100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

April 12, 1981 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1981-04-12

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

1

The Michigan Daily-Sunday, April 12, 1981-Page 3

-HAPPENINGS-
SUNDAY
FILMS
AAFC - Mary Poppins, 1, 3:30, 7, 9:30 p.m., Michigan Theatre; Agnus
Dei, 7, 10:20 p.m.; Red Psalm, 8:40 p.m., MLB 3.
Cinema Guild - The Awful Truth, 7, 9p.m., Lorch Hall Aud.
Cinema II - The Fortune Cookie, 7 p.m.; Morgan!, 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell.
Colorado Slide Shows Loft - I'm a Pretty Nice Person Now, Documentary
of the Ann Arbor Alternative School, Clonlara, 1 p.m., 119 East Liberty.
SPEAKERS
Museum of Art - Horace Miner, "Living Arts of Africa," 3 p.m.
MEETINGS
Graduate Women's Network - meeting, pot-luck brunch, noon, 802
Monroe.
PERFORMANCES
Hillel - Israeli Dancing, 1-3 p.m.; Hebrew Musicians, 8 p.m., 1429 Hill St.
Motor City Theatre Organ Society - Second Sunday, Norm Keating,
{Organ Concert, 10 a.m., Michigan Theater.
Eclipse Jazz - Pat Metheny Group, 8 p.m., Hill Auditorium.
First Presbyterian Church - Concert, J. S. Bach's Passion according to
St, John, 4 p.m., 1432 Washtenaw.
Interfaith Council for Peace - play, "Dunbar's Bremen," 8 p.m., Social
Hall, First United Methodist Church, Corner of State and Huron.
School of Music - Trombone Recital, MM, David VanDover, noon, Recital
Hall; Viola Recital, BM, Larry Ledwon, 2 p.m., Recital Hall; Brass Quintet
Recital, student groups, 2 p.m., Stearns; Piano Recital, MM, John Walter, 4
p.m., Recital Hall; Voice Recital, Karen Werlin/Soprano, Elizabeth
Elvidge/mezzo soprano, 4 p.m.; Stearns; Voice Recital, BM, Nada
Radakovich, 6 p.m., Recital Hall; Horn Recital, BM, Carrie Banfield, 8 p.m.,
Recital Hall; Viola Recital, Roberta Zalkind, 8 p.m., Stearns.
Canterbury Loft - "Ladyhouse Blues," 3, 8 p.m., 332 South State.
Ark - Peter Bellamy and Lisa Null, English and American Songs, 8 p.m.,
1421 Hill St.
Residential College - Chamber music concert, 8 p.m., RC Aud.
CAM - theater, "Los Pelados," Ballet Folklorico, 1-3 p.m., SEB Schorling
Aud.
MISCELLANEOUS
WUOM - Options in education, "Standardized Testing," 11:30 a.m.;
Masterpiece Theatre, "Les Miserables," 4 p.m.; Articulations, poems by
Joseph Langland, 8:30 p.m., 97.1 FM.
Rec. Sports - Family Sunday Funday, "Spring Fling," 2-5 p.m., NCRB.
Michigan Technology Fair - noon -6 p.m., Track and Tennis Bldg.
Residential College - Brecht Co. auditions, 2 p.m., 126 East Quad.
Karma Thegsum Choling - Discussion on Buddhist texts, 4-5:30 p.m., 734
Fountain.
Hillel - Jewish Joggers, 11 a.m.; Deli Dinner, 6 p.m., 1429 Hill St.
Young Jewish Professionals - Brunch, noon, 3545 Greenbrier No. 38-A.
Art Museum - African Images: Arts & Ornaments," gallery talks by
Museum Practice Program students, 2 p.m.
Law School - Honors Convocation, Billy Frye, featured speaker, 3 p.m.,
Hale Aud.;Graduate School of Business Administration.
Seventh-Day Adventist Church - Coronary Risk Evaluation Clinic, 7-11
a.m., Seventh-day Adventist Junior Academy, 2796 Packard.
Exhibition Museum - "Cosmos: The Voyage to the Stars," 1:30, 2:45, 4
p.m., Exhibit Museum Planetarium.
Ann Arbor Art Association- Annual Pottery Sale, 12-5 p.m., 117 West
Liberty.
MONDAY
FILMS
AAFC - Ali; Fear Eats the Soul, 7 p.m.; Fox and His Friends, 8:45 p.m.,
Lorch Hall Aud.
SPEAKERS
Center for Western European Studies - Xavier Richet, "Planning and
Economic Policy in a Mixed Economy: The Eighth Five-Year Plan in Fran-
ce, 1981-85," 4 p.m., Rackham, East Conference Room.
Latin America Monday Lectures - Mauricio Gaborit S.J., "Theology of
Liberation," St. Mary's Lounge, 331 Thompson St.
Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies - Bag lunch lecture,
Gene Heck, "The Importance of Numismatics in Islamic Monetary
History," noon, Lane Hall Commons Room.
Energy Studies Program - Art Schwartz, "Ecology of Risk," 4 p.m.,
Rackham West Lecture Room.
Dept. of Near Eastern Studies - G. L. Windfuhr, "Heaven and Earth:
How the Ancient Iranians Saw the World," 4 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg.
Dept. of Romance Languages and Dept. Classical Studies - Henry

Kahane, "Byzantium's Impact on the West from a Linguistic Standpoint," 4
p.m., Rackham East Lecture Hall.
Architecture - Bag-lunch lecture, Chin Pai, "Urban Design as Architec-
ture," noon, AAB Aud.
Macromolecular research - Nayoda Yoda, "Biomedical Application of
Synthetic Hydrogel Polymers," 4 p.m., 3005 Chemistry.
MEETINGS
Ann Arbor Center for Independent Living - community planning meeting,
5:30-7 p.m., City Hall, 4th floor.
Women's Network-noon -1:30 p.m., Michigan League, rooms 4 & 5.
Medical Center Bible Study - 12:15 p.m., W5603 Main Hospital, Nuclear
Med. Conf. Room.
SACUA -1:15 p.m., Pres. Conf. Room.
Christian Science Organization -7:15 p.m., 3909 Michigan Union.
PERFORMANCES
Blind Pig - Red, 208S. First.
School of Music - Voice Recital, BM tenor, Kevin Doss, 7:30 p.m.,
Rackham Assembly Hall; percussion Ensemble, 8 p.m., Recital Hall.
MISCELLANEOUS
Residential College - Brecht Co., Auditions, 8 p.m., 126 East Quad.
Muscular Dystrophy Association - Skatepapthon, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., World of
Wheels, 2275 Platt Rd.
Center for Independent Living - Easter Potluck and film, 6:30-9:30 p.m.;
Moose Lodge, 390 S. Maple.
WUOM - Albert Lord, "On Collecting Balkan Oral Traditional Poetry,"
10 a.m., 91.7 FM.
WCBN - Women's affairs program, 6-7 p.m., 88.3 FM.
Chemistry - Inorganic Seminar, Paul Clokes, "An Approximate Quan-
tum Mechanical Model for NaCL-KCl Solid Solutions," 3 p.m., 1200
Chemistry.
Ann Arbor Public Library Youth Dept. - films, storytime, preschoolers:
10 a.m., 2 p.m.; Kindergarten - 6th, 11 a.m., 3 p.m., main library meeting

Amtrak's future concerns group

By LISA LEVINE
The Michigan Association of Railroad
Passengers met yesterday to discuss.
the future of Ann Arbor train service in
light of the Senate Committe on Am-
trak's proposed cuts.
If the Reagan administration's Am-
trak proposal is passed, Michigan ser-
vices - including three round trips
daily between Detroit and Chicago, one
between Port Huron and Chicago, and
the Jackson-Ann Arbor-Detroit com-
muter train - could be eliminated.
MARP CHAIRMAN Clark Charnet-
ski said yesterday, however, that he is
"confident we will be able to reverse
the situation." He suggested that the
passengers who depend upon Amtrak

should write letters to their Represen-
tatives and Senators to persuade them
to keep Amtrak services in Michigan.
Should the budget cuts pass, MARP
has prepared a restructuring proposal
that includes the continuation of a
Detroit-Chicago line which would stop
in Ann Arbor. The proposed line
hopefully would be cost efficient, Char-
netski said.
In Ann Arbor, ridership has in-
creased enough so that Amtrak is plan-
ning to build a larger train depot.
Despite the proposed budget cuts, the
city is going ahead with its expansion
plans and hopes to have the new depot
ready by spring next year.
ON FRIDAY Amtrak released a

report commissioned by Congress a
year ago detailing possible expansion of
high speed passenger train service. The
report also said the new trains could
save energy.
However, Transportation Secretary

Drew Lewis said in a letter accom-
panying the study, "In the light of
overall transportation priorities, there
is no justification in the report to sup-
port additional funding for corridors." -

FINANCIAL AID
Fall 1981 and Winter 1982
APPLICATION
DEADLINE
is
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1981
Applications must be submitted to the Office of Financial Aid*
2011 S.A.B. and Family Financial Statements must be mailed
to ACT by that day.
Houmr:815-12:15, 1:30.4:00

Spring splash AP Photo
Joe Cornellier, left, Trey Taylor, kneeling right, and Cory Miller of Beloit,
Wis. enjoy a warm spring afternoon tossing rocks into a creek at the Beloit
Municipal Golf Course.

'U'study.
says state
gun law
may be
ineffective
DETROIT (UPI) - A Michigan law
making a two-year prison term man-
datory for using a gun to commit a
felony crime has not reduced violent
crime in Detroit and may be ineffec-
tive, a University study says.
One skeptic of the gun law, Detroit
Recorder's Court Chief Judge Samuel
Gardner, said he was not surprised by
the findings and added they further
illustrate the need for gun control.
THE STUDY, TO BE published next
month, said researchers could find no
solid evidence the gun law had any im-
pact on crime despite intense publicity
reminding potential criminals that
"one with a gun gets you two."
"The Gun -Law did not significantly
alter the number or types of serious
crimes in Detroit," concluded the 28-
page statistical analysis by a team of
University sociology professors.
The law took effect in January 1977.
Supporters claimed it would deter
potential armed robbers and other
criminals from using a gun because
they would face a mandatory two-year
prison sentence without parole.
But the researchers, who studied
Detroit murder, robbery and assault
cases from 1977 to 1979, found no
evidence linking the data with the law
and "little change in the certainty or
severity of sentences which could be at-
tributed to the effects of the Gun Law."

Don t wait for a little birdie to tell
you* SUBSCRIBE TO
THE
MICHIGAN DAILY

e 1pse presents

PAT

METRHE N

Y

GROUP

0

40

4

TONIGHT

Good Seats A vailable

4

Sunday, April 12 8pm

Hill Auditorium

U-MI Dcpt. ofThetre &Dram~h

Istvan 4rkcn s
rirrm 'rRritlpk -

I

I ' - "lwp w'm.P

i

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan