Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY . Tuesday, January 25, 1977 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY. Residents balk at meal consolidation Campus mail c (Continued from Page 1) solidation," said freshman Jona- than Prasse. "They've been talking about it for years." THE SURVEY outlines the benefits and problems of such a plan, and asks the resident to indicate support or opposi- tion. The major benefit, according to the survey: - Consolidation of food ser- vice is one of the most effec- tive ways to cut dorm rents. The problems: - Residents, of Mosher-Jor- dan, West Quad, and Alice Lloyd will have to walk to neigh- boring dorms for the weekend meals, and lines will swell in the host dorms. - Dining rooms in Lloyd, Cou- zens, and South Quad will be closed to other weekend activi- ties. - The plan could dilute com- munity feeling in dorms and "contribute to an atmosphere of institutionalism and deper- sonalization." "BEING RELAXED and eat- ing in your own dorm is an important part of our life here," said Randi Abramson, an Alice Lloyd representative on the poli- cy committee who disagreed with the recommendation. "Peo- ple are willing to pay to eat in their own dorm." The attempt to disrupt, the Couzensadinner was generally successful. Most of the Couzens residents wished the intruders would "go away." BUT MOST OF THE Couzens residents bucked the horde of diners, who munched elbow to elbow as the garbled, pumped- in radio added to the general melee. Among them was Margot Mor- row, director of Alice Lloyd and the Pilot Program, which calls Lloyd home. Morrow said the change would be "disastrous for our unity. We are a living and learning center. We interact around the table; students can talk to their teachers." Eighteen Pilot teaching assistants live in Lloyd and act as resident advi- sors. By DAVE HYDE One morning two weeks ago, Ann Arbor woke up and found itself buried beneath a foot of snow. And while cars were made captivehto theirawalled-in parking spaces and University professors decided the morning pilgrimage to class was too treacherous to risk, the Univer- sity Mail Service trucks hit the roads fearlessly. Despite the crippling weather conditions, the University re- mained open and so spewed it's roughly 22,000 pieces of campus mail into assorted collection boxes. The two University Mail trucks, one servicing " North Campus and the other covering Central Campus, did the rest. THE CAMPUS mail operation is a unique one. A truck will pull up to a building, make. its de- livery of campus mail, and head for the next stop, while a three- man crew sorts the mail picked up, en route. "We are unique with this sys- tem across the country for de- livery of campus mail," says Doug Barnett, manager of the University Mail Service. "Most will pick up at a lo- cation and bring it- back to sort it," he said. "This system (the University's) was put in back in 1960 and we wouldn't go back." THE CAMPUS mail network is comprised of some 225 stops, some of which are tapped twice a day by the trucks. "The major schools get deliv- ery at least two times a day. The smaller units get at least one per day except for a small number (15) of scattered stops which get delivery three times a week," explained Barnett. "We shouldn't have a letter in our system more than 24 hours," said Barnett, though he admit- ted sometimes the service can get snagged. THERE are bound to be some' problems in processing such a bulk of mail. In sorting, some- times a letter ends up in the wrong bin, a mistake easily made considering the similarity in some of the acronymed ad- dresses like SAB and SEB. Nonetheless, Barnett is "pretty proud of the record." omes through The University Mail Service is l ing people how to address and intimately linked to the Ann Ar- send their mail to insure the bor Post Office especially be- most efficient service. A sem- cause the school is the local post inar is given along these lines office's largest single customer. three times a year and anyone d~nt" Barnett mused that you can't; just go down to the corner mailj box and pack it full with Uni- versity mail collected that day. The University has to personally deliver its mail, already soited, to the post office. And every day, the post office carts the mail to the University .but not the parcels. It is the job of the University Mail Service to pick up packages at the post. office and deliver them to the appropriate departments. Two trucks are employed for this purpose alone. THE COMBINED cost of U.S. mail, parcel post and U.P.S. service came to $1.65 million for the Dearborn, Flint and Ann Ar- bor campuses last year. In University c a t a 1 o g u e s alone, 18 tons of information passed through the postal sys- tern last year. The Mail Service serves an- other important function in the University community by teach- -an attenu. "'OUR BIGGEST protlem,"' said Barnett, "is' that people don't identify how they want mail sent." He cited an example where one package destined to travel overseas, contained a let- ter and as such would have cost $18 in postage, The Mail Service suggested the letter be removed from the package, allowing the parcel to be sent for $8 instead, according to a different rate. category. The campus delivery system developed around 1912-1915. "It began with one carrier who de- livered campus mail. He died in 1960 and he carried the mail for the University for 48 years," Barnett recalled. In 1960, the current en route sorting system was born and by 1964 a second truck was added to the one truck fleet instituted in 1948. The Mail Service presently op- erates out of 1032 Greene, its new home since last April. Council considers city parking plan' (Continued from Page 1) town, we will create a slump supported the proposed assess- which we may not be able to ment as well as those advocat- reverse," Councilperson Robert ing the increased parking rates Henry (R-3rd Ward) said. expressed concern with the ef- However, Wheeler pointed out fect a parking rate hike would that many downtown merchants have on th, downtown business currently validate customers area. parking fees and "if you make SEVERAL COUNCIL members the fee higher more customers voiced fears that an increased will have their paring stubs parking fee would cause shop- pers to patronize shopping areas WHEELER CALLED on Plan- with free parking on the out- ning Director Martin OvPrhiser, skirts of the city rather than who quoted a recent study show the metered downtown area. ;4. t r "If we raise rates and cause people to stop coming down- NEW YORK (UPI)-Employee stock ownership plans created under the new tax exemption plan and designed to broaden stock ownership, are having one unexpected result. They are becoming a means of selling a business quickly to desirable new owners. The trend seems clear, al- though seems clear, although only a few such sales have been reported so far. ing a ten per cent increase in downtown area usage within the next 1S years which would re- quire an additional 2,000 park- ing spaces. "Five cents won't make it (downtown) die," member Earl Greene (D-2nd Ward).said. "In the long run it will be a five- year legal fight to see who pays 1(for the parking improvements) at all. Councilperson Jamie Kenwor- thy (D-4th Wgrd) added that if parking rates are raised this year he believes they will have to be increased again in two years. Kr LDIES' BODY SONS TABLES SHIRTS 6"x 16" size. Available in Long sleeve styles in assortedw Yellow or Block. Easy to prints with button front and le. collar. Available in sizes S-M- REG. $4.47 1 re t n Lda' Snr- -- -r on ±'iI Ie £ T 61t PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY JANUARY 29, 1977. MEIJER RESERVES THE RIGHT TO LIMIT SALES ACCORDING TO SPECIFIED LIMITS. NO SALES TO DEALERS, IN- STITUTIONS OR DISTRIBUTORS. Mondale confers with NATO allies (Continued from Page 1) rifle-carrying German soldiers Meanwhile, in Washington yes- who marched up to planeside terday, a Senate report was" re- and presei}ted arms when Mon- leased saying NATO's armed dale emerged from Air Force forces are in such disarray and Two. poor condition that they might not be able to withstand an at- "I AM delighted to be in tack by the Warsaw Pack na- Bonn just a few hours after, the tions of Eastern Europe. Carter administration, has as- On the way to the Brussels sumed power, in order to . . . airport, Mondale made an un- immediately begin cooperative scheduled stop at the U.S. Em- high-level discussions between bassy to report to Carter via a the leaders of your great coun- telephone line made secure by a try and ours," Mondale said in so-called "scrambler." an arrival statement. Energy, economic problems, MONDALE told reporters Car- East-West relations and the At- ter said the device made the lantic alliance will be on the/ vice president "sound like Don agenda for'his talks on Tuesday ald Duck." with Chancellor Helmut "'I said, 'I am Donald Duck'," Schmidt, Mondale said4 Mondale recounted. Tomorrow he will visit West The vice-president then flew Berlin "to demonstrate our com- to the West German capital, mitment to the security and in- where he was greeted by For- dependence" of the city, located eign Minister Han-Dietrich Gen- 110 miles inside Communist scher and an 18-man squad of East Germany. PLUMBING & HEATING REPAIR BOOK Detailed instructions and. illustrations on how to install various plumbing systems. Pm De Plumbing Dept. 1-STOP SHOPPING SAVES MONEY, TIME, ENERGY TOPCO FRUIT FRAGRANCE SHAMPOO AND o CREME RINSE * New improved formulas * 16 fl. oz. REG. 88 77BeAD Health i Beauty Aid: Dept. 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