Page 2--Thursday, September 15, 1977-The Michigan Daily entor Health Research Instituteta te SEMINAR SERIES LAWRENCE E. HINKLE child *The New York Hospital .Cornell Medical Center cd "THE EFFECT OF MAN-MADE ENVIRONMENT rural residents UPON PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH" " PBB-contamina UHYSCAy AN t E 1977 law that will re hu~rsda , Sept. 15,1977 of thousands of ," WMINAR: l:45 P M., Room 1057 could approach StEAt 3:15 P.M., M41 Lounge ; Doctors from ................................................................. schools will tes farms that were $late 1973 throug ANTONIONi'S 1973 control group * TAMichigan mother THE PASSENGER able PBB in thei * JACK NICHOLSON as a journalist who assumes the identity of "Complete psy N' a dead man in order to start life anew (Which includes * ological examin MARIA SCHNEIDER). ducted," said Dr College of Huma FRI: TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT * igan State Unive S* look for sympt TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. * muscular, nutri * {ClINE A G U7D y:0 0 9:05 ADMISSION $1.50 * infectious disea *9t9$ * * *** *$ $$ HE ALSO SAI look for suns of be gins testing ren who ate PBB msD aedalus'campsout on Art Museum lwn -mPage 1) and those who ate ted food, and a state quire the destruction cattle at a cost that $45 million. the state's medical st children born on e quarantined from ;h 1976, as well as a of children born to rs who had no detect- r breast milk. ychological and neur- nations will be con- . William Weil of the an Medicine at Mich- ersity. "Doctors will oms in the neuro- itional, growth and se areas as well." [D psychologists will f mental stress that eloped among the ilies. already started a g program of 1,000 at Big Rapids to er PBB has affected eam of researchers, ving Selikoff of New said that PBB may rvous disorders and the body's immunity y be years before sorders are docu- n has already taken he level of PBB in ibit milk with traces , while Canada has banned all Michigan beef and dairy products. IN ADDITION, a British television network has produced a documen- tary titled "The Poisoning of Michi- gan," which reportedly portrays Milliken and the state agriculture department as ineffective and inde- cisive. "It's yellow journalism at its worst," said Kathy Stariha, the governor's special assistant in charge of the PBB issue. Michigan legislators have passed a law, which takes effect on Oct. 3, and will require the destruction of about 34,000 cows and has led to a fight over where they will be buried. The state will spend an estimated $16 million to $45 million to implement the law, which requires that dairymen be compensated for their herd losses.- RESIDENTS in dscoda County don't want the carcasses of 5,000 PBB-contaminated animals buried in their area because they fear their groundwater supplies could become contaminated. County officials said they would seek a restraining order against the state to block site preparations, scheduled to begin next week, and lobby instead for disposal of the carcasses by fire. "Our position is that this whole thing is unsafe," County commission chairman Oscar Mast said yester- day. "If you bury the carcasses the PBB taint will be there for hundreds of years. " (Continued from Page 1) hopes for his work, saying, "It needs virtually no maintenance as long as people respect its surface." He ex- plained it requires no paint and it "doesn't need any color than the natural material, once it gets a coat of rust." Ginnever said the sculpture epitomized the atmosphere on campus: "It's about flow-this is where you've got a lot of flow in the college. Just as the sculpture opens and closes, so does the University as it becomes empty or crowded." WHATEVER THE profound significance of the artwork, a film crew recorded for posterity the tedious in- stallation at "Daedalus" and student reactions. The film, made by the University's T.V. and Film Center, will be a documentary entitled, "Daedalus in Place," according to producer director Al Slote. "IT will be used for teaching pur- poses in the museum and the Univer= sity, and then, it will be shown com- mercially in such cities as New York, San Francisco and Washington," he predicted. Reactions to the front lawn display at the corner of State Street and S. University were generally mixed. "I like it as long as I don't have to pay for it," shrugged graduate student Ray Aranian. BUT SENIOR Kathy Obits said, "It's not worth it. It just looks like a bunch of Ann Arbor Film, Co-op ThUrsdy,ASeptmber 15 CAR WASH (Michool Schultz, 1976), 7A& 9-Aud. A may have dev quarantined faim The state has two-year testing farm families, determine wheth their health. A t headed by Dr. Ir York City, has contribute to nei impairmr~ent of t) systems. While it may PBB-caused 'di. mented, Michiga steps to limit tl meat and to proh of the chemical An earthy, irreverent, affectionate look at o typical day in an L. A. car, wash which spotlights guest stars George Carlin, "Professor" Irwin Corey, the Pointer Sisters, and Richard Pryor as Daddy Rich. Exuberant, unpreten-. tious fun, the film overcame lackadaisical distribution through terrific. word-of-mouth and a title song that broke into Top-40 radio with a bullet. "A terrifically shrewd piece of movie-making ... a cheerful, some- what vulgar, very cleverly executed comedy.. ."-Vincent Conby. ADMISSION: $1.50 DANSKIN IS ANY WEAR. PARKLANE HOSIERY IS EVERYWHERE. hunks of metal." However, Carolyn Bailey, a volunteer worker at the museum called it "ex- tremely good-looking'and added, "I'm pleased with it, I'm interested in how .it will look in the different lights of th day." A junior, Keith Tosolt, echoed Bailey's sentiments, saying, "I dig con- ceptual art like this-it improves the scenery." CONTRIBUTIONS of friends of the University of Michigan Museum of Art and a $20,000 matching grant from th National Endowment for the Arts made the acquisition possible for the Museum. Two unique contributors to the fund's for the purchase of the sculpture wat- ched the sculpture go up. Barbara anI Elmer Hamel made their donations as reciprocal birthday gifts to each other this year. "We wanted to give each other per- manent birthday presents this year. It's fun and we're sticking to it-we're nt giving each other anything else,, Hamel said. Powell's apolog to Percy accepted WASHINGTON (UPI)- White House press secretary Jody Powell acknowledged today he told a report- er about rumors that Sen. Charles Percy, ranking Republican on the committee probing the finances of Bert Lance, had misused corporate airplanes. The disclosure and accompanying news accounts triggered a furor on Capitol Hill and a fast apology from Powell. LAWMAKERS, especially Repub- licans, called the incident a cheap shot. Percy, who asked for and received a telephoned apology from Powell, said "there is not a shred of truth" 'to the charges. Powell said he told the Chicago Sun Times and at least one other news,- paper abou teportshe received from two sources that Percy may have been involved in improprieties in- volving the acceptance of airplane flights from a private firm. HIS REMARKS were "inappropri- ate, regrettable and dumb," said Powell, adding that President Carter "seemed to accept my analysis with- out question." THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVIII, No. 7 Thursday, September 5, 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. Parklane Hosiery has body hugging fashions that fit you and your lifestyle for class, classic or classy doings. Anywhere. And with 400 stores throughout America, Parklane Hosiery is the largest re- tailer of Danskin leotar shoes. There's one n parkjane HOSIERY rds and tights and Selva ear you. Legwear, dancewear . . x:24 everywhere. Im t A. Classic leotard #198, scoop neck, long sleeve, no zipper. S,M,L, ExL $8.50. B. 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