The Michigan Daily-Sunday, November 1, 1981-Page 3 ~HAPPENINGS- SUNDAYn HIGHLIGHT Two Salvadoran Guerrillas will be speaking tonight on the war in El Salvador at 7:30 p.m. in the Assembly Hall of the Union. The lecture is being sponsored by the Revolutionary Communist Youth Brigade. FILMS Alt Act.-Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, XlLB 3, 12:30, 2:15, and 4 p.m. AAFC-The Muppet Movie, MLB 3,7, 9 p.m. CG-Nintechka, Lorch Hall, 7 p.m., Sunset Boulevard, 9 p.m., Lorch. Cinema II- Women, Aud.A, 7, 9p.m. Mediatrics- Everything'You Always Wanted to Know About Sex But Were Afraid To Ask, 7, 10p.m., Play It Again Sam; 7 10 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. a SPEAKERS Kelsey Museum-Lisa Vihos, "Vaults of Memory: Jewish & Christian Imagery in the Catacombs of Rome," 434S. State, 2 p.m. UM Voice of Reason-Howard Simon, Meta Baba, Kenneth Phifer, "The Moral Majority: The Threat to Religious and Constitutional Freedom," Aud. A, Angell, 1 p.m. PERFORMANCES Musical Society- Martha Graham Dance Co., 3 p.m., Power Center. ARK- Reilly and Maloney, 8p.m., 1421 Hill. Professional Theater-"Wings," 2 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Canterbury Loft- "Sundance,"8 p.m., 332 South State. Covenant Players-"The High Ceiling," 6 p.m., University Church of the, Nazarene, 409 South State. School of Music-Recital, Andre Watts, 3 p.m., Recital Hall. Michigan Theater- American Music Series, 1 p.m. to 9 p.m., tickets-$2. MISCELLANEOUS PIRGIM-Nestle boycott Task Force Meeting, 4 p.m., 4th floor; Union. Gay Discussion Group-Halloween Party, 6 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. Rec Sports-Family "Learn to Swin Day," 2p.m., NCRB. SYDA-Meditation, 902 Baldwin, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Hillel-interviews with reps'from Jewish Theological Seminary, 3 p.m.,, dinner, 6 p.m., dancing, 7p.m. MONDAY HIGHLIGHT The Union of. Concerned Scientists is presenting two films tonight: The Bombi: February To September 1945 at 7:30 p.m. and Nuclear Nightmares at 8:30 p.m., both at MLB 3. FILMS CG- Silence, 8 p.m., Lorch.t SPEAKERS Women's Research Club- Marjorie Lansing, "Analysis of Women's Vote in 1981 Election," 7:30p.m., West Conf. Room, Rackham. Applied Mechanics- Stuart S. Antdian, "Very large,-deformations of Elastic Structures,'-' 246 W. Eng., 4 p.m. Chinese Studies- Ding Ling, "Chinese Literature and Society in China-The situation of the Writer Today," 8p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Gerontology- Gertt Almind and Bjorn Holstein, "Health Care for the Elderly in Denmark," 7:30 p.m., E. Lec. Hall, third floor, Rackham. Near Eastern and North African Studies- C.R. Krahmalkov. "On Pygmalion & Elissa: The Earliest History of Ancient Carthage," noon, Lane Hall Commons Rm. Biological Sciences- Donald Brown, "How a Simple Animal Gene, Works," noon, N. Lec. Hall, Med. Sci. II Bldg. Computing Center- Fred Schwartz, "Overdrive," B120 MLB, 3:30 p.m. PERFORMANCES Guild House- Poetry reading by Paula Rabinowitz, 802 Monroe, 8 p.m. Sch. of Music- Piano DMA/Graduate Recital series, 8 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Eclipse Jazz- workshop on Jazz Improvisation by Davis Swain, Assembly Hall, 8:30 p.m., Union. Alpena schools will open Tuesday ALPENA (UPI) - Alpena schools will be back in business Tuesday, though many of the northern Michigan district's 6,800 students may have to look for another way to get to class. Voters in the county-wide district went to the polls in record number Friday and approved a tax levy aimed at reviving the bankrupt school system, but defeated a second proposal that would have funded buses and athletics. '4 THE REJECTION of that second millage will also mean the end of elementary music, library privileges, hot lunches and extracurricular ac- tivities, district officials said. "I'm happy," said Alpena superin- tendent John Taylor, "Not as happy as I would have been if both issues had passed, but we're going to be reopening doors." Alpena County voters, much aware of all the national attention that has been heaped upon.their community, responded to the millage election in record number, with 12,000 of the district's 18,000 eligible voters casting ballots. "I THINK people realized the impor- tance of getting kids back in school," said Taylor. "This is a proud com- munity that has also recognized the need for education." The school board barred the doors in the state's only countywide district Oct. 16, when it was learned the system was broke. The successful millage measure, rejected by voters three times in the past, will generate $14 million - enough to allow the reopening of schools in the district. Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM Dedication chit-chat Prof. Gunnar Birkerts, who designed the new law Library, speaks with law school Dean Terrance Sandalow after yesterday's dedication ceremony. MSA urges letters to Congress By BETH ALLEN The MichiganStudent Assembly will be staffing tables in the Fishbowl and several dormitories this week, trying to persuale students to write their Washington legislators to prevent fur- ther cutbacks in federal financial aid programs. Tomorrow and Tuesday, MSA mem- bers will hand out paper, envelopes, stamps, and information on proposals to cut an additional $562 milliofi from federal assistance programs for students. "I THINK in a lot of ways it (the let- ter writing campaign) can be effective in that there are a lot of students at Michigan from states whose congressmen are very influential," said MSA President Jon Feiger. Feiger said some important legislators from New York and Illinois will be especially key in voting down the additional cuts. I addition to organizing this week's letter writing campaign, MSA mem- bers will be compiling a mailing list of students who are concerned about the possibility of further federal cutbacks. Feiger said MSA then would be able to use this list to organize future letter writing campaigns on similar issues. "THAT (compiling an effective mailing list) is important in building any sort of student block," Feiger said.t MSA Legislative Relations coor- dinator Dan Perlman, who organized this week's campaign, insisted that let- ters from students can influence the outcome of a crucial vote on the proposal by the Senate Appropriations Committee Nov. 9. "I've worked in Washington; I've seen congressmen reading their mail," Perlman said. "They don't receive all that much mail. And if they receive an influx of mail on one issue, they notice it."E A ds PERLMAN said the proposals ap- proved by the Senate Committee on Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education could make further cuts beyond those approved by the House, which Oct. 6 called for a 12 percent reduction in financial aid funds. The Senate cuts, if approved by the Appropriations Committee, could in- clude: " Reduction of Pell Grant funds from $2.65 billion to $2.37 billion, excluding up to 600,000 students who are currently eligible for funds. " Reduction of Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants funds from $370 million to $215 million, making ineligible an estimated 270,000 students. " Cuts in National Direct Student Loan funds from $286 million to $186 million, making for approximately 143,000 fewer loans. THE COLLEGE Work=Study program would be unaffected by the bill in its current form. In addition, Perlman said students should be concerned about what he said were the Reagan administration's unofficial proposals to make students pay the interest on Guaranteed Student Loans while they are still in school. The proposal could force local banks to grant fewer guaranteed loans to students, according to Perlman, because bankers would be afraid of an increase in the number of defaults on the loans. PERLMAN said MSA will stress that out-of-state- students (and particularly those with senators on the Ap- propriations Committee) write their home senators instead of Michigan Senators Riegle and Carl Levin. We want to widen our base beyond, Levin and Riegle to senators who will have a more directand immediate ef- fect on the bill," Perlman said. MSA will provide a short fact sheet at the tables as well as stamps, envelopes, and the addresses of the senators. The tables will be stationed in the Fishbowl all day tomorrow and Tuesday- Markley and Bursley at the dinner lines tomorrow and at East Quad and West Quad at dinner on Tuesday. . t C 3 POETRY READING with PaUla Rabinowitz and Gloria Dyc reading from their works Mon., Nov 2-8:00 p.m. ADMISSION FREE GUILD HOUSE, 802 Monroe (662-5189) Group studies political process at workshop MEETINGS N American Nuclear Soc.- George Kish, "A Geographer Looks At Energy," 7 p.m., BaerRm., Cooley Bldg. Christian Sci. Org.- 7p.m., 3909 Union. United Students For Christ- 7 p.m., Union.' SACUA- Pres. Conf. Rm., 2 p.m., Fleming Admin. Bldg. By STACY POWELL Students interested in deciphering the political process have an oppor- tunity to do so every Sunday thorugh Dec. 6 when state and local Democratic party! leaders conduct training workshops to discuss "Who Does What, and When?" Sheila Cumberworth, co-vice- chairwoman for Democratic cam- paigns in Ann Arbor, is organizing the program, which began Sept. 20 and is held at the Guild House, 802 Monroe. "WEHAVE had a poor'turnout in the program thus far," she said. "Students feel exploited and alienated from politics." About 15 students have atten- ded each session. Typically, Cumberworth said, student campaign volunteers have been assigned tasks, such as passing out campaign literature and knocking on doors, but have not been shown how those tasks fit into the overall cam- paign. Cumberworth said she hopes the workshop will clear up the mystery. The program has two objectives: to help the local Democratic party and to help students understand political philosophy. Some topics to be covered in the workshops include election day use of precinct data, sources of cam- paign funds, use of campaignfunds and the role of the campaign manager. "Anyone who is interested at all should attend," Cumberworth said. "We're after 'new blood!' " MISCELLANEOUS Tau Beta Phi- Free walk-in tutoring, 307 UGLI & 2332 Bursley, 7-11 p.m. Engineering- "Joint USA-Sweden Workshop on Productivity and Automation," Henderson Rm., Union, 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Women's Athletics- Volleyball, Michigan vs. Wayne State, 7 p.m., CCRB. Society of Women Eng.- Pre-interview, Schlumberger Int., 229 W. Engin.,,5 p.m. CEW- Six week course, academic writing, Nov. 2 to Dec. 7, 7 to 8:30 p.m., Reading and Learning Skills Center, 1610 Wash. Overeaters Anonymous- Open house, 7:30 p.m., Church of the Good Shepherd, 2145 Independence Blvd. Center for the Creative Arts- Dance class workshops, 213 S. Main, call 994-8400 for registration and time. Chem.- Inorganic Sem., Arthur Ashe, "News From The Cellar of the Periodic Table," Rm. 1200, Chem. Bldg., 4 p.m. Michigan Journal of Economics- Mtg., Econ. Soc. Rm., Econ. Bldg., 4 p.m. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI., 48109. CALL FOR DIRECTORS The University of Michigan Gilbert and Sullivan So- Sciety requests petitions from persons interested in being, a dramatics director, music director or set designer for the April 1982 production. Shows under consideration are Mikado, Patience, Grand Duke and Sorcerer. Candidates will be interviewed November 4th. For more information and for appointment please call April Ola at 663-7109 or 764-1417. Center for Chinese Studies Twentieth Anniversary Lecture Series Ding Ling; literature and Societyin China- The ituaionof the Writer rtoda Born in 1904, Ding Ling, China's most famous wom- an writer, has been the center of political and lit- erary controversy for most of her long career. While still in her twenties, she won considerable fame-and notoriety-for her unprecedentedly frank stories about the "modern" emancipated woman. Her fiction took a leftward turn in the 1930s when she joined the Chinese Communist Party and became active in the Revolution. In 1951 she won the Stalin Prize for The Sun Shines on the Sanggan River, a novel on land reform. In the early years of the People's Republik, she was one of the most prominent members in its cultural hierarchy, but she became a target during the anti-rightist cam- paign of 1957. Expelled from the Communist Party, her works completely banned, she was sent to northern Manchuria for "labor reforth." Her twelve years of exile were followed by five years of soli- tary imprisonment. She was finally released in 1975, and her official "rehabilitation" in 1979 per- mitted her at age 75 to resume- her writing career. ii 737 N. Huron, Ypsilanti 4$5-0240 For Bands anda Drink specials MON. STEVE KING AND THE DITTILIES Cheap pitcher specials! Fraternities and Sororities admitted free with proper I.D. TUE. MARINER ONE NIGHT ONLYI 5 for 1 prices on some drinks to 11 p.m. 2 for1 prices after 11 p.m. Wed. LADIES FREE; Guys $1.00 before 9:30 p.m. 2 for 1 on sorte drinks. Thmi... Linv CEt MAAU 1i1 D ADTV Subscribe to The Michigan Daily -- --~- - -- - - -- ---- ~ ~