The Michigan Daily-Friday, February 6, 1981-Page 3 Fifteenth child found dead in Atlanta; 2 more missing 10 C 0 N T I N U E S -O Minimum Wage Rock & Roll with- "! *@ specialguests:@@@@ 4%4 jtQ, Pax.4 ATLANTA (AP)-A black child whose body was found yesterday has been identified as a 14-year-old boy who disappeared Jan. 3, the 15th black youngster to have been found dead in the Atlanta area in the last 19 months, officials said. Fulton County Police Maj. Louis Graham said the child, Lubie "Chuck" Geter, was identified at the county medical examiners' office by his paren- ts. AT LEAST TWO other children are still missing and their disappearances and the 15 deaths are being investigated by a special police task force. Authorities say some, but not all, of the cases may be related. Graham said the body was found onr its back with little or no clothing. Geter was reported missing Jan. 3, one day after his brother dropped him off at a southwest Atlanta shopping cen- ter. The body was discovered by a farm caretaker, Frank Potts, who said he was out looking for rabbit traps. POTTS SAID he was "walking alongside of the road when a little Ger- man shepherd dog ran out. . . I looked in there and saw the body." Potts said he did not see any clothing on the body, which was stretched out face up. "When I saw what it was, I got back so I wouldn't disturb the scene," Potts said. "I flagged down the lady driving the school bus and told her to go call the police." THE BODY WAS about 40 to 60 feet off Vandiver Road "in kind of an open spot in the trees," Potts said. The area where the body was found is about five miles northwest of the Red- wine Road area where the remains of three other children have been found over the past year. Fuster said the body found yesterday was "more recent" and therefore bet- ter preserved than the two skeletal remains found Jan. 9 in an area about five miles away. He said recent cold weather, which included freezing nights, may have helped preserve the body, which was found in a swampy area in a very rural section of Fulton County. Fuster refused to speculate whether the body might be one of the three missing children. The skeletal remains of Christopher Richardson, 11, of Decatur, and Earl Lee Terrell, 10, of Atlanta, were found Jan. 9 near Redwine Road. In Novem- ber 1979, the body of 14-year-ald Milton Harvey was discovered off Redwine Road near a different intersection. i MOMMOMP Monday, February 1& CALL FOR DETAILS YOUR CONCERT HOTLINE ; m er Monday,Fbrry2r * A ARE HERE" again"! by popular demand National recording artists EVERY WEEK 1 Kiwanis Krazy This heavily bejeweled wofman looks over the merchandise on display at the Ann Arbor Kiwanis Sale yesterday. The sale will continue today and tomorrow at Kiwanis headquarters, Washington and First streets. I Tickets available at Schoolkids' Discount Records, and all Hudson's & CTC outlets I for ,nformation call 99-MUSIC -. .5 HAPPENINGS FILMS A-V Services - Hey ! What About Us?, sex role development, 12:10, SPH II Aud AAFC - M*A*S*H, 7,9:30 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Cinema Guild - Empire of Passion, 7, 9p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Cinema II - Hip Short Night, 7, 9p.m., Angell Hall Aud. A. Gargoyle Films - Foreign Correspondent, 7 p.m., The Man Who Knew Too Much, 9p.m., 100 Hutchins Hall. Mediatrics - Hair, 7, 9:30 p.m., MLB 4. CFT - Rocky, 4, 7, 9:15*p.m., Michigan Theatre. MEETINGS SWE - Harris Corp., lunch slide show presentation, 12 p.m., 325 W. Engin., Pre-Interview Program, 1-4 p.m., 270 W. Engin. Int. Student Fellowship - Dinner, meeting, 6:30 p.m., 4100 Nixon Rd. Ann Arbor Chinese Bible Class - 7:30-9:30 p.m., U. Reformed Church, Huron and Fletcher. Dickens Fellowship - "Great Expectations," 8 p.m., Union Pendleton Room. Undergraduate Women's Studies Association - Women's Studies Con- ference, brown bag discussion, 12-2 p.m., 3rd Floor Lorch Hall. U. Duplicate Bridge Club - open game, 7:30 p.m., League Henderson Room. PERFORMANCES School of Music - Chamber Choir, Thomas Hilbish, cond., J. S. Bach, "Motel No. 5", "Cantata No. 150", P.D.Q. Bach, "The Seasonings," 8 p.m., Hill Aud. Ark - Gemini, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill. SPEAKERS ME and AM -,Peter Vorum, "Manifold Design of Four-Stroke Engines," 10:30 a.m., Chrysler Center. Nat. Resources - William Baughman, "Southern Hardwoods - Half the Forested Acres," 3-5'p.m., 1040 Dana. AstroFest 95 - Jim Loudon, "Titan and More: Voyager-1/Saturn Con- tinuing Discoveries," Apollo 14, 7:30 p.m., MLB 3. Ind. and Op. Engin. - Prof. Jack Edmonds, "A New Twist in Linear Programming," 3-4 p.m., 229 W. Engineering. Architecture - bag lunch lecture, Borkin, B. Johnson, J. Turner, "Com- puter Assisted Designs," 12 p.m., AAB Aud. MISCELLANEOUS ABENG - Art Exhibit, 3-8 p.m., 126 E. Quad.; Political workshop, 4 p.m., Greene Lounge, E. Quad.; Karate Exhib., 7 p.m., South Caf., E. Quad.; Gospel Concert, 8 p.m., RC Aud.; Benefit dance, 10 p.m., South Caf. Hillel - Shabbat Services, 5:45 p.m.; dinner, 7:15 p.m.; Oneg Shabbat, Danny Siegel, "Neglected and Near-Forgotten Mitzvahs, Laws, and Stories," 8:30 p.m., 1429 Hill. Rec. Sports - International Rec. Program, 8-11 p.m., Coliseum. Hockey - vs. Notre Dame, 7:30 p.m., Yost Arena. Wrestling - vs. Iowa, 7:30 p.m., Crisler Arena. Int. Folk Dance Club - All levels, teach 8-9:30 p.m., dance 9:30-midnight, Unipn. Nat. Resources Club - Paul Bunyan Ball, 8 p.m., 1a.m., Union Ballroom. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI., 48109. Laos t Liche$s Carolyne Davis to filfederal health psto Carolyne Davis, University Associate Vice-President for inter-school and in- tra-collegiate programs, will be appoin- ted administrator of the federal Health Care Financing Administration in the next few days, White House sources said yesterday. The mammoth health care agency has a budget of more than $50 billion and is in charge of distributing Medicare and Medicaid funds. DAVIS COULD not be reached for comment yesterday. Davis became an associate vice- president for the University in 1975. In that position, she was responsible for administration and fiscal supervision of 14 University units with more than 500 employees. Davis first came to the University in 1973. p a Before coming to the University, a z ~ Davis was Chairman of the nursing program at Syracuse University in New York. She received her doctorate in xS Q highereducation administration from "'I Syracuse in 1972. ABENG PRESENTS The 7th ANNUAL MINORITY ARTS & CULTURAL FESTIVAL Friday, Feb. 6 ART EXHIBIT 3:00-8:00 PM Room 126 POLITICAL WORKSHOP 4:00-Greene Lounge Theme: "Political Activism in the '80s,"' with Linda Jackson--Jemidari Kamara. Wine and cheese reception will follow. HAPPY HOUR in conjunction with the Trotter House-5:00-7:00 PM KARATE EXHIBITION featuring the AKS Karate Club-7:00 PM South Cafeteria GOSPEL CONCERT: Four local Gospel Choirs including theUof M Gospel Choir 8:00 PM-RC Auditorium BENEFIT & DANCE: $.50 admission charge goes to Freshman Scholarship Fund 10:00 PM-2:00 AM-South Cafeteria Saturday, Feb. 7 ART EXHIBIT 10:00 AM-6:00 PM-Room 126 FRATERNITY/SORORITY EXHIBIT---1:00 PM-3:00 PM-Room 124 POETRY READING 3:00 PM-Benzinger Library , FASHION/PERFORMING ARTS SHOW-Clothes provided by: The Alcove, Herman's.World of Sporting Goods, Merry-Go-Round, Sklaar's International, Renaissance Music by: STILL-BILL 8:00 PM-RC Auditorium All events will be held at EAST QUAD and will be FREE of charge Co-sponsored by the East Quad Rap, Assembly, U of M Housing Special Programs, MSA, & The Residential College. Davis ... to fill top government position 1 PLACE YOUR AD IN THE 1 1 1 Summer Sublet Supplemen t' APPEARING MARCH 29, 1981 Name _ 1 1 Address 1 1 Phone __ 1 1 Cost: $12.001 1 before 5 p.m., March 2 1 1 ($14 from March 3-23) 1 1 1 1 Make checks payable to 1 1 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1 Mni vour checks and ad, or bring * "You'll get to hear the name of Oxana Yablonskaya again and again even if it is not as easy to re- member as Van Cliburn." Philadelphia Inquirer Oxazna~ablon~ihaiy SCARLATTI... Three Sonatas BEETHOVEN ... Sonata in A major, Op. 101 CHOPIN ... Sonata in B-flat minor, Op. 35 PROKOFIEV ... Sonata No. 3 in A minor LISZT ... Transcriptions of three Schubert Songs LISZT ... Etudes after Paganini Maturdwj, Feb.7 at 8'30 Herl Iuditorium Her Ann Arbor debut in a Choral Union concert. Tickets at BurtonTower,A"n Arbor, MI 46109 Weekdays 9-4:30, Sat. 9-12 (313) 665-3717 UIVEISITYcVIUSICAL GSOCIETY In Its 102nd Year HAS MoV 't, 10 Come See Us At Our k *Al S . - . I anM . I