P-y Ten THE MICHIGAMNALY Thursday, July 22, 1976 l~ge Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, July 22, 1976~ -0- City has the hotsfor Art Fair follies (Continueii from Page 1i Patti Walker, an exhibitor in the Summer Arts Fair, rested in front of Waterman Gym while flaunting her choice items - marijuana pipes and jewelry styled from mule-deer and elk antler; col I e c t e d from the Rocky Mountains "ROCKY MOUNTAIN High - that's what you get when you smoke our antlers," she said cheerily. "I smoke out of them."' But she quickly added that the* antlers used are shed by the Dehoco doctors resign (Co1tninuecir~i 's Poe ing their investigation of the shooting, but spokesman Alton Brown admitted they had turn- ed up no new leads. AITIIOUGH police have no suspects or witnesses in the case, they believe they have now determined the shooting to have taken place between 11:34 and 11:45 Saturday morning. "We're a t itt l progressing," Brown said, adding that police are trying to cover all angles in their investigation of the crime. Part of the inquiry is expected to he focused on Miller's work at Dehoco and Jackson Prison. LADIES' or CHILDREN'S HAIRCUTTING A SPECIALTY! DASCOLA STYLISTS ARBORLAND 971-9975 MAPLE VILLAGE--761-2733 E LIBERTY 668-9329 EUNIVERSITY--662.0354 animals. "We don't go around cutting their antlers off," she said seriously. Down the street from the ant- lers. Marilyn Magnuson, a Chi. cago schoolteacher, exhibited the products of her unique talent - nails hammered into fine walnut panels to produce exiiiaraating patterns of turtles. punctuation marks and tther paraphernalia, "I THINK I'm the only one at the fair that does this hus- ness," she said, relaxing in a chair in her small, boothlike compartment. Magnuson, whose business is appropriately called "Nails on Wood," explained that the suc- cess of each piece depends on the kind of nail employed. "I sure am choosy with my nails," she said. Roofing, finish- ing, copper and bluehead nails all adapt themselves well to her earthy art. "I CAN DO this fgll-time if I wanted to," she said, sipping an orange pop to quell the heat. "But I don't. It's a lot of work, and it's simple as that" Another hot item along East 'U' were the wash and wear stuffed animals, tempting a bevy of little suntanned girls to fondle the soft critters to their heart's content. "For crying out loud, aren't they neat!" exclaimed one not- so-little girl, actually an elderly woman. "Bill, come look at these things. Look at the skunk!" AND ALONG Maynard, South 'U', East 'U', State, Liberty and Main, folks ogled at skunks, bowls, handbags, shoes, succu- lents, candles-and each other. On South 'U', Shakey Jake, everyone's favorite minstrel- about-town, greeted his fans with a raspy "Hey, hey, hey" while chugging past countless booths. S t a t e Representative Perry Bullard of Ann Arbor even found the time prime for a little politicking in front of the Engineering Arch. "I'm usually here-particular- ly in an election year," dead- panned the youthful representa- tive from behind his small table laden with campaign literature. The streets teemed with be- wildered babies wearing sun- bonnets, and elderly couples sauntered past the Chem. Build- ing licking popsicles. Conces- sionaires, wiping sweat from their brows, peddled Mackinac Island Fudge, souvlaki and sn ow c o n e s. One innovative huckster shouted his own pat- ented jingle to fairgoers along crowded South 'U'. "HERE, HERE, it's going fast, the ice-cream man is here at last," he chanted. O n e adventuresome so ul seized the attention of a throng at the Street Art Fair when he strode along wearing rainbow colored wool panties, headdress and a white fur vest while push- ing a wheelbarrow holding a long, green pillar. "This a big, green phallic symbol," he shouted, temporar- ity distracting people away from the assorted crafts. LOCAL MERCHANTS found the fair fun, too, especially on State Street, where they emp- tied their inventories in the middle of the heavily-peopled roadway. Shoes, books, towels, nail polish and permanent-press pants glistened under the hot sun, as special half price sales and other gimmicks attracted B-1 bomber delayed WASHINGTON (A) - The Sen- ate Appropriations Committee yesterday approved a $104- billion defense spending bill but voted to hold up funds for the B-1 Bomber until next year. The total defense spending bill for the fiscal year starting Oct. 1, was $3.9 billion below what the White House had requested and $1.4 billion under the figure approved by the House. THE MEASURE contained $1.05 billion for production of three B-1 bombers but the com- mittee -voted to withhold the funds until next February. Later, at .a news conference, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld called the action "un- sound from a cost standpoint and a management standpoint." He said a four-month delay in a production decision could make the Pentagon liable for some higher charges by the contractor. Opponents of the bomber have been fighting for months to de- lay start of production until after whoever is elected Presi- dent in November takes office. THEY WON a preliminary vic- tory in the Senate last month when a provision delaying pro- duction was included in the military procurement bill. But it was deleted in a Senate-House conference. Sen. John Culver (D-Iowa) who led the fight to delay pro- duction when the procurement bill was before the Senate issued a statement after the appropria- tions committee action in which he said: "There is no need to rush ahead with this program now, when a calm, post-election de- cision can be made on this $21.6- billion program." THE MOTION to delay pro- duction was offered by Sen. Wil- liam Proxmire (D-Wis.). Supporters of the B-1 are ex- pected to try to reverse that vote when the appropriations bill reaches the Senate floor. House members on the con- ference committee were ada- mant in their opposition to a delay. Senate opponents of the B-1 have argued that final decisions shoppers in much the same way spilled honey draws bees. Over on South 'U', orange- clad women at Orange Juus ran amok behind the counter, screaming out "tae 1a r g e orange, " "two small strawber- ries," and "one medium pIne- apple" as scores of fairgoers sought refuge and refreshment in Julius' brightly colored store. Meanwhile, exhibitor Marge Detro, supervising her jewelry collection under the tent at Maynard, examined some hand- crafted items she had picked up at the fair. "Oh, sure I buy," she said, and swore there was no better place in the world than an art fair to "buy all my Christmas, Bar Mitzvah, wedding and bap- tism gifts." until'77 on whether to go ahead with production of the bomb should be left to whoever is elected president in November. Prof. lauds Mars landing (Continued from Page 3) litions to the pollution prob- lem, for instance. And experi- ments to learn about conditions on Mars that will provide this information are being carried out by the Viking mission, though they've been oversha- dowed by the 'is-there-life' question. As to that aspect of the pro- ject, Teske admits that the possibilities are good. "IF YOU quote me as saying 'sure, there's life on Mars', I'll deny it," he said. "But the fact that free nitrogen has been found in the atmosphere sug- gests that some sort of biologi- cal organisms might be produc- tng it. tOn the other hand, we really don't knosw if fret nitro- gen has a biological origin." If living matter does exist on the Martian surface, he said, "it would be very primitive- something on the line of self- duplicating molecules. You won't see any pictures of big eyes peering into the camera lens." The astronomer is as opti- mistic about the future as he is happy about the accomplish- ments of the present. "Where do we go from here?" he asked rhetorically. "To the other planets, to learn still more from them if we can." Mars landing photos show a red planetAn (Continued from Page 3) than 80 per cent nitrogen. VIKING TOLD scientists here Argon makes up 1.5 per cent at Jet Propulsion Laboratory of the Martian atmosphere, that the Martian atmosphere is compared with 1 per cent in much denser than had been earth's. But scientists were hap- thought, not entirely dissimilar py to learn that, after Russian from earth's. reports had estimated the Ar- Data from the lander showed gon presence to be as high as 3 per cent of the Martia at- gupeicetbeahghs nmosphere to be nitrogen, which 30 per cent, enough to wreck is required for life as we know the atmosphere - measuring it. Earth's atmosphere is more equipment aboard Viking. A shot against cancer? One day the scariest thing about cancer may be the needle that makes you immune to it. The theory: build up the body's defense to fight off a disease naturally. Dramatic research in this direction is going on right now. Scientists are working on mechanisms to make the body reject cancer, And the promise for the future is staggering. Wouldn't you feel good knowing you contributed to the re- search? Feel good. Please contribute. Your dollars will help further all our cancer research. We want to wipe out cancer In your lifetime. American Cancer Society . 'ISmnSPACE " Tin,,TCO 4 i5 9 L~~~iiFroA5. AutiS'n" CITY NOTICE' Attention Voters from Ward 1, Precinct 2, South Quad Your POLLING PLACE for the August 3, 1976, primary election has been moved from South Quad to WEST QUAD, 541 THOMPSON ST.