Page 12-Friday, May 4, 1979--The Michigan Daily DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:30 MON. thru SAT. 10 A.M. tIl 1:30 P.M. SUN. & HOLS. Noon til 1:30 P.M. EVENING ADMISSIONS AFTER 5:00, $3.50 ADULTS Monday-Saturday 1:30.5:00, Admission $2.50 Adult and Students Sundays and Holidays 1:30 to Close, $3.50 Adults, $2.50 Students Sunday-Thursday Evenings Student & Senior Citizen Discounts Children 12 And Under, Admissions $1.25 WOODY ALLEN DIANE KEATON 1015 12:30 fl 3:15 MERYL STREEPM715 0:00 ANNE BYRNE 1 Fri & Soat MICHAEL MURPHY midnght MARIEL HEMINGWAY L 10:00 3:30 12:45 6:45 S9:30 Fri & Sat n-a-name12:00 w..... .t w..i,.. .r.c .midnight 10:15 1:00 3:45 6:45N FRNC ZFFR 9:30 oFILaM eof.ay:type HE E; PG| 0:00 :15 4:00 7:00 9:45 NP Gt \ PG FRI. SAT. 12:00 MID- NIGH T No matches, lighters, or other R open flame of any type. FRI MR<. ;SAT 12:00 _ s .MID- NIGHT Fi i Juvenile crime up, police report says By TIMOTHY YAGLE (vandals)," Hawkins said. THERE WERE 26 rapes in 1978, an Juvenile crimes reported in Ann Ar- increase of one over last year. bor last year, including murder, rob- One hundred fifteen robberies oc- bery, burglary, and assault, increased curred last year, compared to 150 in by more than 50 per cent, according to 1977. Reported burglaries dropped from the Ann Arbor Police Department 1,628in 1977 to 1,553 last year. (AAPD) 1978 crime report. Juvenile The cases of reported arson burglary rose almost 300 per cent over decreased slightly last year with 35, the 1977 figures, stated the report. compared with 37 in 1977. POLICE DEPARTMENT Executive THE NUMBER of arrests for disor- Major Walter Hawkins attributes the derly conduct remained about the same increase to a higher rate of school van- with 335 being stopped last year as op- dalism and more citizens reporting posed to 338 two years ago, according to crimes, the report. The number of murders rose from There were also 32 reported purse one in 1977 to five reported last year, snatchings, the study said, down 11 the study, which covered the period from 1977. Five area banks were robbed Jan. 1-Dec. 31,1978, said, last year, up four from 1977. The reason for the city's low The report stated a total of close to homicide rate, Hawkins said, is $2.5 million worth of property was because "We have a lot of good, honest stolen last year. The 1977 figure is people. They are mostly crimes of slightly less than that. The amount of passion." He added that no organized goods recovered in 1978 was about crime exists in the city, which he said $650,000, noticeably different from the helps to explain the relative lack of roughly $600,000 figure of 1977. murders in the city. MALES CONTINUE to commit more THE NUMBER of assaults, the study crimes than females, as in the past. stated, dropped from 239 in 1977 to 235 in Females committed less than 10 per 1978. Roughly two-thirds of last year's cent of the total assaults, less than assaults involved a weapon. three per cent of the burglaries, and The only reported crime statistic less than 17 per cent of the robberies. showing a significant change was van- "Males have always committed more dalism, which increased from 1,236 in crimes than females. It really is (a 1977 to 1,627 last year. psychological question)," said Hawkins explained that the increase Hawkins. possibly is due to an increase in school Out of 351 people arrested for driving vandalism, or that "There simply is under the influence of alcohol, 311 were more reported vandalism. People are male. The results from 1977 are almost more confident that we can catch them the same. Council looks at budget for parks, tax office By JOHN GOYER Computer. updating of city tax records will allow the city assessor's of- fice to complete an annual assessment of all property in the city, according to city asssessor Wayne Johnson. The effort to review the city's tax rolls every year comes in response to an opinion by state Attorney General Frank Kelley that Ann Arbor's old system of reviewing half the city's property each year was invalid. JOHNSON ALSO attributed the start of a yearly property assessment system to the "rise in price in single family dwellings." Johnson, speaking before a city coun- cil hearing on the proposed $43.8 million 1979-80 city budget, told the council that using a computer to update tax records would allow his department to divert manpower toward making physical assessments of property. The assessor's office now can look at onlya about half the property it assesses each year. But, according to Johnson,- the computer program would allow the of- fice to both maintain that level of physical assessment and assess all city property annually. The city will spend $40,000 to $50,000 for the computer program needed to use the city's computer for tax assessment, if city council approves the assessor's office budget request for $20,000. IN A SIMILAR budget review session Wednesday night, Councilwoman Leslie Morris (D-Second Ward) called for the phasing out of two staff positions in the Department of Parks and Recreation. Morris said she thought one person, who fills the position of Manager of Field Services, would soon be retiring. The other position Morris said she wants phased out would be the Manager of Park Planning position. Morris said that the same person would perform the job, but that the person would be hired on a consultant basis, thereby saving the city money. IN SUPPORT of her argument to phase out the planning position, Morris said she wasn't sure city voters would approve another bond issue for future parks expansion. Defending the parks development division, George Walker of Parks and Recreation, said, "The projects that we have on board now and those that I have a feeling we'll be getting necessitate retaining the three people we've got." At last night's meeting, Council members also questioned Richard Weid of the city's Municipal Garage Depar- tment. Weid spoke up for a study evaluating the city garage that claimed employees of the Solid Waste Depar- tment are abusing city vehicles because of the incentive system, in which they are paid on a unit-of-work basis and not on an hourly basis. Council members received a letter from Ulysses Ford of the Solid Waste Department, which said that on the contrary the incentive plane en- couraged employees to take care of the vehicles, because if a vehicle broke down, the operator would have to wait around for it to be fixed, thus adding to the length of the operator's workday. City Council will review the proposed city budget for another two weeks before it suggests changes and finally passes a budget in about three weeks.