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April 16, 1982 - Image 3

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The Michigan Daily, 1982-04-16

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I

The Michigan Daily-Friday, April 16, 1982-Page 3

H APPENINGS-
HIGHLIGHT
The third annual "Take Back The Night" march will begin at 8 p.m. in
front of the Federal Building at Liberty and Fifth. The march, sponsored by
the Ann Arbor Coalition Against Rape, is held each year to show support for
changes that will help eliminate the incidence of rape in Ann Arbor. Over 500
people are expected to march the 3-mile route.
FILMS
Cinema Guild - Duck Soup, 7 p.m.; The Coconuts, 8:30 p.m.; A Night at
the Opera, 10:15 p.m., Lorch Hall.
Alt. Action - Young Frankenstein, 7, 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud.
Cinema II - Kagemusha, 7, 9:15 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall.
CFT - Shop Around the Corner, 4, 9 p.m., Michigan Theatre.
AAFC- Cabaret, 7,9:15 p.m., MLB 4.
Spartacus Youth League - Revolution or Death!, 7:30 p.m.,Multi Purpose
Room, UGLi.
Affirmative Action Office - Public Awareness Film Festival, Inter-
,national Year of Disabled Persons, 3 p.m., Lecture Rm. 2, MLB.
Public Health - New Alchemists and The Other Way, 12:05 p.m., School of
.Public Health II Aud.
SPEAKERS
Nat. Resources - Lee., Cy Scheider, "Forest Productivity," 3 p.m., 1040
Dana.
I d. and Opers. Eng. - Sem., Aaron Boneh, "A Set Covering Approach to
Problem of Constraint Redundancy," 3p.m., 243W. Eng.
English - Lee., John Kucich, "George Eliot's Mixed Feelings: The In-
wardness of Middlemarch," 8p.m., E. Conf. Rm., Rackham.
Ling., N. E. Studies, & W. Euro. Studies - Second annual symposium on
Historical linguistics and phiolgy, "Continuity and Discontinuity: Change in
Society and Language," Mich. League.
Anthro. - Colloquium, Robert Paul, "The One and The Many: An Ap-
proach to the Problem of Unity and Diversity in Anthropoligy," 4 p.m., 2203
Angell.
Hillel - Oneg Shabbatsspeaker, Jerry Green, "Mid east Politics," 9:30
p.m., 1429 Hill.
Chemistry - Informal sem., Satoru Masamune, "Stereochemical Control
of the 1,2-Diol System: Saccharides and Toward Amphotericin B and
Palytoxin," 3 p.m., 1400 Chem.
Museum of Art - Art break, Katherine Aldrich, "Margaret Watson/A
Collector's Legacy," 12:10 p.m., Art Museum.
Chem. - Sem., Charles Parmenter, "Intra Molecular Energy Transfer in
p-Difluoronenzene," 4 p.m., Rm. 4403, Chem. Bldg.
School of Metaphysics - Lec., "Creating A Satisfying Relationship," 7:30
p.m., 1029 Fountain.
UAC - Teach-in, Julian Bond, Leonard Woodcock, Anne Coleman, Perry
Bullard, "Militarism: Illusions and Realities," 7:30 p.m., Rackham.
PERFORMANCES
Union Music at Mid-Week Series - Recital, Piano Duets by Rebecca Hap-
pel and Denise Goulet (Music of Bartok, Mozart, and Brahms), 12:10 p.m.,
Pendleton Rm., Union.
Residential College Players - Play "Against Katie Bloom," 8 p.m., E.
:Quad. Aud.
Theater and Drama - Guest Artist Series, "Mary Stuart," 8 p.m., Power
Center.
Canterbury Loftf- "New Music of Gerald $renan," 8:0 p.pn., 332 S.
State.
They Word of God - Theater Ensemble, Orchestra and Chorus, Corner-
stone will present Easter Celebration, 8p.m., Hill Aud.
R. C. - Poculi Ludique Societas, "'Cain and Abel," in Middle English;
Hans Sachs' "Fool Surgery," 3 p.m., RC Aud., East Quad.
Ann Arbor's Dance Theatre 2 - Concert, "Modern Dance Works by Ann
Arbor Choreographers," 8p.m., Dance Theatre Studio, 711 N. University.
Mich. Theatre - "Radio City at the Michigan," Organ overture by Henry
Aldridge, stage show by Ann Arbor Chamber Orchestra, 8 p.m.; Michigan
Theatre, 603 E. Liberty.
MEETINGS
Dickens Fellowship - Meeting, "Discussion of Social Mobility: Dickens
vs. America," 8 p.m., 236 Hutchins Hall.
Int'l. Student Fellowship - Mtg., 4100 Nixon Rd., 7 p.m.
Regents - Mtg., Regents Rm., Fleming Ad. Bldg., 9 a.m.
MISCELLANEOUS
Folk Dance Club - Folk dance instruction, 8p.m., Union.
Univ. Duplicate Bridge Club - Open game, 7:30 p.m., League.
Ann Arbor Chinese Bible Class -7:30 p.m., Univ. Reformed Church.
Women Engineers - Annual picnic, 4:30 p.m., behind the W. Eng. Bldg.
WCBN-FM - Bessie Smith and Other Blue Women, 7 p.m., 88.3.

Alpha Phi Omega and Amer. Red Cross - Campus-wide blood drive, 11
a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Union ballroom.
Ann Arbor Chapter of Am. Statistical Assoc. - Panel discussion, Morton
Brown, Pan Fox, Lawrence Rafsky with moderator Neal Van Eck, "New
Developments in Statistical Computing," 8p.m., 141 Sch. of Bus. Ad.
Phi Delta Kappa - Initiation of new members, 6:15 p.m., Marriott Inn,
Plymouth Road.
Hillel - Shabbat services, 7 p.m., Orth.; 7:15 p.m., Conserv.; dinner at
8:15 p.mm. (RSVP Fri. noon), 1429 Hill.
Ark - Auction and Event, 1421 Hill, 9p.m.
MSA and SOAP - First annual Spring Carnival, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., on path
from Union to Diag.
Rackham Student Govt. - Forum, Billy Frye, "Graduate Issues Forum:
Facing Review and Redirection," 7:30 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre.
RC - Poculi Ludique Societas ("Games and Drink Society") workshop,
"Role of the Audience in Medieval Drama/Playing in Middle English," 10
a.m., RC Aud., East Quad.
Alpha Pi Mu - Eng. Aptitude Tourn., 2 p.m., W. Engin. courtyard.
SYDA Fdtn. - Adv. Hatha Yoga Course taught by Barbara Branca, 4:15
p.m., six classes over eight weeks, 1520 Hill.
Michigan -Nuclear Weapon Freeze - Ground Zero Event, depiction of con-
sequences of a nuclear attack on Ann Arbor, sign-carrying 4:30 p.m.
AstroFest - NASA film on Apollo 16 followed by question and answer
session with Jim Loudon, 7:30 p.m., Aud. 3, MLB.
To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of
Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109.

Ann Arbor astronaut returns,

describes

By ROB FRANK

I
f

Saying he was here to "tell the
people I know best about space," Space
Shuttle Commander Jack Lousma
returned to Ann Arbor yesterday to
visit friends in his hometown and the
University, his alma mater.
"It's always a pleasure to come
back," Lousma said during a presen-
tation to students in the Rackham
Graduate School Auditorium.
Referring to his family, Lousma said,
"Ann Arbor is our home and it has a
special place in our hearts."
THE MOST recent commander of the
space shuttle said he enjoyed his years
as an undergraduate at the University.
"I'm proud to be a graduate of this
school," said Lousma, who was
photographed with an "M Go Blue"
bumper sticker above his head in the
shuttle.
Lousma said he was especially proud
of Michigan's performance in the
Houston Bluebonnet Bowl. "I enjoyed
showing them (Houston friends) what
Michigan was really like, but most of
all I enjoyed winning," he said.
Early Thursday, Lousma viewed and
critiqued a presentation by
Engineering Prof. Fred Bartman's
aerospace design class. The class is
designing a process for separating
solutions in space which will be used in a
shuttle flight in the next two years.
BARTMAN termed Lousma's visit a
"very positive experience" and said it
was "very rewarding" for his students.
"It was really a great way to end the
semester," said Bartman.
Later in the day, during his ap-
pearance in Rackham Auditorium,
Lousma narrated a brief film which
followed the Columbia from its launch

shuttle e
to its landing. Several segments of the
film had never been released to the
television networks including shots of
the astronauts sleeping, sating, and
conducting experiments. Ldlsma and
his partner, Gordon Fullerton, were
also shown playing in the gravity-less
confines of the shuttle.
Lousma said he was particularly
pleased with the Canadian-built
mechanical arm which was used to
manipulate objects outside the shuttle.
"It worked like a champ," he said.
LOUSMA defended the space
program and praised the people who
had been responsible for the flight.
"I'm not going to sell it (the idea of the
shuttle program) to you," he said.
"But, the facts are we get more out of
the space program than we put into it.

xperiences
Take it on faith that this is really good
for America and it provides things we
really need."
Lousma predicted that the Soviets
will. have a manned station before the
United States. "They're like Avis, they
always want to be number one," he
said, "but, this is an era and a time
when people are starting to be proud of
America again and the people's reac-
tion to the shuttle demonstrates the
nation will be number one again."
In addition to his campus visit yes-
sterday, Lousma attended a reception
and dinner in his honor and met with
Ann Arbor Mayor Louis Belcher.
Lousma will address students at
Pioneer High School today before
leaving Ann Arbor.

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