The Michigan Daily-Friday, February 13, 1981-Page 3 MISSING TEEN-A GER SAFE: Cinema I1 presents TONIGHT, Friday the 13th 7:00 & 9:00 Atlanta youth home Aud. A, Angel ATLANTS, Ga. (UPI)-A black teen- ger-who authorities feared might be te 19th child missing in a string of murders and disappearances was reported safe yesterday. The youth most recently reported nissing, Lorenzo Henderson, 15, who ailed to reach home from school Wed- nesday, got home late yesterday unharmed. ANGELO FUSTER, a spokesman for Mayor Maynard Jackson, said, "I don't know where he was and why he didn't return sooner, but he is home." He did not elaborate. Responding to growing tensions over the 19-month string of 15 killings with three other children missing, Jackson noted that similar mass murders have, been solved only by a "fluke." "They never caught the Columbus strangler and they caught Son of Sam on a traffic fluke," Jackson said. "They caught the Yorkshire ripper on a traffic fluke, in many ways. There's no way to Students oj say when the cases will be solved, but we're confident that they will be solved." Public Safety Commissioner Lee Brown said Deputy Police Chief Morris Redding, a veteran investigator, had been placed in charge of the 35-man team, replacing Major W.J. Taylor. rganize to OBSESSION (Brian DePalma, 1976) DePaima's tribute to Hitchcock tells the story of Michael Courtland (CLIFF ROBERTSON), an ambitious New Orleans business- man, and his obsessive gbjilt for the deaths of his wife and daughter. Six- teen years after their deaths, he meets a young Italian woman who is the image of his dead wife. Like the James Stewart character in VERTIGO, Mi- chael sets out to turn the woman (GENEVIEVE BUJOLD) into his dead wife. By the director of CARRIE AND DRESSED TO KILL. (98 min.) SATURDAY, Feb. 14 8:00 p.m. SUNDAY, Feb. 15, 2:00 p.m. & 8:00 p.m. Aud. A, Angell HAPPENINGS- FILMS AAFC -11th Annual 8mm Film Festival, 7,9p.m., SEB Schorling Aud. AAFC - If ... . , 7 p.m., Performance, 9 p.m., MLB 4. Alternative Action Films - Frenzy, 7 p.m., Family Plot, 9:15 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Cinema Guild - Arabian Nights, 7,9:45 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Cinema II - Obsession, 7, 9p.m., Angell Hall Aud. A. Gargoyle Films - Adam's Rib, 7, 9p.m., 100 Hutchins Hall. SPEAKERS Guild House - Marc Breakstone, "Student Government as a Vehicle for Political and Social Change within the University," 12 noon, 802 Monroe. Nat. Resources - John Vance, "Is the Small Landowner Problem Un- solvable?," 3-5 p.m., 1040 Dana. Linguistics, English Lang. Inst. - Paul Schachter, "On the Universals of World Order and Generative Grammar," 4 p.m., 3032 Frieze. S. and S. E. Asian Studies - Ngo Vinh Long, "Vietnamese Village Life Af- tpr Today," 4 p.m., 200 Lane Hall. Architecture and Urban Planning - Carl Levin, "A Courageous Design: The Legacy of Wallenberg," 8 p.m., Hale Aud. International Center, Extension Service - World Horizons Series, William Butler, Switzerland Today, 7:30 p.m., MLB 3. B"Musical Theatre in 18th-Century America," Cynthia Hoover, 4 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. PERFORMANCES 'U' Club - Happy Hour, live band, dancing, food until 8 p.m., 4 p.m.-1 a.m., Union. Canterbury Loft - "Happy Days," 8p.m., 332 S. State. Dratman Theater Co. - "Curse of the Starving Class," 8 p.m., SEB Schorling Aud. PTP Theater and Drama - "I Can't Hear the Birds Singing," 8 p.m., Power genter. Ark -\Debby McClatchy, banjo player, 9 p.m., 1421 hill. Michigan Theatre - "Valentine Vaudeville Show," live performances and the film It Happened One Night, 7:30 p.m., Michigan Theatre. The Saline Area Players - "George M!,"8 p.m., Saline High School Aud. The Ann Arbor Chamber Orchestra - Dessert Concert, Carl Daehler, dir., 8 p.m., Michigan League Ballroom. MEETINGS SWE - Pre-Interview Program, Hewlett Packard, 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., 270 W. Engin. S. and S.E. Asian Studies - Ngo Vinh Long, "Travels in Vietnam", 12 p.m., Lane Hall Commons. International Student Fellowship - Dinner meeting, 6:30 p.m., 4100 Nixon Road. Ann Arbor Chinese Bible Class - 7:30-9:30 p.m., 730 Tappan. U. Duplicate Bridge Club - game, 7:30 p.m., Michigan League, Hender- son Rm. University Lowbrow Astronomers - "Skies of the Andes," 7:30 p.m., 5006 Angell Hall. MISCELLANEOUS Gerontology - bag lunch lee., Toni Antonucci, "Social Support Across the Life Span," 12 p.m., 502 E. Liberty Conf. Immunology, Microbiol., CMB - Immunology Forum, Terence Rabbits, "Human Antibody Genes," 2 p.m., Med. Sci. II North Lee. Hall. Cross Currents - Workshop, Christine Balogh, "Discovering Authentic Techniques: The Painting and Glazing of Hungarian Folk Pottery" 4-6 p.m., Ann Arbor Art Assn., 117 W. Liberty. Hillel - Shabbat Services, 5:30 p.m., dinner, 7:15 p.m., reform disc. 8 p.m., 1429 Hill. Meekreh - Shabbat dinner, 5:30 p.m., Markley Concourse Lounge. Rec. Sports - International Rec. Program, 7-10 p.m., Coliseum. Wholistic Health Council - workshop, Lorna Zilba, "Physio-Psychic Dyn- amics," 7:30 p.m., 602 E. Huron. Int. Folk Dance Club -8 p.m.-12 a.m., teach, 8-9:30 p.m., CCRB Activities Room. Housing - "Black Popular Music and Dance 60s-80s," 1 p.m., South Quad Pining Rm. 4. Minority Women's Career Workshops -8 a.m.-12 p.m., 130 B LSA. Marketing Club - Career Management Workshop, "Managing the Tran- sition from School to Work," 4-5 p.m., Wolverine Rm., reception, 5-6 p.m., Executive Lounge. Alpha Phi - Sucker sale to benefit Heart Association, 12 p.m.-dusk, Diag. WCBN - On-the-Air fundraiser, 88.3 FM, 9 a.m. through Feb. 15. WCBN- "City Limits," 6-6:30 p.m., "Environmental Issues," 6:30-7 p.m. Washtenaw County Committee Against Registration and the Draft - conference, "No Draft, No Registration" and "No U.S. Intervention," 7 p.m., Wayne State University. Ann Arbor Women's Crisis Center - bucket drive to support the Center. fight 'U' budget cuts (Continued from Page 1) tinuation of efforts on the part of student government organizations to address the budget cuts dilemma. LSA-SG asked for student par- ticipation on the geography review board, but was told that students will not be official members or have official status. The Michigan Student Assembly has set up a committee to study the budget cut situation and decide what plan of action the assembly should take. The committee disagrees with some aspects of the discontinuance procedures and opposes the lack of student par- ticipation in the decision to review the geography department. However, members want to have more infor- mation on the procedure before they take any specific action. MSA President Marc Breakstone said yesterday he would like to see a "long, hard look" at the University's discon- tinuance procedures. ANN ARBOR PREMIERE DON GIOVANNI (Joseph Losey, 1980) Under the aegis of Rolf Liebermann (director of the Paris Opera), Joseph Losey has brought to the screen the ultimate master- piece of Lorenzo DaPonte and W.A. Mozart. Mozart's opera depicts the life and times of the legendary libertine, Don Giovanni (with some first-hand ad- vice from DaPonte's good friend Casanova). This work has intrigued one generation after another, unfolding new meanings each time it surfaces. Like Bergman's THE MAGIC FLUTE, Losey's version of DON GIOVANNI is a true cinematic experience. Next weekend: BUGS BUNNY, THE BLUE DAHLIA, THE BIG HEAT, WUTHERING HEIGHTS DECISIONS: ACADEMIC PLANNING WORSHO FR 1 ER UDENTS Tuesday, February 17, 3-5 p.m. UNDERSTAND your decision making style and ex- plore alternative approaches. FIND out what questions you should ask as you make decisions about course elections. SPONSORED BY: LSA Academic Counseling OSS Counseling Services PLEASE CALL 76-GUIDE to confirm your place, in the workshop. FREE to Students-Limited enrollment CALL BY FEBRUARY 13 Sell Your Unwanteds thru Daily Classifieds FEBRUARY 17, 18 & 19 INTERVIEWS: CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT FEBRUARY 17 & 18 INFORMATION TABLE MICH IGA N UN ION DETROIT 31 3-226-7928 To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI., 48109. n '", a f t } i k t i ; !. Y d a i i D d i A - ' a t:z.. ^ I °' a LSAT " GMAT " GRE TEST PREPARATION CENTERS N Although we have been in the test preparation business for -many years, we are new in the Ann Arbor area. We are convinced we have the finest test preparation course available - superior instructors, superior materials and superior teaching methods. But we have found that students tend to patronize the oid 'stand-by' because they have heard the name around. We would like to have the chance to prove we are better; to become known as the quality test preparation service in Ann Arbor. We are therefore willing to take a chance. On any course offered between now and June, 1981, we offer the following guarantee: r ararm If you feel that we promised anything we did not deliver, or, - If you feel our course materials are not up-to-date and reflec- tive of the questions presented on the test, or j - If you are unhappy with the score on the examination (unless This young Alcoa engineer is shown modifying a program on a programmable controller, one of the tools he uses to automate existing equipment. Electrical Engineers, Mechanical Engineers, Industrial Engineers, R&D, Safety Alcoa Campus Recruitment March 6 Contact University Placement Office for available interview times At Alcoa, engineering imagination and creativity are vital resources. And that's what we look for in entry-level engineers - people ,.;I f- k - - : -;- : vn-nv Ato ~k- nn U FI I