The Michigan Daily-Sunday, March 21, 1982-Page 3 'HAPPENINGS- SUNDAY HIGHLIGHT The Committee Concerned With World Hunger, PIRGIM, and the Inter- faith Council will begin a series of educational workshops for World Hunger Week today, at 7:30 p.m. in the Pendleton Room of the Union. Hunger educator, author, and scientist George Borgstrom will discuss the dilemma at the end of the century. FILMS Cinema Guild-The Sea Gull, 7p.m., Lorch. Mediatrics-Gone With the Wind, 4, 8 p.m., Angell Aud. A. Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Black Peter, 7 p.m., MLB 4. PERFORMANCES Reader's Theatre Guild-"Illusions," 2 p.m., R.C. Aud., E. Quad. School of Music-Percussion recital, Dan Armstrong, 2 p.m.; piano recital, Stephanie Leon, 4 p.m., Recital Hall; trombone/Saxophone recital, Gordon Good and Thomas Reed, 4 p.m., Stearns; piano chamber music recital, 6 p.m., Recital Hall; violoncello recital, Michael Sedloff, 6 p.m. Stearns; trumpet recital, Robert Howard, 8 p.m., Recital Hall; horn studen- ts recital, 8 p.m., Stearns; Michigan Youth Chorus, 4 p.m., St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. University Dance Company-Spring concert, 3 p.m., Power Center. Canterbury Loft-"You Can't Hurry Love," 3, 8 p.m., 332 S. State. Ark-Sallyu Rogers plays dulcimer, banjo, guitar, 8 p.m., 1421 Hill St. Stearns Collection Series-William Maim plays exotic wind instruments of Asia, 3 p.m., Stearns. Center for Western European Studies-Bert Hornback reads W. B. Yeats, accompanied by Irish music from Greg Ross, 8:30 p.m., The Earle. SPEAKERS Russian & East European Studies-Carl Proffer, "The Influence of Con- temporary Russian Writers on the West," 2 p.m., Rackham Amph. Kelsey Museum-Gallery Talk, Ann Van Roosevelt, 2 p.m., Kelsey. MISCELLANEOUS Rec. Sports-Family Funday Sunday, 2-4 p.m., NCRB. WCBN-African Rhythms: Traditional and contemporary music from the African continent and diaspora, 1-3 p.m., 88.3 FM. Hillel-Jewish Cultural Assoc. of E.Q., Deli Dinner with discussion on in- termarriage/interdating, 6 p.m., E.Q. Rm. 164; Israeli Dancing, 7-10 p.m., 1429 Hill. Friends of Traditional Music-Square dance with the New Prairie Ram- blers, 8 p.m., Union. GEO-Meeting, 4 p.m., Room C, Third Floor League. Center for Fine Woodworking and Craft Arts-Workshop, spraying finishes, 4-6 p.m., 537 SAB. WSDS-"Milt Wilcox Sports Review," 1480-AM. MONDAY HIGHLIGHT The Campus Nuclear Freeze Committee will throw a party today at 3:30 in the Michigan League, Vanderburg and Concourse Rooms, to kick off the local nuclear freeze campaign. PERFORMANCES Trotter House & Eclipse Jazz-Improvisation workshop, 8:30 p.m., Trot- ter House. Guild House-Poetry and Prose readings, David Victor and Gary Zebrun reading translations of Akhmatova, 8p.m., 802 Monroe. Airmen of Note-Official jazz band of the U.S. Air Force, 8 p.m., Rackham Aud. SPEAKERS South and Southeast Asian Studies-Ernesto Arellano, "The Struggle of Filipino Workers," 8 p.m., 200 Lane Hall. English Language and Literature-F.L.S. Lyons, "Yeats and parnell," 4 p.m., W. Conf. Rm., Rackham.' Chemical Eng.-Paul Belter, "Biochemical Product Recovery Technology Prospectives and Prognosis," 2 p.m., 3107 E. Eng. Chemistry-Inorganic Sem., Melvin Luetkens, "Synthesis and Chemistry of Some U (IV) and Th(IV) Organometallics," 3 p.m., 1200 Chem.; Spec. Inorganic Sem., Karen Wetterhahn-Jennette, "Inorganic Carcinogens: Chromium and Nickels" 4p.m., 1200 Chem. Biological Sciences-Pamela Dunsmufr, "Organization and Expression of the Genes for Chlorophyll A/B Binding Protein and the Small Subunit of Carboxylase," 4 p.m., 1139 Nat. Sci. Committee Concerned with World Hunger-Hunger Week, Eleanor Jositas speaks on domestic hunger of elderly and mothers, 7:30 p.m., Pendleton Rm., Union. Communication-Brown Bag Sem., Chris Sterling, noon, 2035 Frieze. MISCELLANEOUS United Students for Christ-Meeting, 6 p.m., Union. Christian Science Organization-Meeting, 7:15 p.m., 3909 Union. Amer. Chem. Soc./Students-Free tutoring for Chem., 7-9 p.m., 3005 Chem. Tau Beta Pi-Free tutoring math and science, 7-11 p.m., 307 UGLi; 8-10 p.m., 2332 Bursley.- Cinema Guild-Japanese Film Series, Fires on the Plain, 7 p.m., Lorch. CRLT-Workshop for TAs, "Visual Thinking in Learning Process," 7-10 p.m., 109 E. Madison. Hillel-Suzanne Benton, workshop with masks, 7:30 p.m., 1429 Hill. IFC, Panhellenic Assoc. -Greek Week, A Greek Sing, 7 p.m., Hill. SACUA-Meeting, 1:15 p.m., Pres. Conf. Rm., Fleming Admin. Bldg. Recycle Ann Arbor-Spring orientation, 7:30 p.n, Conf. Rm., Public Library. Indoor Light Gardening Soc.-Meeting, "Carnivorous Plants," 7:30 p.m., Matthaei Botanical Gardens Aud. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109. SOMETHING FOR SENIORS- March 27, 1-3 p.m. in the PENDLETON ROOM, M-UNION Sponsored by the STUDENT ALUMNI COUNCIL (SAC) Speakers will focus on: Reporter assesses women's jobs By FANNIE WEINSTEIN Career opportunities for women do exist,-it's just up to women to take adantage of them, ABC-TV News Correspondent Carole Simpson told an audience of more than 200 people yesterday during her keynote address at Ann Arbor's sixth annual Women's Career Fair. "Anything worth having is worth struggling for, and a lot of you are going to have to struggle," she said. "Nobody is going to hire you anymore because you're a woman. Those days are gone. No one cares any more." SIMPSON, a 1962 University graduate, began her career in television in 1970 as a reporter and weekend anchorperson for WMAQ-TV in Chicago. She became a Washington correspondent for NBC-TV in 1974, and jumped to ABC just last month. Simpson said the greatest career ob- stacle she faced has been racial and sexual discrimination. "I had three strikes against me," she said. "I was black, inexperienced, and a woman and it's true, I was all of those things." After having the honor of being the only graduate of the journalism depar- tment's class of '62 not to receive a job offer, Simpson said her luck began to change during' the civil rights movement of the '60s. "My color and sex," she said, "which had been liabilities, were now very at- tractive ... I am still to this day, trotted 'Nobody is going to hire you anymore because you're a woman. Those days are gone. No one cares any more.' -Carole Simpson ABC'-TVNews Correspondent out as the double token. I'm a two-fer." Although she amused the audience with humorous Washington anecdotes, comparing Congress to the television show "Laugh-In," Simpson stressed the negative effects on women of Reagan Administration policies. Women, the poor, and minorities are the hardest hit by Reagan's budget cuts, according to Simpson, who claimed these groups are the most dependent on the social service programs undergoing cuts and elimination. "All of these facts paint for us a pret- ty bleak picture," she said, - noting Reagan's opposition to the Equal Rights Amendment and abortion. Simpson also condemned Reagan for having no female Cabinet members, and for appointing only 43 women to the 367 executive administration positions available. It is crucial for women and minorities to become' politically active, Simpson told the group, complaining of poor voter turnout. "We can blame ourselves for a lot of the problem. We have to stick together," she said. "We must do it. We can do it." Letter-writing and lobbying cam- paigns are both effective forms of protest, according to Simpson. "There are many in Washington who believe Reagan is still on a movie set," and are questioning whether Reagan is calling the shots or whether he is being told what shots to call," she said. "I think the honeymoon really is over and I think you will see Congress exert a lot more power on the President than it has in the past," Simpson said. More than 25 groups-including the University's Career Planning and Placement Office and the Affirmative Action Office-sponsored the fair, which featured workshops and panels on topics such as training and develop- ment, job interviewing, and sales and marketing. "It gives women access to other women out there in careerstthey've probably never explored," said Denise Bristol, coordinator of minority programs for Career Planning and Placement. Bristol described the fair as an "outreach type effort," which is more intensive than regular career planning services, and provides positive role models for those who take part. LSA sophomore Leslie Gluck said she was particularly interested in the workshops concerning job-finding strategies and careers in social change. "I thought I'd get a few tips as far as jobs and finding jobs," she said. Karen Seiple of Ypsilanti, a business administration graduate of Bowling Green University in Ohio, said she came to the fair seeking pointers on the fields open to women. "It's difficult these days to get infor- mation, especially when the times are hard, on where there are opportunities for women to advance," Seiple said. EUROPE AND BEYOND! Traveling the open road. Freestyle. 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We must constantly reaffirm our strong faith in each and every one of us and believe that we can triumph in love against hate," he said. Other speakers included state Sen. Ed Pierce (D-Ann Arbor), former Mayor Albert Wheeler, and Elaine Pitt. v v V 4L/ president of the Jewish Community Council of Washtenaw County. Rick Lederman, 18, said he came from Farmington Hills to demonstrate with his brother, a University student. "We're not going to take what they (the neo-Nazis) are giving us, sitting down," he said. Special presentations also were given by the folk music group Gemini, the Common Ground Theatre, and the. children of two Holocaust survivors. r . . iv* w . c. ..ew w.. _ -qqm- Castro ordered increase in arms, shipments WASHINGTON (AP)- Cuban President Fidel Castro ordered in- creased arms shipments to the Salvadoran guerrillas last December in an attempt to disrupt the March 28 elec- tions in El Salvador, the State Depar- tment said yesterday. "Within the past three months, ship- ments of arms into El Salvador reached unprecedented peaks, averaging out to the highest overall volume since the "final offensive" last year, the depar- tment said in an eleven-page public report entitled "Cuban and Nicaraguan Support for the Salvadoran Insurgen- cy." DEAN FISCHER, the chief State Department spokesman, said the Reagan administration will not disclose the intelligence evidence on which the report was based because "a gover- nment that does not keep secrets does not receive them." The report is the latest ad- ministration attempt to demonstrate Cuban and Nicaraguan control of revolutionary forces in El Salvador. Fischer insisted that the "cumulative weight" of classified and publicly available evidence "makes clear that the guerrilla movement in El Salvador receives vital assistance of many kinds from an international infrastructure outside El Salvador." THE STATE Department report issued yesterday states that intelligen- ce reaching Washington is consistent with.a two-year pattern of guerrilla ac- tivity and foreign support and "Cuba played a major role in developing this support system, and remains its key link." U-M ROWING CLUB RAFFLE KERO SUN portable heater: Nooshin Serai LUGGAGE:O.Juma DINNER for 2 at the EARLE: Richard Beringer OSCAR PETERSON TICKETS: Borge Hadsel OSCAR PETERSON TICKETS: Thoch Ngo DINNER far2 at the WHIFFLETREE: Claude Rowe DINNER for 2 at the PRETZEL BELL: John Bogema AM-FM CLOCK RADIO:Larry Szoina ULRICH'S SWEATSHIRT: Bill Flom DINNER for 2 at MAUDE'S: Cindy App HAIRCUT at the HAIR CUT HOUSE: Gail Fitzsimmons HAIRCUT at the HAIR CUT HOUSE: Karen Smith HAIRCUT at the HAIR CUT HOUSE: _' ; ®'1 - , . . t y + ' ' i , i _ ' ' 1982 ANN ARBOR ANTIQUARIAN BOOK FAIR AND SALE MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM SATURDAY, MARCH 27 10AM - 5 PM More than 30 Midwest dealers Admission free Ann Arbor Antiquarian Bookdealers Association L - qml r L w- 1* U~ FOR time: l0am"4pm ' place: di% I i r-fron t of ITH inganUnion krl 6i OPPORTUNITY FOR STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS TO VELY DEMONSTRATE WHAT THEY DO AND WHAT ARE ALL ABOUT. I I I I I AN ACTI THEY If you have any questions, call 763-3241) or Janine Shahinian (SOAP: Lisa Mandel , Doris Gurke 763-5900). (MSA