The Michigan baily-Friday, February- 13, 1981-Page 7 KILLER STORM RIPS NOR THE AST: Winter weather leaves 51 dead From the Associated Press Floodwaters churning chunks of ice surged into hundreds of homes in the Northeast yesterday, and record cold moved in following the winter's meanest storm, a wet and Windy killer that contributed to at least 51 deaths. About 4,800 people were evacuated from communities along the Delaware River and other streams in New York and Pennsylvania where ice jams blocked the runoff from up to 3 inches of rain and the rivers overflowed. TEMPERATURES that had bounced to record spring-like highs in New rngland on Wednesday shot back down, to new lows in many regions. About two dozen cities from New Orleans to Pittsburgh reported record cold for the date - many far below zero as winds gusting to hurricane force whipped parts of New England. ,The 1,388 residents of Okawville, Ill., spent the night with no heat in tem- Ex-band director Revelli honored By MARK GINDIN t Former University marching Band Director William Revelli was inducted info the National Hall of Fame of 'Distinguished Band Conductors last Saturday in Troy, Alabama. Revelli, who was one of three induc- tees who became the first living men 'inducted into the hall, spent more than 30 years as University band director. The former director, who retired in 1972, developed one of the most famous university bands in the country. During Saturday's ceremony, Revelli's wife Mary unveiled his oil por- trait, which is now on permanent * display at the hall of fame. Revelli first gained notoriety as a high school band leader in Hobart, Ind. His band went on to win competitions in the county and state. Within ten years, he had developed one of the 'leading high school band programs in the nation. peratures hovering at 10 degrees when a utility was forced to shut off the gas because of an equipment problem related to the cold. YESTERDAY WAS the coldest day of the year in numerous cities from Chicago, where the reading was minus 11 and residents were digging out from under a foot of snow, to Nashville, Tenn., where it was 2 above. Cities reporting record subzero tem- peratures included Marquette, minus 32; Cincinnati, minus 10; Rockford, Ill., minus 15, and Pittsburgh, minus 6. In Michigan, which got up to 17 inches of snow earlier in the week, the subzero cold forced schools to close in 182 of 575 school districts. It was so cold in Munising - one official report put it at 48 below - that school bus engines refused to start, officials said. Snow drifts 5 feet high blocked a 44-mile stretch of highway between Munising and Marquette. IN WHITE PLAINS, N.Y., seven people were killed when a Lockheed jetstar crashed and burned during foggy weather Wednesday night near the Westchester County Airport. At least 44 other deaths were blamed on: the storm that buried the Midwest in snow earlier in the week. A huge ice jam on the Delaware River sent floodwaters pouring into the twin cities of Port Jervis, N.Y., and Matamoras, Pa., forcing about 4,800 people to flee in emergency shelters. "To the best of our knowledge, the whole town was evacuated," said Elizabeth Eicherly of the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Association in Harrisburg, Pa. WHILE SOME were able to return to their homes after the ice jam broke up yesterday morning, most of the 2,200 residents of Matamoras were forced to wait at the Matamoras Elementary School where the Red Cross had set up Support the March of Dimes M WH DEE=C FOUNDAT*N t 6 jt.-the ann arbor ; F ilm cooperative Revelli ... inducted into band hall of fame TONIGHT CINEMA GUILD PRESENTS A Film By Pier PAOLO PASOLINI Arabian Nights Rich pagan imagination informs these gripping stories that Scheherazade told nightly to keep her lord in suspense and her head on her shoulders. Shows at 7:00 & 9:45 at LORCH HALL TONIGHT TONIGHT presents IF... 7:00 MLB Aud. 4 Starring Malcolm McDowell PERFORMANCE 9:00 MLB Aud. 4 Starring Mick Jagger Single Feature: $2 Double Feature: $3 Pr tt 1" q. 7 , c~ " j. t i : t j1t 1 j j ----- 6 ANN ARBOR ,WMMMNIlq m r INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th Ae at Lberty 71-4700 l1 si AN EPIC COMEDYI (give or take an inch) LILY TOMLINg j- THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING WOMAN DAILY-6:40, 8:30, 10:20 SAT, SUN, WED-1:00, 2:50, 4:50 HURRY-ABSOLUTELY FINAL WEEKI KAGEMUSHA The shadow Warrior" (m) directed by AKIRA KUROSAWA ., . : %h.- A lqmhk-. OR MV . ,:::::::::: o - , o Q. , f. _r. _, ( i tl r V