Snake out It took six police officers and a group of helpful passersby, but "Big Sid," a missing 140-pound python who sent the Grand Rapids suburb of Walker, Mich. into a panic for five weeks, has finally been captured and caged. The 20-foot long snake escaped from a Florida cir- cus last month while the show was visiting the area. After learning that the reptile feels hungry about once a month and likes to eat small animals, area residents began keeping their pets - and children - indoors. NOW SHOWING Sot -Sun-Wed 1:20-3:25-5:30-7:35-9:45 Mon-Tues-Thurs-Fri 7:30-9:35 Milliken signs new health code into law J I f LAST TWO DAYS Mon-Tues-Thurs-Fri 7:30-9:45 Sat-Sun-Wed 1:15-3:20-5:30-7:35-9: LANSING (UPI) - Governor William Milliken ceremoniously signed into law a new state public health code yesterday amid a crowd of lobbyists, lawmakers and professionals who fought five years for the measure. The revised code will provide basic health services free of charge to all Michigan residents at a projected cost to taxpayers of $50 million a year. "PG" IT ALSO INCLUDES numerous con- sumer protection steps, new restric- tions on health care professions and a mechanism to reduce costly excessive hospital beds. In addition, it modernizes and brings 50 together scattered public health stan- dards that have accumulated over more than a century, providing what supporters decribed as a model for other states. "I think we will have the best code in the nation," said Rep. Raymond Hood (D-Detroit) a prime legislative sponsor of the measure. MILLIKEN DESCRIBED the code as a "document which will allow Michigan to move into the 21st century as it responds to changing citizen health care needs." At the heart of the code is the provision for the state to share in the funding of basic health services which must be provided to all Michigan residents regardless of race, sex, location or ability to pay. After a phase-in period, the Michigan Department of Public Health, the legislature and the executive office will be responsible for drawing up an an- nual list of required basic health ser- vices and determining how to pay for them. Milliken said that mechanism will allow that state and county health departments to improve the availability of health care at the local level. The code gives the state's 13 health profession licensing boards new authority to impose sanctions on licen- sees, and provides for greater general public representation on those boards. It also features a new Health Oc- cupations Council to oversee the licen- sing of professions and a certificate of need mechanism to guard against the excessive proliferation of health care facilities and services. LAST TWO DAYS Mon.-Tues.-Thurs.-Fri. 7:30-9:30 Sat.-Sun.-Wed. 1:30-3:30;5:30-7:30-9:30 "exceptionally pleasant film" , -Detroit Free Press The Ann Arbor Film Coopertive WEDNESDAY, presents at AUD A THE ECLIPSE JULY 26 (Michelangelo Antonioni, 1962) 7 only-AUD A His last film in black and white, THE ECLIPSE is the third of what critics consider to be Antonioni's trilogy (the other two being L'AVENTURA 1960 and LA NOTTE 1961). Monica Vitti is Vittoria, the young woman who breaks off with her lover and becomes involved with a young stockbroker, PIERO, played by Alain Delon. The story is one of human isolation and solitude, conveyed via Antonioni's great talent for using his characters in visual contests which inevitably reveal internal emotional and psychological states. The last seven minutes of this film are considered to be innovative cine- matically in a manner which is equalled only by the ending sequence of THE PASSENGER. ADRIFT (Jan Kadar, 1968-71) 9:15 only-AUD A Medieval, sensual, ethereal. A Czech fishing family discovers a beautiful woman floating nude in the Danube. They rescue the girl who stays with them changing their simple lives into a strange fairy tale rondo. Filming began in 1968 but was interrupted by the Soviet invasion, making ADRIFT one of the few films to survive Russian repression, With MILENA DRAVIC r Amaes