The Michigan Daily-Thursday, February 12, 1981-Page 3 HAPPENINGS Charges against editors dropped FILMS AAFC - In the Realm of the Senses, 7, 9p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Cinema Guild - The French Connection, 7 p.m., The Chase, 9 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Cinema II - The Organizer, 7 p.m., The Wobblies, 9:10 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. A-V Services - Aging, At 99: A Portrait of Louise Tandy Murch, 12:10 P.M, SPH II Aud. Housing - Black Like Me, 9 p.m., Markley. Louis Jardan Film Festival - 8p.m., Anderson Room, Michigan Union. Classic Film Theatre - Young Mr. Lincoln, 4, 7, and 9 p.m., Michigan Theatre. SPEAKERS Biology - Bill Castor, "Age-Related Changes in Connective Tissues," noon, 1139 Nat. Sci. Center for Japanese Studies - Bag lunch lecture,, Kart Hetterer, "Japanese Archaeology as Viewed from Across the Pacific," noon, Lane, Hall Commons.- Museum of Anthropology - Bag lunch lecture, Loring Brace, "Tales of the Phylogenetic Woods," noon, 2009 Museum. Natural Resources - Thomas Cooley, "Wildlife Diseases of Michigan and the Role of the DNR Pathology Lab," noon, 1040 Dana. Comp. Lit. - Bag lunch lecture, Oscar Budel, "Fixed Forms: The Sonnet in the Renaissance-Italy," 12:10 p.m., MLB 4th floor commons. Urban Planning - Gary Lax, "Land Use Control in Cities," 11 a.m., 1040 Dana. Computing Center - Chalk Talk, "FORTRAN Debugging for Beginners," 12:10 p.m., 1011 NUBS. Vision/Hearing - Angela Brown, "Dark, Adaptation of Ms: More Failures of Univariance," 12:15p.m., 2055 MHRI. Computing Center - Forest Hartman, "The Ontel Terminal," 1 p.m., 1429 Mason. Computing Center - Forrest Hartman, "Applications of the MTS File Editor," 3:30 p.m., B134 MLB. Chemistry - Fred Haddock, 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. Chemistry - Fred Haddock, "Some Results in Extragalactic Radio Astronomy," 4p.m., Room 1200, Chemistry Bldg. Marketing Club - Volkswagon of America, "Marketing Research and Advertising Campaign of Volkswagon Trucks," 4:00 p.m., Hale Aud. Alice Lloyd Coalition for Social Change - Members of GEO, "The State of Graduate Employees at U-M," 8 p.m., Alice Lloyd Hall, Red Carpet Lounge. Community College Development Program - Wayne County Community College President Richard Simmons, "The Future of Wayne County Com- munity College," 11:30 a.m., dean's conference room, School of Education. Baker Memorial Lecture - Jean-Paul Revel, "Cell Biology of Inter- cellular Communication or Fleeting Murmurs," 4 p.m., South Lecture Hall, Med. Sci. II. Women's International League for Peace and Freedom - Rev. Barry W. Lynn, national chairperson of CARD, "Registration and the Draft: Update and Bottom Line," 7:30 p.m., First Unitarian Church, 1917 Washtenaw. Cognitive Sciences - William Cooper, "Speech Planning: How People Turn Ideas into Spoken Words," 4 p.m., Rackham East Conference Room. Romance Languages - Leo Bernucci, "Fenando de Lizardi y la picaresca," 4 p.m., MLB 4th floor commons. Hopwood Tea- RC writer-in-residence Mary Beams, 3:30 p.m., 1006 Angell. Guild House - Naomi Long Madgett, Danny Rendleman, poetry reading, 7:30 p.m.,802 Monroe. SYDA - Swami Shantnanada, "Freedom: An Awakening Beyond the Mind, "7:30 p.m., Kuenzel Room, Michigan Union. Computing Center - Bob Blue, "Programming with FORTRAN," 7 p.m., 2003 Angell. MEETINGS Botticelli Game Players, noon, Dominick's. Medical Center Bible Study -12:30 p.m., 2230 Mott Library. Campus Weight Watchers -5:30 p.m., Project Room, Michigan League. Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship - two meetings, 7 p.m., Michigan League, Michigan union. Al Anon -8:30 p.m., 2815 U. Hospital. Psychology - Committee on Undergraduate Studies, 3 p.m., K108 Lloyd, West Quad. PERFORMANCES Cantrerbury Loft - "Happy Days," 8p.m., 332 S. State. PTP/Theatre and Drama - 'I Can't Hear the Birds Singing," 8 p.m., Power Center. UAC - "Soundstage Coffeehouse," 8p.m., U. CLub, Michigan Union. Ark - David Murphy, Garth Gerber, country duets, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill. Saline Area Players - "George M!", 8 p.m., Saline High School Aud. MISCELLANEOUS Men's Basketball - Michigan vs. Ohio State, 8:05 p.m. Crisler Arena. Center for Russian and East European Studies - Readings, Ivan Sanders, Emery George, "An Evening of Hungarian Literature and Poetry," 8 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Recreation Sports - Paddleball Tournament, 6:30 p.m., IM Sports Building. Recreational Sports - Squash Club Match, 6:30 p.m., CCRB. Michigan League Cafeteria - International Night, Switzerland, 5-7:15 p.m., Michigan League Cafeteria, Michigan League. Cross Currents - Ann Arbor Art Association, 46 p.m., info at 763-4430. CEW - Panel Discussion, "Careers in Computer Science," noon, Rackham East Conference Room. WCBN - On-the-Air Funraiser, 88.3 FM, 9 a.m. through Feb. 15. Ann Arbor Public Library Youth Department - Reporting Day Film. Program," 10:00a.m., Meeting room, main library. Ann Arbor Advocates for Safe Alternatives in Childbirth - Hospital Birth in Ann Arbor: A panel of representatives from three local hospitals," 7:30 p.m., 602 East Huron. WCBN-"Minority Show," hosted by Nate Carter, 6-7 p.m. Alpha Phi Sorority - Sucker Sale, benefits to Heart Association, noon until dusk, diag. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI., 48109. Place Your Daily Classified -Call 764-0557 DECISIONS: ACADEMIC PLANNING WORKSHOP FOR 1st YEAR STUDENTS Tuesday, February 17, 3-5 p.m. UNDERSTAND your decision making style and ex- By DAVID SPAK A -'district court judge yesterday dismissed criminal trespass charges against two former Daily .editors who tried to attend a closed meeting of the University athletic department's governing board last October. Fifteenth District Court Judge George Alexander honored the defendants' motion to dismiss the case, saying questions raised by the two former editors concerning Michigan's Open Meetings Act should be addressed ina civil, rather than a criminal, case. FORMER DAILY Editor-in-Chief Mark Parrent and former Opinion Page Editor Joshua Peck were arrested October 28 after they tried to gain access to a Crisler Arena meeting of the University's Board in Control of Intercollegiate Atheltics. The Daily con- tends the board is a "public body" as defined by the Open Meetings Act and that its meetings should therefore be open to the public. The'University maintains the meetings of the board need not be open under provisions of the act and that Peck and Parrent were trespassing when they refused to leave Crisler Arena. Daily attorney Jerold Lax said he was happy that the criminal charges had been dismissed. He added that he hoped the public would in the future "have the opportunity to attend (board) meetings either through voluntary action on the part of the University or through other action." THE OTHER ACTION the Daily is considering is a civil suit that may be initiated to define whether the athletic board must open its meetings to the public. University General Counsel Roderick Daane had no comment on Alexander's ruling, saying "there is no point in criticizing the judgement." Alexander wrote in his decision that the special cir- cumstances of the case led him to dismiss the charges. He added, however, that in normal circum- stances such a trespassing case would proceed to trial without a decision regarding University com- pliance with the Open Meetings Act. In his opinion, the judge wrote, "a decision of this court as to the question of whether meetings of the (athletic board) must be open to the public or not would do nothing to solve the problem which precipitated the arrest of the Defendants." Alexander also said that any decisions he might have made about the Open Meetings Act would not have been binding upon the University. Scientists developing travel, system for blind WASHINGTON (AP)-Researchers are developing an electronic system for the blind that uses a television eye and, computer devices to tell the sightless what's ahead as they travel. The new electronic travel system may give the blind greater mobility by recognizing obstacles and indicating where they are through words and touch, the National Scien- ce Foundation said yesterday. THE FOUNDATION, which funds the research, said a small computer translates what the TV camera sees into ar tificial speech and signals to a tapping device the blind per- son wears. The system not only tells the person the e is an object ahead, but stimulators worn on a belt tap to indicate the direction and distance of the obstacle. The devices are being developed at the Smith Kettlewell Institute of Visual Sciences in San Francisco, a non-profit research corporation affiliated with the University of the Pacific. DR. CARTER COLLINS, a biophysicist, and Michael Deering have built a large prototype system that they soon will be testing on the streets. "After many years of working with the blind and on many devices, this system looks like it has the greatest potential for use," Collins said in a telephone interview. "The system is in an early stage of development and it will take a few years to work out all the bugs," he continued, "but it looks very promising." AT PRESENT, the system is a bulky contraption that requires two people to operate it. The subject has a TV camera mounted on his shoulder, the stimulator belt around his waist and a flexible cable connec ting both with the comnputer and power supply. This, in turn; is mounted on a cart pushed around by a researcher. Collins said later versions would be self-contained systems small enough to carry in a shoulder bag or be worn in a large belt, with a miniature camera either mounted'on a pair of eyeglasses or the belt. The basis of the system is the computer, which would be programmed for artificial intelligence, say the researchers. The TV image is processed to detect the edges of objects and the computer can make logical assumptions from this infor- mation. For example, vertical edges may mean utility poles or trees and horizontal ones low tree branches of overhangs. Sets of edges can outline larger objects, such as cars. With this data, for example, the computer can tell the wearer in a mechanical voice: "Pole, 11 o'clock, eight feet. Read and Use Daily Classifieds! UNISEX Long or Short Haircuts by Professionals at --- DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State.........668-9329 East U. at South U........662-0354 Arborland .............. 971-9975 Maple Village,........761-2733 UM CLERICALS: in the face of current state and federal cutbacks, we can't afford to remain unor- ganized. WE NEED ... -a large wage increase -a full and unlimited cost-of-living allowance (COLA) -a short, automatic pay progression, plus longevity pay, to eliminate the injustice of the 'so-called merit" system -a decent pension fully paid by management -complete health benefits, including autpatient, pre- scription drug, and optical benefits, fully paid by management for all family members -no layoffs, "attrition" or speedup-enforced by the contractual right to strike -a way to fight race and sex discrimination through a strong campus-wide seniority system and union control of hiring, recruitment, and training -a shorter workweek with no loss in pay-35 hours work for 40 hours pay -bring "temporaries," students, technicals, and lower-level, non-supervisory P&A's doing clerical work into the bargaining unit -maintenance of all pre-existing conditions bene- ficial to clericals VOTE YES FOR OCC-February 10-13 Organizing Committee for Clericals (OCC) Bring ID (staff ID, driver's license, or social security card) to polls A DEMOCRATIC UNION MAKES US STRONGI Sponsored by the Campus Labor Support Group _ : ..