H APPENI NGS- SUNDAY Highlight The Eastern Michigan University Faculty Chamber Musicians celebrate the 150th anniversary of Johannes Brahms' birth with a recital of his music at 4 p.m. in EMU's Alexander Recital Hall. The concert is free and open to the public. Films Cinema II-The Godfather, Part II, 8 p.m., Angell Aud. A. Cinema Guild-The Billion Dollar Brain,7 p.m., Lonesome Cowboys, 9:05 p.m., Lorch. Classic Film Theatre-Sleeper, 6 & 9:05 p.m., Bananas, 7:35 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Hill St.-Rollerball, 7 & 9:15 p.m., 1421 Hill. Mediatrics-On The Town, 7 p.m., Singin' in the Rain, 8:45 p.m., MLB 4. Performances University Musical Society-New World Quartet, 4 p.m., Rackham Auditorium. School of Music-Violin recital with Lisa Lantz, 8p.m., Recital Hall. Ark-Dick Gaughan, 8p.m., 1421 Hill. Theatre Department-"Plotters of Cabbage Patch Corner," 2 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Performance Network-"The Forest;" 8p.m., 408W. Washington. Comfort Inn-Louis Johnson and Friends, 7 p.m., 2800 Jackson Rd. Second Chance-Toby Redd, 516 E. Liberty. Speakers Speakers Kelsey Museum - Andrea Berlin, Gallery Talk, 2 p.m., Kelsey Museum. Campus Chapel-A representative from the Michigan Interchurch Council will speak on human rights in Central America, 7:15 p.m., Campus Chapel. Industrial Workers of the World-Lynn Jones will speak on the peace movement in Europe and the need for American involvement and support, 7 p.m., St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, 306 N. Division. Meetings New Jewish Agenda - Jewish Women's Brunch, 2380 Fenwood, Pittsfield Township. For info. contact 662-5731. Lutheran Campus Ministry-Sunday worship, 10:30 a.m.; student supper, 6 p.m., S. Forest at Hill. Women's Weekend of East Quad-Planning meeting, 6:30 p.m., Room 164, East Quad. American Baptist Campus Foundation-Graduate and undergraduate classes, 11:15 a.m., First Baptist Church. Miscellaneous Hands-On Museum-Honey Tasting, 3 p.m., 219 E. Huron. Hillel-Israeli folk dancing, 7:30 p.m., 1429 Hill. Computing Center - Tour of North Campus Computing Center, 2-4 p.m. For info. call 764-9595. MONDAY Highlight The History department is sponsoring the showings of three films, The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter, Clockwork, and Controlling Interest: The Word of the Multinational Corporation. The showingsstat at 7:30 p m. ir Auditorium C of Aigell'lall , . Films Alternative Action-The Wobblies, 8 p.m., Room 126, East Quad. Cinema Guild-Routes of Exile: A Moroccan Jewish Odyssey, 7 p.m., lor- ch.. Performances School of Music-String department recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall; organ recital with James Frey, 8 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Guild House-Poetry reading with Mike Delp and David Epstein, 8 p.m., '802 Monroe. Ark-Rielly and Maloney, 8p.m., 1421 Hill. Performance Network-"Stage Rite," 7p.m., 408 W. Washington Second Chance-The New Dittilies, 516 E. Liberty. Speakers Near Eastern and North African Studies-Brown bag with Edna Coffin, "Readings From a Contemporary Israeli Poet: Yehuda Amichai," noon, Lane Hall, Commons Room. Near Eastern and North African Studies-A.R. Norton, "Shi'a Protest Politics in Lebanon," noon, Room 200, Lane Hall. Natural Resources Club-Wendy O'Neil, "The Nature Conservancy: Protection of Privately-Owned Land Through Michigan's Natural Areas Registry," noon, 1028 Dana. Chemistry Department - Imad Bakkar, "Optical Activity of Inorganic Complex Compounds. A) The Internal Pfeiffer Effect B) Outer Sphere Complexation," 4p.m., 1200 Chemistry Building. Computing Center-Forrest Hartman, "Computing for Poets, Part I: An Introduction to Computing for Humanists," 3:305 p.m., 165 BSAD. Women's Research Club-Nancy Davison, "An Etching is not a Lithograph: Techniques of Printmaking," 7:45 p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham. Program on Studies in Religion-Hans Kung, "Dying with Human Dignity," 8p.m., Rackham Auditorium. CEW-"An Inside Look at Careers Using Computers," 7-9 p.m., CEW Library, 350S. Thayer. Students for Origins Research-Erich Von Fange, "Scholars and Dingalings on Pre-History," 7:30 p.m., 1402 Mason Hall. Meetings Tae Kwon Do Club-5-7 p.m., CCRB Martial Arts Room. Ann Arbor FLOC Support Group-7:30 p.m., 308 E. William. Christian Science-7:15 p.m., Room D, Michigan League. Gotticelli Game Players-noon, Dominick's. Michigan College Republicans-Organizational meeting with Regent Deane Baker, 7 p.m., Pendleton Room, Michigan Union. Ann Arbor AFS Chapter-7:30 p.m., International Center. SACUA-1:15 p.m., 4025 Fleming. Lutheran Campus Ministry-Bible study on the gospel of Luke, noon, Room 3, Michigan League.. LSA Faculty-4:10 p.m., Angell Aud. A. Eating Disorders Self-Help Groups-7:30-9:30 p.m., Classroom 8, St. Joseph's Hospital; room 13, Human Growth Center, 2002 Hogback Rd. Michigan With Hart-7 p.m., Pond Room A, Michigan Union. Miscellaneous U.S. ends search for downed Korean airliner WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department said yesterday it has en- ded its unsuccessful, $122.4 million sear- ch for the wreckage and flight recor- ders of a Korean Air Lines jumbo jet shot down Sept. Iby the Soviet Union. The two-month search in the Sea of Japan "has been completed," the Pentagon said in a statement. "U.S. units found no wreckage or signs of wreckage," it added. OFFICIALS said the cost of the search was estimated at $22.2 million. The KAL Boeing 747 was shot down by a Soviet fighter jet near Sakhalin Island after it strayed into Soviet air- space. The 269 people abord the plane were killed, including 61 Americans. The military began searching for the wreckage, particularly the flight recorders, the day the aircraft was downed. U.S. officials had hoped the recorders, containing tape recordings of the crew's conversation and other flight information, could shed some light on why the aircraft veered off- course on a flight from New York to Seoul. U.S. NAVY ships, Japanese salvage ships under contract to the Navy, a U.S. Coast Guard cutter and U.S. Navy and Air Force planes participated in the search, the Pentagon said. The initial air search covered 3,000 square miles and the surface ship sear- ch covered more than 150 square miles, the Pentagon said. More than 3,000 hours were flown and more than 320 ship days steamed during the search. Union evacuated The Michigan Union was evacuated for 10 minutes last night, after Univer- sity security guards reported seeing smoke on the building's fourth floor. Firefighters were called to the scene at 0:10 p.m., and discovered smoke coming from one of the hallway heating registers near the north stairway en- trance. Spontaneous combustion of paper and debris inside the register apparently caused the smoke, said Union night manager Michael Cusick. No one was injured in the incident. - Jeanette Funk AP Photo A-member of the PLO holds a Russian made "rocket launcher" ready to fire at Syrian positions. The skyline behind bil- lows with smoke at the Baddawi Camp in Tripoli, Northern Lebanon. Lebanese death toll clmbs to 60 TYRE, Lebanon (AP) - Searchers pulled the bodies of 22 more Lebanese prisoners from the rubble of the bomb- wrecked Israeli military post in Tyre yesterday, raising the overall death toll to 60, the army said. It said 28 Israelis were killed, one less than previously reported, and cited mistaken identity as the reason. THE INCREASE in the Lebanese death toll from 10 to 32 followed further digging in the rubble. Detainees were held mainly in ground floor cell blocks and would therefore have.been at the bottom of the wreckage. Israeli troops reinforced roadblocks on the Awali River Bridges, sealing off southern Lebanon from the rest of the nation in hopes of preventing any more terrorist bombings. On the main coast road from the Israeli border to the front line on the Awali River, 37 miles to the north, the only vehicles were trucks carrying white concrete blocks and barbed wire to shore up Israeli positions. THE AWALI RIVER bridges, remained closed, blocked 'off by a defensive network of concrete, barbed wire, tanks and troops that kept traffic off roads leading to the ridges from the south. A curfew imposed on Tyre, where a suicide bomber crashed his truck into the military compound Friday, was lif- ted but no one was allowed in or out of the town. Security was tightened at Israeli military posts in Tyre and elsewhere in southern Lebanon, but Israeli military officials declined to divulge details. In Tripoli PLO chairman Yasser Arafat and his outgunned guerrillas fought off tank, rocket and artillery fire from Syrian-backed mutineers yester- day, and hospital sources reported 240 dead and 550 wounded in three days of fighting. AMONG THE dead were Arafat's ally Abu Mustafa, head of the Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, his wife and five children who perished when a shell hit their house in the Nahr el-Bared camp, the camp commander said. At the Pentagon, a spokesman said there were no plans "at this time" to move a U.S. aircraft carrier task force currently operating near Spain to the eastern Mediterranean off Lebanon. Meanwhile in Geneva, Switzerland Lebanese leaders scored a psychological breakthrough by managing to convene their recon- ciliation talks, but they left Geneva without agreement on a formula for the withdrawal of Israeli forces. AUDITIONS for the MERRY WIDOW OPENING March 1 in the Michigan Theatre MON. & TUE., NOV. 7 & 8 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH call 665-6074 for appointment THE COMIC OPERA GUILD U.S. Congressmen visit sites of Gre nadian battles (Continued from Page 1) with 300 more prisoners scheduled to be airlifted out Saturday and the rest Sun- day. Most of the 37 members of Cubas diplomatic mission here also would be evacuated Sunday, the officials said. The diplomats have remained in the embassy, surrounded by U.S. paratroopers, since last Tuesday when Scoon ordered Soviet, Libyan and Cuban diplomats out of the country. THE CUBAN diplomats had refused to leave Grenada until the Cuban prisoners were repatriated. The State Department said one envoy would be allowed to remain in Grenada next week to oversee the return of the bodies of about three dozen Cubans killed in the invasion. "Your mission is accomplished, you have done a magnificent job," Brig. Gen. J.D. Smith told 1,800 members of the Army's 82nd Airborne Division as they landed Friday in 12 jets at Pope Air Force Base near Fort Bragg. They Malicious Intent were greeted by a jubilant, flag-waving crowd of 1,000 and a military band playing "the Star Spangled Banner." About 4,000 American troops remained on Grenada, but officials said more would be evacuated during the next few days. The American death toll in the invasion has been put at 18 soldiers. IN WASHINGTON, officials said Reagan will meet Monday with many of the 600 American medical students evacuated from St. George's University School of Medicine. "I guess he is going to thank them for being such good sports," said Arthur Massolo, a school spokesman. Also in Washington, the State Depar- tment on Friday released what it said were captured documents showing that Grenada's Prime Minister Maurice Bishop and other Marxist leaders on the island - including those who overthrew and killed him - had arranged treaties for nearly $38 million in military aid from the Soviet Union, Cuba and North Korea. IS YOUR PROFESSOR WORTH HIS PAY? Find out in THE FACULTY SALARY SUPPLEMENT EDITION -includes all faculty and staff salaries -a useful reference guide ,yl- E NTER HERE~ O jr / r &i I I J i l l I I f -available in the regular Thursday, November 10 issue of 11 1 I I r _... I d-