GM to recall 1900 'workers if sales jump The Michigan Daily-Sunday, October 11, 1981-Page 3 Israeli, Egyptian ties may change BALTIMORE (UPI) - General Motors will recall 1,900 employees in February if car sales pick up, a union official said yesterday. Patrick Coletta, a GM vice president and general manager of the assembly division from Detroit, confirmed a ten- tative callback date announced two weeks ago,-said Roaney Trump, an of- ficial with Local 239 of the United Auto Workers. "BUT HE made it contingent on sales," Trump said. He added he is pessimistic the second shift workers will be back on the job early next year. "I'm like the man from Missouri. I won't believe anything until I see it," he said. "I have to be this way, after having been given three previous dates for the return of the second shift - none of which was met." By The Associated Press A former U.S. envoy with close con- tacts to Hosni Mubarak says he expects Egypt's president-designate to seek reconciliation with Saudi Arabia and be firmer in dealing with Israel than his slain mentor, Anwar Sadat. Hermann Eilts had almost daily con- tacts with then-Vice President Mubarak while serving as ambassador to Cairo from 1973-1979. MUBARAK WAS nominated by parliament and is the sole candidate in next Tuesday's elections to name a suc- cessor to Sadat, who was slain by assassins last Tuesday. Eilts, now a professor of international relations at Boston University, told The Associated Press in a telephone inter- view that Mubarak has taken care to place loyalists in key positions and seems to have "effective hold on the levers of power in Egypt." He described Mubarak, a 53-year-old former air force chief, as "very much a disciplined, military type." Sadat's death has pumped new energy into the struggle of Israeli set- tlers in the Sinai desert to block the final stage of Israel's withdrawal from the territory. Leaders of the anti-withdrawal movement said after a strategy meeting Friday that they would bring new settlers into the northeastern cor- ner of Sinai and step up their lobbying among government and opposition politicians to prevent the final with- drawal. The final third of the Sinai peninsula is to be transferred to Egypt next April in accordance with the Camp David peace treaty. About 3,000 Israelis live in a town and a dozen settlements built in the nor- theastern Sinai since Israel captured the area in the 1967 Mideast War. The majority are willing to accept financial compensation and move out peacefully, But a hard-core minority has vowed to stay and campaign against the with- drawal. J T A P~PEXTTFXT(2Q Local firm .1.111 IL' r11 IiN t..Jk SUNDAY HIGHLIGHT The Center for Russian and East European Studies and the Judiac Studies center continues its festival of Jewish culture. Today's events are a lecture by Maurice Friedberg entitled "Yiddish Literature & Its Slavic Neighbors," at the United Hebrew Schools in Southfield. At 2:30 p.m. Joseph Buloff will give a dramatic reading from Yiddish literature. Yiddish folk songs will be performed by Abraham Brumberg and Bob Jacobs at the Jewish Com- munity Center in West Bloomfield at 7 p.m. The film Image Before My Eyes will be shown at 8p.m. FILMS Classic Film Theater-African Queen, 5,7 & 9 p.m., Michigan Theater. Cinema II-The Stud Farm, 7 & 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Cinema Guild-City Lights,^7 p.m.; A Woman of Paris, 9 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Alternative Action-Garden of the Finzi Continis, 7 & 9 p.m., MLB 3. PERFORMANCES Major Events-Don Fogelberg, 8 p.m., Crisler Arena. School of Music-Piano Accompanying Recital, Naomi Oliphant, 2 p.m., University Musical Society-Mozart's " Don Giovanni," 3 pm., Power Cen- ter. Professional Theater Program-BloodKnot, 8 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. WRIF-Benefit concert for PIRGIM, "The Falcons" and "The Blue Front Persuaders," 9p.m., Rick's American Cafe, $2. MEETINGS Friends of the Matthaei Botanical Gardens-Pierre Dansereau, "Ecological Management of Land," 2:30 p.m., Gardens' auditorium. Human Sexuality Office-The Lavender Debutante, discussion of the gay coming-out experience, 6 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. Graduate Women's Network-Potluck brunch meeting, for all graduate women, noon, Guild House, 802 Monroe. Meekrah-Sukkah Bldg., Markley Courtyard, 1p.m. Hillel-Sukkah Bldg., 4 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS Artists & Craftsmen Guild-Fall Exhibition, Briarwood Mall. Jewish Grad Students-Apple Picking Trip, carpool from Hillel at 10:30 a.m.; bring sack lunch. Hillel-Del Dinner 6p.m. Hillel-Israel dancing, 7-0 p.m. Recreation-Family Sunday Funday, Bike Rodeo, 2-5 p.m., NCRB. MONDAY HIGHLIGHT "Coping with Office Stress" is the topic for a workshop from 1:30-3:30 p.m. Monday sponsored by the Center for Continuing Education for Women. The workshop will be held in the West Conference Room, Rackham. FILMS AAFC-Mingus, 7 p.m.; Wizard of Waukesha: A film About Les Paul, 8:45 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. CRT-Little Big Man, 4,7 & 9:30 p.m., Michigan Theater. Cinema Guild-The Cruel Sea, 8p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Cinema I-Black Girl, 8:15 p.m., Nat. Sci. SPEAKERS Collegiate Institute for Values and Science-Edward Gramlich, "What is Benefit-Cost Analysis?: A Case Study," 4 p.m., MLB, Lec. Rm. 2. Ethics & Religion-Patrick Murray, "Creation and Evolution-And Faith," 7:30p.m., Ecumenical Campus Center, 921 Church St. MEETINGS Women's Network-First anniversary of Women's Network, Open to University women, noon-1:30 p.m., Michigan League, Rms. 4 & 5. Recycle Ann Arbor-Annual meeting, with potluck to follow, 6:15 p.m., Xanadu Co-op, 1811 Washtenaw. College Republicans-First meeting of the year, 7:30 p.m., Henderson Room, Michigan Union. MISCELLANEOUS Guild House-Poetry reading, Nadean Bishop and Lorene Erickson, 8 p.m., 802 Monroe. Hillel-Sukkot Services, 6:30 p.m., 1429 Hill St. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI., 48109. t- RELIGIOUS DIMENSIONS OF CONTEMPORARY CONCERNS: A SERIES OF LECTURE-DISCUSSIONS Continuing the Monday Night series of lectures where sub- jects of current major interest are discussed at The Ecu- menical Campus Center, 921 Church Street. Everyone is welcome to these discussions. Beginning at 7:30 p.m., with refreshments, the speaker or speakers will make their presentation and engage in discussion until 9:00 P.M. COME JOIN US I MONDAY OCTOBER w1 2th - Speaker: Dr. Patrick Murray ma print Shroud book DETROIT (UPI) - A Michigan publishing firm has received approval from a federal judge to go ahead with distribution this week of a book on the Shroud of Turin. In a ruling Friday, U.S. District Judge Horace Gilmore removed a restraining order issued the day before by a Washtenaw County Judge preven- ting publication of the book "Verdict of the Shroud." GILMORE SAID halting publication of the book would violate the First Amendment. The ruling came in a lawsuit filed against Servant Publications of Ann Arbor by the Shroud of Turin Research Project, a group of 40 scientists that has spent several years studying the cloth and held a symposium in Connecticut last week. The group contends its study shows that the image of a crucified body on the mysterious cloth is that of a man, but that tests have been unable either to prove or disprove conclusively the 14- foot long linen is the first century burial cloth of Jesus. The book is written by Ken Steven- son, a press aide to the research team, and Larry Habermas, a philosophy teacher at Liberty Baptist College in Lynchburg, Va. It claims the image on the shroud was made by the body of Christ. The scientists filed suit saying they did not want the book to falsely imply it was associated with their project. "I Dontbea TURKE on Thanksiing Don't be a turkey and spoil your Thanksgiving vacation by waiting till the last minute to make your holiday airline reservations. Stop by or call any of Conlin Travel's three convenient locations and book your flights today. Many airlines limit the number of seats available at special fares on each flight. 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