Springsteen coming to Crisler By STEVE HOOK Rock musician Bruce Springsteen will launch his first national concert tour in nearly two years with a perfor- mance Oct. 2 at the University's Crisler Arena. Major Events Office spokespersons, who announced the concert yesterday, said tickets will be sold starting tomorrow at Crisler Arena. A Major Events official said limits on tickets-priced at $9 and $10-will be "based on the length of the line" out- side the arena, which seats more than 12,000. AN OFFICIAL announcement concerning the perfor- mance had been scheduled for tomorrow, according to MEO's Jill Madden, but a disclosure by Springsteen's agent brought word of the concert to Ann Arbor yester- day. The announcement was made yesterday after MEO received a flood bf telephone calls and learned that dozens of people had already assembled outside the Crisler Arena box office. In addition, the date for beginning ticket sales, original- ly scheduled for Monday, was pushed up to tomorrow. "We didn't want any long lines out there during the football game," Madden said, "so we bumped the date back to Friday." SPRINGSTEEN'S LAST performance took place on Jan. 1, 1979. Since that time, he has concentrated on his upcoming album, entitled "The River," which will be released in conjunction with his fall tour. Springsteen will appear with his E Street Band. See SPRINGSTEEN, Page 3 Die-hardI Boss fans queue up By BARRY WITT His most loyal fans heard rumors at least as early as the beginning of last week. By 5 p.m. Tuesday, the first die- hard follower had arrived, and many, many more were soon to follow. They knew: The Boss was coming to town. Scores of people braved the darkness on the edge of town, camping in the shadows of Crisler Arena and planning to stay there 'until next Monday, originally rumored to be the date S tickets were to go on sale. As hearsay t See DIE-HARD, Page 3 F Doily Photo by PETER SERLING PRINGSTEEN FANS LINE up yesterday at Crisler Arena to be first to get ickets for his October 3 concert. The sought-after tickets will go on sale Friday morning. Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom cl . tr t19 an 1 ItiI SUNNY Skies should be clear today and the high temperature will climb to the mid-70s. Vol. XCI, No. 7 Copyright 1980, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, September 11, 1980 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Late North Campus bus restored r/ Experimental 12-2 a.m. service By STEVE HOOK After a week of meeting with angry North Campus residents and student leaders, University administrators an- nounced yesterday that late night bus service to North Campus will be restored beginning tomorrow night. In making the announcement, Vice President and Chief Financial Officer James Brinkerhoff emphasized that the renewal of service is experimental, and may not last beyond the fall term. "We Will continually evaluate the number of passengers on North Campus buses running between midnight and 2 a.m.," he said. THE UNIVERSITY cut back late night bus service to North Campus over the summer, citing low ridership and increased costs as reasons for the schedule reduction. The service cut had sparked major protests among residen- ts of North Campus, which is located several milesfrom Central Campus. The restored late night bus schedule, still curtailed from last year's level of service, will run in a "loop" serving Bursely Hall, Baits Housing, and the Northwood Apartments. For two hours after midnight, campus buses will pick up students every 40 minutes. This revised structure meets a proposal that 13 North Campus residen- ts brought to President Harold Shapiro Monday. Shapiro told the residents that he would "seriously consider" the compromise plan, and discussed it Tuesday at a meeting of the. Univer- sity's executive officers. BRINKERHOFF HAD awaited a transportation department study, which he received yesterday morning, before making the announcement. Acknowledging that the estimated $11,000 it will take to continue the ser- vice comes from "non-recurring fun- ds," Brinkerhoff said that "a per- manent funding source would have to be determined if the service is to con- tinue beyond this term." In making the announcement, Brinkerhoff cited the reopening of the Undergraduate Library (UGLI) until 2 a.m. as a primary motive for the decision. For those who fought to have the ser- vice restored, yesterday's announ- cement signalled an important victory for students who don't live on North Campus, as well as those who do. They see yesterday's agreement as a shot in the arm for student activism. "I'M JUBILANT," exclaimed Jim Gold, a resident advisor at Bursley who helped orchestrate the protest efforts. "I think it was a fair and equitable decision, and I am very pleased that students have a voice in administrative politics." Michigan Student Assembly President Marc'Breakstone, who lob- bied for the-restored bus service, called yesterday's announcement "great." "It was definitely the most well- organized protest effort I have seen during my three years at the Univer- sity. It shows that when students organize in a concerted effort and assert reasonable demands, there will be results, and quick results." Breakstone criticized the ad- ministration for making the decision to cut bus service while students were on vacation. "One of the most important things we can learn from this is that the University will take the opportunity to take action when students' backs are turned-namely during the summer," he said. Both Gold and Breakstone agreed that there had been a surplus of North Campus bus service last year-the majority of post-midnight buses, which ran every 15 minutes until 1 a.m., with three additional runs until 2:.15, were less than half full, and some were nearly empty. But they felt the decision to cut off service altogether was ex- treme. "The services should have been cut," Breakstone said. "No one wants to see empty buses." He and Gold agree that the adopted formula should keep the buses filled up without overcrowding. Daily Photo by PEIER SERLING A recline by the bovine Jean-Marc Bouet, a French student studying at the University, enjoys the shade afforded by a cow on the Diag yester- day.,The cow was attempting to draw attention to a benefit dance tomorrow night for SEVA, an international public health organization. The dance will be held in Schwaben Hall, 217S. Ashley, at 8 p.m. UNITED COAL:'LIBERA TE PA LES TINE': Libya, Syria declare merger From AP and UPI DAMASCUS, Syria-Libya and Syria, separated by 700 miles, proclaimed their merger into a single Arab nation yesterday and vowed to "liberate Palestine" and oppose American-sponsored Mideast peace moves. The merger was declared in a joint communique broadcast by Damascus and Tripoli radios at the end of two days of talks in Tripoli. The communique pledged "total economic, political and military" merger aimed at uniting Syria's 9 million people with Libya's 3 million in an anti-Israeli front dedicated to "Arab revolution." BUT GIVEN THE failure of previous Arab unity attempts and the fact that Libya and Syria are 700 miles apart, there was skepticism that total merger would be accomplished. The two leaders said they; would meet within a month to form a common government. There was no official comment from Israel because of the start of the Jewish new year holiday. But Prime Minister Menachem Begin said Tuesday that Syria needed the merger because of domestic difficulties and that Israel was concerned that some Libyan weapons could be transferred to Syria. President Anwar Sadat of Egypt, when asked about the merger plan, said with mock seriousness, "That's very encouraging," and then laughed. Sadat has termed the plan a "childlren's game." DAMASCUS RADIO broadcast the communique after Assad returned from Libya. Tripoli radio said Libyans were dancing in the streets of the capital at the news. The proclamation listed 13 principles of the new state, including using it as "the base and the tool for confrontation with Israel and the liberation of Palestine." The new state "will be the base of all op- positionagainst imperialism and Zionism and the backbone of the Palestine liberation movement," the communique said, adding that it would oppose the U.S.-sponsored Camp David accords that led to a peace treaty between Egypt and Israel. THE NEW STATE will be a center of "confron- tation against the parties of Camp David, represen- ted by American imperialism, the Zionist enemy See LIBYA, Page 7 TUNISIAGRECE1 TURKEY Domascus Ciro*e JORDAN -a - - -EGYPTSAUDI ARABIA 0 tSo'- - Uncooked goose amphlets and posters urging people to help save the whales and otheranimals under the threat of extinction can frequently be spotted on campus. Yet no one seems to be passing out "Save the Geese" but- tons. Well, maybe its time someone did. Recently, an Australian goose at the Columbus Zoo was fed to cheetahs. The unscheduled feeding occured, according to zoo director of the nearest fast-food dispenser, of course. But once the neighborhood diner was more than something from an Ed- ward Hopper painting-it was the joint with all the action. This week the largest item on the menu of the Englewood Diner, an eatery on Boston's South Side, was the diner-a to-go offering that went for $8,000. It will pack up and probably move elsewhere. The 39-year-old Englewood was, well, let's say cosy, seating 18 customers in wooden booths and a dozen more at stools at a marble counter. No Gandy Dancer, this: the most costly item on the menu was a $3.95 sirloin steak. "I'm looking for new horizons," explains Jack rr__«_-_ ''4A. a.. c,:«.. ..... .1 ; . 41 ;41 Stop the meter Though parking fees in Ann Arbor are high they don't come close to a tab run up in Orlando, Florida. No one is quite sure who is going pay a $2,300 storage bill for Larry Lorenzen's stolen car. The state Highway patrol recovered the car just hours after it was taken, but Lorenzen wasn't notified until 14 months later. Spokespeople for the Orange County sheriff's office and the Florida Highway Patrol, say they fed all the data into a computer but failed to locate Lorenzen. The car now belongs to an insurance company which payed Lorenzen's claim for a stolen auto. i