1-- K Ninety- Editori -One Years of alFreedom t t 1E aiI HOLDING PATTERN Cold again today with a high near 20. The low will near zero. Vol. XCI, No. 87 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan, Sunday, January 11, 1981 Ten Cents Ten Pages now Poles skip want less I work, hours From AP and UPI WARSAW, Poland-Millions of workers defied the government and brought Poland's industry to a near standstill yesterday by staying off the job to inaugurate the Solidarity union's unilateral declaration of a five-day, 40- hour work week. The official PAP news agency said the majority of workers, "guided by civic, responsibility," reported to their jobs. But the agency acknowledged most stayed home in the major in- dustrial centers of Warsaw, Gdansk, Koszalit2, Elblag, Walbrzych, Szczecin, Lodz and Piotrkow. SMALL.SHOPS, department stores and offices in Warsaw and other cities remained open along with transport and other essential services. PAP said some activist members of the independent labor union Solidarity "undertook to remove" workers who showed up for the first shift in factories in Lodz, Poland's second largest city. "The slowed-down pace of work Saturday will have its economic effec- ts," PAP reported. "The economy will undoubtedly feel the losses resulting from a shutdown of some of the plants." NO PRECISE figures were available on how many workers joined the protest. But if PAP's estimate that 65 percent of the crews reported for work, then the number staying home could have approached 6 million. Labor Minister Janusz Obodowski warned on the eve of the protest that those who failed to show up yesterday might be docked a day's pay. The government has said Poland's weakened economy cannot afford a shortened workweek. In Moscow on Friday, the Soviet Union, in the official newspaper, Iz- vestia, issued its sharpest attack so far on Polish labor unrest, saying it was caused by "counter-revolutionaries." A CONFRONTATION over free Saturdays began brewing in late December when, the government an- nounced it would give workers every other Saturday off. In 1980, workers received an average of one free Satur- day a month. Solidarity contends the government promised, while negotiating an end to nationwide strikes last August, to im- plement a five-day, 40-hour workweek this year. Those strikes, which began in the Baltic area over meat prices, resulted in the ouster of Edward Gierek's regime and the establishment of the fir- st independent labor movement in the Soviet bloc. THE STRIKES crippled an already beleaguered economy and continuing labor unrest raised fears of a Soviet-led military intervention like that of 1968 in Czechoslovakia. U.S. intelligence reported Soviet and Soviet bloc troops massed near Poland's borders in -a state of preparedness still in effect. The strike-ending agreement, signed Aug. 31 in Gdansk, set no deadline for the new workweek to take effect. The government said it would implement the new schedule over a five-year period to allow the economy to adjust to the change. The government has said it would agree either to allow workers every other Saturday off this year or to give them every Saturday but with an extra half hour added to each of the five working days. Solidarity, which claims some 10 million members, said either plan would violate the terms of the Gdansk agreement. Next Saturday had already been slated as a day off. The Warsaw branch of Solidarity said the Spolem food and restaurant organization had declared Saturday a "dry" day throughout Poland, with no alcoholic drinks available, to guard against possible violence. No violent incidents were reported. Doily Photo by DAVID HARRIS CUSTOMERS OF Tanfastic, an Ann Arbor salon on Maple Road, get Florida tans in ultraviolet light booths disguised as bamboo huts. Floridat, minust gene atedat lcal alon By MARYEM RAFANI Even in the dead of a Michigan winter there is a place with clear blue water, sandy beaches, exotic trees, and bamboo huts where someone can acquire a golden suntan. The tropical surroundings are accomplished by a mural of a sea and sand scene and creative interior decorating at a place called Tanfastic, one of several area tanning salons. INSIDE INDIVIDUAL tanning booths disguised as bamboo huts, customers )are exposed to ultraviolet rays over a series of visits. There are two types of tanning facilities at salons like Tanfastic. One is a European Tanning Table on which the customer rests horizontally. The customer rests on a. "bed" containing lamps that emit ultraviolet rays. A similar "bed" of lamps is above the customer. The lamps emit long ultraviolet "A" rays, similar to the rays given off by the afternoon sun. The second type of tanning device is a booth which resembles a shower stall with walls covered with reflec- ting material. Six foot lamps run vertically along the walls and are enclosed by safety screens. These booths emit short ultraviolet "B" rays like those given off by the sun at noon. A typical customer might visit the salon 10 times over 12 days, at a cost of $24. The time of exposure to the tanning rays is determined for each customer. "THE COMPANY HAS a computer tape which asks the customers questions about their personal skin type and things like that," explained Diana Kale, manager of Tan- fastic which is located on Maple Road. "The computer prints out a schedule that gives a stand-up time for the booth and also a time for the table," she said. Most of the people who use these facilities are middle- aged couples. "We get a lot of husbands and wives. It's something they can do together, it's relaxing and a lot of them say it's great therapy," Kale said. "There are probably more middle-aged people that come in than others," said Kale., "Some of our customers were referred to us by their doctors and radiologists," Kale said, for treatment of skin problems. "It's the same treatment and it's cheaper than a doctor's visit." VIC TANNY, in Ypsilanti, also has tanning facilities. "We mostly use them as toning facilities to replace small amounts of vitamins in the skin," said Michael Brown, a Vic Tanny employee. "We mostly recommend them to members as relaxation facilities, then over a long period of time customers have the option of lengthening their exposure time," he said. Joseph Lech, a customer at Vic Tanny, said, "What they have here heips you more to maintain a tan than to get or See FACILITIES, Page 5 Begin government edges on collapse' . . .o.:., JERUSALEM (AP)-Prime Minister Menachem Begin faces the probable resignation of a Cabinet minister today, almost certainly leading to collapse of his tottering government. Israel Radio, quoting Begin's closest aides, said yesterday that he has decided to step down if his government is further weakened. The radio said elections would be held in June, five months ahead of schedule. Although he has survived previous political crises, Begin this time was up against a virtually irreconcilable Cabinet split over the issue of teachers' wages. Today's Cabinet meeting is the deadline for a compromise. FINANCE MINISTER Yigael Hur- vitz has vowed to quit if pay raises recommended by an arbitration panel are implemented. Without his support, Begin will be left with a minority in the Parliament, or Knesset. If the pay hikes are rejected, Education Minister Zevulun Hammer is likely to quit in sympathy with the educators, in which case Begin could lose the backing of Hammer's National Religious Party, a key partner in his coalition. - "It's . a question of principles," a Begin adviser told The Associated Press. "Neither minister can give in. The end of this government is very near." OPINION POLLS predict a solid vic- tory. for the opposition Labor Party over Begin's Likud bloc in an election, See BEGIN, Page 5 tgin lose cabinet minister .. mayI Mayoral candidates sp eak up on issues Belcher focuses on taxes, development By ELAINE RIDEOUT participation in street programs, planning for next year's summer repertory festival, the energy Pot holes and $5 pot fines have faded into history. So program, and joint development sessions as examples. too, it seems, have the controversial issue-oriented BELCHER SAID one priority is city council's review *.ampaigns of past city elections. of long-term land use plans as proposed in past zoning Instead, 1981 Republicans and Democrats, incum- ordinances and by a current study, analyzing planning bents and challengers alike, cite a variety ofless con- options for transitional and vacant land areas. troversial "issues," and none can agree there is a "WE'D ALSO LIKE to streamline the planning major issue, not to mention naming one. process without lowering any of our standards to try WHILE HIS challenger Robert Faber sees crime and and get some of these things done within a reasonable city-University relations as major 'issues' of the 1981 time span," he added. mayoral election, two-term incumbent Louis Belcher Belcher said if re-elected he will try to keep the city identifies taxes and city development as primary con- budget and operating millage to a minimum although cerns. he said he "can't promise anything." He said he does not consider crime an issue in Ann He pointed out that while the council reduced the Arbor. "I was wondering what the Democrats would millage by 2.4 mills three years ago and .5 mills each use for an issue," he observed with a chuckle. year since then, the state of the economy would make a Belcher disagreed with Faber's position on matching reduction difficult this year. city/University relations. The city has become more BELCHER SAID he is consulting other Michigan involved with the University in the past year than it has mayors in an attempt to come up with "meaningful" ever been before, he emphasized, citing University See MAYOR, Page 2 Faber calls for strong initiative By PAM KRAMER While Mayor Louis Belcher is basing his April 6 reelection bid on his record and pointing to the relatively good condition of the city, challenger Robert Faber is not satisfied with the way the city has been managed. The Democrat says stronger leadership and more imagination are needed to solve what he sees as major local problems. "I think the issues in this election are leadership and imagination," Faber said, clairning that when the city government acts, it is only in response to outside forces rather than on its own initiative. "LOU BELCHER is not a bad man, but we can do a lot we're not doing '(in the city)," Faber, the chairman of the city Democratic committee, said. "For instance, I can't stop rape, but organizations like PIRGIM and the Women's Crisis.Center have ideas, and they haven't been asked (by the city) IWelche r Fabe r ... says city in good shape wants citizen participation See CITY, Page 2 TODAY New movie guide HE PUBLISHER IS ecstatic.. . and claims the public is equally thrilled. "The public reaction has been so nicV. . . you feel like you're (providing)r something everyone is using," said Tim Kunin, the co-publisher of Sports Guides, Inc., an Ann Arbor publishing firm. Kunin is excited about the first edition of the Michigan Cinema Guide, which was distributed free this week. The Guide condenses into one booklet all the schedule rd c'risnina nf Annf Arhnr' nrn er film first edition of the guide covers movies through the first week in March, and Kunin says Sports Guides Inc. plans to produce the schedule twice each -term. The guide is available at most Ann Arbor bookstores and at all the Ann Arbor film societies' showings. _ No uncertain terms Everyone reaches an age at which it's time to leave the nest, but for those who choose not to face that situation, there is the alternative of continued co-habitation with good old Ma and Pa. But what if the old folks are tired of having iunior rrnnr9One nounle in Cpnterville wan't ahnt to made a prediction about Kenny's future at the house, but one might say the handwriting's on the lawn. F7 Wayward withdrawal What do you do when you're poor and desperate? You try to rob a bank. What do you do when you're mixed-up? You try to rob a bank but end up in the wrong venue. Shelton Kirkman was apparently in the latter category Thursday. Sophie Wisowaty thought Kirkman was joking when he walked into the headquarters of the Niagara Mohawk Power Corp. in Syracuse, N.Y. and announced a bank holdup. After Kirkman made his announcement security behind these days, one designer is simply trying to get someithing on the rears of hospital patients. The new "rear modesty panel" on hospital gowns allows patients to rest and recuperate without baring their bottoms, unlike traditional hospital gowns. The new design is currently in use in Louisville and Los Angeles, and if the reaction is good, the manufacturers say, the new gowns will be sold to hospitals around the country. "Our challenge was to keep the back closed but yet keep it functional. We developed the idea of a deep pleat held by snaps at the neck line," said designer Stan Herman. Herman has also designed outfits for McDonald's, TWA, United Airline, and Avis. With his ltoct Pfnrz i is nlkr-m at hill hn --- of h i; i