The Michigan Daily-Sunday, January 15, 1978-Page 7 250,000 left without power as Eastern ice storm continues By The Associated Press The Northeast was belted by a snow and ice storm that left a quater million people, mostly in the New York City area, without electricity yesterday. Utility officials said some customers might not have- power restored until this morning, as ice storm warnings continued. The storm clobbered New Eng-t land, leaving more than a foot of new snow in Vermont, 10 inches in Maine and New Hampshire and 15 inches in eastern New York. Bitter cold and snow flurries con- tinued in the Great Lakes region and Ohio Valley, and temperatures were expected to drop into the low- to mid- teens in Mississippi, Georgia, Ala- bama and Florida's Panhandle, which all had snow flurries yester- day. About 200,000 powercustomers on Long Island were without electricity yesterday morning because of sag- ging lines that, under the weight of ice, snapped poles. About 8,000 telephone customers were also af- fected and the Long Island Railroad reported delays of 2% hours on its lines because of electrical signal problems. By midday, power had been re- stored to about 65,000 Long Island customers but a spokeswoman for Long Island Lighting Co. said there was "every likelihood people will continue to lose power as the day goes on" and some customers might not have power restored until this morning. Scattered power outages also were reported in New Jersey and Connec- ticut communities within commuting distance of New York and as far, south as Virginia. Some estimates placed the number. of people left without electricity because of the Northeast storm at a half million. With forecasts for freezing rain and sleet and up to two more feet of snow in northern New England, utility officials called emergency crews on round-the-clock duty and police urged motorists to restrict travel to near-emergency need. The Postal Service canceled mail deliveries in Concord, N.H., because of the weather. State Police in Vermont said snow fell at the rate of an inch an hour and snowplows were having difficulty keeping roads open. SUMMER JOBI ANYONE-undergrad, grad, professor, with expe- rience in food or management Theme Park MARRIOT'S GREAT AMERICA GREANEY, ILL. (I hr north of Chicago) INTERVIEWING Jan. 19 & 20 Contact Ann Cooper-763-4117 Summer Placement Office Daily Photo by PETER SERLING Ed Wasen and his wife Leola don't let the cold weather keep them indoors. Selling apples at the Farmer's Market to the passersby seems to agree with them. . Al Yk*ER AT A L OSS FOR WORDS: Dr. Paul C. Uslan OPTOMETRIST Visual Analysis Full Contact Lens Service Cold Sterilization Soft Lens 545 Church St.-769- 1222 E Humphrey alks, overwate said and could build a (ContinuedfromPagel) sequence of themes along the way. I vidwest tradition of populism and think it helped Humphrey learn you o htical debate . just can't freewheel once you get into "It helps them to judge a man, to a national campaign." ee what intellectual and physical en- In view of the reputation he later urance he has," he said. "Perhaps gained, it is a bit ironic that one of the hey want to see how his mind works most important speeches of Hum- when he has been on his feet awhile phrey's career was one of the nd has run out of notes. shortest - less than 10 minutes. "They know about ghosts - notes It was at the Democratic national eould be prepared by a staff member. convention in Philadelphia in 1948, - but when a man has been on his where a somewhat listless party was eet beyond an hour, then he'd better } preparing to nominate Harry Tru- be able to think for himself." man, regarded widely as certain to lose his bid for re-election to Thomas HIS OWN staff members some- Dewey. imes despaired of Humphrey's hab- HUMPHREY, the mayor of Minne- ts. They would prepare long papers apolis with no national status, was ri the form of speeches, which determined to fight for a strong civil. Humphrey would digest and then rights plank, although he, too, was recal led pessimistic about the outcome. "The time has arrived for the Democratic Party to get out of the shadows of states' rights and walk forthrightly in the bright sunshine of human rights," he said. To his surprise, he won. To the sur- prise of most people, so did Truman the following November. The same election brought Hubert Humphrey to the U.S. Senate, where his persist- ence, buoyancy and dedicated home- work won for him many legislative triumphs against long odds. AS A MEMBER of the Agriculture Committee early in his Senate ca- reer, Humphrey once said, "I didn't become a U.S. senator to become the nation's leading expert on the boll weevil." t i i throw away to wing it on nis own. Waters has said that a measure of discipline was injected into that 1954 campaign in which Humphrey was making a dozen or more talks a day. His staff adopted the practice of preparing a press release digesting the main theme of each speech. "You can't control everything Humphrey says, but he would very religiously cover the part in the press release and then take off from there," Waters said. "THAT WAY we had some control CENTRAL CAFE FEA TURING: MEXICAN DINNERS AMERICAN-MEXICAN BREAKFASTS SANDWICHES, SOUPS, SALADS OPEN 7 AM-Midnight Mon.-Wed., 24 Hours Thurs-Sat., Sundays til 9 PM 322 S. MAIN 665-9999 HOUSING DIVISION RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATION FORMS FOR 1978-79 ACADEMIC YEAR Available Starting January 16, 1978 In Ms. CharleneCoady's Office, 1500 SAB POSITIONS INCLUDE: Head Resident, Resident Director, Assistant Resident Director, Resident Advisor, Head Librarian, Resident Fellow, CULS Counselor and Graduate Student Teaching Assistant Advisory positions require the completion of a minimum of 55 credit hours by the end of the 1978 Winter term for the Resident Fellows in Residential College, Resident Advisor and CULS Counselor positions: Graduate status for Graduate Student Teaching Assistant in Pilot Program, Head Librarian, Head Resident and Resident Director positions. However, qualified undergraduate applicants may be considered for the Resident Director positions. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a registered U. of M. student on the Ann Arbor Campus during the period of employment. (2) Must have completed a minimum of 55 credit hours by the end of the 1978 Winter term. (3) Preference will be given to applicants who have lived in residence halls at University level for at least one year. (4) Undergraduate applicants must have a 2.5 cumulative grade point average and graduate applicants must be in good academic standing at the end of the 1977 Fall term in the school or college in which they are enrolled. (5) Prefer