Page 10-Tuesday, September 13, 1977-The Michigan Daily Wet, weary balloonists Council votes to bu post office By JULIE ROVNER "ACTUALLY, there are three things they could own enough space to avoid' well as approving third year funds resc u e in Ac The Ann Arbor City Council voted last they (GSA) can do," said Councilman paying any rent at all, the Community Development B] night, 11-1, to allocate $107,000 for the Jamie Kenworthy (D-Fourth Ward). Also last night, Council voted a $478,- Grant (CDBG) housing and phy REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) - Two miles in their attempt to be the first purchase of the old Federal Post Office "They can either negotiate with us, put 500 increase in the 1977-78 budget, as improvements plan. __ . 1. 1..1 .... ....... 1.. A1..4. 1..1l.S ..4 +t- nn n ±2 - - P- - - taL--------± . « . th s fo so rsica American balloonists who splashed down in the chilly North Atlantic off Iceland yesterday in an unsuccessful attempt to drift from the United States to Europe said they were in good shape but "we won't give it another try." Ben Abruzzo, 47, and Maxie Ander- son, 44, both from Albuquerque, N.M., spoke to reporters in Reykjavik where they landed at 11 p.m. (7 p.m. EDT) in a U.S. Air Force helicopter after being rescued from their balloon's floating gondola. THEY WERE WET, weary and dis- appointed. The pair had travelled nearly 2,000 men to balloon across the Atlantic. They came down 80 miles short of their target after more than 60 hours in the air. Abruzzo and Anderson said they were forced down after their five-story-high balloon, Double Eagle, began icing up and was trapped in whirlpool winds.. "THE MAIN TROUBLE started when we drifted into icy weather early yesterday and we soon began losing altitude," Abruzzo said. "The balloon iced up badly, At the same time, we were caught by the win- ds and began to drift north instead of south. The weather was pure hell." building at the corner of Main and Catherine Streets. Exactly what the building will be used for has not yet been decided, al- though suggestions include District Court offices, a cultural arts center, or a neighborhood services center. THE BUILDING, which actually be- longs to the General Services Adminis- tration (GSA) and not the Post Office Department, has a current asking price of $147,000. Council had originally planned to offer $53,000 for the structure, with the county chipping in the same amount. For the moment, however, the county had backed out.- Council simply voted to put up the county's ,share in the hope that the county will change its mind later and make the building into a new city- county office. the property up for public sale, or take the bid." Kenworthy pointed out that a prob- lem with putting it up for public sale is that the 60-year-old building has a historical designation, and therefore the facade cannot be changed. "They can't just tear it down and put up a gas station," he said. BESIDES THE' FACT that Council considered the building financially a good deal, the feeling was also ex- pressed that it had a strategic location. "Face it, that corner is the key to the restoration of downtown," said Coun- cilman Louis Belcher (R-Fifth Ward). The feeling that the building would be a good buy stems mainly from the fact that the city is currently paying over $30,000 per year in rent in another building, so for only a few year's rent, Study shows one third o f LSA students quit -I UNBELIEVABLE SAVINGS CALCULATORS & STEREOS calculators Texos Instruments WAS SALE TI-59........ $300 $224.95 T1-58 .........$125 TI-57 ..........$80 PC-100A. $200 MBA-FINANCE. $80 SR-51-11.......$70 SR-40.........$40 TI-1680 ........$40 BA-BUSINESS . $40 TI-5015.........$80 TI-5040 .......$130 TI-5050M ...$110 MODULE LIB. FOR 58 & 59 $93.95 $59.99' $149.95 $59.99 $45.95 $23.95 $23.95 $27.95 $62.95 $94.95 $79.95 $29.95 HEWLETT PACKARD WAS SALE HP-1C.......$175 $153.95 HP-19C .'.$345 $299.95 HP-21........$80 $69.95 HP-22.......$125 $109.95 HP-25.......$125 $109.95 mass HP-25C-..$160 $140.95 *a aa HP-27.......$175 $153.95 SOUS \ HP-29C ..... $195 $171.95 a5s \ HP-55....... $395 $129.95 ils5 HP-67....... $450 $374.95 HP-91....... $325 $279.95 HP-92....... $625 $519.95 HP-97....... $750 $624.95 -LS&A SCHOLARSHIPS- LS&A Scholarship applications for winter 1978 will be available in 1220 Angell Hall beginning Sept. 15. 1977. To qualify for scholarship consideration, a student must be an LS&A undergraduate and have attended the University of Michigan for at least one full term. Sophomores must have a U of M grade point of 3.7 or better and Juniors and Seniors must have a GPA of at least 3.6. The awards are based on financial need and on academic merit. Completed applica- tions must be returned to 1220 Angell Hall by October 12. (Continued from Page 1) procedure. According to a survey tracking a sampling of non-Residential College freshpersons who entered the' school in 1972, two-thirds of the 30 per cent who dropped out left voluntarily. The rest were dismissed for academic reasons. A similar survey conducted among freshpersons entering LSA in 1969, showed a 25 per cent attrition rate with the same percentages voluntar- ily quitting and flunking out. The present rate appears to be no different, Morris pointed out.. MORRIS ALSO said he is satisfied with the present system of allowing students to register for normal class loads without counselor signatures. The two-year-old practice frees up Counselor time for discussion of distribution plans, alternative con- centration programs and career plans. " The quality of counseling does not appear to have declined," Morris said, adding his study of 361 students - half counseled under the old system and half under the new - offered no reason to return to the o(d system. According to the sampling, the average student sees a counselor about once per term - the same average as under the old system. However, Morris said, appointment lengths are now 30 minutes long, as opposed to 20 minutes before 1975. Morris added that, eight per cent of 1975 freshpersons and nine per cent of 1972 freshpersons never saw a counselor after arriving on campus. But he pointed out that, lack of counseling hasn't been reflected in SHORT or LONG Haircutting By Exports DASCOLA STYLISTS Arborland-971-9975 Maple Village--761-2733 E. Liberty-668-9329 E. University-662-0354 student coursework. "'The 21 stu- dents have a combined GPA of 3.021 and only one has encountered aca- demic disciplinary action," Morris said. He added that those figures are comparable to the rate for all LSA students. Also at the meeting, Frye dis- cussed plans for the college, pointing to the need for decreasing class size as "more- urgent than ever before' Frye discussed recommendations for achieving "a more desirable level of diversity" among students as well a developing "a greater appreciation of the longer range value of liberal education" in students. The soft-spoken dean further dis- cussed graduate training, academic support porgrams, organizational difficulties and, as usual, funding. C1 CassilsQ bring out' wistful (Continued from Page 1) trated student, furiously rushing fron stack to stack. "There are too many ix. pressionists and enough goddamn M.C Escher." The Picasso print Vicki Baar bough yesterday, besides matching her bed spread, was especially releVant. "Jus the other day," the Art School sopho more recalled, "I took some flowers out of my vase, held them in my hand anc said, 'Look, this is just like Picasso.' In his painting, simply entitled wit( the date, 2.14.58, Picasso outlined two hands, folding around a bunch of bright. multicolored blossoms. The sixth "semesterly" sale e tinues through Friday during clas hours. 1. Above prices include A/C Adaptor-Charger and Carrying Case 2. All above calculators have full one-year factory warranty 3. Enclose payment in full with order, or remit $20 with order, balance C.O.D. 4. Shipping Charges: Add $3.00 for calculators and 4% of price for receivers. 5. FAST DELIVERY GUARANTEED only with M.O. or certified checks. Personal checks will delay the order untlit clears banks. FOR ALL NEW STUDENTS PRE-MEDICAL i STEREO RECEIVERS :~CA OA PIONEERPHONE< REG. SALE SX-1250...........$900 $584 CF SX-1050 .......$700 $489 SX-950..............$00 $402 81 8X-85 ..............$500 $347 SX-750..............$400'$279 (Add 3% for Credit Ca SX-50............$300 $213 SX-550..............$250 $176 *B SX-40 ...$200 $149 SEND FOR FREE ATALOGUE ORDERS ACCEPTED ONLY WITH REDIT CARDS 4-237-5990 INFORMATION MEETING CARE E R Thursday, Sept.15 7:30 P.M. Auditorium B, Angell Hall, Information on course planning and Medico! School requirements. Note: Fall Term Hours Pre-Professional Office (Pre-Med) 9:30-12:00 1:00-4:30 3200 SAB Ord Orders) sAICARD1 STEREO WAREHOUSE 110 NEW ALLEY, STATE COLLEGE, PA. 1 Planningt P. acemnt 6801 I -. I -~ir i.. __ .- UNIERIT OFMIHIAN7PEIA UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SPECIAL Come to a FREE SPEED. READING LESSON Increase Your Reading Speed 50-100% U COMPARE AND DECIDE ATTEND A FREE LESSON: Dynamic Reading Systems Inc. D.R.S. guarantees in writing to at least triple your Dynamic Reading Speed or you will receive a FULL refund. Advanced Course Lifetime membership enables our graduates to retake the course to extend their skills at no additional charge. Tuition Assistance Payment Plan. NO Finance Charge!! Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Partial refund of your tuition if you fail. No advanced course known at this time. Their graduates are required to pay a registration fee to retake the course. Contractual obligation with finance charge. Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday September 12 September 13 September 14 September 15 September 16 12:20 12:30 12:30 12:30 12:30 2:30 2:30 2:30 2:30 2:30 4:30 4:30 4:30 4:30 6:30 6:30 6:30 6:30 ._ All Meetings Held At The MICHIGAN LEAGUE, 227 S. INGALLS (Across from Burton Tower) 1