The Michigan Daily-Saturday, December 12, 1981-Page 5 Severe cuts predicted in state's budget (Continued from Page 1) same level for the rest of the year there could be a $360 million budget deficit by 1983. "THE SITUATION is making everyone here very uneasy," Clay said. "But an executive order is not a cer- tainty. "We've gone through two of the worst years in the state's economy in 40 years. Further budget cuts may be ne'cessary," Clay added. Bill Manchester, administrative assistant to state Senator Ed Pierce (D- Ann Arbor), said the budget prospects for any unit within the state were bad, including the higher education units. "IF WE CONTINUE to have shor- tfalls for our projected budgets, then Daily Classifieds Get Results- Call 764-0557 higher education will have to bear some cuts," Manchester said. The state's most pessimistic predic- tions for revenue intake have turned out to be too optimistic, Manchester added. "Everyone's worst case two years ago is now our best case," Manchester said. Roberts said there will be no con- sideration of an executive order until after the Christmas season. He said much of the state's revenues depended on retailer's Christmas sales, which can total 25 percent of a business' an- nual profits. The governor wants to avoid issuing another executive order, Roberts said. Milliken is asking all state government departments to save 4 percent of their budget early this year to make up for the revenue losses of October and November. ROBERTS SAID various- ad- ministrative offices within the Lansing government would have to delay equipment purchases, reduce travel budgets, and possibly lay off personnel to save that 4 percent. Bullard said the-only solution to the state's budget problems is to raise taxes. "If Milliken were responsible he would propose a new set of taxes," Bullard added. "Maybe they (the Office of Management and the Budget) are just waiting for supply-side economics to work," Bullard said of the state's lack of tax revenues. Daily Poony.,ue rFnc Ann Arborites David Kahn, Stewart Merritt, Patricia Ball, and Clarke Ball (no relation) hiked 3,000 miles along the Con- tinental Divide to raise money for the blind in Nepal. : Hikers finish 3,000-mile walk HOLIDAY SPECIAL Hard Contact Lenses $139 Hydrocurve Soft Contact Lenses $155 Extended Wear Soft Lenses $300 (Wear for 2 weeks without removal) All Glasses 25% Off Dr. Paul Uslan 545 Church Street Offer Expires Dec. 17 769-1222 BY JENNIFER MILLER * 'It was a lot of pain, a lot of boredom," University graduate Stewart Merritt said, "and a lot of exhilaration." Merritt and three other Ann Arbor residents returned this week from a 3,00mile, six-month hike along the Continental Divide. BUT CLARKE Ball, Patricia Ball, David Kahn, and Merritt didn't walk e Divide solely for personal reward. The grueling hike raised $35,000 in donations to help prevent and cure blindness in Nepal, a Himalayan coun- try where about one out of every 50 people are blind.1 Ninety percent of the blind are curable, but there are no hospital facilities and few eye doctors, accor- ding to the trip's sponsor, the Society for Epidemiology and Voluntary Assistance. On Nov. 24, the four celebrated the end of their trek with firecrackers and champagne at the Mexican border. Pat Ball said she ran the last two miles, but Merritt said he "walked real slow. I was sad that it was over." Pat Ball couldh't wait because her wedding was held in Santa Fe, N.M. the next day. DURING THE journey, the hikers faced waist-deep snow, spoiled food, discouragement, 100-degree weather, cold rain, and in order to escape the on- coming winter, walked 40 miles on some days. Pat Ball, 26, may be the first woman to hike the Divide. "The third day out I wanted to quit," she said. Her com- panions "ignored her. We called her our hostage," Kahn, 22, said. Pat Ball was the only one of the four who had never had ary hiking experience before. "After a while, we couldn't keep up with her. She was always in front," an said Kahn, an Outward Bound graduate. "Thinking of the people in Nepal," Pat Ball said, "was enough to keep me going." ALL FOUR said they missed home- cooked food the most during the trip. "I had chocolate cake and pizza last night," Merritt grinned. Music, hot showers, and warm beds were also sorely missed trappings of civilization, the hikers said. Another complaint was that "we didn't get to stop and enjoy a lot of the beautiful scenery," Clarke Ball said. Boredom set in at times during the trek. "We were doing crazy things," Kahn said, "talking to cattle ..." Each developed his own special method of killing the large horseflies that pestered the hikers, Kahn said. THE EXPERIENCE held personal rewards for the hikers. "You'd be amazed at what you're capable of doing," Pat Ball said, "I'm not this weak person anymore. I feel I probably can accomplish anything I want to in life." Merritt, 24, said, "I'm a lot more relaxed and self-confident. People tell me that I'm different." He now plans to get a job in computer science. Kahn said he is planning a hike across the Upper Peninsula in August to benefit Greenpeace. He is on leave from his sculpture studies at Northern Michigan University, and will be tem- porarily teaching stonecarving in his native Ann Arbor. Both Clarke Ball and Pat Ball (no relation) hope'to visit Nepal sometime in the future. A parade and rally at Liberty Plaza is being held in their honor starting 11 a.m. today, and a benefit party at 8 p.m. at the Blind Pig tomorrow night. ta QUALITIY TECHNICAL and PROFESSIONAL REFERNCE MATRILS Medical, Nursing, Dental, Engineering, and Law books, all at discount prices - perfect for holiday gift giving! Open 7days a week, in the Michigan Union. "A Special Christmas Gift" . FOR YOU OR SOMEONE ELSE, TO ENJOY ALL YEAR ROUND. ILI 11 1l I r : VOLUME I' (Golden Crest CRS-4202) With the University of Michigan Symphony 'Band. WILLIAM D. REVELLI, Conductor RECORD 1 THREE REVOLUTIONARY MARCHES.....................Smetana/Nelhybel OVERTURE TO DIE FLEDERMAUS ........................ Strauss/Cailliet ELSA'S PROCESSIONAL TO THE CATHEDRAL...............Wagner/Cailliet SCENARIO FROM SOUTH PACIFIC......................Rodgers/Werle TOCCATA AND FUGUE IN D MINOR ........... .......... Bach/Leidzen RECORD 2 SYMPHONY FOR BAND........ ......................Persichetti WHEN JESUS WEPT........ ........... ...... Billings/William Schuman THE SOUTHERNER MARCH......................R. Alexander/Bainum A STEP AHEAD ....................................... H. Alford PASSIONS IN PAINT.........Renee/Werle MANZONI REQUIEM (EXCERPTS)........................ . Verdi/Smith RECORD 3 MARCH MILITAIRE FRANCAISE ........................ Saint-Saens/Godfrey VARIATIONS AND FUGUE......... ..................... Giannini SUITE FROM WATER MUSIC.......... ....... ...... Handel/P. Kay FETE DIEU A SEVILLE Albeniz/Cailliet LIEBESTOD FROM "TRISTAN AND ISOLDE" . .... . ....... Wagner/Bainum RITMO JONDO .................... ........................ Surinach RECORD 4 FIESTA DEL PACIFICO....... .......................Roger Nixon ST. LAWRENCE SUITE ......................................... Gould RELAX............................................ Paul Yoder MARCH OPUS 99.. . Prokofiev/Yoder GEORGE WASHINGTON BICENTENNIAL MARCH ......... ............. Sousa BLACK MASKERS SUITE (FINALE) ....................1..R. Sessions/Bancroft OVFRTURE AND CACCIA......... .................... Menotti/Lang MEDITATION FROM THAIS ........................Massenet/Harding MARCH ON THE HUDSON................................ Goldman RECORD 5 PRAELUDIUM AND ALLEGRO ............................Giannini FOLK SUITE.................................... Gould/Lang SYMPHONIC SONGS .... Robert Russell Bennett POLKA AND FUGUE FROM "SCHWANDA THE BAGPIPER" ...Weinberger/Bainum MARCH HONGROISE DAMNATION OF FAUST) .................. Berlioz/Smith VARIANTS FROM A MEDIEVAL TUNE ........................Dello Joio AMERICAN SALUTE............... ..................Gould/Lang RECORD 6 OVERTURE TO THE OPERA LE ROI D'YS...................Lalo/Godfrey MEDITATION ................................... Gunther Schuller MARCH: THE FREE LANCE ...............................Sousa ENIGMA VARIATIONS ................................ Elgar/Slocum MARCH: THE HUNTRESS .................................King- STARS AND STRIPES FOREVER ............................Sousa VOLUME 2 (Golden Crest CRS-4210) With the University of Michigan Marching Band. WILLIAM D. REVELLI, Conductor RECORD 1 DR. REVELLI CONDUCTING ALL NUMBERS "M" RHAPSODY PRIDE OF THE WOLVERINES MICHIGAN ON PARADE MARCH SILVER ANNIVERSARY MARCH BLOCK "M" MARCH MICHIGAN MARCH BANDORAMA 1964 - ARTHUR COHEN, NARRATOR "M" FANFARE I'VE GOT A LOTTA LIVING TO DO VICTORY AT SEA I'VE GOT RHYTHM SHE LOVES YOU JAVA RHAPSODY IN BLUE ARMISTICE DAY MEDLEY: ANCHORS AWEIGH, THE U.S. AIR FORCETHE MARINES HYMN. THE U.S. FIELD ARTILLERY WARSAW CONCERTO HAWAIIAN WAR CHANT COLLEGE DAYS THE VICTORS RECORD 2 BANDORAMA 1965 - GEORGE CAVENDER, NARRATOR "M" FANFARE HEY, LOOK ME OVER MARY POPPINS SHOW: SPOONFUL OF SUGAR CHIM CHIM CHEREE FIDELITY FIDUCIARY SUPERCALIFRAGILISTIC. EXPIALIDOCIOUS STEP IN TIME JOLLY OLIDAY FEED THE BIRDS LET'S GO FLY A KITE NAT KING COLE MEDLEY: COTTON CANDY WORLD RAMBLIN' ROSE LAZY HAZY DAYS OF SUMMER THE HIGH AND THE MIGHTY SING, SING, SING WHITE CHRISTMAS AULD LANG SYNE BANDORAMA 1968 - GEORGE CAVENDER. NARRATOR "M" FANFARE WHEN I AM "64" TIP TOE THROUGH THE TULIPS FUNICULI-FUNICULA WESTERN MEDLEY TARA'S THEME I LOVE PARIS EL RANCHO GRANDE UP A LAZY RIVER JOHNSON RAG SOUTH RAMPART STREET PARADE YELLOW AND BLUE RECORD 3 BANDORAMA 1970 - GEORGE CAVENDER, NARRATOR "M" FANFARE BOW DOWN TO WASHINGTON THE YELLOW ROSE OF TEXAS HAIL PURDUE FIGHT SONG MICHIGAN STATE MINNESOTA ROUSER ON WISCONSIN PRIDE OF ILLINI ON IOWA BUCKEYE BATTLE CRY THE VICTORS SYMPHONY NO. 4, EXCERPTS SEPTEMBER SONG PEOPLE SOFTLY. AS IN A MORNING SUNRISE THE VICTORS "A LA BACH" BUGLERS HOLIDAY TOCCATA NO. 2 TENDERLY BANDORAMA 1970 (CONCLUDED) BY THE TIME I GET TO PHOENIX YESTERDAY TEMPTATION A.EMORIES I WANT TO GO BACK TO MICHIGAN THE BUM ARMY VARSITY THE VICTORS RECORD 1 ROBERT NAGEL-TRUMPET SOLOIST ... . 'THE EUPHONIUM SECTION"......... Concerto For Trumpet-Hummel Napoli-arr. Bellstedt Flower Song from "Carmen"-Bizet Robert Streckfus-Gary Burgess- Brian Bowman Charles Wolgamott-William Johnson Concerto For Clarinet-Tomasi/Werle Denneriana-Bloch/Werle VOLUME 3 (Golden Crest CRS-4211) With the University of Michigan Symphonic Band and Famous Artists. WILLIAM D. REVELLI, Conductor JOHN MOHLER-CLARINET SOLOIST ..... DONALD SINTA-SAXOPHONE SOLOIST . Concerto For Saxophone- Paul Creston RECORD 2 CLAUDIA ANDERSON-PICCOLO SOLOIST . . VOLUME 4 (Golden Crest CRS-4214) With the University of Michigan Symphony Band, presenting Original Band-Works of Distinguished Composers. WILLIAM D. REVELLI, Conductor RECORD 1 SYMPHONY NO. 4 ..............................Alan Hovhaness DRAMATIC ESSAY, DON JACOBY, TRUMPET SOLOIST ............ Clifton Williams MUSIC FOR A FESTIVAL..... .......................Gordon Jacob RECORD 2 SYMPHONY NO. 3 FOR BAND .......................Vittorio Giannini PRELUDE AND DANCE ................................ Paul-.Creson SYMPHONY FOR BAND ........... ................... .Morton Gould PRELUDE AND FUGUE ........................... Vacalav Nelhybel RECORD 3 PRAGUE 1968...................................Karel Husa SCENES FROM THE LOUVRE .......................... Norman Dello Joio SUMMER IN VALLEY CITY .................................Ross Finney TRITTICO .......................................... Vacalav Nelhybel RECORD 4 SYMPHONY IN Bb ................... ................ Paul Hindemith THEME AND VARIATIONS ............... ............ Arnold Schoenberg MUSIC FOR BRASS .......,............................ Ingolf Dahl NEWS REEL IN FIVE SHOTS........ ................William Schuman RECORD 5 SYMPHONY FOR BRASS AND PERCUSSION................................Gunther Schuller VARIATIONS ON A KOREAN FOLK SONG..... .......................... John Barnes Chance INCANTATION AND DANCE ........... ............. John Barnes Chance DESIGNS. IMAGES. AND TEXTURES ...... ........ ....................... Leslie Bassett ROCKY POINT HOLIDAY ....................... ............Ron Nelson RECORD 6 FESTIVAL PRELUDE .................................... Alfred Reed LINCOLNSHIRE POSY..............................Percy Grainger OUTDOOR OVERTURE ................................... Aaron Copland SINFONIETTA........................................ Ingolf Dahl BLESSINGS (FROM A CURSE AND A BLESSING) ...............................Henry Cowell REFLECTIONS .......................................... Roger Nixon .4 Concerto for Piccolo-Vivaldi r, WILLIAM BELL-TUBA SOLOIST ......... Carnival of Venice-arr.Bell Moto Perpetuo-Paganini/Bell ANGEL REYES-VIOLIN SOLOIST........Concerto in G Minor-Bruch/Hindsley RECORD 3 CARL "DOC" SEVERINSEN- TRUMPET SOLOIST ................. Concerto For Trumpet, Winds and Percussion-Floyd Werle My Man's Gone Now- Gershwin/Rhoads NEW YORK BRASS QUINTET .......... Dyptich-Gunther Schuller JEAN MARIE LONDEIX- SAXOPHONE SOLOIST............... Summertime (from "Porgy and Bess'"- Gershwin/Summerfelt Flight Of The Bumblebee-Rimsky- Korsakoff/Londeix JOHN HENEY-XYLOPHONE SOLOIST .. .. Bolero Impromptu-Heney When You And I Were Young Maggie/ Somewhere My Love-arr. Heney St Louis Blues-Handy/Heney YA 6 RECORD SET .:. $55 3 RECORD SET _ . 125 3 RECORD SET . S25 6 RECORD SET ... $55 I 6IEODS T. 5 J nRFInV L I . .. PLPt' IdI RF v f Lf .FT . RECRD ET.. $5