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October 07, 1980 - Image 3

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1980-10-07

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The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 7, 1980-Page 3
FOOTBALL SATURDA Y CONGESTION CITED

A

4 -
SCRUB DUDSTM
Wear the Latest in Fashion
Authentic operating room scrub suits as worn by

Council restricts street

By ELAINE RIDEOUT
eet-side solicitors of buttons,
3rs, bumper stickers, and other
all paraphenalia may find them-
s out of business soon as a result of
j tight's City Council amendment to
r. Aty peddlers and solicitors or-
ice.
a amendment, which was passed
imously, would allow council to
rmine that on certain dates,
estion in the city would be too great
rmit peddling and soliciting.
"E AMENDMENT also restricts to
minutes a vehicle or other con-'
*--nee may stand in one place unless
Beet-use permit is issued for that
'his situation has caused real
Alems for merchants who pay their
s only to have a competing peddler
Ap right outside their doors," Mayor
Belcher explained.
!cording to Belcher, the amen-
!nt was originally requested by the

Ann Arbor Police Department to help
cut down sidewalk congestion on foot-
ball Saturdays.
"THE PEOPLE have to walk out in
the street because the peddlers are
taking over the sidewalks," he said.
University Athletic Department
spokesman Will Perry addressed coun-
cil in favor of the resolution. "We're in
favor of the amendment," he said. "We
couldn't control congestion without the
help of the police and this will help us
all do the job a little bit better."
City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw noted
that the amendment would affect
existing peddling permits, making
them null and void on the dates and
locations designated by council
prohibiting. peddling.
BELCHER SAID the new ordinance
would technically affect the private
sale of football tickets, although he said
police, who already have their hands
fulaen orcing traffickat the games,
would have no time for ticket solicitors.

He also said the ordinance would only
affect soliciting lands. "The University
already prohibits such activity in the
football stadium."
In other action, council:
" passed a resolution providing equal
access to solid waste special pick-up,
formally reserved for private home
owners;
authorized the execution of a
hydroelectric feasibilitystudy loan
agreement with the Department of
Energy for a study of power generation
utilizing local dams;

rending
" allocated funds for police service to
the University of Michigan/Michigan
State University Pep Rally Parade to
be held Friday, Oct. 10, and;
" designated October 6-13 as
Productivity Week.
Council will discuss several parking
amendments regarding off-street
parking, Art Fair parking, small-sizing
parking, and truck and bus parking in
residential areas at a working session
to be held next week.

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Woman assaulted on bus

A woman who was sexually assaulted
on a University bus last week would be
willing to press charges if police can
locate the suspected attacker, police
said yesterday.
The woman told police a man forcibly

fondled her after she sat next to him on
the bus last Thursday shortly after 10
a .m.
Police said she described the suspect
as a man in his late teens.

* NEW YORK

CHICAGO

DETROIT e

d

HAPPENINGS-

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Burglars hit.
There were three burglaries in the 500
block of North Ashley Street last
Friday, police reported yesterday.
They all occurred very close in time to

N. Ashley St.
each other. Police said $625 worth of
goods were stolen, 'including a 35
millimeter camera, an electric razor,
and other miscellaneous goods.

FILMS
AAFC-Rolling Thunder, 7,9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell.
Cinema Guild-Dial 'M' for Murder, 7, 9p.m., Lorch Hall Aud.
SPEAKERS
CEWS-Leslie Stone and Ken Woolman, "British Views of U.S. Presiden-
tial Election," noon, 5208 Angell.
EEC & IC - K. Allin Luther, "Iran at War," noon, Int'l. Ctr.
CPP - Diane Dean, UCLA's MBA program, 1 p.m., 3525 SAB.
Geology - Robert Shoemaker, "Taphrogeny and Orogeny in the U.S. Mid-
continent," 4 .m., 4001 CCL.
MARC-C.A. Patrides, "Standing in God's Holy Fire; The Nature of Byzan-
tine Art," 4 p.m., 1408 MLB.
Hillel-William Fishman, "The Rise and Fall of London's East End Ghet-
to," 8:30 p.m., 1429 Hill.
Engish Composition Board-Jay Robinson and Daniel Fadeer, "Editing
rand Revising," 2553 LSA, 4 p.m.
Psychology - Robert Payne, "Cultural Evolution of Song Tradition in
Birds," 12:30 p.m., 1057 MHRI.
ISR-Second Annual Founders Symposium-Edward Lawler III,
"Designing High Involvement Work Organizations," 3 p.m., Rackham Am-
ph.
CRLT-Workshop, Jack Lockheed, "Problem-solving and Comprehen-
sion," 3:30 and 7 p.m., 109 E. Madison.
Bioengineering-Seminar, David Hraden, "Rehabilitation Engineering
for the Disabled Driver," 1042 E. Engineering, 4 p.m.
Chemistry-Gary Maciel, "NMR as a Bridge Between Different States of
Matter," 4 p.m., 1300 Chem.

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The
SUMMER BUSINESS
INTERN PROGRAM
OFFERS ESA SOPHS, JUNIORS, AND SENIORS THE OPPOR-
TUNITY TO GAIN PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE IN PAID INTERN-
SHIPS:
MARKETING, FINANCE, ADVERTISING, BANKING, PUBLIC
RELATIONS, ACCOUNTING, MEDIA, COMPUTER SCIENCE,
RETAILING, AND MORE!
CAREER
MASS MEETING
TUES.. OCT. 7
Rackham Aud.
Planning 7:0PM
Placement
" NEW YORK CHICAGO DETROIT "

Bis MEETINGS
Biological Research Review Comm.-Open meeting, 4 p.m., 3087 SPH I.
CPP-Mass meeting for business internships, 7 p.m., Rackham.
Ski R aitgClub-First recruit meeting, 7p.m., 2203 Angell.
aoS use Christ p'ellowsip-Meeting,,League,. .D& 7:30 p.m.
PERFORMANCES
School of Music-Piano Chamber Music, 8 p.m., Recital Hall.
UAC Viewpoint Lectures-Debate on Presidential Election, Shana
Alexander and James Kilpatrick, 8 p.m., Hill Auditorium.
Musical Society-"Barber of Seville," Goldovsky Opera Co., 8 p.m.,
Power Center.
The Current and Modern Consort-Concert of American Composers. 8
p.m., Ballroom, Michigan Union.
MISCELLANEOUS
Oriental Art Exhibit and sale-10 a.m. to 8 p.m., Main Floor, Union.
UAC-Homecoming informational meeting, 6:30 p.m., Anderson Room,
Union.
HRD-Course, Printing and Technology for the Editor, 9-11:30 p.m.
Comput. Ctr.-Chalk Talk: MTS files, devicesm and I/0, noon, 1011 NUBS.
UAC-Open workshop, Impact Dance, 7p.m., Union ballroom.
UAC-Bartending mini-course, 7, 9p.m., Union Bar.
Awareness through movement-Dance workshop, 7 p.m. Northside Pres-
byterian Church on Broadway.
Cocktail Party for Ken Woolmer, British Member of Parliament, 4:30
p.m., 6th floor, Pol. Sci. Lounge, Haven Hall.
WCLPP-National Family Sex Education Week-Open House, 9 a.m.-5
p.m., 912 North Main.
Contemporary Fiction Review-Accepting manuscripts now for fall, 1980
issue, guidelines located in Hopwood Rm., Angell.
IM Cross Country meet-University par 3 golf course, 4:30 p.m.,
tlinic-interval training program, 7:30 p.m., NCRB Track.
To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of:
Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI, 48109.

PEACE CORPS
20TH ANNIVERSARY
Monday, October 13
4:00--7 :00 R egistration for former volunteers,
Michigan Union.
8:00 Address by Tarzle Vittachi, Rackham
Auditorium.
9:00 Reception for former volunteers,
Michigan League.
Tuesday, October 14
9:00-10:30 Seminars on topics related to the Changing
Needs of the Third World, Michigan Union.
11:00 Ceremony commemorating the 20th A nniversary
of the Peace Corps. Front steps of the
Michigan Union.

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