The Michigan Daily - Thursday, December 1, 1983 - Page 3 -HAPPENINGS- Highlight A three-day conference on U.S. policies toward health and human rights in Central America begins with a lecture by Charles Clements on medical neutrality at 7:30 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheater. The conference, titled "Health in Central America: Medical Neutrality and the Crisis in Health .Care," is sponsored by the University's School of Public Health. Films Cinema Guild - One-Eyed Jacks, 7 & 9:30 p.m., Lorch. Women's Studies - Yudie, Woo Who, noon, MLB 2.. Performances School of Music - Opera workshop, 8 p.m., Rackham; piano recital with Fernando Garcia Torres, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Performance Network - "Waiting for Godot," 8 p.m., 408 W. Washington. Ark-Mike Cross, 8p.m., 1421 Hill. Union Cultural Arts Holiday - "The Business of Good Government"' per- formed by the Residential College's Brecht Company, 12:15 p.m., Pen- dleton Room, Michigan Union. Second Chance - Salem Witchcraft, 516 E. Liberty. Speakers ITI - Shimon Nof "New Tools for Planning Robotic Assembly Systems," 3:30 p.m., Chrysler Center. Rackham - David Roberts, "Hydrophobic Ligand Binding by the Lima Bean Lectin," 4 p.m., 3554 C.C. Little. Rackham - Robert Langbaum, "Pound & Eliot," 4 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham. Marxist Group - "Brazil," 7:30 p.m., 2443 Mason Hall. English department - Ann Hermann, "Theorizing the Maternal: French vs. American Approaches to the Feminine," 7:30 p.m., Fourth floor con- ference room, Rackham. Chemistry department - Peter Silveston, "Forced Cyclic Operation of Chemical Reactors," 11:30a.m., 1017 Dow Building. Medical school - Panel discussion, "Coping With the Holidays," 7-9 p.m., third floor, main hospital. Russian & East European Studies - Olga Davydoff Dax, "My Decembrist Ancestors," 4 p.m., Slavic department lounge, third floor, MLB. Museum of Anthropology - Brown bag with Tim Johns, "Aymara Taste Preferences and Plant Domestication," noon, 2009 Museums Building. SYDA Foundation - "The Science of Meditation," 8p.m., 1522 Hill. Friends of the Ann Arbor Public Library - Jane Myers, "One Woman's Viewpoint," 7:30 .m., Meeting Room, 343 S. Fifth. International Student Pugwash - Carl Cohen, "The Ethics of Human Sub- jects in Research," noon, Room D, Michigan League. Center for Japanese Studies - Hiroshi Watanbe, "Japan Folk Culture As Seen From Northern Cultures: Dwelling Habits," noon, Lane Hall Commons Room. American Arab Anti-Discrimination League - Roberta Strauss Feuerlict, 7 p.m., 1414 Hill. -Meetings Cooperative Outdoor Adventures - 7:30 p.m:, 1402 Mason. Undergraduate English Association - Social committee, 5 p.m., literary committee, 7 p.m., seventh floor, Haven Hall lounge. Eating Disorder Self-Help Group - 7-9 p.m., Green Room, First United Methodist Church, corner of Huron and State. Medical Center - Bible study, 12:30 p.m., Room F2230, Mott Hospital. CEW - Step before the job search, 1:30-3 p.m., 350S. Thayer. Psychiatry Anxiety Disorders Support Group - 7:30-9 p.m., third floor conference room, Children's Psychiatric Hospital. Fencing Club -8-10 p.m., Coliseum, corner of Hill and Fifth. Scotish Country Dancers - Beginners, 7 p.m.; intermediates, 8 p.m., Forest Hills community Center, 2351 Shadowood, Student Wood & Crafts Shop - Advanced power tools safety, 6-8 p.m., 537 SAB. League International Night - Germany, 5-7:15 p.m., Michigan League Cafeteria. Eclipse Jazz - Jam session 9:30 p.m., University Club, Michigan Union. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of ' Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Steiner says student input needed By CHERYL BAACKE Students shouldn't be given a position on LSA's top decision-making committee, but student knowledge and input are needed in other areas, LSA Dean Peter Steiner said yesterday. "Student input into decision-making can be very viable in certain areas," Steiner told about 20 people at Campus Meet the Press. But he said he thought students are better suited to serve on departmental committees than on the LSA Executive Committee, which makes sensitive personnel and budget decisions. LSA STUDENT Government members have fought for several years to create a voting student position on the Executive Committee, but have been unsuc- cessful. In addition to serving on committees, Steiner said, students can voice their opinions through course evaluations. Changes in student interests sometimes are a factor in deciding which programs to review, he said. Reviews are carried on continually-five to seven departments are reviewed each year-and changes in faculty, budget concerns, and shifts in student needs and interests can all spark a review, Steiner said. THE SELECTIVE cuts that sometimes result from departmental reviewssare preferable to across-the- board reductions, he said. "I think that's the only way one can control our mission and our destiny. I'd rather make those decisions deliberately than by random," Steiner said. The college must also plan for projected declines in student enrollment over the next few years, he said. The college could cut the number of classes it offers, but would risk becoming less diverse. Or, LSA could attempt to attract more out-of-state students to make up for the loss of tuition revenue. "We probably should have started worrying about this five years ago, but better now than five years from now," Steiner said. HOWEVER, STEINER SAID he doesn't foresee any major LSA reorganizations in the near future, aside from the impending merger between the com- puter and communication sciences department and computer engineering courses. Demand for computer courses is growing faster than the University's equipment and faculty mem- bers can handle, Steiner said. Although the merger is still in the planning stages, it appears to be a reasonable idea, he said. "I believe we will succeed in maintaining our program and, indeed, in im- proving it," Steiner added. Although Steiner answered many questions about LSA's future, some members of the audience were more concerned with current LSA programs. Steiner said concerns for the competency of teaching assistants are legitimate and he said the college is solving problems of poor English skills and inadequate teaching methods. Steiner noted that TAs are not chosen primarily for their teaching ability, but for their knowledge as graduate students. "If they are knowledgeable and hardworking, they can learn to teach, even if they are not born teachers," he said. LSA currently tests all TAs whose native language is not English, and offers classes to instructors who cannot pass the test. Courses to improve teaching ability fall under the jurisdiction of a number of LSA departments. i City protesters ace arrest at Walled Lake (Continued from Page l) ~; t t e ]w h e h j?.if rn.., c *(- mnAl? hrp ifferen nt are still in jail because they refuse to post bail. University student Peggy Garrigues, an LSA senior, was arrested yesterday along with members of a Christian group, the Detroit Peace Community, including several clergymen. Garrigues was still in Oakland County jail at press time last night, according to group member Wayne Large. Demonstrators could be sentenced to a month in jail for violating the injun- tion or the trespassing aws. ey face up to a year in jail for conspiring to commit a misdemeanor. EVERY PERSON participating in the blockades is a member of an af- finity group, which is structured to establish discipline among the par- ticipants. Guidelines include instruc- ting group members to refrain from violence. Since Janaury, members of the East Lansing-based religious group Covenant for Peace have been distributingie a ets outsiae eacory gates urging the company end its government contract to produce the missile engines. To call attention to the recent deployment of cruise missiles in West Germany, and the company's produc- ton of the missile engines, Covenant for Peace members organized a demon- stration that drew approximately 1000 protesters to company grounds last Sunday. SINCE MONDVI ,I UM: , e. n groups have continued the protest by blockading the gate and have been arrested before dwindling crowds of less than 50 people. The blockades will continue until Saturday. Each participant in the blockade today will have at least one support person who has the responsibility of taking care of the arrested protester while he or she is in jail. Mo~r C ttII1 j'(/! V '*'\ Malicious Intent e! } 1N"' i " f- ; I S c W10E WITH A 3LOWC-UN © Erik Taylor/Andy Hill The MichiganDoily a: call or 0 ue an mefree. - - - a Id