The Michigan Daily-Thursday, June 3, 1982-Page 3 THOUSANDS EXPECTED TO A TTEND Ya'ssoo festival begins By GEORGE ADAMS Singing, dancing, three different or- chestras, and a variety of Greek food and drink will all be part of the eleventh annual Ann Arbor Ya'ssoo Greek Festival, which begins today.- The festival, which will run from 11 a.m. to midnight today, Friday, and Saturday is sponsored by Saint Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church, 414 N. Main, and will be held on the chur- ch's grounds. "ANYONE WHO wants to come (to the festival) is assured 1,000 percent that they will have a good time," said Nick Beltsos, professor of business management at EMU sod chairmnan of the fes vl activi ', itans sa h exp cts a bout 27,00 people to at d th hre d-y 'u .i "Y's i gengthat tan ,, 'Anyone who wants to come (to the festival) is. assured 1, 000 percent that they will have a good time.' -Nick Beltsos, festival chairman today festival's close at midnight. THOUGH AN admission fee of $6.00 will be charged after 6 p.m., $4.50 of that amount will apply toward a cer- tificate the patron may use anywhere in the6by 210-foot tent that will contain the festival. Beltsos admitted that there has been some trouble with the neightborp im- mediately bordering the festival grounds. Numerous complaints have been filed by a few nerby residents about disorderly behavior during the event, Beltsos said, and the $6.00 ad- mission fee was instituted to keep out those who come only to drink and cause trouble. "My greatest joy," Beltsos said, 'is to soe 27,000 people happy. Come and lao-k al their cyct and the smiles on their tacos .J.They'rc appy! literally, 'to your health,'" explained Litsa Varonis, one of the organizers of the festival, who also lectures for the Unviersity's English Composition Board. "We do this because we like to do this, we do it to raise funds for expansion of the church, and we do it because we feel it is one of the finest cultural con- tributions we can rnake," Beltsos ad- ded. AFTERN 0N attractions will in- Iaudc a b-ke sae afl-cooursc tGreek lunch for $3.50, a boutique with Greek arts and crafts, and gyro cart full of the Greek sandwiches. Dinnertime features a full menu of Greek dishes, and is served after 6 p.m. nightly for $4.50 Greek wine and beer will be available for those who wish to augment their dining experience. Each night will feature a different Greetk 'and along with folk dancing performances by dance groups ironm SI. No-bolos. The music begins at 7:3d mm _or__-..-lbn o h nn i"or>ca Tb .,mnounc aseof ekd apenu ation that - ullard would att rmpt to gain a seat in the state Senate under the newly drawn legislative district boundaries. BULLARD SAID he had considered running for the state Senate, but "per- sonal considerations and the likelihood of diminished influence over legislative reforms as a member of the state Senate" made him decide to run for re- election to his current seat in the state House. "We can't figure out what the odds are in the Senate," said Bullard, "but we think there is -a good chance of a Republican majority . . . it's a difficult choice but on the balance, I think it's better to run for re-election." Bullard began the election year as a candidate for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, but he dropped that campaign when Ann Arbor was placed in what he considered highly conservati ve district. Bullard, who chairs the state House Judiciary Committee, called - his decision to run for re-election "a very straightforward matter." "I'm currently the chair of an impor- tant committee and have been able to effectively represent my constitutents in that position. Running for (state) Senate would mean giving up that . ]®O ?i2 j AP Photo - Whooping it up No, Richard Simmons has not gone loony. It's merely George Archibald, director of the International Crane Foundation, performing a mating dance with Tex, the foundation's only whooping crane. After Archibald stood in for six weeks as a surrogate mate, the five-foot-tall Tex gave birth to a bouncing five-inch chick named Gee Whiz. Bullard . ..ready for another bid position," he said in a statement released after the announcement. Now in his fifth term in the state House, Bullard said he was pleased with the composition of the new Ann Arbor district, which he described as 80 percent the same as the previous district and "slightly less Democratic." "I believe that 'I've accomplished a lot as a member of the House," said Bullard, "and I look forward to accom- plishing a lot more during the difficult times ahead." By SCOTT STUCKAL Astronomy research at the University will greatly increase with the upcoming construction of a new $2 o -omillion reflecting telescope at the University's 't]- S1 y McGraw-Hill observatory at Kitt Peak, Arizona, ac- cording to the astronomy department chairman. The new 2.4 meter telescope, which will be the four- th largest University-operated telescope, has an ex- - 1 pected completion date of early 1985, and will com- pliment a 1.3 meter telescope already at Kitt Peak. The new telescope, like the old one, will be jointly C" operated by Dartmouth University, the Massachuset- ts i 1 li R O f Iiueo ehoyadtheUnvesityo _Michigan. THE NEW telescope will increase the time available to researchers, said Astronomy Prof. i e L el e S C 0 e Robert Kirshner, and as a result, quality and amount - _of the University's research will increase. The. data from the new addition will affect the en- tire department,including undergraduates, Kirshner said because availability of elescope time benefits- all research projects. The new 2.4 meter telescope will "have a bearing on the question of the overall fate of the universe- Will it continue to expand?" said Kirshner, who operates the present observatory. He explained it will be used to investigate the expanding nature of the universe by observing whether there is enough mass to half the expansion, and by measuring the rate of - expansion in the universe. THE TELESCOPE will cost $2 million, $934,00{ of which will come from grants by the National Science Foundation. The remainder of the costs will be split tween Dartmouth, MIT, and the University. Ac- cording to Kirshner, the astronomy .department is looking for a "high-minded" donor to contribute the third of a million dollars still needed for the telescope. "Astronomy has a long history of private benefac- tors because it has such wide appeal," Kirshner ex- plained. The present University astronomy facilities at Kitt Peak were financed, by a donation'.lpthe --MeGra-H1-~p bihngiirss.~