The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, April 6, 1983-Page 3 MSA course evaluations to be distributed late By CHERYL BAACKE Students seeking advice from the Michigan Student Assembly about what classes to register for next term will have to wait a little longer than usual. ADVICE, MSA's booklet of sum- maries of student course evaluations, usually comes out about ten days before students begin registering for the up- coming term. THIS SEMESTER, however, AD- VICE won't be distributed until the beginning of next week - several days after CRISP opened. The committee in charge of the booklet encountered a number of delays while getting the booklet ready for publication, said Richard Layman, the group's coordinator. One of the biggest problems was that "less than a handful" of people served on this term's committee, he said. There are usually two coordinators for the project, Layman said, but one quit earlier this year and, because of the lack of leadership, fewer 'people became involved. LAYMAN SAID another setback was the time involved in preparing the computer printout of the evaluation results. "(Getting information from the computer) always takes a fair amount of time and money," he said. He added that the process involves a complicated program that is actually about 20 programs run in succession. One more delay came when the committee tried to finish gathering in- formation, Layman said. Before the final computer program is run, the committee has to get information from the University about who taught each class and how many students were enrolled. Only one person has access to that information, Layman said, and that person was out of town when the committee was trying to complete AD- VICE. Even though ADVICE will be a little late, Layman said it will still be useful. MSA plans to distribute the booklets at the Undergraduate Library and at dorms instead of just leaving them in Angell hall to be picked up. Layman said the committee will keep some books to distribute in the fall for students who change their minds during the summer about what classes to take. Daily Photo by RENEE FREIER Stacked This honeycomb is formed by plastic pipes stacked on William Street yesterday. HAPPENINGS- Highlight Visiting author Mary Lee Settle will give a lecture entitled, "Blood Tie and Scapegoat," at 7:30 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheater. Films Alternative Action - Dossier 51, 8:30 p.m., East Quad. AAFC - Shaft, 7 p.m., Taking Off, 8:45 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Cinema II - Rififi, 7 p.m., The Exterminating Angel, 9 p.m., Lorch Hall. Hill St. - The Phantom of the Opera, 7 & 9 p.m., 1429 Hill. CFT - The Jerk, 7:30 p.m., Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid, 9:15 p.m., Michigan Theater. Women Law Students Association, Labor Studies Ctr., ILIR, Michigan Media - Taylor Chain, 12:15, followed by discussion, 116 Hutchins Hall. Performances School of Music - Tuba students recital, 8 p.m., recital hall; voice recital, Christine Stressel, 8 p.m. Rackham Assembly Hall. Ark - DO'a, flute and guitar, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill. EMU - Dance and drama departments, Stravinsky's "The Soldier's Tale," 7p.m., Pease Auditorium, EMU. Speakers Minority Student Services - Latina Woman monthly brown bag luncheon series, Jackie Rodriguez, "Social Identity and Political Consciousness: The Relationship," noon, community services conference room, 2202 Union. Washtenaw CARD - Mustaffa Randolph and John Judge, "Military Research and the Pentagon," noon, Guild House, 802 Monroe. History, W. European Studies - Theodore Rabb; "The Mentality of the German Burgher in the Age of Reformation," 8 p.m., 203 Tappan. History of Art -John James, "The Factors which Produced Gothic," 4:10 p.m., 203 Tappan. Russian and East European Studies - brown bag lecture, William Reisinger, "An International Regime Governing Intra-CMEA Relations?" noon, Lane Hall Commons Rm. ,Comparative Literature, English, and Classical Studies - Robert Fit- zgerald, "A New Aeneid," 7:30 p.m., Rackham W. Conf. Rm. Tau Sigma Delta - Oberdick lecture, Thomas Beeby, "Classicism: College or Transformation?" 8p.m., Chrysler Center. Collegiate Inst. for the Study of Buddhist Literature-Colloquium, Robert Cooper, "Vegetable Gardening as a Medium of Transmission," noon, 3050 Frieze. Oral Biology - seminar, Raul Caffesse, "Present and Future of Periodon- tics,"4 p.m., 1033 Kellogg. Alliance Francaise d'Ann Arbor - Joseph Sax, "Exploring the Backcoun- try of France: The Regional and National Parks," 8 p.m., Layers Club Lounge, Hutchins Hall. Labor and Industrial Relations - Irving Bluestone, "The Future of Worker Participation in the United States," 12:15 p.m., Whitney Aud., SEB. Politics'-Hans Ehrbar, "The Vietnam War," 7 p.m., 447 Mason. Psychiatry - Manuel Zane, "Contextual Therapy for Phobias," 10:30, SPH Aud. Chemistry - Analytical thesis colloquium, Mark Fraser, "Studies of Chemiluminescence," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem.; organic thesis colloquium, Neil Canter, "Synthesis and Thermal Reactivity of Monorganothiaboranes Derived from 6-Thia-nido-decaborane (11)," 4 p.m., 1300 Chem. ECB - Emily Golson, "Taking an Essay Exam," 4 p.m., 1103 Angell. Education - Seminar, "The Influence of Collective Bargaining on Public Education," Barbara Roberts Mason, Dorothy Eiker, Harry Howard, 6:15 p.m., Rm. 1309, Whitney Aud.,SEB. Great Lakes and Marine Environment - Seminar, John Black, "Aquatic Carcinogenesis," 4 p.m., White Aud., Cooley. Meetings Nurses' Christian Fellowship -4-5:30 p.m., 2703 Furstenberg. Michigan Gay Undergraduates - 9p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. Academic Alcoholics-1:30 p.m., Aano Club. Latin American Solidarity Committee - 7:30 p.m., International Center Lounge. Science Fiction Club - "Stilyagi Air Corps," 8:15 p.m., ground floor con- ference rm., Union. Guild House - Faculty Against Apartheid noon, 802 Monroe. Miscellaneous Tae Kwon Do Club - practice, 6 p.m., martial arts rm., CCRB. WCBN - "Radio Free Lawyer," 6 p.m., discussion of legal issues, 6 p.m., 88.3 FM. Museum of Art - Art Break, "Forest, Prarie, and Plains: Native Amer- ican Art," Margaret Coudron, 12:1 p.m., West Gallery. CEW - "Assertiveness Training for Women Graduate Students," 3:15- 4:45 p.m., 350S. Thayer; brown bag financial aid clinic, 12 p.m., CEW Conf. Rm. Student Wood and Crafts Shop - Power tools safety, 6 p.m., 537 SAB. Tau Beta Pi - Free tutoring to all students in freshman and sophomore level science, math and engineering courses, 7-11 p.m., 307 UGLi; 7-11 p.m., Alice Lloyd music rm.; 8-10 p.m., 2332 Bursley. Law School - Henry M. Campbell Moot Court Competition, John Stevens, Bailey Brown, Dallin Oaks, Terrance Sandalow, Peter Westen, 2:30 p.m., Rm. 100, Hutchins Hall. Young People's Theatre - Registration for spring session classes. Sign up at YPT officem 410 W. Washington. Classes begin April 9. Psychology - peer counseling for undergrads interested in psych. cour- Two Germans escape over Berlin Wall WEST BERLIN (UPI) - Two East Berliners used a bow and arrow to shoot a line across the Berlin Wall, then glided to the West on a pulley 35 feet above the ground while guards were not looking, a West Berline newspaper and informed sources said yesterday. The nighttime escape, one of the most ingenious in the 22 years since communist authorities built the wall across the divided city, took place last Thur- sday, the sources said. An account of the escape ap- peared in the West Berlin newspaper BZ. ONE OF THE escapers, a heating engineer iden- tified only as Michael B., 23, told the newspaper he and a 24-year-old elecrician friend hatched the plan on New Year's Eve. The two men said they looked for months for a suitable place on the border to make the daring bid, eventually choosing a five-story tenement house in the Treptow section of East Berlin that overlooked the wall. Most houses along the eastern side of the wall have been evacuated and boarded up to prevent such escapes. The' no-mans land along the wall is usually patrolled by guard dogs. BOTH TOOK vacations and then hired a car to carry their equipment to the house Wednesday after- noon. For 15 hours they waited for the attention of border guards to be diverted during the night. "We fastened a cable, which was 90 yards long and one-quarter-inch wide to the chimney of the house," Michael said. "I fired a 100-yard long fishing line, attached to a steel arrow, out of the window of the attic and over the roof of the house in Bouchestrasse (in West Berlin) to a waiting friend." MICHAEL said they tied the fishing line to the steel cable and the friend pulled the cable across and secured it to his car. "Laughing hysterically, my friend made it the 30 yards over the barbed wire and the wall and onto the roof of the house opposite. I followed after," he said. It took 10 seconds to roll from East to West, he said. Both men went to the Marienfelde Refugee Camp in West Berlin. MICHAEL SAID he was recently released in an amnesty from a 20-month jail sentence following an earlier, unsuccessful escape attempt across the Hungarian-Austrian border. A total of 2,392 East Germans fled to the West in 1982, but only 269 made escapes across the nine-foot- high Berlin wall or the fortified East-West German border. Reagan WASHINGTON (AP) - Pre. Reagan intends to ask Congre reduce spending by about $900 m next year to offset part of the cost $4.6 billion jobs bill he signed last th, officials said yesterday. The disclosures came as Reaga with Republican members of the S Budget Committee to discus proposed 1984 tax and spending ph OFFICIALS SAID Reagan change his budget to show abou million in lower spending reques 1984 for agencies. such as the Co Engineers and Fish and Wildlif( vice. They said the administration also show changes in the proj spending levels for 1985 and beyo some agencies, although no p numbers were available. wants Congress to cut sident Budget committee members, Several congressional al ss to emerging from a nearly two-hour White asked not to be identified, pillion House meeting with the president, said House and Senate were likely of the Reagan was adamant in pushing for the president's proposal, for mon- approval of his defense spending plan, part. which calls for about a 10 percent an- MEANWHILE, President n met nual increase, after adjusting for in- private-sector task force enate flation. government could save $48 b s his "THE PRESIDENT, as of today, is the next three years, mostly an. still asking that we consider his 10 per- ping down on benefits to would cent increase in defense," said Sen. workers-including early reti t $904 Pete Domenici (R-N.M.), chairman of In the first, six-volume inst ts for the Budget Committee and a leading its cost-cutting study, -the rps of advocate for paring the president's oriented group concluded't] e Ser- spending proposal. management of the 2 millio The president refused to back down civilian work force would tri would even though Domenici and other com- ding by $34.7 billion. jected mittee members told him the panel The remaining $13 billio nd for would not approve the full spending projected by the President recise request, the GOP contingent reported outside the White House. spending ides, who Sector Survey on Cost ysaid the result from placingj y to ignore programs administerec the most government agencies. Reagan's said the fl illion over ZC 'by clam- o federal C rement. allment of of Ann Arbor ann business- that better ANNUA n-member im spen- RUMMAGE n in cuts National Guard 's Private 223 East A Fri., April 8th, 5-1 Sat., April 9th, 9- ice i Zonta appreciates an of new and used househ+ wearing appa Call for pick-up: 668-82 Control would new curbs on d by a host of )NTA LUB ounces its L SALE Armory inn 8:30 p.m. 2:30 p.m. ny donation old goods and arel. 75 or 663-5000 Trouble threatens satellite (Continued from Page 1) dered if they had anything to do with the satellite's problems. Challenger commander Paul Weitz and his crewmen, pilot Karol Robko and mission specialists Story Musgrave and Donald Peterson, who had ejected the satellite from their cargo bay late Monday, were asleep when the trouble began. They were in the second day of the ship's five-day inaugural flight. - THE SPACE plane encountered a few first-mission annoyances, including a clogged filter is humidity duets in a cabin fan. Peterson checked it and reported: "We found all kinds of junk on them, a whole bunch of screws, bolts and some washers and quite a bit of felt." He said the area was too tight to photograph the mess but "we wrapped it all in Scotch tape and saved it for you," and added "there is also a lot of blue lint in these filters." "THE CHALLENGER is operating near flawlessly," said flight director Randy Stone at a morning briefing. "The crgw is feeling fine." There was no indication that the astronauts suffered from the space sickness that plagued others on the five flights of the first shuttle, Columbia. UlihsAnnual Inventory Sale Involving every item in our store except textbooks. Special prices on calculators, computers and computer products. Sale Ends Saturday, April 9th 6 Cooperative Outdoor Adventures MICHIGAN UNION RECREATION AIM HIGH We're assembling the team now to carry the Air Force into the frontier of space with leading edge technology and the officer leaders to keep us on course. Consider your future as an officer on our team! With our undergraduate conversion program you could become an engineer or weather officer or you may wish to experience the thrill of flying as a pilot or navigator in today's finest aircraft-the wings of America. Whatever your specialty, you'll find a good income and excellent advanced education op- portunities as an officer. White Water Raft Trip $565.00 Through Green River Wilderness, Utah 4 Days 4 Nights on river meals included Transportation by VIP Motorcoach Depart from MI Union Sat., May 7 Return to Ml Union Sat., May 14 Limited space available $125 deposit on space reservation Balance due by 5:00pm, April 21 Michigan Union Ticket Office Tickets on sale March 28 Call 763-5900 20% OFF General Supplies INCLUDING Watches Alarm & Travel Clocks Sunglasses Tote Bags Back Packs Danskims Globes And Other Useful Things 20 % OFF Prints and Frames Posters Art Prints Size 8xlO to 24x36 Ready -Made Frames Size 8x10 to 24x30 Oak, Walnut, Fruitwood I _ _...s ,-