HAPPENINGS- Highlight SUNDAY Georgia State Senator Julian Bond will speak tonight at 7 at the Alumni Center. A reception sponsored by the Black Student Union, The Michigan Student Assembly and the office of Community Services will be held after the speech at Trotter House. Films Hill Street - Topele, 1429 Hill St., 7 & 9 p.m. Mediatrics - From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China, Nat. Sci., 7 & 8:30 p m. Cinema II - The Three Ages Aud. A, 7 p.m.; College, Aud. A, 9 p.m. Cinema Guild - Devi, Lo'ch, 7 & 8:45 p.m. Performances ABENG - Classical Recital, Greene Lounge, East Quad, 3 p.m. Young Peoples Theater - The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, Performance network, 410 W. Washington, 2 & 8 p.m. -PTP - Play, "Butley,"Mendelssohn Theatre, 2p.m. S eakers irst Presbyterian Church - Rene Hurtado, Salvadoran refugee, "Soldier to Refugee: A Conversion Story," First Presbyterian Church 4 p.m. American Baptist Campus Foundation, U-M Office of Ethics and Religion, Association of Religious Counselers at U-M P Theologian martin Marty, "Religiog and the Values of Crisis: What are the Options," Rackham Aud., 7:30p.m. Miscellaneous Muslim Students Assoc. - Class for Quran study, Arabic & teachings of Islam for children & adults, Muslim House, 407 N. Ingalls, 10 a.m. Computing Ctr. - Tour of the N. Campus Computing Ctr., 2-4 p.m., Registration req., call 764-9595. Intl. Folk Dance Club - workshop on advanced Balkan dances, taught by Steve Kotanski, Anderson Rm., Michigan Union, 1-3 p.m. Free University - "Political Music Workshop," Canterbury Loft, 1:30 p.m.; "Media and Politics" course, informational meeting, Canterbury Loft, 4 p.m. Highlight MONDAY The Husng office is sponsoring a Soul Food Dinner at Couzens cafeteria from 4:30 to 6:15 p.m. tonight, in celebration of Black History month. The dinner will be followed at 10 p.m. with a showing of the film, Lady Sings the Blues in Mosher-Jordan's Nikki Giovanni Lounge. Films Cinema Guild - The Face of Another, Lorch, 7 p.m. Alt. Act. - Witches and Faggots - Dykes and Poofters, Rm. 126, E. Quad, 8 p.m. Mosher-Jordan - Lady Sings the Blues, Nikki Giovanni Lounge, 10 p.m. Performances Michigan Union Art Programs - Concert of the month, harpsichordist Bradley Brookshire plays Bach, Scarlatti, Frescobaldi & Ravel, Pendleton Rm., 8pm. Guild House - Poetry readings, Charles Wasserberg & Sandra Steingraber, 8 p.m. Near Easter & North African Studies - Raymond Stock, "Original Dramatic Poetry & Translations from Arabic Verse," Lane Hall Commons Rm., noon. Seakers heinistry- Douglas Williams, "Methanol to Hydrocarbons: A Review of the Mobil Process, '1200 Chem., 4p.m. Biol. Sciences - Napcy Bahman, "Isolati n of a cDNA-Clone for Beef Cytochrome Oxidase IV,"139 Nat.Sci., noon. Computing Ctr. - Forrest Hartman, "Intro to TELL-A-GRAF, P How to Make Simple Graphs on the Plotter," 165 Bus. Ad., 3:30-5 p.m. CRLT --TA workshop, Timothy L. Walter, "Learning/Teaching Strategies," 3-6 p.m., to register call 763-2396. Meetings Turner Geriatric Clinic - Intergenerational Women's Group, 1010 Wall St., 16a.m.-noon. Society for Creative Anachronism -8 p.m., call 996-4290. Botticelli Game Players - Dominicks, noon. Research Club - Rackham Ampitheatre, 8 p.m., LSA - Faculty meeting, Angell Aud. A, 4:10 p.m. SACUA - 4025 Fleming, 3 p.m. Asian American Assoc. - Trotter House, 6:30p.m. Human Growth Center - Eating Disorder Self-Help Group,-2002 Hogback Rd. #13, 7:30 p.m. Miscellaneous Eclipse - Jazz improvisation workshop for intermediates, led by David Swain, Assembly Hall, Michigan Union, 7-8:30 p.m. Tae Kwon Do Club - practice, CCRB Martial Arts Rm., 6-8 p.m. Housing - Black History Month Celebration - soul Food Dinner, Couszens cafeteria, 4:30-6:15 p.m. Artist & Craftsmen Guild - Artspace Workshop classes, call 763-4430. SYDA Foundation - medication class, "Beyond Psychology: Meditation," talk by Harry Cohen, 1522 Hill St., 8 p.m. Human Resource Development - Workshop, "Word Processors, Hands On," Rm. 1050 Admin. Services Bldg., 1-4 p.m. Soundings: A Center for Women in their Middle Years - "Woman to* Woman" class taught by Lynne Csrbeck, 7:30 to 9:30, call 665-2606 for registration. Free University - "Co-ops: Working Toward Economic Democracy cour- se," informational meeting, 4th Floor, Michigan Union, 4 p.m.; "Tenants Rights and Tenants Organizing" course, informational meeting, Canterbury Loft, 8 p.m. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Maliious Intent I The Michigan Daily - Sunday, February 5, 1984 - Page 3 Prof and son invent a mat board game By MICHAEL JOHNSTON What do University math professors do on their spare time? One University math professor inven- ted a game and started his own cor- poration to produce and market it. It took 25 years for Prof. Charles Titus and his son Steve to perfect "Kaliko," a new game of geometry, but it has finally reached the market and received the praise of Omni science magazine and a trade publication en- titled Games. KALIKO IS played by placing hexagonal pieces on a board, and the object is to match up the lines and arcs painted on the top of each token into various geometric shapes such as lines and circles. Players receive points for the number of pieces in each completed pattern. "It's a game with no gimmicks, said Titus' son Steve, who helps him manufacture Kaliko. And without such complexities, it is. easy to learn, said Titus. "Kids can catch on quick, and beat the hell out of their parents," Prof. Titus added. KALIKO IS the perfected version of "Psyche-paths," another game Titus invented about 10 years ago. But Psyche-paths didn't sell well because it was poorly marketed, explains Titus. "It wasn't visually appealing and was made of cheap cardboard," he said. Another problem with psyche-paths was that Titus sold the production rights and "lost control of the quality." With that experience under his belt, the second time around, Titus decided to produce Kaliko on his own, even though he had to "mortgage everything" to start his company, Future Classics Inc. that manufactured and promoted the game. TITUS EXPLAINED that his son had to design a special "fancy saw machine" to cut the game, pieces because no existing machine could handle the job. The game is now manufactured in Steve's basement. The key to success in the game in- dustry, Titus said, is to produce a game which is durable and appeals to all ages. And from the Kelly Mylnek's com- ments, a 12 year-old contestant in the first annual Kaliko tournament yester- day at the Union, Titus has 'succeeded - at least with the younger generation. "If you don't like playing the game, you can make puzzles and stuff," she said. Daily °hoto by DAN HABIB Ooh la la One of the student models in the week long ABENG Minority Arts Festival displays casualwear from Bivouac during last night's fashion show at East Quad. Mayor to fight crime .in Detroit inner city Book says American pilots aided Israelis DETROIT (UPI) - Mayor.Coleman Young is asking community leaders for help in stemming the city-wide rise of violent crime - including the rapes of 50 schoolgirls. City Council President Erma Hen- derson said yesterday the council needs Young's help to halt the growing crime problem. "THERE IS no room for division," she said. Young said leaders in criminal justice, religion, business, labor and education have been asked to attend a "community summit meeting" Tuesday. "The people I have invited share the deep concern we all have over violent crime in our city," Young said. THE MEETING was scheduled amid a growing groundswell of community concern over the city's rising crime rate and outrage over reports of sexual assaults on at least 50 schoolgirls in recent months. Earlier this week, Young said that "cooperation between citizens" is the only way to deal with the wave of rapes and other assaults. Police figures show the number of reported rapes in Detroit during the fir- st 11 months of last year soared 31.8 percent. Homicides also climbed 14.9, percent, robberies were up 8.5 percent and assaults up 9.2 percent. "IT HAS BECOME a shock and a shame to our city that 50 girls have been (sexually) attacked," said Hen- derson, "and we don't know how many have gone unreported." Meanwhile, the city's grass roots an- ti-crime efforts appeared to be gaining steam. About 100 parents and students at Northern High School, where a 14-year- old girl reported she was raped in the school last week, met Friday in the school library to discuss security. WASHINGTON (UPI) - A new book, based partly on declassified U.S. documents, says American pilots flew combat reconnaissance missions for the Israelis during the 1967 war. The book, "Taking Sides" by Stephen Green (William Morrow and Co:, New York), also says that the United States turned a blind eye when Israel built a nuclear weapon. In addition, Green presents new evidence on the 1967 Israeli attack on the U.S. Navy ship "liberty," which killed 44 people. He indicates that the attack was not an accident as claimied by the Israelis, and that the Israelis even warned a U.S. military attache of the impending attack one day before it occurred. The warning was ignored, and a sub- sequent alert to the ship and the U.S. 6th Fleet was misrouted by U.S. technicians to the Far East, the book says. The U.S. intelligence ship was at- tacked, according to the book, because. it was eavesdropping on Israeli radio transmissions that revealed the Israelis were breaking a cease-fire in the West Bank and were secretly moving troops from the western front to the Golan Heights for a new attack there. "Taking Sides" reviews U.S.-Israeli relations from 1948 to the end of the Six- Day war in 1967. Another volume is planned by Green to bring the record up to date. Green, who lives in Vermont, has been a writer and researcher for the Council on Foreign Relations, the Car- negie Endowment and the United Nations Association. Among his charges: " U.S. pilots stationed in West Germany were secretly flown to Israel in 1967, where thy flew RF4C reconnaissance missions for the.Israeli armed forces during the fighting with Egypt. The planes had advance cameras, as well as side-looking radar that Israel did not have, Green said. President Lyndon Johnson and other U.S. officials denied Arab charges at the time that American pilots were flying combat missions for the Israelis. Neither the Defense Department nor the Israeli Embassy have responded to a request by United Press International to comment on Green's charge. SUMMER BOYS CAMP IN NORTHERN MICHIGAN John Kiseda, Director of Camp Mahn-qo-Tah-See, Hale, Mich- igan will be on. campus, Tues- day, February 7th to interview prospective staff members and campers. Interested persons should stop by the Michigan Union from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. for further information. Western Union satellite lost after launch (Continued from Page 1) They found only two large object never tracked before and a number of smaller pieces in orbit that would be consistent with a failure of the satellite to climb on its rocket. WE attempted to communicate with some of those objects without any suc- cess today," Ziegler said. "We are not at all certain these objects are Westar VI or PAM the satellite's rocket carrier." Ziegler said possible causes of the satellite-rocket failure are too many to list. "The possibility of an explosion is one of the; possibilities that is being looked at," he said. "We have no con- firming evidence it was or it was not." A second customer, the government of Indonesia, had NASA postpone yesterday's shuttle launching of Palapa-$, an electronic twin to the Westar VI.- A decision was pending whether to release it today or tomorrow, or to bring it back home. ON that decision hinged another: 0 * CelebrateN 0 Day 0 should the Challenger stay up an extra day. to accommodate the delay. , On Tuesday and Thursday, mission specialists Robert Stewart and Bruce McCandless are to don back packs and perform the first space walk without a lifeline. Shuttle astronauts have launched five satellites previously, using the same system. The satellite is attached to a rocket stage called a "Payload Assist Module," or PAM, which is pushed out of the cargo by by powerful springs. The shuttle moves eight miles away and turns its underside to PAM to avoid damage from the rocket blast that. comes automatically 45 minutes later. Since astronauts can't see the firing, the only indication that it is moving as planned comes from telemetry signals.. On Friday, a ground station thought, it had received a signal, but that proved to be false. TUESDAY LUNCH DISCUSSION February 7, 1984 - 12 Noon "SUPER POWER POLITICS AND THE SUFFERING PEOPLE OF VIETNAM AND KAMPUCHEA" SPEAKER: The Reverend Barbara Fuller, Indo-China Consultant for the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), and Interfaith Council for Peace (Peace & Justice issues) THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 At the International Center 603 E. Madison Street For Additional Information please phone 662-5529 HEANW HILE, AT THE R~OUND TAB3LE fl qrL IT f)O\,\ 1 ,.t lf VU"Iv O . \ _ Ai~// Valentine's With t tt 1wut*. 0 0 a Sponsored by THE ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER CHURCH WOMEN UNITED IN ANN ARBOR TAKE THE LEAD Help New Students Discover the Diversity of Michigan BE A FALL ORIENTA TION T T IA T m"".