The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, September 14, 1977-Page 3 t( MU SEE IWS E CAtLZ-DWJY All ye faithful So your mother always wanted you to be a boxer, but you had to see what it was like to be a journalist, just like in the movies? Dream no more! The Michigan Daily offers real journalism training at down- to-earth wages. For the whole scoop (as the trite members of our profession say), stop by our imposing offices at 420 Maynard Monday night, Sept. 19 at 7:30 for a mass meeting. Your college paper wants you. Tougher than wax When son Icarus' wings melted and dropped him into the sea, Daedalus didn't die of grief, you know. Instead, he was turned into a Il-by-30 foot steel sculpture which will be erected this morning on the lawn of Alumni Memorial Hall, known to everyone except the alumni as the Museum of Art. Created in 1975 by sculptor Charles Ginnever, it was acquired through private gifts and a matching grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Friday, after public acclaim over the thing has settled down a bit, a celebration of its arrival will be held on the lawn, featuring free refreshments and a personal appearance by Ginnever. * Happenings ... .. first, a reminder that Drug Help/Ozone House will move to a new home at 608 N. Main on Sept. 23. . . you can gawk and point at 10 a.m. this morning as big cranes install an enormous piece of sculpture between the Union and the Art Museum..... the University's Com- mission for Women will meet at noon in 2549 LSA.. . itemize your fruit and vegetables, then haul your carcass to the Itemized Food and Vegetable Coop's first full order night on the 4th floor of the Union between 6:30 and 9:00. Faculty, staff and other members of the com- munity are invited to learn more about the coop.. . learn to talk machine at 7:30 when Prof. Brice Carnahan gives "An Introduction to Digital Computers and Computing Languages" in the Natural Science Auditoriom... or learn to sprech deutsch at a free showing of Werner Herzog's film "Fata Morgana", 8 p.m. at the Max Kade German House in Oxford Housing, 603 Geddes.. . Reuven Gold will tell Chassidic stories at Hillel at 8:30 p.m.... and the 4th International Conference on Red Cell Metabolism and Function begins pumping today and runs through Saturday at the Med Center. Safe smoke? Tokers in Madison, Wisconsin have a unique form of dope smoking insurance which may be even more reliable than the Ann Arbor $5.00 marijuana law. And it's not just because Madison recently passed its own decriminalization law-in fact, the police department says they aren't using the new law at all. Police Lt. Ted Balistreri says the problem is that "There's no way to prove what you've been picked up for is marijuana. You could say it's just oregano and we couldn't proye otherwise." The only government body in the state capable of testing such substances, the State Crime Lab, refuses to test substances ex- cept on state business. Since a local ordinance isn't state business, Madison cops still have to prosecute people under the harsher state laws, which the department refuses to do since, says Balistreri, "we've got more important things to do." Sounds pretty safe to us. On the outside Looks like the rainy Wednesday morning of the bluegrass tune. Best you should remain in your sharecroppin' one-room country shack, because it will rain and be miserable all morning and then be cloudy and almost as miserable all afternoon, with a high of 72. Next to today, tomorrow will look like Waikiki, with sun(that large yellow orb in the sky) and a high of 76. Cholera deaths soar in Mideast epidemic -AP Photo In preparation for its weekly treks into outer space during the 1980's, the space shuttle "Enterprise" makes a five-minute free flight above NASA's paee shuttle checks out during its second oryden Research Center in the California desert. The flight, according to NASA officials, went off without a hitch. Use Daily Classifieds - -- U free fligt EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) - The space shuttle En- terprise yesterday maintained its record of doing everything it was de- signed to do, gliding through sparkling desert skies to a flawless touchdown on its second free flight test. During the five-minute, 20-second descent from the back of the Boeing 747 jumbo jet, the two-man crew of the del- ta-winged craft turned, banked and rolled the prototype spacecraft from side-to-side and landed it without a hit- ch. "LOOKS BEAUTIFUL from chase," radioed the pilot of one of the compara- tively tiny jets that flew alongside the 75-ton glider. Yesterday's flight was a preview of how the shuttle's earth-orbit space flight will end - not with the splash down of previous manned mis- sions but with an airplane-style soar through the atmosphere and a runway landing. "That sure was fun," came the word from Enterprise after spacecraft com- mander Joe Engle, 45, and copilot Rich- ard Truly, 41, brought the rolling craft to a stop after a dusty,'dry lake landing. PLUMMETING more than four miles in five minutes, the 75-ton Enterprise reached speeds of more than 310 miles an hour. At times Engle, an Air Force colonel, opened a pair of hinged flaps at the craft's tail to brake the shuttle's on- test rush and keep it on its U-shaped course. Two other astronauts had guided the craft during its first free flight Aug. 12. Yesterday's cruise was much the-same except that Engle and Truly used the cockpit controls to put the stubby-wing- ed shuttle through more maneuvers. AS BEFORE, the powerless Enter- prise descended along a U-shaped cour- se over the corners more sharply, Engle rolled the craft nearly onto its side, exposing the black-painted belly. During this tight turn, the craft and crew were subjected to forces of nearly twice the strength of gravity. The crewmen also tested automatic control systems that can guide the en- tire flight automatically. With Truly. calling out the numbers, Engle punched a panel of buttons like those on a push- button phone. The signal told a system under the control of four onboard com- puters to move wing and tailflaps to put the craft through preprogrammed ma- neuvers. AFTER THE NEXT flight, scheduled for Sept. 27, the shuttle will be flown to Alabama for vibration tests. There, the craft will be mated with a giant fuel tank which will be used for the first spacelaunch, in 1979. A fleet of shuttles is planned to carry scientific and industrial cargos such as satellites and space stations into earth orbit at a rate of about one flight a week during the 1980s. Ann Arbor Film Co-op WEDNESDAY, September 14 BEATLEMANIA - MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR (The Beatles, 1964-1967( 7 only-Aud A See John, Paul, George, and Rngo sing "Fool on the Hill," I Am the Walrus," "Your Mother Should Know," and more in this extraordinarily entertaining and funny film. "Come with us now to that special place, where the eyes of man hove never set foot! With the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Bond and other assorted freaks and oddities. Also, rare early footage of the foursome in Liverpool, recording sessions with zany interviews and the pandemonium that was Beotlemonia. HIGH SCHOOL CONFIDENTIALI (Jack Arnold, 1958) 3:35 Only-Aud. A One of the first movies to explore the campus dope ring scare of the late fifties. A young undercover agent infiltrates a school dope-pushing ring Pure camp Rocker Jerry Lee Lewis sings "Boppin' at the High "Schbol Hop." Mi. Von Obron 'Manages to coil herself around a refrigerator like a python. . " NY. TIMES. Russ Tamblyn, Jon Sterling, John Drew-4arrymore, Michael London, JackieCoogan REEFER MADNESS (Leo Casnier, 1936) 10:15 ONLY--AUD.,A Originally titled "Tell Your Children," this anti-marijuana propaganda film seen today is a hilarious camp comedy. The weed is described -as "the new drug menance which is destroying the Youth of America!" With THE MYSTERY OF THE LEAPING FISH (John Emerson, 1916), the classic "Cocaine Comedy" with Douglass Fairbanks, Sr., as detective Coke Ennyday-a parody of Sherlock Holmes. Scenario by Tod Browning. supervised by D. W. Griffith. ADMISSIONS: $1.50 single feature; $2.50 double feature BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - The num- ber of confirmed cholera victims in Syria rose to 2,300 yesterday and scores of cases were reported in neighboring Jordan and Lebanon. Other Midestern countries moved to check the spreading epidemic. The outbreak of the disease, spread by contamination of food and water, came on the eve of a three-day Moslem feast. Police in two countries were seen arresting food vendors. SYRIA REPORTED almost 200 new cases in 24-hours. At least 70 Syrian vic- tims have died of the gastrointestinal disease. Jordan reported 214 cases and the Lebanese Health Ministry reported 18, with no fatalities in either country. However, medical sources in Lebanon put the toll at 25 and said three persons had died in recent days of "food poisoning," a designation the Lebanese goverzment has used for cholera. HEALTH MINISTRIES in Syria and Lebanon ordered all medical personnel to stay onduty over the Mosl'em holiday bf Bairam, which starts Wednesday pnd ends a month-long dawn-to-dusk period of fasting. } The Lebanese sanitation department +rdered public health supervision over city bakeries, which are full of Moslems buying sweets, bread and Bairam cook- ies for the holiday. Officials said all, bread must be sold in nylon bags to prevent infection from handling. DOCTORS WARNED against overin- dulgence during tie Bairam feasting." Nyrian and Lebanese police were seen prresting food vendors and confiscating their wares. Soft drink and ice cream peddlers were cleared off the streets. Saudi Arabia confirmed that the epi- demic had crossed from Jordan to the northern Al-Kheiber district. The Saudi state radio said there had been "only a few cases" and authorities were ef- fectively countering the disease. THE SAUDI Health Ministry was re- ported organizing extensive preventive measures as the desert kingdom pre- pared for the annual pilgrimage season that attracts an estimated three million Moslems from around the world to Mecca and other holy sites in Saudi Arabia. Many of the pilgrims live in tent camps or special dormitories where the epidemic could easily take hold. The United Arab Emirates and other Persian Gulf countries clamped an em- bargo on food imports from Syria and Jordan. Libya, Egypt and Tunisia urged their people to take precau- tionary measures like receiving innocu- lations and boiling drinking water. MARLENE DIETRICH as 1932 * *W * CARYBLONDE VENUS * CARY GRANT and HERBERT MARSHALL co-star in this decep- tively simple tale about a self-sacrificing housewife who works in a nightclub to support her child and save her husband. * THURS: THE PASSENGER * * CINEM GUILDTONIGHT at OLD ARCH. AUD. * * C*EAG IDT0a,0 aisnis *** ** *** ** THE MIGHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVIII, No.6 Wednesday, September 14, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Pub- lished daily Tuesday through Sunday morning dur- ing the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. -LS&A SCHOLARSHIPS-