-HAPPENINGS- Highlight Cellist Mstislav Rostropovich will play selections from Beethoven, Schumann, and Britten tonight at 8:30 p.m., in a concert sponsored by the University Musical Society at Hill Auditorium. Films Cinema II - Ball of Fire, 7 p.m., His Girl Friday, 8 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Hill St. - On the Town, .7 & 9 p.m., 1429 Hill. Cinema Guild - The Stranger, 7 & 9 p.m., Lorch. AAFC - Aguirre, Wrath of God, 7:30 p.m., Distant Thunder, 9:15 p.m., MLB3. Performances School of Music - Trombone recital, Lawrence Cooper, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Theatre and Drama - "Devour the Snow" by Abe Polsky, 8 p.m., New Trueblood Arena, Frieze Building. Ark - Open mike night, 7:30, 1421 Hill. Second Chance - Masquerade. Laugh Track - Comedy triple header, Stoney Burke, Tim Slagle, Tim Rowlands, 9 p.m., U-Club. Speakers Guild House; Canterbury Loft - Christianity and Capitalism Today, Cornel West, "The Prophetic Church & the Socialist Vision," 7:30 p.m., Rec Room, St. Andrew's Church. Ind. & Oper. Engin. - Seminar, A.K. Kochhar, "Computer Integrated Manufacturing and Its Implications," 4 p.m., IOE Sem. Rm. 241. PsychiatryB- Thomas Wehr, "Seasonal Depressions - Rhythms & Blues," 10:30 a.m., CRH Aud. Western European Studies; Economics; Sociology - Ernest Mandel, "Contemporary Debates in Marxist Theory," 4 p.m., Rackham Am- phitheater. Dentistry - Oral biology seminar, Salam Syed, "Comparative Microbiology of Periodontal Disease," 4 p.m., 1033 Kellogg. Michigan Map Society - James Minton, "Modern Maps & their Research Possibilities," 8 p.m., Grad Library, Rm. 825. Jewish Social Action Committee - Zvi Gitelman, "Soviet Jews Today," 7:30 p.m., Hillel, 1429 Hill. Michigan College Republicans - Mike Nye, "Duties of a State Rep," 7 p.m., Anderson Rm., Union.. Chemistry - Analytical seminar, David Albers, "Fluoro-Immunoassay," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem; organic seminar, Steven Tanis, "Furans as Synthons in the Preparation of Bioactive Natural Products," 4 p.m., 1300 Chem. New England Lit Program - Informational meeting and slide show for spring term in New Hampshire, 8 p.m., Angell Aud. D. Computing Center - Forrest Hartman, "Intro to TELL-A-GRAFF," 3:30 p.m., 165 Bus. Ad. Sociology - Thomas Scheff, "Research on Emotions," 4 p.m., Rackham E. Conf. Rm. Minority Student Services, Trotter House - Neftali Garcia, "Economic and Ecological Crisis in Puerto Rico; A Case in Utilization & Abuse of Natural Resources," 7:30 p.m., Rackham W Conf. Rm. English - Young writers series, poet Ian Reid, 4 p.m., Rackham W. Conf. Rm. Project Community - Panel discussion, "Career Options in Law," 4:30 p.m., Rm.116,Hutchens Hall. International Center - Slide show, Year in Scandinavia Program, noon, International Center; Physics and Humanities - Brian Josephson, "Intelligence and Reality," 4 p.m., 170 Astronomy Bldg. Center for Afroamerican and African Studies; Office of Ethicsand I ,e1igion-,Cornel West, "Tie 196W's and Afro-America: A Black Christian Socialist Perspective," noon, Rm.1309 School of Education.. Center for Russian and East European Studies - Bill Zimmerman, "A Report on the Soviet Interview Project," noon, Lane Hall Commons Rm. Marxist Humanist News and Letters Committee - Eyewitness reports by lab sit-in and Nov. 12 march on Washington participants, 8 p.m., East Quad Rm. 124. Meetings Michigan Gay Undergraduates - 9 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice, 7 p.m., CCRB Martial Arts Rm. Academic Alcoholics -1:30 p.m., Alano Club. Science Fiction Club - 8:15 p.m., League. Miscellaneous Museum of Art - Art Break, Jeanette Goldberg, "Woodcuts," 12:10 p.m. Student Alumni Council - First & Foremost Week, Maize & Blue "Tackey" Dress Contest & Cheering Contest, 7 p.m., Dooley's. Student Wood and Crafts Shop - Power Tools Safety, 6 p.m., 537 SAB. CEW - Math Review, 7:30 p.m., MLB. Friends of UM Hospitals - Holiday Bell Bazaar, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., private dining rooms adjoining the main.cafeteria; bake sale, 7:30 a.m., fifth floor elevator lobby.M Undergraduate English Association - Poetry reading, bring your own poems, 6 p.m., Rm. 124 East Quad. Transcendental Meditation - Intro to TM program, 8 p.m., 528 W. Liberty. WCBN - Women's Rites and Rhythms, 6 p.m., Black Affairs Show, 6:30 p.m., 88.3 FM. Red Cross - Blpood drive, 11 a.m.,to 4:30 p.m., Union. Breakthrough - Dramatically Able, drama workshop for able and disabled persons, 4:30 p.m., Rm. C, League. University of Michigan Straight Shooters - Straight Shooters Turkey Shoot, 10 a.m. -7 p.m., indoor range, top floor of North University Building. Opryland - Talent search, 1-4 p.m., Union Assembly Hall. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 alicious Intent ° ' r Panel tofight black The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 16, 1983 -Page 3 enrollmnt drop By GEORGEA KOVANIS Presidents of the University's dormitory minority councils have banded together to fight declining minority enrollment by helping with recruitment and retention programs and lobbying for increased finan- cial aid. According to Douglas Middlebrooks, chairman of the newly-formed Minority President's Council, the coalition was created earlier this week to improve communication between minority groups on campus. "WE WANT TO make a plan to increase the num- ber of minorities and keep them here," said Mid- dlebrooks, who is president of the Markley Minority Council. Middlebrooks said the coalition was formed par- tially as a response to figures released recently which show that black enrollment at the University is at 4.9 percent - a two percent drop since 1977. He said the council, by staging its own programs to encourage new minority students, can help relieve some of the pressure forced on minority faculty members. "THE PROBLEM of minority recruitment and retention seems to be left on minority faculty," he said. "We'll be working, hopefully, with some area of admissions, and some area of housing," said Mosher- Jordan Minority Council President Vickie Davis.She said the coalition will publicize the resources available to minority students. Middlebrooks said part of the problem could be. solved by increasing financial aid for minority :# students to match the levels at other schools. "Michigan can compete," he said. "We just have to get off our duffs and do it." Ronald McDonald shelter to open in Ann Arbor By REBECCA KNOX Parents coming to Ann Arbor to be with their seriously ill children while they receive medical treatment will no longer have to pay a fortune to stay near the hospital. A "Ronald McDonald House," one of a national network of temporary homes for families of hospitalized children, is scheduled to open in Ann Arbor in late summer of next year. The shelter is the second such facility to be located in Michigan. ALTHOUGH BACKERS of the fund- raising drive are currently negotiating for several sites, no specific location has been selected yet. The facility which planners hope will include as many as 20 bedrooms, will probably be located near Mott's Children's Hospital, they said. Memebers of the Ann Arbor Junior Service League are coordinating the drive to raise $1.2 million to cover start- up costs for the house. According to League President Gretchen Wieting- Sherwood, who will serve as president of Arbor House, Inc., owners and operators of McDonald's restaurants throughout Michigan have already pledged $350,000 to the project. The McDonald's Corp. has donated $25,000. Once the facility is established, Wieting-Sherwood said area parents, business and community leaders, and hospital representatives will help main- tain it. ANN ARBOR was selected as a Ronald McDonald House location because of the quality of the medical services available in the area. "We had so much need up against other areas," Wieting-Sherwood said. She estimated that as many as 3,000 children are brought to the city each year for treatment. Mary Griffith, one of the members of the board of directors, said she decided to help create the Ann Arbor facility because of her personal experiences with caring for a sick child. GRIFFITH's FAMILY stayed in a Ronald McDonald House in Philadelphia for four months while 13- year-old Jennifer received treatment for leukemia. The room cost the family $5 a night, which allowed them to stay in the city until the girl's treatment was complete. "You think that you're the only one it (having a sick child) could happen to," Griffith said. "In a Ronald McDonald House, the parents stick together and help each other. It's not just lodging. It's emotional support." Griffith, who lives in Ohio, offered her services to the Ann Arbor house because of what she saw at Mott's while Jennifer was receiving treatment there. "Parents were sleeping in the halls, anywhere they could find to sleep," she said. "Cheap lodging was something they just didn't have." Griffith is writing a book on her ex- perience, which she plans to call Road in the Dark. She says the house is "something close to her heart." [(SHOP NOW FOR A CHRISTMAS GIFT THAT WON'T BE DUPLICATED Giant Selection PFD- Flashglance Dpily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Only the photographer's lens can capture such a unique version of last night's snowy weather. But Reggie Harvey, a senior in the music school, probably wasn't thinking about creativity as he hovers underneath his umbrella outside, Burton Tower. GEO vote end; U' finds new members (Continued from Page 1) student assistants membership status. Union dues typically are paid through deductions in payroll checks after' a teaching or staff assistant returns a card authorizing such payment. Gamble said that most of the errors occurred with new employees who tur- ned in a deduction card for the first time. Gamble also attributed the problem to the uniqueness of the GEO deduction system, which differs from other union's systems. The system "really hasn't had a lot of experience," Gamble said. But "we're going to take steps to ensure that this doesn't happen again," he said. Gene Goldenfeld, GEO's elections committee coordinator, charged that the union lost more than 100 members because of both the confusion over the membership list and a confusing letter the University sent to teaching and staff assistants to explain the deduction system. BECAUSE GEO is an agency shop, all teaching and staff assistants must either join the Union of pay a represen- tation service fee to GEO. Only mem- bers are allowed to vote on the proposed contract. To ratify the agreement, 50 percent plus one of the union's current mem- bership must vote in favor of it. GEO's membership, including the names just cleared up, is now estimated at about 650, not 776, as stated in yesterday's Daily. The union represents about 1,700 teaching and staff assistants at the University. GEO reached the tentative contract agreement with the University in Sep- tember. If it is approved, it will be the first contract between the union and the University since 1975. i INDIVIDUAL THEAT F~hA~e of L~bert 701"! Q WED. SAT. SUN. SHOWS $2.00 BEFORE 6:00P.M. ENDS SOON! ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S REAR WIND RES "9700 0W WEDNESDAY; CHEERING CONTEST 7- 9p.m. BEAT OHIO STATE! JAMES STEWART GRACE KELLY THURS.; 7:15, =9 4 "WO)' 1.15 1.11, c.lc.7.1C 01 ii ""u. : "1 5, :3",5:15,-:15a,9:15 NON-STOP THRILLS! Sean Connery in "NEVER SAY NEVER AGAIN" (PG) DOLBY STEREO THURS. 7:00, 9:30 WED. 1:00, 3:30,7:00, 9:30 Earn 8 Credits This Spring in NEW HAMPSHIRE THE NEW ENGLAND LITERATURE PROGRAM, MASS MEETING & SLIDE SHOW WED., NOV. 16, 8 p.m. AUDITORIUM D ANGELL HALL for more information PROF. WALTER CLARK Dept. of English 761-9579 Hear Ye! Hear Ye! Join Colony Craftsmen in the 18th Century X Lucas o. Rec C.nte M Q-M Uw iX. Novemer x9 &420,19T8pk. Admucssio .....Co ..... $2. Adn t s" M?'t}MUME HO (Na xt4,Oi p. Ad iso ............... A.00rdult MiV VVV I I V V 4V I Y1 1 6 iU