The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, September 24, 1980-Page 3 Ursprung resigns from. AATAboard a"s<"+.:.;t<5;;;;:;::v:<.v:"::::::: ": _:::::;::>:"::.......:::::";:"v ::->::"v::%2 5:> :;fi:< >>;:?5::;< "::; :: SY.:: i i:r:::::a:::"::"::z"::-:.>:">:v:"::<"::">::"v>:vv::;::"x"::">>::: "::">xa:: :"a:: ar" By JOYCE FRIEDEN City Council will have to fill a place on the Ann Arbor Transpor- tation Authority Board of Director when Chairman Cecil Ursprung's resignation becomes effective Oct. 1. Ursprung turned in his letter of resignation to Mayor Louis Belcher late last week. "I have another job besides my board position-one that I earn a living at, and the respon- sibilities of my job have been in- creasing," Ursprung explained, ad- ding that he felt three years was long enough to hold the non-paying position. "THE NORMAL term of a Board member is five years, but I feel that's too long. I think other people should be given a chance to serve," he said. Ursprung works full-time as direc- tor of a marketing firm in Far- mington. He said he still has many ideas for AATA. "I'd like to see it become a county- based transit authority, sponsored by Ypsilanti as well as Ann Arbor. And I think it should begin dealing with non-bus kinds of transportation such as car and van pools." HE ADDED that the "transition period" the authority is currently going through makes his resignation more timely. "AATA is entering a new phase," he said. "We've gone from being $400,000 in deficit to having a small surplus, and we have a new management team as well. There is also less emphasis on Dial-A-Ride and more emphasis on line-haul buses." By JOYCE FRIEDEN Residents of Hill-area and North Campus dormitories will have an op- portunity to hear their Rice Krispies snap, crackle, and pop next Monday when Stockwell and Bursley dor- mitories begin a continental breakfast program. According to University Associate Housing Director Norm Sunstad, any student purchasing a $10 ticket at either dormitory desk will be able to buy that amount of cereal, baked goods, fruit in season, orange juice, and other items from 7:30 to 8:30 a.m. Monday through t serveSuFriday.i Sunstad said the breakfast service is being offered only in Stockwell and Bursley because students on Cenitral Campus can already buy breakfast at Ssnackbars in South Quad and East Quad. THE RESULTS of a survey taken last year by the Housing Rate Study Com- mittee prompted the new morning food service, Sunstad said. In the telephone survey, the committee found 40 per cent of the respondents favored some sort of breakfast program in the dorms. "It really is a better eating habit (to have breakfast in the morning)," said Sunstad. "And' the Rate Committee is there to find out about needs such as small number of students ate breakfast, in the dorms. "They wanted to keep the rates downs and there weren't enough people eating' breakfast to make the program worth- continuing,"he said. TUBBS SAID the $10 fee charge toy each student was enough to pay for thee A $10 ticket will enable students to raid the cafeteria for such break- fast items as cereal, baked goods, and fruit i this one so we can best serve the students." Housing Food Services Coordinator Lynford Tubbs said breakfast service to the dorms was discontinued after the 1970-71 academic year in response to a rate committee study showing only a program without having to raise or allocate additional funds. The University Housing Office has sent a letter to Hill area and Nort Campus residents informing them v:a the new service. Sunstad said that the; service will operate at least until they end of the Fall term. egimoiilmini XX. i 0y 0 0 HAPPEN INGS FILMS AAFC-The Fearless Vampire Killers, 7 p.m., The Tenant, 8:45 p.m., MLB Aud. 3. Cinema Guild-The Gunfighter, 7, 9p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Cinema II-Dr. Strangelove, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, 7, 9p.m., Angell Aud. A. Max Kade Deutsches Haus-Kammeradschaft, 8 p.m., Oxford Housing Conference Room. MEETINGS Career Planning and Placement-Pre-law mass meeting, 12 p.m., Angell Aud. B. LSA Student Government-6:15 p.m., Michigan Union Rm. 3904. Ann Arbor Tenants Union-7 p.m., Michigan Union. Ann Arbor Libertarian League-Informal meeting, 7:30 p.m., Mason Hall Rm. 443. Stilyagi Air Corps-8 p.m.;Union Conference Room. University Residence Hall Council-Open meeting, 9 p.m., Michigan Union Rm. 3909. SPEAKERS Center for Russian and East European Studies-Herb Eagle on Dusan Makavejev and Yugoslav Marxist Humanism, 12 p.m., Lane Hall, Rm. 200. Center for Afroamerican and African Studies-Murray Jackson, "The Politics of Urban Higher Education," 12 p.m., 246 Lorch Hall. . Dept. of Biology-John Breznak, "Gut Microbes Degrade Uric Acid: A Strategy for Nitrogen Conservation in Termites," 4 p.m., MLR Lecture Rm. 2. Dept. of Chemistry-Ronald Dorman, "Application of Pulsed Volta- metry to Amperometric Membrane Electrodes," 1200 Chemistry, 4 p.m., Joseph Kostusyk, "Deprotonation Studies in co-oxoketene Dithioacetals," 4 p.m., 1300Chemistry. Industrial and Operations Engineering-Juan Santana, "Optimal Con- trol of Multi-Commodity Single-Server Queue with Batch Services," 4 p.m., 229 W. Engineering. MARC-Charles Foulon, 'Who Was King Arthur," 4 p.m., 1402 Mason, in French. h LANSING (UPI)-State drug abuse officials-conceding there may be no "right" drinking age-endorsed yesterday lowering the minimum to 19, saying legal crackdowns are not the an- swer to alcohol abuse among young people. Kenneth Eaton, director of the Office of Substance Abuse Services, said he will not campaign for the drinking age ballot proposal and "professionally" opposes heavy tippling by young people, but is convinced the 21-year-old minimum adopted by voters two years ago has simply not worked. IMPROVED EDUCATION and a bet- ter example by drinking adults are the answers to alcohol problems of the state's youth, he said at a Capitol news conference. A spokesperson for the anti-drinking Michigan Council on Alcohol Problems, who attended the news conference, ex- pressed disappointment at the office's position and challenged its facts. "Age 21 discriminates against a small segment of our society whose problems are largely due to adult social attitudes about alcohol," said Oakland County District Judge Kenneth Hem- pstead, chairman of the state Substan- ce Abuse Advisory Commission. WHILE CONCEDING the accident MSA organizes security meetin A mass meeting of students concer- ned with improving campus security is scheduled fortonight by the recently- organized Michigan Student Assembly Security Task Force. At the meeting, to be held at 7 p.m. in the MSA chambers, students will have the opportunity to question represen- tatives of the Ann Arbor Police Depar- tment, the University campus security and the MSA. MSA officials also hope to develop strategies at the meeting to combat campus crime. In other action in their regular weekly meeting last night, MSA ap- proved plans for an extensive campus voter registration drive. The non- partisan drive will be held from Sept. 28 through Oct. 6. In last week's Assembly meeting, MSA passed a resolution condemning the Tisch tax cut amendment. 375 N. MAPLE 769-1300 rate among 18- to 20-year-olds has dropped under the higher age, the office noted accidents among 21- to 24-year- olds increased, suggesting a jump oc- curs at whatever point the legal age is set. Hempstead also insisted drinking problems among college students are now much more severe than before the drinking age was raised. "It's just a matter of going into any' dorm room and seeing a better stocked bar then you see in most homes," he said. Denying drinking privileges to young adults makes matters worse by fostering rebellion and a lack of com- munication among the generations, he said. EATON SAID there may not be a "right legal drinking age," Michigan needs to "arrive at a comfortable set- tlement" acceptable to young and old alike. the ann arbor film cooperative PRESENTS: ROMAN POLANSKI NIGHT THE FEARLESS VAMPIRE KILLERS oa 7:00 THE TENANT Qt8 :. MLB3 Admission: 42 State officials favor lower drinking age PERFORMANC ;CanterburyLoft-Charlie King, benefit cone 8:30 p.m., 332S. State. MISCELLANEC Department of Recreational Sports-IM tra Personal Safety Clinic, 5:30 p.m., Angell Aud. C scheduling, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., IMSB; Clinic on Programs, 8p.m., CCRB small gym. International Center-Cider and information national Center Lounge. Ann Arbor University Women's Club-Book Ballroom. Hillel-Sukkot services, 7:15 p.m., 1429 Hill S vations needed: 663-3336.N Soph Show-Auditions for "Hello, Dolly!," Pendleton Room. WCBN-Call-in, "The Word Processors' Disp Students for Anderson-voter registration dri Ark-Hoot night, open mike, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill: AnnArbor -Human Rights Commission-P rights in Ann Arbor, 7 p.m., City Hall Council Cha American Friend Service Committee-"Chur Central America," 7:30 p.m., 1420 Hill St. To submit items for the Happenings column, s peninigs The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., A ES cert for the Arbor Alliance, )US ck meet, 5:15 p.m., IMSB; ; IM touch football instant Stretching and Cool Down ial exchange, 3 p.m., Inter- sale preview, 7 p.m., Union t.; dinner, 8:15 p.m., reser- 7:30 p.m., Michigan Union ute," 6p.m., 763-3500. ive-fishbowl, diag. St. 'ublic hearings on human mbers. rch People and Struggles in end them in care of: Hap- nn Arbor, MI, 48109. 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