The Michigan Doily-Sunday, October 2, 1977-Page 3 . HELD IN NEUTRAL COUNTRY CYUMSEE ff-WS AKENCALL -Jy IHappenings .. get off to a slow but lavish start today at noon when the Fall Art Fair begins its second day of craft exhibits and musical entertainment on the Community High School grounids, until 6 p.m.... and, coin- cidentally across the street, the Farmer's Market will be holding its' Fall Harvest Festival ... on a more serious note, area residents are in- vited to join in a 10-mile Walk for Hunger, sponsored by the Interfaith Council, beginning at 1:30 p.m. from St. Clare's Episcopal/Temple Beth Emeth, 2309 Packard ... and you'll need a sponsor/contribu- tor to donate money toward the alleviation of world famine ... from 1-5 p.m., the "Actors Ensemble," a new theater group, will be holding auditions in 4203 Mich. Union ... or, for the hearty physical types, the Outing Club meets at the same time for a(no doubt rainy) hike, at the Rackham N. Entry ... the Ark features a 3 p.m. recital by the Classical Guitar Society, starring Pamela Kimmel ... and the sole evening oc- curence is the St. Mary's Student Chapel's seminar on the Psychology of death and dying, with a film, discussion and talk ... that's at 8 p.m. at the corner of Thomson and William Sts.... On Monday, events also kick off at noon with a brown bag lunch as the folks from the Ctr. for Near Eastern and N. African studies, and Allan Christelow, discuss "Marriage, Divorce and Pre-emption in the Eghris Plain, 1853-1856" in the Commons Rm. at Lane Hall ... at 4 p.m. you'll be torn between an English/MARC lecture by Oxford University's Malcolm Parks en- titled "What Did an Anglo-Saxon Book Look Like to an Anglo Saxon?", in the Cook Rm., N. Entrance, Law Quad, and another lecture by Sheilia Widnall of MIT on "The Instability of the Vortex Ring" at 206 W. Engineering ... or, in a third language, you can take your kids to at- tend a 4-5 p.m. registration period for gradeschool Spanish lessons, in the International Center's Pound House ... at 7:30, attend a meeting of the Southern Africa Liberation Committee in Rm. 2308 Mich. Union or listen to speakers from the Gay Advocated Office in Alice Lloyd Hall's Blue Carpet Lounge, also at 7:30 ... and from 7-9 p.m., the Child & Family Service of Washtenaw County is sponsoring a session on "Emotional Aspects of Aging," in his office at 2301 Platt Rd. for anyone interested in registering for their six-session program ... for information or enrollment fees, call 971-6520. Burning desire? The Rev. John Withers, a Southern Baptist minister in suburban Cleveland, was disappointed as heck last week when area officials banned a bonfire he had planned to burn bikinis and other instru- ments of the devil, furnished by local churchgoers. But when the of- ficials, who were defending air pollution laws, offered him a garbage truck to replace the torch, Withers waxed enthusiastic. He had called upon his parishioners to bring "instruments of temptation" - such as. television sets, books by liberal authors, hard rock albums and bikinis - to a ceremonial bonfire today. On being informed the fire would be illegal, the minister said he would settle for the garbage truck; though leaning toward a small-scale, legal, barbecue because of its "sym- bolism." "We just want to exalt Jesus Christ," he explained. On the outsider Get set for another mournful day or so. Today will be - You 'guessed it - cloudy, and showers will linger on through tonight. The winds will be blowing cool and fast from the northeast at 13-17 m.p.h., putting the high temperature at about 60* and dragging the low down to a brisk 44*. Good studying weather will continue tomorrow under partly cloudy skies and even cooler temperatures with a high expected in the mid-50's., U.S., U4 LONDON (AP) - The United States and Britain hope to organize a new conference in a neutral country on a final constitutional settlement for Rhodesia, according to senior diplomats here. They said yesterday that the government of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean has offered facilities for such a parley. THE U.S.-BRITISH plan as report-. ed by the diplomats is likely to mean rejection of a bid .by Prime Minister Ian Smith of Rhodesia to have Pakistan to defer vote ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) -- Gen. Mohammed Zia ul-Haq, head of Pakistan's marital-law government, 1 announced an indefinite postpone- ment yesterday of national elections scheduled for Oct. 18, Zia also banned all political activity in the country.' "The very, existence and integrity of the country is at present at stake," he said in a televised nationwide address. He said political activity is{ creating a situation that "threatens law and order.' ZIA AND OTHER military com- manders deposed elected Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto on July 5, ending four months of bloody political strife touched off by opposi- tion charges that Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party (PPP) had rigged national elections last March. Zia then scheduled new elections for Oct. 18 between the PPP and the opposition Pakistan ,National Alli- ance coalition: Bhutto was arrested by martial- law authorities and charged with various offenses, including murder of political opponents and abuse of power as prine minister. The general set no new date for the voting. K. plan Britain's commissioner - Designate and a special representative of United Nations Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim visit him in Salis- bury, the Rhodesian capital. Smith has said he wants to discuss key aspects of American-British pro- posals for a settlement with Field Marshal Lord Carver of Britain and Waldheim's envoy. "For Lord Carver, as the legal rep- resentative of Queen Elizabeth II, and for the U.N. envoy representing the international community to visit the pretender-premier of an illegal state is a totally unacceptable idea," one keyofficial said. The British and others consider Rhodesia's govern- ment illegal because it unilaterally declared itself independent from Britain in 1965. "YET IT'S NOT for the American- British promoters of a settlement to be too rigid and the probability is that lower level officials will confer with Smith and with leaders of the black Rhodesian parties on next steps," the official added., A new phase is imminent in the 12-year-long search for a Rhodesian settlement since the U.N. Security Council last Thursday broadly sanc- tioned Waldheim to name a delegate Rhodesian talks to work with Carver in quest of a constitution. Under American - British peace proposals, Smith would be required to make way for Carver, who then would preside over the arrangements designed to lead the white-governed, former British colony to legal state- hood on the basis of black majority rule. SMITH AND, LEADERS of key black Rhodesian factions have ob- jected to various elements in the British-American plan. But Washing- ton and London have undertaken to clarify and maybe even amend certain parts by general agreement. This will call for a new round of preliminary negotiations with all the parties and with leaders of Rho- desia's neighbor states, including South Africa, Zambia, Mozambique, Tanzania, Botswana and Angola. Special U.S. and British envoys Stephen Low and John Graham are due to conduct these. The Rhodesian government an- nounced yesterday that Prime Minis- ter Smith had met secretly for eight hours last Sunday with President Kenneth Kaunda of black-governed Zambia to discuss U.S.-British pro- posals to bring black-majority rule to Rhodesia and U.N.-sppnsored efforts to arrange a cease-fire in the five-year-old guerrilla war. SOUTH AFRICA, according to these plans, already is under inform- al notice it would risk an oil embargo itself unless it joins in the mandatory U.N.hsanctions campaign against its neighbor. A Commonwealth c o m m i t t e e charged with examining the oil sanctions issue concluded a secret report last week by saying it would 'see no alternative to seeking from the Security Council a decision to im- pose in mandatory form an embargo on the supply of crude oil and= petroleum products to South Africa itself" if it refuses to guarantee a ,cutoff of the oil flow to Rhodesia. THE FIRST 10 PEOPLE ON MONDAY Get A FREE PINBALL GAME AT UNION LANES open 10a.m. ____. Daily Official Bulletin SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2,1977 Day Calendar WUOM: Options in Education: "Community and Junior Colleges", First part of two programs ex- ploring the boom in two year colleges, looking at the changing images and impact of these institutions, 1 p.m. General Notice PRESIDENT'S STATE OF THE UNIVERSITY ADDIESS. President Fleming will give his annual address to faculty and staff in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre at 8:00 p.m., Mnday, October 3, 1977. Distinguished faculty awards will be -presented during the program. A reception in the Michigan League will follow the ceremony. The meeting is open to all members of the University community. THE MICHIGAN DAILY volume LXXXVIII, No. 22 Sunday. October 2,1977 N edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by tail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; V1.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. OPEN TONIGHT TILL 1 A.M. BILLIARDS, BOWLING, AND PINBALL at the UNION Sunday is.. . Imported Bottle Beer NIght featuring: Beers from Every Country atCa GREAT PRICEI JEAN COCTEAU DOUBLE FEATURE THE BLOOD OF A POET (AT 7) Early classic of experimental avant-garde cinema.,Made in 1930, it is "A REAL DOCUMENTARY COMPOSED OF UNREAL HAPPENINGS." BEAUTY AND THE BEAST (at 9:05) This surreal rendition of the old fairytale is an enjoyable cinematic experience for young and old alike MON: DIE NIEOELUNGEN (I & iI) (free) TIlS: THE BAD SLEEP WELL (FREE) CINEMA GUILD EACH: 1.50 50TH: $2.50 OLD ARCH AUDITORIUM a An original musical recalling vaudeville and memorable star performances of New York City 's famous Palace Theater. SAT. OCT. 8-8:30 p.m. SUN. OCT. 9-2& 7 p.m. Tickets at $5 and $3 Box office at Michigan Theater Mon.-Fri. 10-5 or call 665-8221 or 761-2247. ' F -. *:. *.* 4W . *. S..0.W ..V.'., ~ *:-.. '.';~ CINEMA II ANGELL HALL AUD. A Sunday, October 2, 1977 Double Feature Dark Victory Director: EDMUND GOULDING (193 One of BETTE DAVIS' most deeply felt and widely-ranging performances is as Judy Traherne, a superficial young heiress who suddently learns that she has only months to live. As she realizes her remaining days mustibe lived to the fullest, she gains a victory over death which few others ever glimpse. With GEORGE BRENT, HUMPHREY BOGART, RONALD REAGAN, and GERALDINE FITZGERALD. 7p.m. only $1.50 a *a** * *** **** **** * *** 4 l'OclC, F- FOR 4 a~rn FRE. Fol;y am (oSPEL at Pm I P . - F L I