Los Angele -cut smog fo LOS ANGELES (AP) - Air quality officials are setting out to reduce air pollution during the 1984 Olympics to. avoid substandard performances by the athletes and damage to the city's reputation. The South Coast Air Quality Manage- ment District issued a list of 10 suggestions Friday for reducing air pollution during the 1984 summer smog season. Ideas range from staggering public employees' work- hours and reducing auto traffic to a two-or-three- week shutdown of. major industries. "LOS ANGELES has a chance to be a showcase," said the proposal's author, 's may r Olympics Brian Farris, senior air quality specialist with the district. "We have a a, bad enough reputation without a bad smog episode having to happen during the Olympics, too." The effects of smog, including watery eyes and shortness of breath, are not long-lived for most people, but they could slow down Olympic athletes, he said. "They won't get cancer, but some of these athletes have been preparing for the Olympics all their life and then, to come here and give a sub-optimal per- formance because your chest hurts you know, you throw a javelin and it sticks in the air, would be bad," he said. The Michigan Daily-Sunday, November7, 1982-Page 3 Workers brace for long haul in Chrysler strike HAPPENINGS- Sunday Hi hlight e Uiversity's Musical Society will present guitarist Julian Bream today at 4 p.m. in Hill Auditorium. English guitarist and lutenist has toured the world and comes to the United States annually. Tickets are available through the Musical Society in Burton Tower. Films Cinema Guild-I Know Where I'm Going, 7 p.m.; The Red Shoes, 8:50 p.m:, Aud. A, Angell. Cinema II-Dial M For Murder, 7 & 9 p.m., Lorch. 'Hill St.-The Dybbuk, 7 & 9 p.m., Hill St. CFT-Dr, Zhivago, 4 & 7:30 p.m., Mich. Theatre. Performances Fair Lane Music Guild-Paul Ganson and Friends, 7:30 p.m., Fair Lane Mansion, UM-Dearborn. School of Music- Opera, Stravinsky's "The Rake's Progress," Gustav Meier, musical director and Robert Altman, stage director, 3 p.m., Power Center. Ark-Grit Laskin with Friends of the Fiddlers Green, 8 p.m., 1421 Hill St. Speakers Kelsey-Andrea Berlin, Gallery Talk, "Roman Glass," 2 p.m., Kelsey Museum. Larry Cohen, "Human Rights and the Rje of .the Church in Central America," 7:30 p.m., Campus Chapel, 1236.Washtenaw Ct. Meetings Black Student Organization-Workshop on Careers in Health, 2-6 p.m., Trotter House. Miscellaneous. Computing Center-Tour of the Center, 2-4 p.m.; first floor North Campus Computing Center. Hillel-Israeli dancing, 7-10 p.m., Hillel, 1429 Hill St. LASC-Benefit Dance, 9p.m., Rick's American Cafe. Student Wood and Crafts Shop-Safety classes, 6-8 p.m., 537 S.A.B. Monday Highlight Zvi Elpeleg, senior researcher at the Shiloah Institute of Middle East Studies in Tel Aviv will speak on "Current Issues in the Middle East" Mon- day night at 8 p.m. in Conference Rooms 4and 5 of the Michigan Union. Elpeleg, formerly commander-in-chief of a civilian aid unit in Lebanon, is the author of many research works and articles on the Palestinian problem. Films CFT-1900, 7 p.m., Mich. Theatre. Film/Video series-The Hat (18 min.); Hiroishima/Nagasaki: August 1945 (16 min.); The Bomb: February to September, 1945 (55 min.); 7:30-9:30 p.m., Aud. B, Angell. Performances' Guild House-Poetry readings, Ellen Dreyer, Lisa Vihos, Reva Man- delbaum, 8 p.m., Guild House. Special Events on WCBN-The Empress of Jazz, Bessie Smith, 11-2 a.m. Performance Network-"A Matter of Wife and Death," and "The Atomic Weight of Potassium," starting at7 p.m., 408W. Washington St. Speakers Undergraduate Political Science Assoc.-Neil Stabler, "What Next in Politics: What Happened on Nov. 2nd?" 7:30 p.m., 439 Mason Hall. Atmos & Oceanic Sci.-Supriya Chakrabarti, "Preliminary Results from s the Extreme Ultraviolet Spectrometer On Board the STP78-1 Satellite," 3:30 p.m., 2233 Space Res. Near Eastern & North African Studies-Kemkal H. Karpat, "Democracy & Constitutionalism: The Turkish Way," 4-5:30 p.m., MLB 2. Chemistry-Inorganic sem., John Oliver, "Spectroscopic Studies on Organo-and Silyllithium Compounds," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem.; Macromolecular Res. Cntr. Colloquium, Richard Robertson, "A Molecular Model for Relazation in the Glassy State," 4 p.m., 3005 Chem. Computing Center-Mark Hersey, '"Intro. to the Use of Microcomputees," 2-3:30 p.m., BSAD; Dave Sun, "Debugging in PL/I and PL/C," 3:30-5 p.m. Russian & East European Studies- Abraham Brumberg, "Poland After 1944," 8p.m., 200 Lane Hall. Near Eastern & North African Studies-Lee. given in Turkish, Kemal Karpat, "Turkish: What It Was, What It Is, and What It Will Become," 1:10 p.m., MLB 137; Brown Bag, "A Cry from the Heart," videocassette, noon, Commons Room, Lane Hall. Program in Judaic Studies-Brown Bag, Maya Tavori, "Consumerism in Israel," (in Hebrew) 12:00, Conference Rooms 4 & 5, League. Psychiatry & Neuroscience-Sem., Michael Schwartz, "Molecular & Cellular Events in the Process of Optic Nerve Regeneration," 3:45 p.m., 1057 MHRI. Chem. Engin-Michael Cutlip, "Computer-based Instruction in Engineering," 4 p.m., 1017 Dow Bldg.; Demonstration, 4:45 p.m., 2074 Dow Bldg. Meetings Women's Network- Noon, rooms 1 & 2, Michigan League. U-M Public Relations Club-Business Meeting, 4 p.m., 3016 Frieze. Tae Kwon Do Club-Martial Arts practice, 6 p.m., Sports Coliseum. Christian Science Organization-7:15 p.m., Room D, Michigan League. School of Music-Composers Forum, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Women Engineers-Pre-Interview, Stone & Webster, 1-4 p.m., 146 W. Eng.; Pre-Interview, Schlumberger Wells, 7-9 p.m., 229 W. Eng. SACUA-3 p.m., 4025 Fleming Admin. Bldg. Miscellaneous Eclipse Jazz-Workshop series on Jazz improvisation by David Swain, Trotter House. Alph Phi Omega-Blood Drive Battle between OSU & UM, 11 a.m.-4:30 TORONTO (AP)-Chrysler says it can't afford higher pay for its striking Canadian workers, who are walking picket lines in frigid weather and saying they can't afford to work for the wages they're getting. The strike, started Friday by 10,000 workers, seems likely to last for mon- ths, with rippling effects on the United States and Canada's economies. MEANWHILE, United Auto Workers union President Douglas Fraser suspended his membership on Chrysler Corp.'s board of directors until contract disputes in Canada and the U.S. are set- tled, a union spokesman said yester- day. Fraser gave his notice in a letter delivered to Chrysler Chairman Lee Iacocca's office Friday afternoon. The letter said Fraser took the action because of "a perception held by some that when the UAW is engaged in an ongoing and serious collective bargaining conflict with the Chrysler Corp., my active participation on the board is inappropriate." WITHIN HOURS after the Canadians walked out, Chrysler officials in Detroit announced layoffs affecting 2,500 workers in 16 U.S. plants from San- dusky, Ohio, to Huntsville, Ala.-1,000 of them in the Detroit area. Company officials say if the strike continues into next year up to 40,000 U.S. workers could be laid off at a time when unemployment has already reached the 10 percent mark. The unemployment rate in Canada is 12.7 percent. Because of concessions made to save the automaker from bankruptcy, Chrysler workers are still on the 1979 wage scale. The union says some Canadian employees lost their homes, unable to afford mortgage payments when their loans came up for renewal at higher rates in the past year. Chrysler has proposed a two-year contract with cost-of-living increases but no general wage hike. Workers both in Canada and the United States rejec- ted the offer, but while the Americans voted to renew negotiations in January the more militant Canadian workers took to the picket lines with the daytime temperatures in the 30s. The Canadian union is seeking a general wage increases, cost-of-living protection and other benefits. POETRY READING MONDAY, NOV. 8, 8 P.M. § with Ellen Dreyer, § Lisa Vihos, and § Reva Mandelbaum S Reading from their works L dHouse 02 Monroe, Not just for kids Daily photo by JON Owner and operator Norm Harris gives change to a customer at his comic book store, the Eyes of Agamotto. Located on State St. above Tice's Market, the Eye is a popular hangout for both serious comic book collectors and oc- casional perusers of all ages. Conference gIves chance to discuss medical ethics (Continued from Page 1) their choice of one of two topics in the morning session and the same in the af- ternoon. At each session two speakers give short presentations which raise questions suggested by the topic's fic- titious case history. AFTERWARDS, the groups break up into small discussion sections of 12 to 15 people, each led by a moderator. The discussion sections meet for about an hour and try to reach some sort of con- sensus, if possible. After the discussion sections meet, the topic group gets back together to ask questions and hear how the speakers would solve the dilemma. In addition to "Refusing to Treat the Non-compliant Patient" (the John Travis case), the conference topics in- cluded "Minors and Birth Control," "Are Living Wills a Viable Concept?" and "Civil Defense." speakers at the conference came from as far away as Miami, Fla. and Tulsa, Okla. They included several doctors, professors, a nun, and the public affairs coordinator of Michigan's Planned Parenthood Affiliates. ABOUT 175 people registered for the conference. Half to two-thirds were students. "The small group sessions are my favorite part of the conference," said Doreen Ganos, a group moderate and former conference co-director. "In the groups we get a chance to work together to solve the problems of a specific case. "And we strive to make everyone equal in the groups," she said, so professors, students, doctors, lawyers, and anyone else who attends the con- ference all have a voice in the outcome. "Our main objective is to promote a rational and interdisciplinary approach to medical ethics," said Ganos, a sixth- year Inteflex student. The conferences are the brain-child of several Inteflex students, par- ticularily Inteflex graduate Dr. Marc Bassin. Bassin formed the Committee on ethics, humanism, and medicine in 1977 with encouragement from Inteflex counselors and Residential College Philosophy Prof. Carl Cohen. The committee recruited members mostly from the Inteflex program, but that has begun to change. BECAUSE OF the time constraints on Inteflex and medical students, un- dergraduates make up a large share of the staff, according to Warren and con- ference Director of Registration Mike Segesta. Segesta and Warren are examples of this trend. Segesta is majoring in philosophy and Warren in biology. CEHM gets its money from a variety of university sources. About one-third of their money comes from the University medical school, another Warren ... promoting biomedical ethics third from registration fees, and the remainder from LSA, the School of Nursing, the School of Pharmacy, and other programs, Warren said. She ad- ded that the School of Public Health donates its building free of charge. Since the first conference in the spring of 1978, the committee has been drawing praise for its work. "CEHM IS A marvelous program - remarkable, successful, and run en- tirely by students. They make a very genuine contribution" to the field of medical ethics and to the University, Cohen said. "The conference provides an oppor- tunity for those who are really in- terested in medical ethicsbeyond background information," said Dr. Gerald Abrams of the medical school. "It throws back to .the student the problem of detecting the problems.,, Which is what the conference is all about - thinking for oneself about medical ethics issues. "The more you think about (the questions), the more questions are raised," said CEHM staffmember Mark Bilsky. "I believe that a system for figuring out these questions is more important than the decisions you reach. And I think that is one of the goals of the con- ference - to have people at least start to work out a framework in which to make decisions," Warren said. But CEHM is running into problems. Some of the group's funds are being cut and efforts to obtain grants from private foundations have turned up empty so far. **** ****************** . Receive a FREE A Pass for two to 0'PERSONALS" - the new movie at the Ann Arbor Theatre just by placing a personal ad in the Daily Classifieds. Good till Fri., Nov.12 call 764-0557 or come to the Daily at 420 Maynard St. § HOUSING WINTER TERM, 1983 University FamilyHousing§ Applications Available, NOW § §University Residence Halls § Applications Available, NOW Telephone 763-3164 COff-Campus Housing Listings, Roommate Matching, Advice, Meditation § Telephone 763-3205 §* HOUSING INFORMATION OFFICE § 1011 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING § 8 a.m.-12; 12:30-4:30 p.m. § Weekdays § § § i Be AWinner In The Game Of Life... Be A Blood Donor I'm Coach Bo Schembechler of the University of Michigan . . . I have a special message for young people I'm asking you to get involved in an important part of living and saving lives. . . Donate blood when the Red Cross Bloodmobile comes to your High School . .. College .. . or University ... .I know from . .. MARCHING BAND Crisler Arena i