rtdQy ,Ju ly 1,19 17 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine PIRGIM seeks ronsUmer Ctca iwued frcm : 1, ernment, ihich we don't have now," said Strausberg. After the signatures and the nickels are collected, PIRGIM representatives will confront Carl Pursell with them and urge him to vote in favor of the hill. Strausherg said if individ- uals could not make it to Tues- day's meeting they could still join by calling PIRGIM. U M Stylists at the Union 8:30 a.m.-5:15 p.m. Man.-Sat. DAVE, CHET and HAROLD i Sliced lemon? And you thought your insurance covered everything. Actually this enormous "Saw in the Volkswagon" isn't an act of God at all, but the work of a Miami art student. After handing - or rather, rolling - his project in, he gave in to his young friends Melinda and Kathy. It now sits in Melinda's front yard, attracting the gawks of passing wire service photographers. Adams asks required air (Contnued from Page 1) first and third years, and 5 mil- effective only in front-end col- lion in the second year. lisions. Adams said seat belts Consumer advocate Ralph like those used in today's cars Nader, long a supporter of pas- still would be required as an air sive restraint systems, criti- bag supplement. rized the phase-in plan, saying PASSIVE SEAT belts are a Adams did it to avoid a con- combination lap and shoulder gressional veto. harness attached to the car "THIS IS THE first time the doors. They automatically wrap federal government has phased around the front seat passeng- in an auto safety standard," ers when the door is closed and Nader said. lock into position if there is a "This says to the public, if collision. you can't afford a large luxury Auto buyers would have their car, you're going to have to choice of systems. wait for safety protection," he "Too many people have been said. "While we have one gov- needlessly injured or killed in ernment agency telling us to crashes where passive re- buy small cars to save fuel, we straints could have saved have another telling us we can- them," Adams laid, citing 47,- not yet have safety devices in 001 traffic deaths on the na- those cars.". ion's highways each year. "I Adams said he decided on the casnot in good conscience be a phased-in approach so that the party to further, unnecessary automakers wouldn't suddenly delaty." be faced with changing all ten ADAMIS SAID the automatic million cars in one year. projection devices would be re- HE ALSO NOTED that manu- utired beginning Sept. 1, 1981, facturers have some experience 'or all standard and luxury size with air bags in larger autos tars of the 1982 model year. and that smaller autos, which The requirements would be ex- have less space to absorb im- tended to 1983 model interme- pact in a head on collision, diate and compact cars and to might pose some technical 19114 model subcompact and problems that require more R-size autos. 'lime to solve. The secretary said 2.5 million The secretary's order is ass- cars would be equipped in the other in a series of government THIS WEEKEND AT (INEMA GUILD FRIDAY The Devil Is A Woman Directed by Joseph Von Sternberg and starring Marlene Dietrich SATURDAY Chaplin's The Gold Rush (with a CHAPLIN SHORT) SUNDAY FREE SHOWING AT 8 The classic silent THE BLUE ANGEL CINEMA GUILD OLD AC 7:30 & 9:30 ADM $1.50 bags by '84 rulings that will change the look of the American auto in the 1980's. Adams noted that Con- gress is completing its work on elimination of automobile pol- lutants, and that last Sunday he announced new- fuel econo- my standards for 1981-84 mod- el cars, ranging from 22 miles per gallon up to 27 mpg. RACKHAM GRADUATE STUDENTS S you intend to graduate this term wits either a master's des.eeor so intermedite de- gree awarded b the Rackham Graduate S ch oo 1, you must sbmitaDi" alomaoAppication to the Recordis Office, Roost 1014 Rarkham Graduate School. no later than Friday, July 8, 1977 in order tohe placed on the Augsost degree list. niploma appllvotions are avail able in the Rackham Oraduate school, Room 1014, as* ell as i yourertment or program ANN AE U If E[At CC-Cr Friday, July 1 JAMES DEAN NIGHT EAST OF EDEN (Elio Kazan, 1955) 7 onv--MLB 3 Kazan's adaptation of Steinbeck's novel was the film that turned a t et osa rase-TVactoe osed Jomes Dean into s superstar. Deanplays Cal Trasis, a sonfused adolescenutsearchingosdesperately for lost love and tenderness. The youth of that period immediately reconized the honesty of his performance and liocked to the tim, making Dean the hottest star on the warners lot. REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE (Nicholas Ray, 19551 9 onv---MLB 3 James Dean was perhaps the tost senstlive, intense, vulnerable, best actor to grace the screen. REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE is his bestiperformance. Playing a young man on his first day in a new high school, Dean portrayed the pent-up confused frustrations of youth perfectly. Saturday, July 2 CARNAL KNOWLEDGE (Mike Nichols, 1971) 7 & 10:30-MLB 3 A SAFE PLACE (Henry Jaslom, 19711 8:45 only-MLB 3 THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING MAN (Jack Arnold, 1957) MLB 4--7:00 only ALPHAVILLE JentLuc Godard, 19651 MLB 4-8:45 only DANGER: DIABOLIK (Maria Bova, 1968) MLB 4-10:30 only y.._.._A . ... f.. ... ....... ... ._ 1 i 2 MOVIES - CINEMA U - MOVIES ROBERT ROSSEN'S 1949 ALL THE KING'S MEN Broderick Crawford won an Academy Award for his portrayal of a Huey Long-type character who on a populist platform makes it into the Governor's Mansion, but not without losing his integrity along the way, and ending up an assassin's victim. A thought- provoking study of American society. With a fine supporting per- formance by Joseph Cotten. ,_.-- 1 1 1 1 1 CINEM kU' TONIGHT AT ANGELL HALL-AUD. A 7:30/9:30 ADM. $1.25