The Michigan Doily--Wednesday, November 23, 1977-Page 7 MMMMMMMMI AATA increases daily bus fares, strims Dial-a-Ride, night services By DENNIS SABO Button up your winter coat and remember to bring an extra dime when you ride the city buses begin- ning this weekend: Saturday is the starting date of the new transit service cuts and rate increases. The Ann Arbor Transit Authority (AATA) bus fares will increase from the present 25 cents to 35 cents. The service adjustments to remember are as follows: -Weekday Dial-a-Ride services will end at 9:50 p.m. and at 6:15 p.m.. on Saturdays instead of the present 11:00 p.m. -The Packard Avenue night bus line will be discontinued. The last day-time run will leave at 6:15 p.m. Dial-a-Ride will still be available until 9:50 p.m. -Sunday transit services will re- main unaffected by the cuts and will continue to operate until 6 p.m. AATA offers $10 monthly passes for regular bus passengers. Each pass provides unlimited transit use for that month .in Ann Arbor and reduces part of the fare for trips made outside the city limits. Starts on new housing are expected to reach 2 million units in 1977, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association of America. This includes 1.5 million single-family homes. Kingston, the capital and largest city of Jamaica, has 170,000 residents. 'U' limits speech (Continued from Page 1) explains Friedman. Referring to the recent speech by John Dean, when a protestor hurled an orange at the stage, Friedman said: "If he shrugged it off and said 'Let's go on' - no problem. If the orange-throwing persisted and the speaker was so distraught that he couldn't go on, then it's cause for action." The main purpose of the guide- lines, he adds, is to "re-establish communications with no more force than necessary." "THE SPEAKER has the right to express his ideas, and the listener has the right to assess what he's saying," said Friedman, "and it is a serious offense to freedom of speech r r - r r rrrrr protest if these rights aren't protected." If the protestors disrupt the com- munication between the speaker and the audience, the University repre- sentative present must put the protestors on notice. If the disruption continues, the official "should pro- ceed with those measures necessary to reestablish order, which may include physical removal of the pro- testors." Protestors may express their opposition in an "orderly fashion" outside of the area where the lecture is being held. Don Coleman, chairman of the Ann Arbor American Civil Liberties Un- nion (ACLU), questions the terminol- ogy used in the guidelines. "What constitutes 'protesting in an orderly fashion,' or 'protesting unduly'? These are ambiguous terms and they're often used in a discrimina- tory way to squelch political dissent and political ideas." But according to Irving Freeman, a student ACLU member, the guide- lines need to be vague because various violations would be too diffi- cult to list. Turkey (Continued from Page 1) d AP Photo JFK remembered Yesterday was the fourteenth anniversary of the assassination of President John Kennedy. His brother, Senator Edward Kennedy, his sister-in-law, Ethel Kennedy, and her daughter, Rory, visited the grave in Arlington Nationals Cemetery. The Lincoln Memorial is in the background, the grave's eternal flame in the foreground. tions. "This all depends on the weather. If it is wet and cold, parents won't bring their children. This is the one day when the city of Detroit sees a good crowd," he rejoiced. "I've worked on and in conjunction with the parade for the past 18 years," Sibthrope continued. "There's been quite a few changes in the floats-con- struction, materials, and size have all changed. But the parade has stayed basically the same." Originally, the floats were all of Hud- son's origin. Due to rising costs and a reluctance to cut back on the size and scope of the parade, Hudson's has allowed - other corporations to submit float ideas. All the designs and con- struction are still done by a crew of Hudson's employes. This year's parade includes five floats sponsored by outside interests- three from the Ford Motor Company, one from McDonalds and one from Burger King. The first Thanksgiving Day parade, as we know them, was introduced by the mercantile magnates, Gimbel Bros. in Philadelphia in 1920. That first parade, filled with figures from Gout can be controlled by treatment that reduces uric acid levels in the body. Gout is probably inherited and most of its victims are men, according to the Health Insurance Institute. About a million Americans suffer from gout. Cyclone in India claims ay oats childhood books and toyland, celebrated the fantasy of youth. Competitors became aware of the new spectacle and introduced parades to their cities. The most famous one of all-Macy's Thanksgiving clkssic-fir- st meandered down New York streets in 1924. Hudson's initiated the first Detroit parade in the same year and has con- tinuously sponsored the event except in 1941 and. 1942, when World War II superceded the parade. U.S. OKs Brazilian Want The Inside Scoop? ti 10, 000 Continued from Page 1) sands homeless. MOST communications withl tne devastated area were still out yester- day. Reddy said the area had been di- vided into 20 zones, each authorized to. draw ,needed funds from the state treasury. Indian air force and navy planes and helicopters dropped at least 10 tons of food to isolated areas. Officials in Andhra Pradesh said as many as 100 coastal villages were washed away, most with heavy but still undetermined casualties, BAPATLA, Chirala and Repalle, towns famous for hand-loom fabrics, were reported in total ruin. The cyclone blew railroad passenger coaches from their tracks at Bapatla, the reports said. The central government turned to New Dblhi-based social service agen- cies for clothing, tarpaulins and cooking utensils. CARE officials said the organiza- tion had allotted 1,300 tons of food for cyclone victims, plus enough flour to bake five tons of bread a day. nuclear tr( BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) - Secre- tary of State Cyrus Vance exchanged views with Brazilian officials yester- day on nuclear and human rights issues that have become major points of contention in U.S.-Brazilian relations. On nuclear non-proliferation, offi- cials aboard the Air Force jet that brought Vance here from Argentina said they were hopeful of progress in at least one area of disagreement. VANCE WAS at the half-way mark of a four-day South American trip ide pact that will take him to Venezuela today. He was in Argentina Monday and earlier yesterday and reported "good progress" on nuclear issues but no major success on human rights. Vance met with Brazilian Presi- dent Ernesto Geisel and other top officials. Reporters were told that the United States was no longer inflexibly opposed to Brazil's plans to purchase uranium enrichment facilities from West Germany. SUBSCRIBE TO ol be ;n UIIQ A nose for garbage (Continued from Page 1) stump nightstand and some really good cable spools, the kind with steel centers and bands across the top and bottom" he says. His backpack, hair dryer, ski gloves and goggles, surfboard, pots and pans, crockery, travel iron, toaster, clock radios, Syracuse china, barometer and television set - all in good shape, all found in the trash - are spread about elsewhere. BEARDSLE Y CLAIMS she hasn't owned a single new outfit for years. "What I wear," she insists, "I grab out of trash cans, and all of it is almost brand new." "Some of the stuff is so good," she says, shaking her head, "you'd have to be an idiot to leave it there." Abr~ihamer estimates that at least one quarter of his wardrobe was once someone else's. "Anytime I find anything that looks half decent," he said, I genereally keep it. "I DON'T SEE ANYTHING wrong in taking something from the trash that I can make use of" Susanne Beardsley says. "It's not a question of being poor; it's a question of being realistic and being sensible." "Sometimes people just package it in plastic bags really neatly for you" Abrahamer says. He might have to put up with a few rips and tears, he says, "but who can argue with the price?" Call 764-0558 for immediate delivery go away. The five most dangerous words in the English language. American Cancer Society