UNIVERSITY'S FUTURE See Editorial Page Y n a it SLIPPERY High-30* Low-10 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 112 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, February 13, 1977 Ten Cents Eight Pages plus Su pplement ,f u SEE EWS " PP V { M cAL ZDAIIY A word from our own It's not often that the president shares his thoughts with you, but tomorrow, at 7 p.m. in the Rackham Auditorium, you'll get your chance. Mind you now, it won't be a Southern-accented voice addressing the crowd. We didn't mean that president. It's our own Robben Fleming who will be speaking his mind. His address, part of the Future Worlds lecture series, concerns "The Role of the University in the Future." Cursed acros tic Last week, we challenged you not only to solve the acrostic puzzle in the Sunday Magazine, but to assemble the grid yourself - which was scram- bled. Well, in our continuing effort to bring you a truly exclusive acrostic, and one that ge in- creasingly more mind-boggling each week, we've misprinted a couple of the numbers that corre- spond with clue solutions. But for those of you who are still a bit new at the acrostic game, we'll tip you off on those insidious changes. Take note: Clue D: the fifth letter is numbered "136" but should read "126." And in Clue M, the last letter is tagged "24" but should be changed to "29." Please, don't give up on us. We promise to de- liver you a flawless puzzle next week. Happenings-... ... on this wet and icy Sunday crystalize at 3 p.m. when the Sunday Gay Discussion debates "Community" in the Canterbury House, corner of Catherine and Division ... an hour later, in the Pendleton Arts Information Center on the second floor of the Union, Lori Sommers, accompanied by John Gabriel and Deborah Little, will give a violin recital ... from 4-6:30 Couzens will serve dinner in honor of announcing the trivia contest finals ..,. at 6:30 Hillel, at 1429 Hill, will show the movie "Storm of Strangers" ... dorm residents and fraternity and sorority folks whose houses don't serve Sunday dinner are in for a break with dis- counted buffet meals served at the University Club on the main floor of the Union from 5 to 8 p.m. ... the Ann Arbor Libertarian League will sponsor a taped lecture by Dr. Nathanial Bran- den on the objectivist view of the role of philoso- phy in society at 7 p.m. at 30812 S. State St. .. at 7:30 there will be a discussion on "Life after Death" in the lounge of the International Center the student support committee for campus AFSCME workers will meet at 8 in East Quad's Greene Lounge ... also at 8, a men't conscious- ness-raising group will be formed at 550 S. Ash- ley, Apt. 2 ... on Monday, from 9:30-11:30, the Center for the Continuing Education of Women will hold "A Support Group for Single Parents" at 328-330 Thompson ... at 4 in the Rackham E. Con- ference Rm., Martin Silverman of the Anthropolo- gy Department will discuss "Culture, Kinship and Marx" .. at 7 in rooms 4 and 5 of the League, Ozone House will begin its training sessions for volunteer counselors .., and don't forget Presi- dent Fleming at 7 in Rackham Auditorium. " Belly-aching It had all the makings of a juicy, headline- grabbing scandal, and members of the Urban County Council in Lexington, Ky. were practi- cally lining up to express indignation. The coun- ty budget seemed to show that a woman had been paid.$41,000 to teach belly dancing in Lex- ington's Recreation Department. But as it turned out, the lawmakers just weren't familiar with the procedures involved in writing up the city's ex- penses. Part-time and temporary workers are listed in the budget as if they had worked 40 hours per week for a year. The belly dancing instructor was paid $20 an hour, but only for a couple of hpurs per week and only for a month or so. All told, the city paid the skin-rippling instructor about $250. Tuned out New York's most radical radio station, WBAI- FM, was off the air yesterday after the staff seized the studios and broadcasted grievances and protest songs before being silenced. The staff be- gan their guerrilla action Friday in a dispute with management over plans to change the format of the 17-year-old anti-establishment' station in an at- tempt to halt declining support. The staff seized the station's transmitter and barricaded them- selves in. On the inside... You'll find volume two of The Daily's new tabloid Sunday Magazine, featuring a profile of Charles Mingus by Stephen Hersh ... the Editor- ial Page brings you the weekly Week in Review by editors Ann Marie Lipinski and Jim Tobin ... the Page 3 Digest tells about Andrew Young's return from negotiations with African leaders ... and the final layout of retiring sports editor Bill Stieg is found on, you guessed it, the sports page. 0 On the outside... Don't leave home without your ice skates this morning. By some fascinating chemical phenome- non the rain that fvll iinn is: vesterdav has turn- CRSP appointment lines canned By RICHARD BERKE If you savored camping out on the steps of Angell Hall once a semester, you're not going to like the new CRISP appointment procedure. There will be no lines to wait in. The Administration, concerned over the inconveniences and inequities in the old appointment system, has shifted the schedul- ing responsibility from the individual schools and colleges to a centralized, University-wide scheme. "WE BEGAN to worry last fall when it got particularly bad with LSA (literary college) students waiting all night in line for an oppointment card," said Ernest Zimmerman, assistant to the vice president for academic affairs." "I can see students doing that for football tickets, but not for CRISP appointments," he added. Beginning with this April's early registration, the student pop-' ulation will be divided into eight alphabetical groupings, each group being assigned a certain one-and-a-half day period during which its members can register. Individuals will CRISP at a computer-designated time within the alphabetic group and the times will be assigned randomly though the computer is programmed to avoid class schedule con- flicts. The appointment will appear on the Student Verification Form. WITH EACH TERM, the groups will be rotated one shift. This gives all undergraduate students the advantage of registering first, the disappointment of registering last and the uncertainty of regis- tering in the middle - all in the course of a four-year career at the University. The randomly selected group schedule for the April early reg- istration period is as follows: " A-Cap: April 13 (p.m.), April 14 " Caq-Fen: April 15, April 18 (a.m.) " Feo-Her: April 18 (p.m.), April 19 " Hes-K: April 4, April 5 (a.m.) " L-Mom: April 5 (p.m,), April 6 " Mon-Rid: April 7, April 8 (a.m.) " Rie-Sto: April 8 (a.m.), April 11 * Stp-Z: April 12, April 13 (a.m.) See CRISP, Page 2 Sadat. Vance MViddle tooking to for new East talks CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - President Anwar Sadat in- dicated yesterday he is counting on U.S. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance to help remove remaining' obstacles to an early resumption of Arab-Israeli peace negotia- tions in Geneva. "U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim has faced difficulties in Israel but we hope problems will be eased after the visit of Vance to the region next week," Sadat told a news conference. The American secretary is scheduled on a week-long tour of six Middle East current prospects for hammering out a to embark tomorrow countries to explore peace accord. Sadat -added: "The Arab leaders will also meet soon to study the situation after which things might become more clear." Waldheim said earlier yesterday that Israel still rejects par- Sadat .How dry we are%= Western states moan SAN FRANCISCO '(A") - It hangs above the Pacific Coast like an ominous invisible cloud. Californians peer through it ev- ery morning as they awake to another miserable day of dazz- ling sunshine. Weather predictors call it the Pacific high. In normal winters it wanders up and down the coast, bringing the occasional sunny, dry weather that, most years, is a welcome part of the California lifestyle.. BUT FOR the second straight winter, the Pacific high has hung steady,hits center about 200 miles northwest -of San Fran- cisco. Meteorologists say it causes the cold and snow that socked the East this winter as well as back-to-back dry years in much of the West. "The winter cold in the East is going to be forgotten a lot sooner than the drought out West," says J. Murray Mitchell, meteorologist with the National Oceanographic and Atmospher- is Administration in Washington. The prolonged dryness cer- tainly will mean higher food and energy prices - how much higher remains to be seen. Bank of America economist Eric Thor says the drought could push the national consumer price index up as march as one percentage noint, raising the inflation rate from the five to six per cent See DROUGHT, Page 2 ticipation by a Palestine Lib- eration Organization (PLO) dele- gation in the proposed Geneva conference. "THIS IS THE MAIN problem facing my mission in the Mid- east," Waldheim said as he com- pleted a ten-day tour of the Mid- dle East aimed at arranging. re- sumption of the peace talks. Sadat reiterated his govern- ment's position that the Pales- tinians must be able to attend the conference. "The Palestinians are the core of the problem and I cannot im- agine any negotiations in Gene- va without their representa- tion," he said. "If we had to establish peace in, the area the Palestinians should join the negotiations." West German Foreign Min- ister Hans-Dietrich Genscher, who was also at the news con- ference, agreed that "the Pales- tinian problem is the key ques- tion. The Palestinian rights See SADAT, Page 2 AP Photo LIFE WAS SIMPLER once in Plains, but now the tour guides -hawk the Georgia town like so many hot dogs. Upon his return home yesterday, President Jimmy Carter was surprised by a new tourist mini-train and even a traffic light. Carter visits the f oltis PLAINS. Ga. (A) - Jimmy Carter gave two of his relatives a folksy report yesterday on how he's been making out in Washington as President. They exch~nged small-town gossip and talked about "Roo:s." Carter told them how he's been getting along with Congress, what it's like living in the White House, his traveling troubles and his worries about being isolated. THE'CHAT TOOK place in cousin Hugh Carter's antique shop with the President leaning on the counter in back of the store and with reporters looking on. Behind the counter was Hugh Carter, a cousin who doubles as a Georgia state senator, and 88- year-old Uncle Alton Carter, who shared laughs and confidences with Jimmy, who is home for his first visit since he was inaugurated three weeks ago. Carter brought the news that Hugh Carter, Jr., the senator's son whom he had made a White House assistant, had already saved $40,000 fby cutting back newspaper subscriptions at the White House. See COUNTRY, Page 2 I Olga's: Trying to break the burger, n fast food war By RICK BONINO Two ounces of seasoned lamb and beef, special sauce, tomato slices, minced onion - all in a homemade ,bread shell. A Big Mac gone Bohemian? No, that's an "original Olga's," standard fare at Olga's Kitchen, State Street's new eaterie. And according to that list of. ingredients, Olga's stands a world apart from Golden Arch-type. fast-food outlets. OLGA LOIZON, a Detroiter of Greek ancestry, charac- terizes her creation as "fresh food" but not "fast food." "In fast food, things are frozen and thrown on a grill or in a microwave oven," Olga explains. But Olga's specialties are pampered all the way to the plate. "Here, everything is fresh," she boasts. "It doesn"t take that much time to prepare - that's where yotf get your fast food concept." OLGA'S advertising agent, Greg Raab, insists the res- taurant is not a "bun and run operation." Some two thousand Ann Arborites per day have been running to Olga's to sample the bizarre fare, which includes the "originals" (based on the gyros, a Greek sandwich), similar sandwiches featuring meat, cheese and vegetarian fillings, "fresh fries," spinach pie and "frozen Olgurt's" - what else, frozen yogurt - since the restaurant's December 12 opening. RAAB CONSIDERS Ann Arbor a tough market for a new food chain., "It's full of discerning critics," he says. ~~~~~- . - ' . .1 _ - m . a _>:r 11811