s mSEE &1S HAPEM CAALZDNY Unaccustomed to power' Our new mayor is apparently unaccustomed to the raw power in his hands. After he appointed three Council members to a committee Monday night, he asked if he needed Council approval for the appoin- tments. When informed that its O.K. wasn't needed, the neophyte Mayor replied in mock disbelief, "It's just too powerful for any one person.''" Victory is sweet It seems East Quad residents emerged victorious in yet another round in the war between man and machine. After one student put some money in a dorm vending machine, candy and gum became ac- cessible with only the push of their respective buttons. Within minutes a crowd had gathered and a mob assembled around the machine, ac- cording to freshman #Ken Feldman. Feldman said the group was "wildly groping" for anything they could get'their hands on. "The people in the middle (of the crowd) were being beaten," he said. One observer speculated that a local dentist was behind the incident. Happenings ... ., ... begin with some food for thought, so to speak. The legal defen- se fund for Lucio Rivera, sponsored by La Raza law students' organization, will hold a bake sale from 8-1 in front of room 100, Hut- chins Hall. Continuous showings of the films "You say Chicano" and "I.M. Joaquim" will be presented in Room 100 ... INFACT will also hold a bake sale, beginning at 9, on the Diag . .. You can pick up an, armband to show opposition to the Bkke decision between 9 and 2 in the Fishbowl. .. Remember that big, green frog that was on campus a few weeks ago? That was Herman, the star of "Herman Goes to College," which premiers at 10 in 411 Mason . . . at noon a rally celebrating the 30th anniversary of Israel's independence will be held on the Diag .. Dr. Dorothy Skaardal, director of American Studies at the University of Oslo, Norway, speaks at noon in 520& Angell Hall on "Scandinavian Immigrant Literature" . . . the Gay Academic Union sponsors a lecture by Mark Flynn on "Job Bias Against Gay People: A Caselaw Perspective" at noon in 212 Hutchins Hall ... "Your Rights as a Tenant: What Do the New Housing Laws Mean for You" will be explored at 3 in a mini-course in the Kuenzel Room of the Union ... Committee C, the Biological Research Review Committee, will meet at 3 in Room 3087, School of Public Health I. Visitors are welcome, but must call 764-6435 in advance . . Prof. Kenneth Landes speaks on "Storage of Radioactive Waste in Salt Mines" at 3:30 in Room 310 Automotive Lab . . . Buzz Alexander and Jane Siegal will hold a colloquium on "Politics and Film" at 3:30 in Room 315 Old A&D. "Hour of the Furnaces" will be shown. . . Harold Leventhal discusses "When the Courts Review - of Generalist Judges Overseeing Specialized Agencies" at 3:30 in 100 Hutchins Hall. A panel discussion will follow . . . Two one-act plays of Chekhov and Strindberg will be presented at 4 in the Frieze Building's Arena Theatre. .. Author Tom Wolfe delivers the Hopwood lecture at 4 in the Rackham Lecture Hall. He'll speak on "Literary Technique in the Last Quarter of the Twen- tieth Century." . . . "Investigation of Thin Water Film Behavior and Droplet Motoun with Co-current Vapor Flow" will be discussed by Wontaik Kim at 4 in Room 3042 G.G. Brown Lab... the Michigan Association of Gerontology Students holds its annual meeting at 7 in the Michigan League Library. Beth Ferguson, state director of Office of Services for the Aging will talk about "Conversations on Aging: News frofn Lansing and Washington :." an evening of "Nineteenth Century American Ballroom Dance and Music" begins at 8 in the Clements Library.. On the outside .... Today will be the last day of spring-like temperatures as Old Man Winter returns for a while. Expect partly sunny skies with moderate southwesterly winds and a high of 58-61. We'll cloud up tonight as another cold front passes through the area and temperatures will fall considerably. Expect a low of 30-33 with a slight chance of snow flurries (yep, snow!) It will be partly cloudy and cold tomorrow with a high around 45. Daily Official Bulletin Milliken request LANSING (UPI) - Gov. William Milliken's office promised yesterday to weigh the personal interests of a deeply religious Detroit woman against those of Alabama officials demanding her return for a 1951 prison escape. Lizzy Williams, 60, was named in an extradition petition signed last week by Alabama Gov. George Wallace. Williams was sentenced to 218 years in prison in 1942 for lying to protect her boyfriend from an armed robbery charge. SHE FLED AFTER serving nine years and went to live with a sister in Detroit. A fight between the two women several months ago prompted the sister to for weig '51 i The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, April 12, 1978-Page 3 extradition to tell police of Lizzy's past. Milliken scheduled an extradition hearing at the State Capitol today to consider Williams plea for special con- sideration. She was expected to attend with an attorney. Milliken aide Peter Ellsworth said Alabama extradition laws give Wallace little room for clemency, but Milliken has more leverage. "WHAT GOVERNOR Milliken is in- terested in looking at are the equities, issues that can't be raised in court," Ellsworth said. "It's a balancing of the interests of Alabama versus the in- terests of this woman." Williams was an unmarried mother of a young daughter in 1942 when she prison met Turner Washington in Mon- tgomery, Ala. One night he begged her to say he was with her all night because he had stolen a gold watch, an overcoat and about $65. She lied for Washington, but both were eventually convicted of charges stemming from the theft. Two charges against her drew 99 years each, and a third carried 20 years. After nine years at an Alabama prison farm, she fled to Michigan at the invitation of her sister Annie. Williams became involved in local church work, and a court bond officer placed her in the custody of a Baptist church pending her extradition hearing. Gov. William Milliken, who scheduled an extraordinary hearing today to consider Williams' plea for special consideration. Co'al stri~ke over; woes con tinue CHARLESTON, W. Va. (AP) - For several thousand Appalachian coal- miners, the end of the 111-day United Mine Workers (UMW) strike has not meant an end to hardship. They are laid off because the export market for metallurgical coal is bad and the strike left shipping tangled. It could be next month before many resume work, and some will have to wait longer. Several hundred will have to look for other jobs. IN ADDITION, 1,100 employees of Pittston Coal Group's Clinchfield Coal Co. in southwest Virginia began a wild- cat strike yesterday. Hugh Flaherty, a spokesman at Pit- tston headquarters in Greenwich, Conn., said the strike began over sym- pathy for a worker discharged last Paintings damaged by German, vandals FRANKFURT, West Germany (AP) - In the third attack on European art in nine days, vandals smeared two pain- tings at the Staedel Museum here with a colorless paste that caused the oil to run, police said yesterday. Experts were trying to determine whether they could restore the two damaged art works, "Joyful Com- pany"by 17th century Dutch master Dirck Hals and a 15th century triptych - a three-paneled painting - by an unknown Spanish artist. THE VALUE OF the paintings was not immediately available. The damage was-discovered at about 1 p.m., police reported. Officials said they had no clue as to the identity of the vandal or vandals. Hilmar Hoffman, city cultural direc- tor, said more vandalism attempts at Frankfurt art museums could not be ruled out and announced he was placing guards on special alert to prevent any new attacks. The Staedel, located on the banks of Main River near Frankfurt's commer- cial center, is the city's major art showcase. The museum is currently displaying works from the famous Hir- sch collection valued at millions of dollars and attracting a larger-than-' usual audience. LAST YEAR, A 40-year-old German widower who told investigators "I must destroy what other men cherish" con- fessed to vandalizing nearly a dozen art treasures in West German galleries by spraying sulfuric acid on the paintings with a syringe, The man, Hans- Joachim Bohlmann, was arreted and committed to a mental institution. Priceless works by Rembrabdt and Rubens were among those badly damaged paintings, but art restorers succeeded in saving them. The Frankfurt vandalism comes af- ter two knife-slashing attacks on pain- tings in London and Amstertam last week. Both those assailants had en- tered the museums as spectators, of- ficials say. ON APRIL 3, a man slashed Nicholas Poussin's 17th century painting "Adoration of the Golden Calf" at Lon- don's National Gallery. Salvatore Bor- zi, a 27-year-old Italian resident of Lon- don, was arrested and charged with causing criminal damage to the ar- twork. Officials said the paintings, valued at $925,000, could be restored. Two days later, a 31-year-old Dutch- man who claimed he was trying to draw attention to the plight of poor artists sliced three long gashes in a Van Gogh painting in Amsterdam's Municipal Museum. The Amsterdam artist, who was not identified, was charged with willflly damaging the art work, "La Berceuse", and later released from custody. Art experts said there was a 90 per- cent chance that the work, whose value is estimated between $425,000 and $850,00 could be fixed. In September, 1975, a Dutchman ar- med with abread knife attacked Rem- brandt's "Night Watch" painting in another Amsterdam gallery, and in 1972, a man took a hammer to Michelangelo's "Pieta" statue in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican. Both works were restored. Hit FtSUD10 Stereo & TA'. Service Fast-Competent RENTMA TSJDENT RATES 215 S. Ashley 769-0342 Downtown, I block west of Main, between Washington and Liberty week for missing three days of work without a proper excuse. But the slack foreign market for metallurgical coal and problems ship- ping coal overseas were causing the biggest trouble. METALLURGICAL coal is used for making steel, and is of a higher grade than the steam coal burned in power plants. Domestic power plants, whose stocks of coal had dwindled drastically during the strike, have been busy restocking since miners went back to work March 27, so most of the 160,000 United Mine Workers members who had been on strike since Dec. 6 have returned to work. But in contrast, some mines serving forign customers are idle. "Chartered vessels that carry the coal overseas from Hampton Roads, Va., have not been available," said Flaherty. "The strike made it impossible for our foreign coal customers, 'mainly the Japanese, to schedule vessels into the port until they were certain the strike would be over." And that, in turn, was making it difficult to obtain railroad cars to move the coal to port. Pittston, the largest U.S. producer- exporter of metallurgical coal, has laid off 1,100 miners at nine mines and two preparation plants in southern West Virginia. Dennus O'Neill of Con- solidated Coal Co., another large' producer of metallurgical coal, said his firm had three West Virginia mines closed yesterday, with 600 miners out of work. O'NEILL SAID the immediate cause was a shortage of railroad cars, but the firm also has had long-term difficulties with the foreign market. Toward the end of the strike, the company announced it was permanen- tly closing three other southern West Virginia mines which employed 544 persons. At the time, Consolidation attributed the closings to poor productivity. That, coupled with higher labor costs in the United States, which will be even higher because of the wage increases granted under the new UMW contract, makes it difficult for Amserican coal to compete with coal roduced abroad, O'Neill said. "WHAT WE HAVE is a situation where costs are rising dramatically in these mines and productivity has taken a real tumble - where some of these mines are only producing four or five tons a day," he said. According to Dan Fields of the West Virginia Coal Association, the United States had a 40 percent share of the foreign coal market in 1974, but that had declined to 24 percent in 1977 - largely due to competition from Australia and Canada. He said the statewide production average ,in West Virginia is eight tons a day per man. LADES HALF PRICE ON DRINKS South University near Washtenaw 769-1744 Wednesday. April 12. 1978 Daily Calendar Statistics: Edward Korn, Stanford-U.. "Classifi- cation Errors in Contingency Tables," 451 Mason, 4 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: M. Kosterlitz, Princeton-U. "Phase Transitions in Two Dimensions," 296 Den- nison, 4 p.m. Hopwood Lecture: Tom Wolfe, "Literary Technique in the Last Quarter of the 20th Century," Rackham Lee. Hall, 4 p.m. General Notice University of Michigan Center for Continuing Education of Women will name 27 CEW Scholars for 1978-79 Thursday. April 20. Dorothy G. Mcguigan, Program Director of CEW, will talk with, the scholars and guests about women scholars in history and today. Dr. Charles F. Lehmann, Chairman of the faculty Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, will greet the scholars. The awards will be presented by Jean W. Campbell, Center Director; Lorraine R. Perry. Associate Professor of Social Many good cooks like to ise beef chuck rather than beef round for meatballs because chuck is a fattier cut than round and that factor benefits the flavor of the meatballs. If you have a food processor you can easily grind the meat at home. Work: and Roberta Keniston, formerly a library administrator at the University of Michigan and Eastern Michigan University and Reference Librarian; Ann Arbor Public Library (retired). The award program and reception celebrating the eighth year of the CEW Scholarship program is at 8 p.m. in the Assembly Hall, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies. SThe No. 1 Rock-n-RolDisco 737 N. Huron (at Lowelljust east of the E.M.U, Campus) TONIGHT ONLY M2 cover charge before 9:00 bar time and DISCO BETWEEN SETS DRINK SPECIALS See our DYNAMITE LIGHT SHOW THURSDA : :Drink N' Drown Large GAME ROOM with pool tables ROCK BOTTOM PRICES LADIES NIGHT: /2off cover charge THE HOPWOOD AWARDS FOR 1978 WILL RE ANNOUNCED Wednesday, April 12, 1978 -4:00 p.m. Rackham Lecture Hall, Main Floor, Rackham Bldg. LECTURE by TOM"WOLFE "Literary Technique in the un, pomt10:20 2:15 4:30 7:15