The Michigan Daily-Sunday, April 5, 1981--Page 3 ,HAPPENINGS SUNDAY, APRIL 5 FILMS AAFC - The Roundup, 7, 10:20 p.m., The Red and the White, 8:40 p.m., MLB 3. Cinema Guild - Tales of Hoffman, 7, 9:30 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Cinema II - French Can-Can, 7 p.m., La Bete Humaine, 9 p.m., Angell Hall, AUd. A. MCTF - The Letter, 2, 3:45, 5:30,7:15 p.m., Michigan Theatre. SPEAKERS Wesley Foundation - Bishop Dale White, Alan Luther, "U.S. and Iran: What's in the Future?", 7:30 p.m., 602 E. Huron. Hillel - Michael Brooks, "Masada television Series" 9-11 p.m., 1429 Hill. Museum of Art - Prof. Niara Sudarkasa and Bamidele Agbasegba Demerson, "African Art and Culture in West Africa", 3 p.m., Museum of Art. MEETINGS SYDA - India Vegetarian Cooking class, 2p.m.,1510 Hill. Karma Thegsum Choling - Discussion on Buddhist Texts, 4 p.m., 734 Fountain. ACLU - Annual Meeting, 1 p.m., 331 Thompson. Moscow Scientific Sunday Seminar - 1:30 p.m., E. Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. RC - Conf., "Is Pornography Really a Feminist Movement?," 8:30 a.m., "Reconsidering the Feminist Movement," 10 a.m.-noon, "Women in Socialist Countries," 1 p.m., "Oppression in Women of Color," 2:30 p.m., "Self-Defense," 4-5:30 p.m. PERFORMANCES School of Music - Michigan Youth Band, 8 p.m., Hill Aud. Hillel - Hillel Hebrew Musicians, 8 p.m., 1429 Hill St. Ark - Louis Killen, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill St. Rudi Foundation - Ali Akbar Khan,8 p.m., Rackham Aud. Ann Arbor Figure Skating Club - "Melody on Ice," 2:30 p.m., Veteran's Arena, Jackson Rd. at Maple. School of Music - faculty Artists Concert, 2:30 p.m., Rackham Aud. MISCELLANEOUS Washtenaw Audubon Society - Field trip to Erie Gun Club, 8 a.m., meet at Pittsfield School parking lot. Hillel - Israeli Dancing, 1-3 p.m., Deli Dinner, 6 p.m., Tay Sachs Screening, 12-6 p.m., 1429 Hill St. Rec. Sports - IM Badminton (coed) Tournament, 6:30 p.m., NCRB. Rec. Sports - Family Sunday Funday, "Paddle Basketball," 2 p.m., NCRB. M Club - 7th Annual Michigan Antiques Show & Sale, 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Crisler Arena. Friends of the Ann Arbor Public Library - Spring Book Sale, 1 p.m.-5 p.m., Ann Arbor Public Library. WUOM - Options in Education, "Standardized Testing", 11:30 a.m., 91.7 FM. MONDAY, APRIL 6 FILMS AAFC - False Movements, 7 p.m., Radio On, 9 a.m., Lorch Hall Aud. MCTF - The Letter, 5:45, 7:30 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Women's Studies - Female Socialization in the 1950's, 7 p.m., MLB 3. SPEAKERS Medical Care Organization - Cy Briefer, "Medical Care: A Right or a Wrong?" 3 p.m., Rm. M3163, SPH II. Applied Mechanics - Ian Sneddon, "Cracks in Disks, Cylinders and Cylindrical Holes," 4 p.m., 311 W. Eng. Bldg. Energy Studies - Weston Vivian, "Energy Supply," 4 p.m., 2102 MLB. English - Reading by Madeline DeFrees, 4 p.m., Rackham Amph. Macromolecular Research - J. S. Higgins, "Dynamics of Polymer Chains in Solution and in the Melt Studies by Neutron Spin-Echo Measurements," 4 p.m., Cooley White Aud. MSA, PIRGIM - Presidential Debate, Union Kuenzel Room, 7:30 p.m. Pirgim-Adrienne Selko, "What you should know about Toxic Shock Syndrome," 7 p.m., Alice Lloyd Blue Carpet Lounge. Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies - Scott Grosse, "The Politics of Family Planning in Maghreb", noon, Lane Hall Commons. Center for Russian and East European Studies - Prof. Steven Burg, "Yugoslovia Without Tito: Defining the Role of the Party," 4 p.m., B116 MLB. Latin America - Bill O'Brien, slide show on reconstruction, 7:30 p.m., St. Mary's Lounge. Hillel - Michael Brooks comments on the "Massada" television series, 1429 Hill. MEETINGS U-M Bike Club - 7:30 p.m., 1084 E. Engineering Bldg. Ann Arbor Council for Traditional Music and Dance - Mass organizational meeting, 7:30 p.m., Union Pendleton Room. Extension Service - Michigan Assn. of Infant Mental Health: Vulnerability and adaptation, 7 a.m., Rackham Aud. Bible Study Group -12:15 p.m., W5603 Main Hosp. Nuc. Med. Conf. Room. SACUA -1:15 p.m., 40215 Administration Bldg. Michigan Technic - 3 p.m., B46 W. Engineering Bldg. LSA Faculty - 4:10 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. CEW - "Library Science,"6 p.m., 328 Thompson. Christian Science Organization -7:15 p.m., 3909 Union. PERFORMANCES PTP-Gertrude Stein Gertrude Stein Gertrude Stein," 8 p.m., Power Center. MISCELLANEOUS WCBN - Women's Affairs Program, 6 p.m., 88.3 FM. Friends of the Library - Spring Book Sale, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., Ann Arbor Public Library. AT LEAST 8 KILLED Twisters tear through Midwest By United Press International Tornado laced thunderstorms lumbered over the nation's midsection yesterday killing at least eight people, injuring dozens of others, and causing millions in property damage. The worst of the storms hit West Bend, Wis., where three people died. TWISTERS ALSO tore up large sections of Illinois and Iowa, with winds gusting to 90 mph. High winds raked Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, and Indiana. The National Weather Service reported 140 tor- nadoes in all from the southern and central Plains in- to the Ohio River Valley and Great Lakes states. A Dallas woman was killed and her son suffered a skull fracture when she lost control of her car on a highway during high winds and heavy rain. TWENTY-ONE PASSENGERS aboard a United Airlines DC-0 en route to Newark, N.J., were injured when the plane hit a pocket of turbulence over Han- nibal, Mo., and plunged 2,000 feet. The plane which had taken off from Los Angeles, landed late Friday at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport. Most of the injuries were minor. . As many as 100 persons were injured - 50 needing hospitalization - in the first tornado ever to hit West Bend. Officials estimated damage from a night of severe weather at $10 million. THE TORNADO CUT a swath about a block wide and three miles long in West Bend, destroying homes trees, and utility poles and overturning cars. Tom Johnson, 26, whose house was damaged, said he had about 10 seconds warning before the tornado hit. "I heard that goddarn wind and I jumped out of bed," Johnson said. "I felt my roof shaking and then it was over. I looked out and could see all kinds of homes damaged and people running around." TORNADOES CAUSED dozens of injuries and widespread property damage in southern and western Illinois and Iowa. In Sandyville, Iowa, a 2-year-old child being carried to safety by his mother was killed when high winds toppled a tree that hit the child on his head. Authorities clocked winds in Scott County, Iowa, at 90 mph. A tornado uprooted trees, downed power lines and ripped the roof off a movie theater in Edwardsville, Ill. Just south of Edwardsville, five people were in jured and 20 trailers damaged at a trailer court. A tornado touched down in Granite City, Ill., injuring 17 persons, four of whom required hospitalization. Indiana State Police said the west wall of the Lake County Public Library at Merrillville, Ind., caved in and crumbled, apparently from strong winds Friday night. 47 killed in renewed fighting in Lebanon Ulrich's Annual Inventory Sale Involving every item in our store except textbooks. Special prices on calculators. From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon - Syrian and Lebanese army units battled with ar- tillery and rockets along Beirut's Moslem-Christian dividing line yester- day, leaving at least 47 dead and 191 wounded and threatening a new civil war. The Beirut police department gave the casualty figures for the capital and said they were in addition to the 102 killed and 300 wounded in the last four days in Beirut and the Roman Catholic city of Zahle, where fighting erupted anew shortly after another truce collapsed. BEIRUT RADIO reported late yesterday that calm was returning to both Beirut and Zahle three hours after another cease-fire was supposed to take effect. The Voice of Lebanon radio of the Christian Phalange militia also said shooting had slacked off in both places. Earlier, Beirut shook from one end to the other with the roar of explosions as the night skies were lit with flashes of outgoing and incoming rockets from Soviet-made launchers and mortar shells. A communique from the Lebanese army command, whose forces man the Christian side of the three-mile-long dividing line, said its positions were un- der fire and were returning fire. THE TERSE communique did not say where the shells were coming from, but reporters saw artillery and rocket barrages going toward the eastern, Christian sector from positions held by Soviets say they may have found Atlantis MOSCOW (AP) - Soviet oceanographers say they may have discovered the lost continent of Atlantis on the seabed several hundred miles west of Portugal. Andrei Monin, director of research aboard the Soviet vessel Academician Kurchatov, said scientists based their hypothesis on "mysterious structures" seen in 460 photographs taken of sunken Ampere Mountain, 450 miles west of the Straits of Gibraltar, between Portugal and Madeira Island. "IN A NUMBER of pictures of the northeastern part of the summit, researchers discerned rectangular structures. On one of the photos, we can see rectangular plates (one-yard) wide rising from the bottom," the Tass news agency quoted Monin as writing in the Soviet magazine Earth and Universe. "The position of the plates, individual blocks, as well as the regular shape of the plates photographed ... may testify to their artificial origin," Monin said. There are dozens of theories on the possible location of Atlantis and societies seeking to find it have formed in numerous countries and undertaken searches. Some scholars believe Plato may simply have been describing an imaginary, ideal civilization, a utopia. TODAY PNA RBOR' the Syrians in the western and Moslem side of the dividing line. The fighting flared along all the traditional battlefronts of the 1975-76 civil war. Most of the fighting centered on a three-mile-long line separating Christian East Beirut and Moslem West Beirut. Christian militiamen were backing the Syrians, and Moslem gun- men were supporting the Syrians. Streets were deserted throughout the city as many of the 1 million residents of this Mediterranean capital huddled in bomb shelters built during the 1975-76 civil war. "I'M RUSHING DOWN again to the shelter, taking my wife and kids with me - they're panicked," said Hanna Aoun, a Christian who lives close to the line. U.S. Ambassador John Gunther Dean had just left the palace after a brief meeting with President Elias Sarkis when the first rocket landed in nearby woods, state-run Beirut radio reported. Dean was not harmed, the radio said. "Shells are falling only yards away from the presidential palace and the ar- tillery fire on East Beirut is pouring from all directions," a spokesman for the right-wing Phalangist militia said. A spokesman for the Phalange Party, the largest Christian group in Lebanon, also reported a massive barrage of ar- tillery and rocket fire, over the Christian suburbs of Hadass, Kfar Shima and Hazmieh, where the president's palace is located. "It's raining bullets," he said. 20% OFF All Michigan Items u . nay E ' . .. Adults Children Sweatshirts Jackets Sweatsuits T - Shirts Jogging Suits T-Shirts Jogging Suitsi Jackets Jerseys Sweatshirts Miscellaneous Glass Sets Blankets Hats Flags Thermos Bottles To Mention Just a Few MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 E. University at the corner of East U. and South U. 662-3201 _ _ _ LECTURE BY ARTHUR MILLER Distinguished American Playwright Thursday, April9,94:00 p.m. Rackham Assembly Hall (Main Floor) ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE 1981 HOPWOOD AWARDS PANELS BY HOPWOOD WINNING WRITERS: FRIDAY, APRIL 10 10:00-12:00: Drama panel with Melvin Gordon, Dennis McIntyre, and Norman Rosten 1:30-3:30: Poetry Panel with John Ciardi, Dorothy Donnelly, and X. J. Kennedy 4:00-6:00: Poetry Reading and Discussion by Festival Panelists. SATURDAY, APRIL 11 10:00-12:00: Fiction Panel with Max Apple, William Brashler, and Nancy Willard 1:30.3:30: Essay Panel with John Malcolm Brinnin, Theodore Solotoroff, and Chad Walsh 4:00.6:00: Fiction Reading and Discussion by Festival Panelists Friday and Saturday morning panel sessions will be held in the Rackham Amphi- theater (Fourth Floor). Saturday afternoon sessions will be held in the Henderson Room, Michigan League. All events ar.,freeand open to th.public. rip TAPRIL 9-11,1981 THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN yHopw1o od FE'stival APRIL 9-11, 1981 THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN The Hapwood Festival is made possible by grants from the Michigan Council for the Humanities and the following units of The University of Michigon-the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts; The Howard R. Marsh Center of the Deportment of Communication; the President's Office; and the College of En ineerina. F - iIL 3bLc30t 4: AMATEUR & COMMERCIAL PHOTO FINISHING DUPLICATE SLIDES 7 DAY r &I A wri~i, I lni n~I A I Ic TO MAUCH YUHUK RINALS OR COLOR CORRECTED WHEN REQUESTED 4. SERVICE Number of Originals 1-5 6-24 25-491 4 $.55 .55 Number of Duplicates per Original 2-4 5-9 40-24 2 .51 .48 .42 .48 .42 .33 25 or More .33 .28 .55 .42 33 .28 .21 ,VV fL VV .r.. "...i« _._ -_ _ _ . G' _ I