunity for a pointed political barb. "If it was up to the Third Ward," he said, "They never would have freed the slaves. Happenings... ... Begin with a request for all persons who took photos at last month's Chick Corea/Herbie Hancock concert. Darryl Pitt needs your pix for possible use as art work for albums recorded live at the concert. No matter where you sat or what you shot, give him a call at 665-5593 by Tuesday. . . catch a quick breakfast at the Panhellenic Bake Sale in the Fishbowl. . . It begins at 9 and runs until 5. . . Get more cookies if you give blood at the Alpha Phi Omega Blood Drive at the Union that runs from 11-5 . . . the Italian Colloquium presents a speech at noon in 5208 Angell Hall on "Risorgimento, Fascism and Marxism in the Italian Cinema" . :. the Vietnam Teach-In continues at 1:30 with a panel discussion on "American Images of Vietnam and the Third World" in 2225 School of Education Building ... if you're in- terested in bicycle touring in Europe, pedal "What Can We Expect of Public Policy for Scientific Research?" Get the answers from Jerome Wiesner at 3:30 in Room 160, Hutchins Hall . . . at 4, the Vietnam Teach-In offers a veterans' seminar in Greene Lounge, East Quad . or learn all about "Mesozoic and Cenozoic Tectonics of Antarac- tica":(whatever that may be) from Ohio State Prof. David Elliott in Room 4001 C.C. Little, also at 4 ... break for dinner, then head over to the Washtenaw County Road Commission meeting room at 7:30, 555 N. Zeeb Rd., for a discussion of water quality and sewage treatment in Washtenaw County ... "From Tridents and Tanks to Tractors and Tables: From Folly to Food," a three-part program on economic con- version, will be presented at the Ann Arbor Public Library, 343 S. Fif- th, at 7:30. . . the Vietnam Teach-In continues at 7:30 with a discussion of "What Now?" in Schorling Auditorium, School of Ed. . . . the un- dergraduate Philosophy Club presents a talk by Prof. Donald Monroe on "The Theory and Practice of Model Emulation in Chinese Education" at 8 in the Commons Room of Angell Hall . . . also at 8, noted contemporary architect Charles Moore talks about "Connec- tions-Use of the Past" at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. . . Finally, a reminder that Project Outreach is still looking for persons interested in a full-time, spring internship program dealing with adolescence. For an application, go to 554 Thompson or call 764-9179. Amy ambles The nation's famous 10-year-old strolled through the center of Washington on -an architectural tour Tuesday and almost no one noticed, which is hard to understand since the freckled tyke was accompanied by two Secret Service agents, some of her fifth grade classmates and at least one reporter as she made her way through downtown streets gazing at buildings. r Only a woman accompanying several teenagers recognized the precocious youngster as she stood in front of historic Ford's Theatre. When the woman pointed, her companions began clicking their cameras. Amy just scowled. Most of the time she was in- tent on jotting things down in her notebook. When the other students were/ asked which of two buildings they liked best, many shouted their preference. But leave it to the President's daughter. " K -She responded, "I like them both in dif- ferent ways." On the outside Today the sun will make an appearance as a high pressure system moves down from Canada. It should become partly sunny later this af- ternoon with highs ranging from 42 to 45°. Tonight will be partly cloudy with a low from 25 to 28°. Daily Official Bulletin U.S.-Soviet gap widens due to ,. dispute MOSCOW-Soviet-American relations appear to have reached their lowest point in more than a year and many analysts feel the worst is yet to come unless both sides show new flexibility. Soviets and Americans have clashed on issues ranging from the Horn of Africa to the neutron bomb, and each side has publicly announced it is waiting for the other to change its stand. SINCE EACH country wants it known that it will not give in to pressure from the other, analysts predict continuing tension that can only complicate other major issues between the countries, in: cluding human rights and the SALT talks. The latest sign of tension was President Carter's speech last Friday at Wake Forest University, in which he called for a strong defense program and bluntly told the Soviet Union to exercise military restraint. The Soviet news agency Tass respoonded with unaccustomed speed, branding the speech "alarming" and a sign that Carter was moving from a policy of detente to one of "threats and a build-up of tension." on major world issues YET THE SOVIET Union, according to U.S. reports, is continuing its own arms build-up. The Pentagon has noted the deployment of new Soviet land- based missiles capable of hitting the United States and an increase in con- ventional weaponry. U.S.-Soviet negotiations on a new SALT pact, which the Soviets call the "centerpiece of detente," remain delayed by essentially the same issues as a year ago. These include the development of new missiles, the coun- ting of missiles in each country's ar-. senal and the capabilities of the Soviet Backfire bomber. Last year SALT appeared to be the major U.S. - Soviet issue, but the arms talks are now only a part of a much more complicated U.S.-Soviet faceoff. AMERICANS WERE angered by the appearance of Soviet advisers and Cuban troops in Ethiopia, even though they were invited by Ethiopia to repel an invasion by neighboring Somalia. In his Wake Forest speech, Carter said that if the Soviets fail to show restraint in new arms programs and "the projection of Soviet proxy forces into other lands and continents," U.S. lqkdam i/ v v w qw %-Ofw r R..l t..7 %./9V / . 19..7 support for social, scientific and economic ties with Moscow may wane. If the Soviets should call the American bluff by leaving communist forces in Ethiopia and continuing an arms build-up, the United States may have to take retaliatory action to back up Carter's threat. SIMILARLY, THE Soviets demand an end to plans for the proposed U.S. neutron bomb, which Soviet newspapers call the most dangerous development in the arms race since the hydrogen bomb. The Soviets have publicly promised that if the bomb is deployed, the Kremlin will be forced to take "an- swering measures," presumably referring to production of their own neutron bomb. In the field of human rights, the United States has made the upcoming trial of Anatoly Shcbaransky, a 30-year- old Soviet dissidenta focal point of U.S. -Soviet relations. THE U.S. THREATENS retaliation in trade relations, SALT negotiations or other arenas if Shcharansky is tried ATTITUDE ADJUSTMENT HOURS- 3:00-6:00 p.M Monday-Friday % PRICE DRINKS 15C HOT DOGS w /all the trimmings and severely punished. Here, too, ac- tion by one supporter could force retaliatory moves by the other. There are other tense areas as well. With all the side issues, some third- country diplomats here doubt that any early SALT agreement can be reached. Only if Washington and Moscow are prepared to retreat on some other issues, the analysts believe, can major issues of strategic arms and human rights be settled. Karl Wallenda falls to death d SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) - Karl Wallenda, who cheated death for more than half a century on the high wire, was killed yesterday when he fell during a promotional appearance for a circus in which he was performing with his granddaughter. Wallenda, 73, consistently refused to give up performing, despite accidents through the years which killed four members of his family and left his son paralyzed from the waist down. "I FEEL BETTER up there than I do down here. It is my whole life," he once said. Wallenda, who first walked the wire in 1920, made the statement less than three weeks after two members of the Great Wallendas were killed and he himself was injured when their famed seven-member pyramid collapsed in an appearance in Detroit on Jan. 30, 1962. Wednesday's accident occurred while Wallenda was walking, through strong winds, on a wire stretched 10 stories high between the towers of a beachfront hotel in a promotion for' the Pan American circus. WALLENDA FELL an estimated 120 feet to the driveway of the Condado Holiday Inn Hotel before hundreds of spectators. He died in San Juan's Presbyterian Hospital at 10:20 a.m., soon after the fall. "The people who work with Wallenda in the act ran around in a panic, screaming 'Oh my God, oh my God,'" said Gary Williams, a local newspaper photographer. "Everybody was hysterical. People were fainting, collapsing on the ground." iiring. stunt Another witness, Victor Abbound, an accountant from Montreal, said: "I saw him go down on his knees on the wire and I thought he was kneeling to rest. But then I saw he was shaking. The winds blew him off and he went all the way down, head first." WILLIAMS SAID, that Wallenda, leaning into the wind as he inched his way across the wire, "seemed to be losing it," halfway through the stunt. "His balance pole was going up and down. One of the people who work with him in the act was watching from the roof. He yelled: 'Sit down, sit down.' Wallenda sat, but he missed the wire and went down." James Harrington, the manager of the Pan American circus, was asked if Wallenda was worried about the wind. "No, he thought it was fine," said Harrington. "He tested and installed the wire himself." Wallenda, who was born in Germany and came to the United States in the 1920s, was performing nightly in San Juan on a 50-foot-high wire with his granddaughter, Rietta. His best-known - and most dangerous - act was the three-level pyramid. The bottom level consisted of four men, linked, two each, by shoulder bars. Two more men stood on the shoulder bars and a woman stood on a chair balanced on a pole supported by those on the second level. "We had close calls many times, but never any serious injury until the pyramid," Wallenda's brother, Her- man, once said. II Just four health o Get moving, America! pep Physical Education Public Info 2enlran A Alanh t WWa,- Physical Ecduc'on ,r: 1201 36th St N w0.W;. 44 I .4 4 I I -4 v_ e t "0aE'~ .r " 14p y,. w. omi th4 of it BLUE FROG1GE rmation 1 D C - 611 Church 995-5955 I Coming to the I.M.A. Auditorium on Easter Sunday in Flint, Michigan WILD CHERRY (recorded Hit Tune: "Play That Funky Music White Boy"). THE CON-FUNK-SHUN (Hit Tune: "Fun, Fun") and also appearing The Great Lakes Music Box Time: 8 P.M. Tickets are $5.50 and $6.50 Mail orders accepted Call the I.M.A. Auditorium Box Office: (313) 234-4633, open daily BOARD FOR STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ELECTION (held with MSA Election) ONE STUDENT MEMBERSHIP OPEN IN G4R- _e I e r . s v ort eOV KDu W - oor THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1978 Day Calendar: urban Planning Program: T. Brooks Brademas, "Renovation of a 125 year old Brewery," 2104 Art/Arch., 12:30 p.m. Natural Resources: Hatch Graham, USFS, Alaskan Affairs, "Private Forest Industry in Alaska," 1040 Nat. Res. 3 p.m. Math: Maurice Roseau, "Quasi-periodic Solutions of Non-Linear Differential Equations in the Critical Case," 3007 Angell, 3 p.m. Geology/Mineralogy: David Elliott, Ohio State U., "Mesozoic and Cenozoic Techtonics of Antartica," 4001 CCL, 4 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: M. Einhorn, "New Heavy Particles in the Weinberg-Salam Model?", 2038 Randall Lab., 4 p.m. Museum of Art: Donald Baum, Roosevelt U., "The Contemporary Art of Chicago," Aud., D, Angell, 7 p.m. Social Work: Beth Reed, "Alcohol, Substance Abuse, and Women: Leo McNamara, "Alcohol and the American Novel," 3063 Frieze, 7:30 p.m. Guild House: Poetry reading, Jonathan Ellis, Steven Schwartz, Steve Cohen, Paul Hubbell, 802 Monroe, 7:30 p.m. Chemistry: Alan G. acDiarmid, "Polyacetylenes," 1300 Chemistry, 8 p.mi IJXATCN fAu(cT(&) 13ooK54g-. rC T5 --e d . '- ' A ., n4. -R