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October 20, 1983 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1983-10-20

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

HAPPENINGS-
Highlight
Former Secretary of State General Alexander Haig will present the
second Warner-Lambert lecture at 8 p.m. tonight in Rackham Lecture Hall.
Haig will be giving "A Perspective on American Foreign Policy" during his
lecture, which is free and open to the public.
Films
Cinema Guild -Burn!, 7 & 9:05 p.m., Lorch.
Jewish Law Students' Union; Prog. in Judaic Studies - Great Trials in
Jewish History series, The Fixer, 8 p.m., 100 Hutchins Hall.
Gov't of the Netherlands; Germanic Lang. & Lit.; Netherlands Amer.
Univ. League; Cinema IT - Lucebert, The Reading Lesson, & The New Ice
Age, 7:30 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater.
Ctr. for Near Eastern & N. African Studies; Dept. of Near Eastern Studies
- Man and Nature & Unit, noon, 3050 Frieze.
Classic Film Theatre - A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The
Forum, 7:30p.m., The Producers, 9:30p.m., Michigan Theatre.
Mediatrics - The In-Laws, 7 & 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud.
Women's Studies - Taking Our Bodies Back: The Women's Health
Movement & Gentle Birth, noon, MLB Lecture Rm. 2.
Performances
Major Events - Joan Baez in concert, 8 p.m., Hill Aud; concert, Video
Ballroom, 9p.m., Union Ballroom.
Music - String Dept. Recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall.
Union Arts-Music at Mid-day Series, Gail Arnold, Jill Feldstein, gam-
bists; Ellen Foster, harpsichordist; presenting music of Marais and Tobias
Hume, 12:15 p.m., Pendleton Rm., Union.
Canterbury Loft; Common Ground Theatre - "Children of a Lesser God,"
8 p.m., Lydia Mendelsson Theatre.
Eclipse -jam session, 9:30 p.m., U-Club, Union.
Performance Network; Mich. Labor Theatre - "Dangerous Times," 8
P.m., 408 W. Wash.
Conf. on Organ Music - recital of new works for organ by Univ. doctoral
students, 8:30 p.m., organ studio 2110, School of Music.
EMU - Tenor Jeffrey Willets performing "Die Schone Mullerin," 8 p.m.,
Alexander Recital Hall.
Theatre & Drama - Spell #7, 8p.m., Power Center.
Speakers
Museum of Anthropology - Carla Sinopoli & John Fritz, "Contemporary
Pottery Production in Kamalapuram," noon, 2009 Museum Bldg.
Rackham - Marc Longino, "Development & Evaluation of Polyiodinated
Lipid-Soluble-CT Contract Agents," 4 p.m., 3554 C.C. Little.
Computing Center - C.C. Consulting Staff, "Editor INIT Files &
PFkeys," 12:10 p.m., 1011 NUBS; Forrest Hartman, "Pattern Matching in
the Editor II: Uses & Examples," 3:30 p.m., 165 Bus. Ad.
Japanese Studies - Yoichi Fujiwara, "The Force Behind the Creation of
Words in the Japanese Language," noon, Lane Hall Commons Rm.
Antiquarian Book Society -- Mary Hall, "Collecting Ghost Stories," 8
p.m,, Clements Library.
Museum of Art - Victoria Jennings, "Birth of the Virgin," by Sano da
Pietro, 12:10 p.m., Museum of Art.
Guild House - Women and Power series, Catherine McClary, county
commissioner and financial broker, 8 p.m., 802 Monroe.
Rackham; Offices of the Vice Pres. for Res. & Acad. Affairs; English -
Stuart McDougal, "Pound & Dante," 4 p.m., Rackham E. Conf. Rm.
CRLT - faculty & TA workshop, "Effective Learning,"7 p.m.
Chemistry - G.D. Stein, "Molecular Beam Cluster Nucleation & Structure
Studies: Deviations from the Bulk States of Matter?" 4 p.m., 1200 Chem.
Res. College -- Susan Wright, "The Responsibilities of Scientists in the
Nuclear Age, '7 p.m., 2443 Mason.
Vision - Bernard Agranoff, "A Look at PET," 12:15 p.m., 2055 MHRI.
Industrial Tech Inst.; Robotics & Integrated Manufacturing - David Alan
Bourne, "Computational View of Flexible Manufacturing Systems," 3:30
p.m., Chrysler Cntr. Aud., N. Campus.
Chemistry - James Melrose, "Physico-Chemical Analysis of the Reser-
voir Wettability Problem," 11:30 a.m., 1017 Dow Bldg.
2100 Users' Group - "Graphics on the 2100,"' 6:30 p.m., Rm. 140 BSAD.
Meetings
Fencing Club -8 p.m., Coliseum corner of Hill & 5th.
Huron Valley Quilting Society - 7:30 p.m., St. Andrew's Episcopal Chur-
ch.
Human Growth Center - eating disorders self-help group, 7 p.m., First
United Methodist Church Green Rm., corner of Huron and State.
Am. Cancer Society - Smoking education and self-help group, 7 p.m., 4105
Jackson Rd.
Planned Parenthood - reproductive health care answer session, 7 p.m.,
912 N. Main St.
Sailing Club -7:45 p.m., 311 W. Engin.
Scottish Country Dancers - beginners session, 7 p.m.; intermediate, 8
p.m., Forest Hills Cmmty Center, 2351 Shadowood.
Med. Cntr. Bible Study -12:30 p.m., Rm. F2230 Mott Hosp.
Regents -1 p.m., Fleming Administration Building.

Psychiatry - Anxiety Disorders Support Group, 7:30 p.m., 3rd Fl. Conf.
Rm., Children's -sych. Hosp.
Graduate Christian Fellowship -7 p.m., 3rd floor league, Rm. D.
Miscellaneous
Theatre & Drama-- annual Halloween Sale, 9'a.m. to 5 p.m., outside 1528
Frieze.
Student Wood and Crafts Shop - Advanced Power Tools course, 6 p.m.,
537 S.A.B.
Homecoming - Ice Cream Eating Contest, 8 p.m., The Commons, Union.
Pre-Professional Services of Career Planning & Placement - Pre-Law
Day, 1 p.m., Mich. League Ballroom.
To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of
Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109
Malicious Intent,
I-I 1L

The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 20, 1983 - Page 3
Car bomb injures four marines

From AP and UPI
A powerful car-bomb blast ripped
through a U.S. Marine convoy yester-
day, wounding four American
peacekeepers in an escalation of
violence that forced the government to
call off a planned peace conference.
Marine spokesman Maj. Robert Jor-
dan said one Marine received a super-
ficial head wound and three others suf-
fered lacerated eardrums, and face and
hand cuts when the bomb exploded as a
convoy of four American military
vehicles passed the Kuwait Embassy
on Beirut's southern edge.
HE DESCRIBED all the injuries as
minor. State radio said a Lebanese
police guard at the embassy also was
wounded.
Witnesses said the bomb, planted in a
blue Mercedes, shattered the windows
and flattened the front tires of a 21/2-ton
truck in the convoy.
The explosion hurled the engine of the
Mercedes 75 yards through the air and
turned the truck into twisted rubble.

THE AREA is across from the
Palestinian refugee camps of Sabra
and Chatilla, and Jordan said
Palestinian women and old men ran to
help the Marines.
The area was immediately sealed off
by Italian troops in the multinational
peace-keeping force, who are in charge
of the zone.
Police said eight people were killed,
including six civilians, and 27 injured as
the Lebanese army and opposition
Druse and Shiite militiamen exchanged
artillery and rocket fire in mountains
east of Beirut and the shantytowns
south of the city.
STATE-RUN and private radio
stations said Druse and Christian
militiamen fought day-long battles in
the Kharroub region, just north of the
Israeli army's defense line along the
Awali River in southern Lebanon.
Beirut shook from artillery blasts as
Lebanese army soldiers fought Druse
insurgents at Souk el-Gharb, the
strategic mountain town above the in-

ternational airport where the 1,600-man
Marine contingent of the international
force is based.
Jordan said the Marine camp was not
involved in any of the shooting.
THE OFFICIAL announcement can-
celing Thursday's planned national
reconciliation conference was made on
state radio.
A sourcedat the presidential palace
said President Amin Gemayel called
off the meeting because the opposition
rejected his choice of Beirut's inter-
national airport as the site.
The source said efforts were under
way to set a new date and site, with the
likely choices Jidda, Saudi Arabia, or
Geneva, Switzerland.
RASHID KARAMI, one of three
leaders in the anti-government
National Salvation Front, said in
Tripoli that he and his partners would

not attend any meeting at the airport.
"The airport lacks and will continue
to lack the basic security conditions
necessary for holding the natinal
dialogue there," he said.
He made the statement after meeting
with Marwan Hamadeh, an aide to lef-
tist Druse leader Walid Jumblatt.
Hamadeh later said Karami spoke for
Jumblatt and the third partner in the
Syrian-backed front, former President
Suleiman Franjieh.
JUMBLATT repeated his suggestions
of a meeting in Tunis, ona ship off the
Lebanese coast or in Geneva.
The reconciliation conference was
called for in a Sept. 26 cease-fire
agreement that reduced but did not end
heavy fighting that began three weeks
earlier. Beirut has been wracked by
almost continual fighting since its 1975-
1976 civil war.
Bickering over a proper site so far
has prevented the conference. At least
14 sites hale been suggested.

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