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March 18, 1981 - Image 3

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The Michigan Daily, 1981-03-18

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The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, March 18, 1981-Page 3

-HAPPENINGS
FILMS
Cinema Guild - Serpent't Egg, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud.
Cinema II - Late Spring, 7 & 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud.
CCWH - Barbara Fuller, lee., films, Year Zero: The silent Death of
Cambodia: Year One, 7:30 p.m., Aud. D. Angell.
National Wildlife Week - Following the Tundra Wolf, Beth Duman-Wolf
(speaker), 7:30 p.m. Wesley Foundation Lounge, 2nd floor, First United
Methodist Church, 120S. State St.
SPEAKERS
Psychiatry - Carl Malmquist, "Unsettled Issues in the Confirmation of
Childhood Depression", CPH Aud., 9:30 a.m.
CREES - Bag lunch lee., James Mace, "The Soviet Surrogate for In-
dependence", noon, Lane Hall Commons.
Social Work - CAPE Coll., Howard Simons, "The Impact of the Moral
Majority", noon, 3065 Frieze.
CAAS - Coll., Jemadari Kamara, "Independent Black Politics and
Political Party Development", 12:10 p.m., SEB Whitney Aud.
Computing Center - Pauline Nagara, "Introduction to OSIRIS IV Sof-
tware System," 1:30 p.m., 6050 ISR.
Social Work - Coll., Jeanette Jennings, "American Value Orientation and
its Impact on Policy", 3 p.m., 2075 Frieze.
Education - Morton Chetnik, "The Emotional Impact of Divorce on the
Young Child; A Case Illustration", 4 p.m., SEB Whitney Aud.
IOE - John Klincewicz, "Selected Applications of Mathematical
Programming to Facilitate Location and Financial Management", 4 p.m.,
229 W. Engin.
S. & S.E. Asian Studies - Chittabrata Palit, "Peasant Revolts in Colonial
India," 4p.m., 200 Lane Hall.
International Law Society - Sarah Goddard Power, "The Com-
munications Revolution," 6:30 p.m., 132 Hutchins Hall.
National Lawyers Guild - Stuart Lev, "Building a New Society in
Nicaragua, "7:30p.m., 138 Hutchins Hall.
MEETINGS
Commission for Women - noon, 2549 LSA.
Rackham Christian Forum - noon, League Studio.
Sailing Team -3p.m., 122 Tyler, East Quad.
LSA-SG -7:15 p.m., 3909 Union.
Stilyagi Air Corps -8 p.m., Union Co nf. Rooms.
Residence Hall Association - 9 p.m., 3909 Union.
U. Chrstian Outreach - 9:30 p.m., South Quad Dining Room 2.
Graduate Women's Network - "Testing Theories with the Aid of
Statistics," 4 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham.
WAS - general meeting, 7:30 p.m., Botanical Gardens.
PERFORMANCES
Union - Music at Midweek, Meredith Sachs, David Meek, 12:10 p.m.,
Union Pendleton Room.
Canterbury Loft - Yeats Festival, "The Dreaming of the Bones,"
"Calvar," 8p.m., 332 S. State.
Hillel - Purim Players' rehearsal, musical Purim spoof, 8 p.m., 1429 Hill.
UAC - Laugh Track, 9 p.m., Union U. Club.
MISCELLANEOUS
Academic Women's Caucus - Review, Rosemary Sarri, "The Gender
Studies Program," noon, 3050 Frieze.
CEW - Book Review, Martha Fader, noon, Rackham E. Conf. Room.
CHGD - Roberto Frisancho, "R-ole Genetic and Environmental Factors on
Body Proportion", noon, Vaughn 3rd floor Conf. Room.
Communications - Bag lunch lee., Gavriel Salomon, "Learning from
the Mass Media," noon, 2040 F LSA.
Linguistics - Steve Tyma, "Peirce and the Situation of the Sign," noon,
3520 Frieze..
Landscape Arch. - Sem., William Johnson, "Farmscapes: A History of
Rural Design Farms: Their Translation and Use in Design", noon, B 203 E.
Engin.
RPM - Bag lunch sem., Dr. Lawrency, "Forestry and the Forest In-
dustry", noon, 1520 Dana.
Yeats Festival - "Ensemble Working Process," 3 p.m., "The Player
Queen," 4 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall.
Chemisrtry - Kent Kokko, "The Leukotrienes: New Metabolites of
Arachidonic Acid," 4 p.m., 1300 Chem.
Chemistry - A. H. Francis, "Thermo-optical Spectroscopy of Monolayer
Films on Surfaces," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem.
GWN - "Testing Theories with the Aid of Statistics," 4 p.m., Rackham
Conf. Room.
Nuclear Engin - John Milandin, "Nuclear Quality Assurance," 4 p.m.,
Cooley Baer Room.
E. Orthodox Christian Fellowship - Lenten Dinner, 6:30 p.m., St.
Nicholas Church, 414 N. Main.
Karma Thegsum Choling - Meditation, 7 p.m., 734 Fountain.
Honors - Honors concentration sem., Social Science, 7 p.m., SEB
Schorling Aud.
Eckankar - Intro book review, Paul Twitchell, "Letters to Gail," 7:30
p.m., 302 E. Liberty.

Latin American Solidarity Comm. - Videotape, "El Salvador: Another
Vietnam?," 7:30 p.m., 2203 Angell.
International Folk Dance Club - Adv. teaching, dancing, 8 p.m., Bell Pool
Mezz.
CRLT - "Transparencies for Classroom Teaching," 35 mm slide produc-
tion, 7 p.m.
Chi Phi Fraternity - 72-hour pole sitting for MDA.
CEW - counseling group, "Overcoming Procrastination: Strategies That
Work When You Don't Know How to Start," 2 p.m., CEW.
Students of English Dept. - "Wail - in", poetry reading - encouraged to
bring dogs, 8 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe St.
WCBN - Walter Eysselinck, "A Doll House," 6 p.m., 88.3 FM.
To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of;
Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI., 48109.

Mean streets AP Photo

Philadelphia weathers another crisis: The city's third transit strike in six years
has forced these commuters to get to work under their own power. An estimated 1
million persons are suffering inconvenience, but no great hardship, in the dispute

between the Transport Workers Union and the Southeastern Pennsylvania
Transportation Authority. Settlement of the 3-day-old strike is not imminent.

_ __

MSA to study exam complaint

By BETH ALLEN
The Michigan Student Assembly will
investigate the claims of a student who
charged he was a victim of religious
discrimination.
MSA member Bernard Edelman,
Vice President of Special Projects, will
investigate the case of Joel Okner, an
Orthodox Jew, who said he was unable
to complete a final exam last June
because it was proctored on the Sab-
bath. Edelman also will look into
several similar claims.
OKNER CLAIMS he should have
been able to take the test at another
House OKs

time. His instructor in the course,
Biology Prof. Robert Beyer, said Okner
was given ample time to arrange for
another exam and should have ap-
proached him sooner than one week
before the exam.
Edelman will also take an MSA
resolution to tomorrow's Regents'
meeting, asking the Regents to
establish stricter guidelines concerning
conflicts with religious observances.
In other developments, 84 candidates
filed for the upcoming MSA election by
yesterday's 5 p.m. deadline.
Candidates for the president and vice

president and their respective parties
include: Steven Roach, president, and
Andrew Zuckerman, vice president
(Joy Ride); Jon Feiger, president, and
Amy Hartman, vice president,
(People's Action Coalition); Barry
Himmelstein, president, and Sid Chait,
vice president (Political Party);
Clarke Anderson, president, and Mark
Bonine, vice president (Responsible
Alternative).
The election court must certify these
candidates and all others filing for the
election on March 20 before any of the
candidates officially are on the ballot.

MANN THEATRES
VILLAGE 4
375 N. MAPLE
769-1300
Daily Discount Matinees
TUESDAY BUCK DAY

Y e

Running from the post,
and barking into Love.

1 -

new tax

plan forM1
LANSING (UPI) - A compromise
plan combining property tax relief with
a .sales tam- iterease cleared its first
major legislative hurdle with relative
ease yesterday, winning House ap-
proval on an 86-18 vote.
The vote - 12 over the two-thirds
required for the constitutional amen-
dment - came after more than 7 hours
of debate and party caucuses,
highlighted by a rare personal pitch for
the measure from Gov. William
Milliken.
THE PLAN NOW goes to the Senate
and will be placed on a May special
election ballot if it wins adoption there.
The House rejected repeated efforts
to force the inclusion on the special
ballot of the so-called Tisch III
proposal. Its author, Shiawassee Coun-
ty Drain Commissioner Robert Tisch,
has insisted his latest proposal should
receive equal treatment with the one
developed in negotiations among
Milliken and top legislative leaders.
House Speaker Bobby Crim said
Tisch has no more right than any other
citizen to demand that the legislature
put his proposal on the ballot. He
denounced Tisch III, which calls for
deep property tax cuts with no compen-
sating increases, as irresponsible at a
time of fiscal crisis.
ACTION MUST COME by tomorrow
if the special election is to be held as
planned on May 19.
The plan drawn up by Milliken and
legislative leaders cuts property taxes
and income taxes in 16 Michigan cities
by 50 percent while hiking the sales tax
11/2 cents.
In a rare appearance before the
House Republican caucus, Milliken
predicted tax cut crusader Robert
Tisch's third plan - which cuts taxes 50
percent over three years but does not

ay ballot
make up lost revenue - would win if
lawmakers do not put his:compromise
proposal on the ballot.
"It'll be Tisch in 1982, there's no
question about that, and that would be
bad for Michigan," said Milliken, who
was given a standing ovation by the
caucus, with which he is often at odds.

HOWARD HUGHES HEIR?
love story.
2"~ (and Howard)
y Memn
' (R)
Doily-7:25, 9:15
WED-1:45, 3:35, 5:35, 7:25, 9:15
W1 :A+

A CBS iheotrcol Fim% Presentcoron
AMARIIN Rh, RONALDSHEDLONPodoon
SALLY FIELD TOMMY LEE JONES BACK ROADS"
Aso Stoing DAVDKETH Write by CARYDeVORE
Musk by HENRY MANCINI y by ALAt'io MAR LN BERGMAN
Diedo, of Phoog ophyCJOHN A A ONZO, A S C
P"x,o,.oby RONALD HEDLO0 e' ed byMARTIN RITT
0: 3:9:30
As timely today

INDIVIDUAL THEATRES
51h A"e ot Uber 7*1.9700
ENDS THURSDAY!
7 ACADEMY
SAWARD
NOMINATIONS!
SISSY SPACEK
DAILY-7:10, 9:30
WED-2:20, 4:40, 7:10, 9:30
WITH THIS ENTIRE AD -
one admission $2.00 any film
Good Mon. thru Thur's. Eves.
valid thru 3/19/81 "M"
--

i

3 students arrested
for rape protest
Police arrested and arraigned
three University students yesterday
on charges of defacing public
property.
Micalea Trumbull, a 20-year-old
LSA sophomore, Dipti Ghosh, a 26-
year-old LSA senior, and Ruth
Zisook, a 21-year-old LSA junior,
were all charged with trying to paint
the word "rape" on a stop sign early
March 5, according to Ann Arbor
Police Sgt. Harold Tinsey.
All three stood mute in court,
which automatically enters a plea of
riot guilty. They were released on
personal recognizance.
-David Spak

- - - 9

a

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