..- Two Pog~~~~ Two ~~THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY MAGAZINE Mrh2,17 oc 7 97TEMCIA AL UDYM(ZN March 27, 1977 Aarch 27, 1977 THE MICHIGAN QAf LW SUNC 41E MAGAVNE contents: notes .. . Last week we told you to watch out for our special analysis of the Hite report in this issue. Well, what started -out as a book review has turned into a full-fledged feature with Laurie Young scouting the University community for insight and reactions to the findings of this document. So instead of bringing it to you in bok review form this week, we promise an even more in-depth feature on the subject. in our next magazine, as port of on issue devoted to a dis- cussion of women's concerns surrounding their bodies and their health. sunday ma z n~re ICO-EDTOS- 4Susan Ades SElaine Fletcher z BOOKS EDITOR-- 1Tom O'Connell 2ADVERTISING- Don Simpson COVER GRAPHIC OF LAW QUAD'S HUTCHINS HALL By Karl Schweikort DONTOWN SERIES.. FEATURE . .a Toward a new music PERSPECTIVES. . Academy award preview Heroin addiction The loss of adventure a .1 htReeves licks the froth off i 3 .4 0 the Democratic Convention HAPPENINGS .. BOOK REVIEW. R iE 3" 6 R E E 3 3 " " IIII l III II IM Sunday magcazine acr"ostic puzzle N' 221)D 2 A 2 B 2 } 20 K {27 H 28 122)' 30 j. r. . .. __.. _ . Thj, 46V44i ;& L5 1iJ ~ IB a: I I F1 2 5 , 13 354~ uS t, "I x to J 131 ' 3, Q 131. ', :5 V 9 i 92 I 3 B 1 P u 4':N 3 9 1}4 t!1 } +154 1 3 2 i 915 1 I3C1 S Io4 Fi 12 It 143 -i.I r; l kj F15 a ri +K i U iljloo 103++Y k2 V .3 1_ 17 ?3 .L 1? 7 8 9 0aL' 1b <; s 1,3 18 !121 J122 14Th i4d " 6 A 3 3 3 : K 3>"; 401)1 Ali 421 45 BOr 101 E10 E103 J1041 U 2 06J10 1 2' Z S :< i 1' ti16 41° ( 1 0 H 1, A. Questionable; malodorous ......... B. Futility; ineffectuality . C. Sea monster.......... D. Lasting; established '1 977 By STEPHEN J. POZSGAI INSTRUCTIONS Guess the words defined at the left and write them in over their numbered dashes. Then, trans- fer each letter to the corres- pondingly numbered square in the pattern. The filled pattern will contain a quotation reading from left to right with the black squares indicating word end- ings. Meanwhile, the first let- ters of the guessed words will, form an acrostic, giving the author's name and title of the wvork the quote is extracted from. CONVENTION By Richard Reeves Photos by Elliott Erwvitt Hlarcourt, Brace and Jovanovich New York: 1977 239 pp. By ANN MARIE LI'INSKI FEARS AGO when Te dd y White delivered his first Making of a President, newspa- per editors were furious. We don't want to find any surprises in White's next campaign chron- icle, they hollered at veteran and green political reporters alike. Make sure that whatever White prints next, we've printed first. White's book serve ,as a good lesson for American political writers. His revelations and new perspectives were as surprising to reporters' as- they were to their editors, and as soon as the collective blush of embarrass- ment faded from the cheeks of the campaign press corps, every reporter with a crack at the next presidential race vowed to Paill, co -('iitor-Uit- chicf A nn Ma-icy Lipsinki last su-niner don- ned a /tress pass, (-raised the floo r of l lison Square Garden, held Mayor1Beanie's Iha'id and~ pennl] her awn bits of ninirin- t~e' abhouit the Dc inocrahticroll - v'eeftitan. A ATAi By MIKE NORTON E OF THE less pleasant side effects of a growving downtown is the sharp increase in traffic brought about by new development. Added automobile traffic creates serious parking and safety problems, pollutes the air with noise and exhaust, and ~generally tends to make down- tow-n a less inviting place for business or pleasure. Many concerned Ann Arbor residents and citizens' groups argue that the only way to serve the transportation needs of the downtown area without a huge increase in ,'traffic problems is by strengthening the city's mass beat White to the punch at all costs. Those editors and journalists responsible for- churning out feature copy on presidential race periphery are probably suf- fering through the same lesson following the release of Richard Reeves' Convention. I n d e ed, there are even a couple of sting- ers for hard news reporters packed into this skinny account of last summer's Democratic National Convention. in his third book in three years, Reeves and a team of six writers present the fruition of a long period of snooping-snoop- ing which began in late 1975, more than eight months before the start of the four day fiesta on July 12, 1976. Despite all the effort, there is virtually no re- portage of any affairs of parti- cular urgency. But because of the effort, Reeves was able to put forth the definitive account of the convention by stringing together episode after episode of trivial anecdotes which, combin- ed, paint a rather accurate pic- ture of the whole. Picking up their cue from a Carter aide- "There are ten thousand cam- paigns going on at this conven- tion, and Jimmy Carter's is only one of them"-b~eeves and his convention squad put together a real gem. transit system and discouraging the use of cars downtown. But there are a host of ob- stacles -- economic, geographic and psychological - to be over- come before such a scheme TN HIS FLUFFY 246 page ac- 1 count Reeves gives his read- ; ers the proverbial' behind-the- scenes story. A rather nervous John Glenn pays $229.49 for in- stallation of a phone in his hotel suite that would ring only to an- nounce a call from Carter - . hopefully offering the spaceman- gone-governor the vice presiden- cy. A CBS producer calls Car- CA ter's press office to confirm ru- mors that the expected nominee would appear in a ballroom to address his forces. "I don't know if we can stop him," re-2 plies prankster Hunter Thomp- son. "We hope we can, but Jim-.A my's so drunk we may not be able to." Lynda Bird Johnson Robb ter's senior advisor, Charles Kir- takes her seat in the VIP sec- bo. "If you touch 'em too soon, tl tion of the convention hall and you get a red blotch. If you P notices Paul Newman sitting wait till the right moment, they d across the aisle. She sends an usher over to the actor, request- BUTP BEYOND all the chatti-& inghi company. Newinan hears i ness of the book, Reeves b, the messenger out, turns to does make a couple of valuable g, Robb and smiles, then turns contributions to the news history t back to the usher. "Fuck her," of the convention. One is his re- p he replies. velation that during that week p' Worried about the possibility in Manhattan, the Carter people ft of Jerry Brown' addressing the established an ersatz campaign convention and thereby sparking headquarters stocked with a si a movement for himself as a bunch of phonies to deal with R vice-presidential candidate, con- and occupy what Strauss called r{ vention chairman R ob e rt the "weirdos" of the convention g Strauss maps a plan of attack. -those that expected insiders' tE "He's (Brownvz) like a pimple on privileges, but who got the back % your face," Strauss tells Car- door treatment instead. ti transporta to L. Blotter; sponge 11 50 92 145 160? 81 166 76 177 Reef that s( plans drop a as the bekno gov ern tation, pulled plans, from1 Outs sives, fer a review gt to to he] wasn't tic Col I Arbor leased by the Social proxin city's ;y sten Sel 24 114 36 79 67 25 1 44 94 99 103 119 135 144 164 169- 43 63 1583116 140 9 15 183 56 60 105 23 54 87 97 120 118 147 metaphysics ........ N. Cigarette butt ......... 0. Desert refuge........ P. Body-"cycles.........._ Q. Interval between an order and its delivery (2 ords) ... R. Nihilist; vandal....... 33 157 75 138 98 38 59 8 133 155 42 61 127 146 162 156 113 174 89 22 30 130 151 188 163 101 70 131 193 73 Public transit in the Ann Ar- bor-Ypsilanti area is administer- ed by the Ann Arbor Transpor- tation Authority (RATA), which was formed in 1968 when the private bus company which for- E. Science (2 words) ...... 4 72 102 S8 124 134 150 191 53 168 mill property tax approved by city voters in 1973. The Authority- has madte im- pressive strides in organizing both a conventional fixed-route bus system and a computerized Dial:-A-Ride program, and in boosting ridership among Ann A It b' P F. Modify; replace....... G. Straighten .. ...... H-. Triangular pyram-id 1. Producing effects ......_ J. Allow for extra expenses or cutbacks (3 words) 12 165 171 179 14 46 91 2 184 186 26 40 6 16 20 148 48 65 71 29 176 6$ 80 90}31 106 129 -47 153 7 21 149 49 192 115 143 170 136 78 b2 13 34 52 74 -84 141 112 128 --- S. The appearances or 110 121 semblance of truth . 18 126 93 152 117 85 123 189 161 175 185 100 37 29 77 104 107 125 142 82 122 167 173 180 T. Having two equal sides. U. Tryingto look wise . V. Movements that break with tradition (2 words)... Answer to Last Week's Puzzle All the vegetable sedatives and narcotics, all the euphorics that :grow on trees, the hallucinogens that ripen in berries or can be squeezed from roots-all, with- out exception have. been known and sysematically used by hu- -wan beings from; time immne- norial. (Aldoug) Huxley fronm "Tbe D~oors of Perception;' many of these are the result of contradictions built into the present mass transit system it- self. could be put into effect. And merly served the area wcent out wi~ i j 32 10 181 19 132 66 95 108 137 57 182 111 41 83 45 i of business. ARATA is an auto- nomous public corporation which operates out of funds from a 2.5 3 U 1 ALL YOU CAN EAT! K. Closed: dense.... 3 17 109 27 39 51 64 139 154, J87 178 159 5 35 58 172 69 190, 86 96 9 s _1 AI-4'TE ..T ... T A1i ~S O)$TN~O~r ! P ACAtE T dR-%\SAWA, v'To et YN MJ - ML A WmT M T"\,M ? )- O MM Atu -5F IN" STARtAYKlmp3 ,rt . pbS~z1t 1 (~Y~ ' I'2s~ 7. - dV r .4.1 Thursday Special FRENCH FROEDSMELT1 French Fried Potatoes Wednesday Special HOMEMADE BAKED LASAGNA ALL MEALS INCLUDE: * Steaming Basket of Russian Rye Bread * Large Pretzel Bell Salad $3.95/Adult $1.75 Child Serving fDinner 5-10 n m. Sunday Special BAKED CHICKEN Sage Dressinq, Mashed Potatoes Monday Special BAR-B-QUE CHICKEN French Fried Potatoes Tuesday Special BAR-B-QUE BEEF RIBS French Fried Potatoes PRETZEL BELL Restaurant 120 E. LIBERTY 761-1470 ZiAh.S IAML15-11 '2o reate~b collection in town fl a# ,%-£rov, And( rsoc. Bliih, Brackett,E )3 i.rnr Ott {- rbrt, I=1'. rg LeGnin, LGv ~C1.3 =t, ik.OiCO,;, ;'$F7, x9or~el T, i'° -Ike, 3i "_'T;', :i.uik,111.1 ;ith, I dJo ut ; u3OIt, at 1,1 01 01' y.