4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 22, 1985. Cult classic moves to By AMY D. GOLDSTEIN After six years and hundreds of showings, the cult film classic Harold and Maude has moved from the State Theatre to a new home-the movies at Briarwood. The State Theatre, which has recen- tly come under new management, decided to discontinue all their mid- night movies according to Bill Sturland, a manager of the Movies at Briarwood. State Theatre management refused to comment on the decision. FOR MANY fans, Harold and Maude was a weekend tradition, some people have seen the film dozens of times. Though still in Ann Arbor, moving the movie to Briarwood will undoubedly hinder visits by a large number of the film's campus audience who lack a convenient mode of transportation. 'If we didn't have a car, it'd be bad.' - EricB lawe Briarwood see the film Saturday. Still, Briarwood management is con- fident that the film will survive being uprooted and continue to attract late- runstad night moviegoers. "As more people hear about it, they'll student be coming," said relief manager at the Movies at Briarwood, Bryan Carson. For diehard Harold and Maude buffs uited to the at- like Paul Larmer, moving the location rheatre.won't keep them from seeing the film. Theatre. t "I don't care where it's showing, as crowd (at Briar- long as I can see it in the area," Larmer said. uer, who went to "It's a real bummer," said second year law student Eric Brunstad. "If we didn't have a car, it'd be bad." Another fan who was disappointed with the move was Bill Shipley. "IT'S TOO bad, I think it should still be there because Ann Arbor is a 'mini- New York', and (Harold and Maude) helped keep Ann Arbor a little livlier past 2 a.m.," Shipley said, "it's another Ann Arbor institution. I've seen it (at the State). It's a cult movie." Others thought Harold and Maude was simply better st mosphere of the State Z "I think it's more for State than it is for this wood)," said Ray Mat Winds gust through THCE M SCS ON Rs... EVERY TUESDAY a frozen A (Continued from Page 1) AND THEN, of course there were the lucky ones. Warren Hamil and Campus Commercial Properties reported get- ting no calls. Steven Ceccio, a junior engineering student, said the weather didn't bother him. "As a matter of fact, I've got the window open." In weather as low as 10 degrees below zero, all occupied rooms in a dwelling, including bathrooms, are required by the city housing code to be at a tem- perature of at least 70 degrees at a distance of three feet above the floor level, according to Ray Eyer, a city housing inspector. inn Arbor "We encourage people to contact the landlord first," said Eyer. The city housing division will send someone out if the landlord and tenant can't resolve the problem, added Eyer. THE WIND also makes a lot of dif- ference, said Eyer. It blows heat away from the house. Dr. Ron Oehler said St. Jospeh Mercy Hospital has received about 10 cases of minor frost bite within the past three days. "Most our patients have received mild frost bite on the finger tips, nose, and ears," Oehler said. -Daily reporter Bill Hahn filed a report for this story t's a New Year and there's a new club in town. A club with an Ann Arbor tradition, but with a new face for '85. The music room has been made more spa- cious and more social. A new game room has been added in the basement. We've got 27 brands of beer in- cluding Bass and Guiness and a full food menu serving until 1 am. And dancing, as al- ways, to the area's fa- vorite bands. But now, there is no cover charge on Tuesdays. Come on down! MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY NEEDS YOU! Positions are now available on the following Regental and University Committees: University Budget Priorities Committee Research Policies Committee (1 grad student) Insurance Committee Student Legal Services And Many More Stop by the MSA office for a full listing of open committee positions. Applications are available now. DEADLINE for submitting applications is WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1985 - 5:00 P.M. For more information contact Laurie Clement, 3039 Michigan Union, 763-3241 208 S. First, Ann Arbor 996-8555 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Israeli pullback sparks violence BEIRUT, Lebanon - As Israel troops dismantled and trucked equip- ment south to prepare a pullback of their front lines in Lebanon, the Lebanese Cabinet met in emergency session yesterday to discuss ways to prevent an outbreak of civil warfare in areas Israel evacuates. In the capital, an outbreak of fighting overnight by Druse and Sunni and Shiite Moslems in West Beirut killed two people and wounded seven. The Spiritual leader of Lebanon's Sunni Moslems, Grand Mufti Sheik Hassan Khaled, met with representataives of all three groups to try to prevent further fighting. Police said mountain fighting east of Beirut between the Lebanese army and Druse militiamen overnight killed five civilians, including an 11-month- old boy. His father was one of eight people wounded. Israeli convoys made their way along winding roads in south Lebanon, moving hardware in anticipation of the withdrawal from the Awali River south to the Litani River, a distance of about 18 miles. Evacuating the strip of south Lebanon in which 250,000 to 400,000 Lebanese live would be the first step in the three-stage pullout of Israeli soldiers, ap- proved by the Israeli Cabinet last week. Court overturns death sentence, requires un-biased jurors WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court yesterday, voting 7-2, made it har- der for those unsure about sending people to their death to serve as jurors at capital punishment trials. Florida officials had asked the Supreme Court for guidance on excusing jurors opposed to the death penalty in a case involving Johnny Paul Witt, 40, who was convicted and sentenced to death in Volusia County, Fla., for a Oct. 28,1973, murder. Jonathan Kushner was abducted while riding his bicycle along a trial near a wooded area in tampa, and placed in the trunk of a car where he died of suffocation. A federal appeals court overturned Witt's death sentence because a poten- tial juror was excused after voicing anti-death penalty views. Nevada plane crash kills 74 RENO, Nev. - A chartered turboprop carrying about 74 people home from a gambling junket crashed and burned just after takeoff yesterday as the pilot tried to return to the airport because of vibrations. Authorities said all but three people on the plane were killed. Galaxy Airlines Flight 203, which had taken off at 1:05 a.m. PST bound for Minneapolis, crashed in a field and slid onto a four-lane highway after narrowly missing motels and apartment buildings. Four people on the ground suffered minor injuries, said Washoe County Sheriff Vince Swinney. The cause of their injuries was not immediately known. "It was really shocking. The plane never seemed to get off the ground," said Mark Brenner of Reno, who was driving by the scene when the plane went down. Accused Belushi murderer abandons extradition fight TORONTO - Cathy Evelyn Smith, the Toronto woman accused of mur- dering comedian John Belushi with injections of cocaine and heroin, turned herself in to police yesterday and gae up her 22-month fight against ex- tradition to California. Her attorney, Brian Greenspan, told a news conference that Miss Smith formally abandoned her extradition appeal because "discussions and negotiations" with the Los Angeles County district attorney's office "provided an acceptable basis for Miss Smith's voluntary departure." Greenspan refused to say whether the bargaining led to an agreement on- reduced charges or on a sentence to be served. "It just wouldn't be proper, it would be inappropriate to comment fur- ther," he told reporters. Belushi, star of NBC-TV's "Saturday Night Live" and such films as "Animal House," was found dead of "acute cocaine and heroin intoxicaton" on March 5, 1982, in a Los Angeles bungalow hotel at the age of 33. Spy satellite countdown begins CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The countdown began yesterday for the first top secret U.S. man-in-space mission, with the exact launch time kept under wraps to hamper Soviet efforts to monitor a spy satellite that will be deployed from the shuttle Discovery. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the Pentagon will say only that Discovery and its crew of five military officers will take off between 1:15 p.m. and 4:15 p.m. EST Wednesday. After its release, the Air Force satellite, called SigInt for signal intelligen- ce, is to be boosted into a stationary orbit 22,300 miles above the equator south of the Soviet Union. To reach that outpost, the satellite has to be drop- ped off precisely over the equator. The Pentagon especially does not want Soviet photo-reconnaissance or communications-interceptor satellites to monitor the U.S. intelligence- gathering satellite after it is released from the shuttle's cargo bay. Although the Defense Department tried to keep the identify of the U.S. satellite a secret, sources reported it is an advanced spy satellite capable of monitoring Soviet missile tests and radio, radio-telephone, microwave and satellite communications over a wide area, including most of Europe, Asia and Africa. SJbe £iigan 1Oaiig Vol. XCV - No. 92 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the Fall and Winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the Spring and Summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Sub- scription rates: September through April - $16.50 in Ann Arbor; $29.00 outside the city; May through August - $4.50 in Ann Arbor, $6.00 outside the city. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndi- cate and College Press Service, and United Students Press Service. 4 APPEAMJNG TONIGHT: From Detroit PRIVATE ANGST 4 Editor in Chief....................BILL SPINDLE Managing Editors .............. CHERYL BAACKE NEIL CHASE Associate News Editors .........LAURIE DELATER GEORGEA KOVANIS THOMAS MILLER Personnel Editor .................... SUE BARTO Opinion Page Editors ...............JAMES BOYD JACKIE YOUNG NEWS STAFF: Laura Bischoff, Dov Cohen, Stephanie DeGroote, Nancy Dolinko, Lily Eng, Rachel Gottlieb, Thoma's Hrach, Gregory Hutton, Bruce Jackson. Sean Jackson, Vibeke Laroi, Carrie Levine, Jerry Markon, Eric Mattson, Molly Melby, Tracey Miller, Kery Mur- akami, Arona Pearstein, Lisa Powers, Charles Sewell, Stacey Shonk, Dan Swanson, Allison Zousmer. Magazine Editors...............PAULA DOHRING RANDALL STONE Associate Magazine Editors ...... JULIE JURRJENS JOHN LOGIE Arts Editors.......................MIKE FISCH ANDREW PORTER Associate Arts Editors ... MICHAEL DRONGOWSKI Movies.....................BYRON L. BULL Music ...................... DENNIS HARVEY Sports Editor....................MIKE McGRAW Associate Sports Editors ........... JEFF BERGIDA KATIE BLACK WELL PAUL HELGREN DOUGLAS B. LEVY STEVE WISE SPORTS STAFF: Dave Aretha, Andy Arvidson, Mark Borowsky, Emily Bridghtam, Debbie deFrances, Joe Devyak, Joe Ewing, Chris Gerbasi, Jim Gindin, Skip Goodman, Jon -Hartman, Steve Herz, Rick Kaplan, Tom Keaney, Mark Kovinsky, Tim Makinen, Adam Martin, Scott McKinlay, Barb McQuade, Scott Miller, Brad Morgan, Jerry Muth, Phil Nussel, Adam Ochlis, Mike Redstone, Scott Salowich, Randy Schwartz, Susan Warner. Business Manager..............STEVEN BLOOM Advertising Manager................ LIZ CARSON Display Manager..............KELLIE WORLEY Nationals Manager ................... JOE ORTIZ Sales Manager .............DEBBIE DIOGUARDI Finance Manager................ LINDA KAFTAN Marketing Manager..............KELLY SODEN Classified Manager............ JANICE BOLOGNA Ass't. Display Manager.........JEFFREY DOBEK Ass't. Sales Manager............ LAURIE TRUSKE Ass't. Finance Manager............ JANE CAPLAN Ass't. Classified Manager..........TERRENCE YEE SALE REPRESENTcArTrIVE: e.nAba. Shervi 4 m J