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.

March 13, 1983 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1983-03-13

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

-HAPPENINGS-
Sunday
Highlight
"A Glimpse into Darkness: Conference on the Holocaust" will begin today
with a discussion by the Rev. Franklin Litell of Temple University entitled
"The Importance of the Holocaust to Christians" at 2:30 p.m. in the
Rackham Amphitheatre. Cantor Harold Orbach will present "Songs from a
World that is No More" at 7:30 p.m. in the Pendleton Room of the Union.
All events are free and open to the public.
Films
AAFC - Nahabet and A Slap in the Face, 7 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall.
Cinema Guild - 21st Annual Film Festival, winners night, 7, 9, and 11
p.m., Michigan Theatre.
Hill Street - Mr. Klein, 7 & 9:30 p.m.; My Fair Lady, 1 p.m., Hill Street
Theatre.
Performances
Ark - A Children's Concert with the Folktales, 2 p.m.; The Folktellers, 8
p.m., 1421 Hill St.
University Players - "The Father," 8p.m., Trueblood Theatre.
Motor City Organ Theatre - Organ recital, Henry Aldrich, 10 a.m.,
Michigan Theatre.
Music at Michigan - Bassoon recital, Jennifer Kelley, noon; cello recital,
Barbara Naragon, 2 p.m.; saxophone recital, 4 p.m.; all in the Recital Hall;
percussion recital, David Wiles, 8 p.m., Rehearsal Hall, School of Music.
Meetings
Breakthrough - meeting, 2-4 p.m., Room C. third floor, Michigan League.
Gargoyle - staff meeting, 2 p.m., first floor, Student Publications
Building.
Miscellaneous
Gypsy Lore Society - Annual meeting continues with activities at the
League.
Folk Dance Club - workshops with Camille Brochu, 12:30-3 p.m.,
Michigan League basement.
Kelsey Museum - gallery talk, 2 p.m.; Get Acquainted with the Kelsey, 4
p.m.
Society of Women Engineers - wine tasting, 7:30 p.m., Magic Pan at
Briarwood.
St. Mary Student Chapel - Open House, 2-5 p.m.
Monday
Highlight
PIRGIM will present the film Into the Mouths of Babes at 7:30 p.m. in Aud.
C of Angell Hall. The film deals with the unethical marketing of infant for-
mula in the third world. Admission is free.
Films'
Middle Eastern Film Series - Titles to be announced, 7 p.m., Lorch.
Friends of the Phillippines - To Sing Our Song, 8 p.m., Max Kade German
House, Oxford Housing.
Performances
Music at Michigan - Composers Forum, 8 p.m., Recital Hall; Michigan
Saxophone Quartet, 8 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall.
Guild House - Poetry readings, Vicky Jean Beauchamp & Adam Brooke
Davis, 8 p.m., 802 Monroe.
Eclipse - workshop series on jazz improvisation by David Swain, 8-9:30
p.m., Trotter House.°
Speakers
English Composition Board - Anthony Smith, "Electronic Abundance:
Myth or Reality," 4 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre.
Macromolecular Research Center - Stanford Sternstein, "Matrix
Dominated Properties," 4 p.m., 3005 Chem.
Chemistry & Medicinal Chemistry - Gary Gunewald, "Synthesis of the
Elusive One Substituted Norbornadienes and a Stereospecific Synthesis of
Substituted Exo- and Indo- 2-Amino-Benzonorbornenes," 2 p.m., 3554 C. C.
Little; Sheldon Shore, "Systematic Routes to the Preparation of Osmium-
and Muthenium-Based Cluster Systems, and Reactivities of Ruthenium-
Cluster Anions & Their Implications for the Water Gas Shift Reaction," 4
p.m., 1200 Chem.
B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation - Avner Yaniv, "Israel and America's
Security in Lebanon," 4 p.m., Rackham East Conference Rm.; Irving
Greenberg, "The Holocaust: A Jewish Response," 7:30 p.m., Rackham Am-
phitheatre.
Near Eastern & North African Studies - Raymond Stock, "Original
Dramatic Poetry on the Middle East & World Affairs," noon, Commons Rn.,
Lane Hall; film, Fertile Memory, 7 p.m., Lorch Hall.
Computing Center - Bob Parnes & Forrest Hartman, "Conferencing in
MTS," 3:30-5 p.m., 176 BSAD.
Neurology - Lonny Jarret, "Neurological Basis for Acupuncture," noon,
Neuroscience Lab. Bldg.

St. Joseph Mercy Hospital - Alexander Brickler, "Twenty-five Years of
Medical Practice in the Deep South," 8 p.m., Merch Hospital Education Cen-
ter Auditorium.
Meetings
Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice, 6-8 p.m., Martial Arts Room, CCRB.
F.L.O.C. -7:30 p.m., 308 E. William.
Christian Science Org. -7:15 p.m., Rm. D, League.
Women's Network - "Problems in Hiring, Retaining Women Faculty,"
12-1:30 p.m., Rms. 4 & 5, League.
SACUA -1:15 p.m., 4025 Fleming.
Art School - Public meeting on art school review, 6:30-9:30 p.m., Chrysler
Center, North Campus.
Miscellaneous
Tau Beta Pi - Free tutoring for all students in freshman and sophomore
level science, math, and engineering courses, 7-11 p.m., 307 UGLI; 8-10 p.m.,
2332 Bursley.
Psi Chi - Peer counseling for all undergraduate students interested in
psychology courses and graduate studies, 11-12 a.m.,1018 Angell Hall.
Strategic Moves - Class on weight loss, 6-7:30 p.m., First United
Methodist Church, 120S. State.
Academic Women's Caucus - brown bag lunch, "Orienting New Women
Faculty," noon, CEW basement conference room, 350 S. Thayer.

The Michigan Daily-Sunday, March 13, 1983-Page 3
Authorities
arsonist

Bound for glory
John K'rivit, lead vocalist for the group "Aluminum Beach," competes
the U-club. The best band wins the right to play at Second Chance.

Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS

in the finals of Michigras' battle of the bands at

'Anti ovi
MOSCOW (AP) - The Kremlin war-
ned its merchant seamen yesterday to
stop trafficking in pornography,
designer jeans and other "gaudy
Western rags." It said rubles spent
illegally abroad go to spies and "anti-
Soviet scum who are trying to penetrate
our country."
An indignant report in the Young
Communist League newspaper, Kom-
somolskaya Pravda, said it was high
time to take steps against "the stream
of brand-name jeans" and other
"gaudy Western rags" brought into the
country by Soviet sailors.
JUST AS SERIOUS, the newspaper
said, was the illegal exchange of Soviet
currency to purchase clothes, tape
Jokes fly at
Shapiro roast
(Continued from Page 1)
meetings. Roach followed his promise
with a moment of silence.
But Shapiro was not to be outdone.
"Someone has to take the Regents
seriously," he responded.
Roach went one step further and
suggested Shapiro move out of his
house on South University and let the
art school take over the first floor. This
would leave plenty of room for the
School of Education in the basement, he
joked.
Barry Witt, editor-in-chief of the
Daily, parodied an Ann Arbor News
profile of Shapiro in which the president
was dubbed, "the Mandarin of
Michigan."
Witt suggested other themes for the
president, including "the Mohawk of
Michigan," which wasn't acceptable
because the punk hairdo is going out of
style; "the Marxist of Michigan,"
which Shapiro himself later rejected
because "I know too much about
economics to be a Marxist"; and "the
Mohel of Michigan." (In Judaism, the
mohel performs the circumcision on a
baby.)
"Talk about cutting your natural
resources," Witt said.
There's only so much character to
one man, so the roasters sometimes
wound up using the same material.
They all agreed on at least one point:
The event would have been better billed
as a "Frye."

et scum' push
recorders and cassettes, and por- shop in
nographic pictures in waterfront shops Singapoi
catering to Soviet seamen, particularly Soviet
in Singapore. Singapot
"It's been known for a long time that IN SIP
this money is needed by our enemies. shops n
Special services use the money to "Vladiv
finance spies, subversives and anti- Soviet s
Soviet scum who are trying to penetrate cut-rate
our country," the report said. batov.
Youthful Soviets who wear jackets
with U.S. military insignia, jeans
labeled "Texas" or T-shirts em-
blazoned with American cigarette logos
have long irritated Soviet authorities,
prompting calls for better training in
communist ideology.
MANY ARTICLES of Western
clothing are purchased from tourists,
and it's not uncommon for visitors to be
stopped on Red Square and offered 100
rubles ($140) for their pants.
Rubles are non-convertible, meaning
the Soviet currency cannot legally be
taken out of the country. Citizens who
travel abroad are permitted to buy
foreign currency at the state bank. But
the amount is limited and the rate of
exchange set arbitrarily, thus tempting
some travelers to smuggle out rubles
for exchange abroad.
Komsomolskaya Pravda told of one -

jeans?
Singapore that exchanged 4
re cents for one ruble, while the
state bank rate was two
re dollars for one ruble.
NGAPORE, clothing and music
named "Moscow," "Odessa,"
ostok" and "Nakhodka" lure,
eamen on liberty with offers of.
goods, wrote journalist Kur-.

PUEBLO, Colo. (UPI) - Authorities
questioned 11 peopleyesterday for leads
on the "demented, angry or flat-out
mean" arsonist who touched off six
fires at a university dormitory, injuring
32 students and an ambulance atten-
dant.
District Attorney Gus Sandstrom said
the 11 being questioned, most of them;
students, were chosen because of "past,
behavior, statements about them by,
other students or because they have
additional knowledge."
SANDSTROM SAID he did not regard
any of the .11 as suspects. He said in-
vestigators had no leads in the case so,
far.
"We've either got a very demented,
very angry person, or someone who is
just flat-out mean," Sandstrom said. AI
don't know if they were trying to kill or.
unjure anyone, but it is easy to draw
that conclusion."
Asked about possible motives, San-
dstrom said they would include "anger;
lust, sex, a love triangle."
He said he was not aware of any
threats being made against any student
that could be connected to the case, but
said the investigators probably would
not complete their interviews until
tomorrow or Tuesday.
PR
0,1983 8pme.
JIDITOR IUM
.50, 9.50
:Michigan Union Ticket
CTC.C all 763-2071.

APRIL 1
HILL AU
11.50,10
Tickets:
Off ice,C

I

S

NARPY

A Birthday Remembrance
KEROUAC
FRANKIE EDITH
KEROVAC - PARKER
remembers
Kerovac in NY & Detroit
Sunday, March 13
2 p.m.
West Side

TWO-PIECE SUITS
FOR MISS J
It is the hottest look for
Miss J this season: lightweight
"menswear" fabric tailored
classically for a confident young
woman on the move. Here, one
from our collection, in tone-on-tone
mauve or grey fabric with mandarin
double-tuck collar and dirndl skirt.
Polyester/rayon, in the Miss J Shop
for young women. Sizes 5-13, $80.
Jacobsons

To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of
Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109.
TUESDAY LUNCH DISCUSSION

V

E -
: .
E

L

_ _ U

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan