./. The Michigan Daily-Thursday, October 20, 1077-page 3 Concord SST lands at Kennedy THE CNCORE'.< ' tFK SEE tNEWS. f{AP PE4CA ZIL tJY South Campus Decisions, decisions. One item the University Regents must con- sider during this week's deliberations is whether or not to accept Donald and Priscilla Halla's gift to the University-a bit of the Bahamas. The eight decision-makers will undoubtedly accept the small, sun-drenched plot on the Island of Grand Bahama from the two grateful Grand Rapids alumni. With a little imagination we might find ourselves the only university in the country with a retreat for exam- weary students. How about the Art of Sunbathing 432? Surf's up! ,* ; Reach out Attention, undergraduate altruists! The Project Outreach Inter- nship in Adolescence program is now accepting applications for Win- ter 1978. Anyone interested in this full-time, undergraduate field work program should apply at 554 Thompson or call764-9279 or 764-9179. The deadline is Nov. 25. Happenings .. . don't pick up till the sun peaks at noon ... that's when staffers at the International Center, 402 E. Madison, tell you how to get "Inter- nships in the British House of Commons and Social Agencies" during a brown bag luncheon .. ,here from the University of Illinois, Pauline Bart conducts a seminar on "Victimization and It's Discontent: Rape, Abortion and Depression" at 3:45 in 1057 Mental Health Research Institute . . . if you're interested in "Seismicity in the Eastern United States," Geology Prof. James Wilson tells you all about it- at 4:00 in 4001 C.C. Little ; . .the Anthropology Department invites you to "The Limitations of Cultural Analysis: History and Consciousness" in Rackham's East Lecture Room at 4:00.. ,. at the same time, Ken Freidman, artist, critic and sociologist, speaks on "Fluxus and Inter- media" in"2029 Angell Hal. .. then at 7:30 in the Onion's Pendleton Room, Friedman discusses "The Sociology of Art".. . over in Alice Lloyd's Blue Carpet Lounge, Leo McNamara talks about Northern Ireland at 7:30 .. or at that very same hour, you can meditate with Stern Morgan at the Canterbury House, corner of Catherine and Division ... MTS afficiandos cpn attend a Computer Club meeting in 4108 Michigan Union at 7:30 ... the Campus Chapel, 1236 Washtenaw Court, plans a discussion,with S. African Professor Johann VanTander and the film,."Last Grave at-Dimbaza" at 7:30 .,. . listen to Ellen Zweig read her own poetry at the Guild House, 802 Monroe, at 7:30.. . at the same time in the Union's Kuenzel Room, the Spartacus League and Red Flag Union bring you a forum on Homosexuals and Democratic Rights: A Marxist Analysis" . . . it will be music to your ears when the Concert Band and Chamber Winds perform at 8:00 in Hill Aud... .and at 8:30, two Israeli Jews, Israel Shahak and Leah Isemel, speak out for Palestinian Human rights in the UGLI's third floor multipurpose room . ..ciao. Royal retinas Queen Elizabeth donned spectacles for the first time in public Tuesday ' when she opened Canada's Parliament ' in Ottawa. Peering through half- ' moon, gold-rimmed glasses, the SI- , year-old monarch read a speech-in -' French as well as in English-to an at- tentive audience of Canadian - politicos. A spokesperson says it's the first time the Queen ever has worn her " specs in public, though she privately I, wears reading glasses in the confines " of Buckingham Palace. We are tem- , | pled to ask her Royal Highness, "Have you ever considered contact lnses? Q Queen Eliza b eth On the outside .. . Today is shaping up pretty nicely. The outlook gives us a high of about 63 degrees with clear skies, a few scattered clouds, and winds from the Southwest. Expect a low of around 45 degrees tonight as it warms up a bit tomorrow. ri NEW YURK-The Concorde SST swooped through an overcast sky yesterday and landed at Kennedy In- ternational Airport, marking the end of a 1/2-year strugle to keep the faster- than-sound passenger jet out of New York. The sun broke through and glistened on the white body of the .needle-beaked plane as it touched down with one boun- ce at 11:09 a.m., minutes after it tllk off from Toulouse in southwest France, where it was built. SOME OBSERVERS at the airport and sightseers in the Rockaway section of Queens under the Concorde's glide path thought the landing was quiet. But Jerry Jones of Rosedale, who watched from the Far Rodkaway board-walk fronting the Atlantic, com- mented: "Right now it may be a very beautiful sight, but there's a very heavy wind thrust which is keeping the noise away from us." nA, £5ZA RvJZ 4 maU en visit to New York was an Anglo-British. familiarization flight, with the colors of British Airways on the starboard side of. the tail and Air France's on the port begin Nov. 22. It cuts in half the normal flying time to New York from Paris and London to 3 hours. A HEAVY security force was out to cope with any crowds or unanticipated I'm here 46 years and I've put up with 707s and 747s and they're twice as loud -as this plane was today,' declared Bill Gradiska, a steelworker who lives in Far Rockaway. 'I heard nothing. It was un- believably soundless and beautiful.'" practice flight around the New York metropolitan area today and several takeoffs and landings today and tomorrow. It will fly to London tomorrow afternoon. SINCE EARLY last year, the Concorde has flown regularly scheduled flights between the two European capitals and Washington. But flights to New York, the route on which Britain and France hoped to make the plane a seller, were held up because of local opposition to the aircraft's noise, It is considerably worse on takeoff than the noise of sub- sonic planes. On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way for New YOrk service by refusing to hear a plea that landing rights at Kennedy be denied pending. side. The plane carried test equipment, technicians and other personnel, but no passengers. Its maiden entry to New York was a familiarization flight. The plane carried technicians and other person- nel, but no passengers. Regular commercial service by the 1,350-mile-an-hour plane is scheduled to events, but anti-SST forces had no protests planned at the airport yester- day. Shortly before the takeoff, a union of French aerospace workers appealed to New Yorkers to accept the inevitable and welcome the Concorde as a symbol of transatlantic amity. The Concorde is scheduled to make a U.S. economic growth declines WASHINGTON (AP)-The nation's economic growth as measured by the Gross National Product slowed to a rate of 3.8 per cent in the third quarter as consumers bought fewer products, the Commerce Department said yesterday. The new GPN figure was a decline from the 7.5 per cent annual growth rate in the first quarter and the\6.2 per for the year. Treasury Secretary Michael Blumen- thal argued that the latest figures should be assessed in a larger context, noting that the nation's output had in- creasedby more than 15 per cent since the 1975 recession. SPEAKING at the American Bankers Association convention in Houston, Tex., Blumenthal said business has been showing a lack of confidence despite a favorable economic outlook. The GNP figures show "A marked slowing in the rate of economic growth from the first half of the yar," he said. But he said the first six months were unusually strong. The government report focused on lower consumer spending and no in- crases in inventory investment and housing construction as the ex- planations for the third-quarter GNP decline. After adjustment for inflation, con- sumer purchases of durable goods, Join the Daily's Arts Departrment Phone 764-0552 A WARREN FARRELL & SANDY FORTIER WEEKEND ON "SEX ROLES AND & SEXU A LITY'" Includes Friday ederning presentation and "MEN'S BEAUTY CONTEST" with Dr. Farrell (author, The Liber- ated Mian), films, role-reversal date, body awareness and assertiveness experiments with Ann Arbor ther- apist Sandy Fortier. Ott. 21-23 973-1480 Special Student Rates Wolverine Institute, 2015 Hogback Rd., AnnrArbor 48105 such as cars and large appliances, dropped from $137.9 billion to $136.4 billion in the quarter, which ended Sept. 30. Purchases of non-durable goods declined from $330 billion to $329.1 billion. However, money spent on services increased from $386.3 billion to $392.6 billion. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVIII, No.37 Thursday, October 20,1977 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, Michigane48109, Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day morning. Subscription rates: 56.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Receive 3 free lessons en our cali 971430 Peak indoor Ski Dek.Plusorsp yt Pa a free lilt ticket at 'Mt.o tpb~ePa Brighton and Sugarloa#. There's no obligation. 3150 The free skiing Carpenter is yours.... on us. Ann Arbor 4 Blumenthal cent rate in the second quarter of the year. USUALLY, a 4 per cent rate of growth is considered necessary to keep unemployment from getting substan- tially worse. Administration officials are counting on a strong fourth quarter to keep the GPN, the nation's total output of goods and services, rising at least 5 per cent HORSEBACK RIDING' YEAR ROUND GROUP RATES Hayrides and Party Building Rental Douglass Meadows 2755 M 151-Temperance, MI 48102 (313) 856-3973 / ;. inl r'_ :" ', ': >T >!'. T.; T' :T. ,T; :T,::T-: ;T; ;.T; T.'T T ..T:: "T; .' ' '..'T; .T-; :1 I.. ___ - - - ___ ~ ~ ~- ~- ~- ~ ~ - U U Mental Health Research Institute SEMINAR SERIES Pauline B. Bart Department of Psychiatry Abraham Lincoln School of Medicine University of Illinois NOW SHOWING at 7:00 6'upQ 'iiRe I Victimization and Its Discontents: Rape, Abortion and Depression SEMNAR: 3:45 p.m., Rm91057 Thursday, Oct. 20, 1977 TEA: 3;15p.m., MHiRkLounge NOW SHOWING at 7:00 Modiatrics WEEKEND ' ' wA - v w n SCHEDULE IWc nn __-, >Daily Official Bulletin: THURSDAY Day Calendar .WUOM: Cultural Perspectives on Aging, "National Policy and Aging: The Influence of the Hztmanities," John Barcroft, Dir. Public Programs, National Endowment for the Humanities, 10:20a.m. .Guild House: Ellen Zweig, poetry reading,, 802 Madison, 7:30p.m. Music School: Concert Band, Hill Aud.,8 p.m. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB 763-4117 USIA, Washington, D.C. Summer College Intern Program, must have completed junior year or graduate student pursuing a degree. Covers wide area of government activities. Closing date early January '78. Details and appls. available. Rand Corp., Calif., Wash.,D.C.: Graduate student Summer Program, covers broad fields-computer sciences, engr., manage., physical sciences, social sciences, etc. Apply as early in '78 as possible. Full details available. National Trust Education Services, Washington, D.C.: Work training experience for undergraduates and graduates in architecture, history, art history, economics, horticulture, etc. Further details available. INTERVIEW. State Farm Ins. Co.: Bloomington, Ill.: Will inter- view Thursday, Oct. 27, 9 to 5. SUMMER intern program for junior year students majoring in business, computer training, math and accounting. Also, SUMMER intern program for 2nd year law students. Register in person or by phone 763-4117. Luis Sunuel's 1972 discreet charm of the bourgeoisie A surreal, cutting social comedy about a small group of chic, upper crust Parisians who spend most of the film tryina unsuccessfully to COUNSELING SERVICES OFFICE OF STUDENT SERVICES Personal coUnseling groUps are now being formed.. Interested students may arrange for an interview by contacting us as soon as possible and BEFORE OCTOBER 28. Spaces are limited. Please drop in at COUNSELING SERVICES, 3rd floor Michigan Union or call 764-8312. the ann arbor flm cooperative TONIGHT: Thursday, October 20 PANIC IN THE STREETS (Ella Kozan, 1950) 7 ONLY-AUD. A In New Orleans, the autopsy of an immigrant Armenian determines not only that he has been murdered, but also that he is a carrier of bubonic plague. The Chief Health Inspector (RICHARD WIDMARK) is thus propelled into a desperate race against time to locate all the people who might have earlier come into contact with the infected victim (including his killers) before the news of an impending wide-spread plague causes panic. Gripping entertain- ment directed with a keen sense of appreciation for violence and suspense. With JACK PALANCE in a performance of overpowering menance, Zero Mostel. A BOT AND rIS i G-1975 A super science fiction film about survival in a post atomic wilderness. "An incredibly hilarious and terrifyng vision of future earth." FRI. OCT. 21-7:30 and 9:15 **************************** ************************ THE PAPER CHASE The all time favorite about law school at Harvard and what to do with the degree. SAT. OCT. 22-7:30 and 9:30 All films in NATURAL SCIENCE AUD.-$1.50 i NOW SHOWING at 7:00 BIVOUAC ANNOUNCES l "KARAKORAM MOUNTAINS IN PAKISTAN" A slide show-lecture series of mountaineering & outdoor activities.