10, 1 The Michigan Daily-Sunday, March 23, 1980-Page 3 SOVIE T INTER VENTION BLAMED: Afghan famine predicted NEW. DELHI, India (AP) - Soviet intervention in Afghanistan and the continuing guerrilla war is critically af- fecting the country's agricultural production and there could be a famine later this year, according to reliable reports reaching India. "It's very serious, and the Soviets, who have their own shortfall, are going to have difficulties helping the Afghans. People are going to starve, really," said a West European diplomat based in Kabul. He was interviewed after his recent arrival in New Delhi. The diplomat and other sources, who declined to be identified, predicted a 30 per cent to 50 per cent drop in Afghanistan's grain output this year. THE SOVIET-BACKED regime of President Babrak Karmal has announ- ced Afghanistan will import thousands of tons of fertilizer and wheat seeds from the Soviet Union. But an informed Kabul resident interviewed here predicted the shipments would not arrive in time to help. He noted road transport in Afghanistan is uncertain because of at- tacks by Moslem guerrillas who have been battling a succession of Marxist regimes for nearly two years along with the Soviet troops that began moving in- to the country in December. He also said the traditional 'seed distribution system, through feudal landlords, collapsed in the past year because of a hastily improvised land reform scheme. "SOME PEASANTS have been reported refusing government-supplied seeds and others will not plow because they received parcels of land without compensating the previous owners in violation of Islamic law," the source: said. According to official Afghan statistics, 72 per cent of the country's labor force is directly or indirectly engaged in agriculture, and many peasants have left the land to join the guerrillas. Grain production reportedly dropped 20 per cent in 1979 from an estimated four miillion tons the year before, largely because of a poor snowfall. Snow provides much of Afghanistan's irrigation water. CINEMA Il QN G PRESENTS I WALKABOUT (Nicholas Roeg, 1971) Two European children, abandoned by their father in the Australian outback, are saved by a young Aborigine boy. The friendship between them is destroyed, however, as they near civilization and cultural differences begin to intrude. A breathtaking film, both in its images and vision of the world. With JENNY AGUTTER and LUCIEN JOHN. (95 min.). ANGELL HALL $1.50 7:00 & 9:00 I Women's Career Fair Friday: BRINGING UP BABY Kathleen Dannemiller, assistant to the vice-president for student services at the University, talks with Carol Dick and Lucy Abramson at a Women's Career Fair workshop entitled "if I Am Doing So Well ... Why Am I Feeling So Bad." The fair, held in the Modern Languages Building, included workshops on general subjects such as "Interviewing Assertively," and specific topics relating to career fields. Motiveless murders SUNDAY FILMS Washtenaw County Parks and Recreation-Bighorn, Greenhouse, 10 a.m., Recreation Center at Washtenaw and Hogbeck. a Cinema Two-Walkabout, 7, 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Cinema Guild-Tliroshima Mon Amour, 7,9:05 p.m. Old Arch. Aud. SPEAKERS Dharma Study Group-Seminar, 8:30 a.m., Room E, Michigan League, call 665-4481 for info. Hillel-Raul Hilberg, "The Final Solution," 2 p.m., Rackham Am- phitheatre. PERFORMANCES Ann Arbor Chamber Orchestra-featuring Aaron Copland's "Appalachian ' Spring," 3 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Hillel - dance performance, "Personal and Artistic Responses to the Holocaust," 7:15 p.m., Pendleton Rm., Union. Ethnic Theatre Festival-Echo Hawk Indian Theatre Company, "Coycote in the Land of Enchantment," children's play, 2 p.m., Mendelssohn Theatre. Ethnic Theatre Festival-Echo Hawk Indian Theatre Company, "Firelife ' and Legends,"8 p.m., Mendelssohn Theatre. MEETINGS A, Graduate Women's Network-pot luck brunch, 12 noon, Guild House, 802 Monroe. Gay discussion group-Gay health issues, 6:30 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. Hiking Club-meet at 1:30 p.m., Rackham N.W. entry on E. Huron. s n-s MISCELLANEOUS School of Metaphysics-Seminar entitled, "Abundance: Your Inheritan- ce,"9:30 a.m.-4 p.m., Miller Manor, 727 Miller. 4 International Center-Maple Sugar Tasting Bee, day-long trip, Chippewa Nature Center, Sign up, Rm. 18, Int'l Ctr. Hillel-Israeli dancing, 1 p.m.; Deli, 6 p.m., 1429 Hill St. MONDAY FILMS Wesley Found-Hiroshima-Nagasaki, Pine Rm., 602 E. Huron, 12:10p.m. Cinema Guild-Polish Film Series: Man of Marble, 7 p.m., Nights and Days, 9:05 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. AAFA-Scarlet Street, 7 p.m., Beyond a Reasonable Doubt, 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. PIRGIM-Union Maids, Emerging Woman, Antonia, Kuenzel Rm., Union, 7 p.m. Arbor Alliance-The Other Way, 2235.Angell, 7:30 p.m. SPEAKERS Pub. Health Stud. Assoc.-"Primary Health Care in Rural Tanzania," M112, SPH II, noon. Ctr. for Near Eastern and N. African Stud.-Joel Beinin, "The Emergence of the Egyptian Working Class," Lane Hall Commons Rm., noon. Applied Mechanics-Walter Debler, "Interferometric Observations of Stratified'Flows," 219 W. Engin, 4 p.m. Symposium in Critical Theory-Murray Krieger, ''Literary Criticism: A Primary or Secondary Art?" Rackham Ampitheater, 4 p.m. St. Mary's Student Chapel-Marc Mauer, "Alternatives to Lockup," Gabriel Richard Ctr. Lounge, 7 p.m. Hillel-Lawrence L. Langer, "Versions of Survival: The Psychology of worry Lon LONDON (AP) - The brutal but ap- parently motiveless slaying of a crip- pled, 87-year-old woman has provoked police fears that a "killing-for-kicks" trend has begun in normally peaceful London. Detectives said the city's historically low homicide rate has been going up the past few years and so have incidents of brutal assaults. Often, authorities said, the crimes have been committed for small sums of money - or nothing at all. THERE WERE 179 homicides in London in 1979 compared with 118 the. year before, Scotland Yard reported. And although that represents a tiny fraction of the number of killings in similarly sized cities like New York, police here are worried. New York had 1,733 homicides last year, a police spokesperson there said. "We could be seeing the start of don police something very unpleasant - violence for kicks and even killing for kicks," said a London detective investigating the death of Jose Shattock, the 87-year- old widow whose fully clothed body was found dumped in a water-filled tub. "It was an apparently motiveless and vicious crime - yet another brutal at- tack on a defenseless old lady," said Chief of Detectives Mike Huins. LAST CHRISTMAS Day, an 86-year- old woman was beaten up in her home in East London and died from a frac- tured skull. On Jan. 9, a 53-year-old woman was found strangled and mutilated in her apartment in south- west London. A 62-year-old woman was stabbed to death in her south London apartment on Feb. 13. Police arrested a man after the killing Feb. 13, but he has not been charged. a1 The University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts Third Distinguished Senior Faculty Lecture Series Professor Emeritus Gerald Else in a three-part series, will discuss The Humanities, Past, Present, and Future March31, 1980 The Humanities That Were April 2, 1980 The Humanities That Are. April 4,1980 The Humanities That May Be A reception in Rackham Assembly Hall will follow the final lecture R.N. PROGRAM A CAREER IN NURSING MERCY SCHOOL OF NURSING OF DETROIT is a TWO YEAR hospital based diploma program to be a REGISTERED NURSE. Direct patient care experience begins early and continues until graduation. ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS: Highschool graduation with a C-plus average, Biology, Chemistry and 2 years of Math. First year at Samaritan Health Center-St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Unit, Detroit. Second year at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Ann Arbor and/or Pontiac. Student residences available. Student parking provided for commuter students. FOR FURTIjERINFORMATION CALL 923-5700 EXT. 376 A Glimpse Into Darkness CONFERENCE ON THE HOLOCAUST March 23, 24, 25 Sunday, March 23 Raiul Hilberg: "The Final Solution" Keynote Address 2:00 P.M. Rackham Amphitheatre Personal and Artistic Responses to the Holocaust Dance Performance Workshops: Faith After the Holocaust Children of Survivors Experiences in Nazi-Occupied Poland Personal Accounts of Survivors 7:15 P.M. Pendleton Room Union Monday, March 24 Lawrence L. Langer: "Versions of Survival: The Psychology of Victim Response" 7:30 P.M. Rackham Amphitheatre Tuesday, March 25 Carol Rittner, R.S.M. "The Holocaust: Humanity's Shame" 7:30 P.M. Rackham Amphitheatre r Sponsored by: Vice-President for Academic Affair's, College of Literature, Science and the Arts Student Government, B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, Office of Ethics and Religion, Lord of Light Lutheran Church, Temple Israel, Congregation Beth Achim, St. Mary's Chapel, Congregation Shaarey Zedek. Rackham Amphitheatre - 8:00 p.m. All lectures are open to the public , SiTY pp i s i r ®1$1T J l. ti- ._.-i Print or Type legibly in MOVING OUT? the space provided, the copy as you would Why Not Sublet Your Leaseleta Through 3rdiigan ublet r aigUpplemtent r tnhse NAME __ _s___e_______o4/ A D D RESS ______/ PHONE __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Mail or Bring in Person with payment to: 420 MAYNARD STREET Lo AAAVL rLWu WVe DA VAIF T TH r MICIG ANDAILY I nA po