HAPPENINGS- Highlight Bertolt Brecht's 1930 play St. Joan of the Stockyards opens tonight at the Residential College Auditorium, 701 East University. The show, which begins at 8 p.m. tonight will play for the next two weekends. Performances UAC - Soundstage, 8:30 p.m., U-Club, Union. The Ark - Deborah Silverstein, 8 p.m., 1421 Hill. 4 Union Arts Program - Music at Midday, Judy Tsou, Harpsichord 12:15, Pendleton Rm., Union. School of Music - Eric Johnson, viola recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall, School of Music. Speakers Museum of Anthropology - Olivier de Montmollin, "Settlement Patterns in the Rosario Valley, Chiapas, Mexico," noon, 2009 Museums. - English - Colloquium on Critical Theory, Michelle Gellrich, "Aristotle & Tragic Conflict," 7:30 p.m., W. Conf. Rm., Rackham. Industrial Technology Institute - Michael Brady, "Artificial Intelligence & Robotics," 3:30p.m., Chrysler Ctr. Aud., 2121 Bonisteel Blvd. Alice Lloyd Hall - Rep. Perry Bullard will meet with students at 8:30 p.m. in the main lobby at Alice Lloyd Hall. Computing Ctr. - Chalk Talk, CC Consulting Staff, "Handy Editor Pat- terns," 12:10 p.m., 1011 NUBS; Forrest Hartman, "Intro to Textforms II: How to Use Macros," 3:30 p.m.,,165 Bus. Ad. CLRT - Faculty Workshop, George Williams, "Beginning Darkroom Techniques," 2:30-6 p.m. To register, call 763-2367. Interdepartmental Program in Medicinal Chemistry -Henry Lau, 4 p.m., 3554 C.C. Little. Lutheran Campus Ministry - Kauper Lecture, Kay Baerwald, 4 p.m., Michigan Rm., League. Rackham, LSA; W. European Studies; Victorian Semester '84 - Peter Brimblecombe, "London Fog: Fin-de-Siecle Nightmare," 4 p.m., W. Conf. Rm., Rackham. Human Resource Department - "Effective Business Writing," 10:30 a.m.; "Grammer: A Modern Review," 1p.m., Rm. 4051. * CEW - "Women in Science: Resume Writing for Science Majors," noon, at CEW. Statistics - Elizabeth Stasny, "Estimating Gross Flows in Labor Force Participation Using Information from Individuals with Incomplete Classifications," 4 p.m., 451 Mason Hall. Center for Japanese Studies - Donna Winkelman & Lori Sobson, "Where SDo We Go From Here? Career Opportunities in Japanese Studies," noon, Lane Hall Commons. Macromolecular Research Center - Dragutin Fles, "Alternating Copolymers prepared by Charge-Transre Complex Monomers Copolymerization," 3 p.m., Rm. 4403, Chem. Bldg. Chemistry - C.E. Nordman, "Symmetry in Biological Macromolecules as a Source of Crystallographic Phase Information," 4 p.m., Rm. 1200, Chem Bldg. Meetings Medical Center Bible Study -12:30 p.m., Rm. F2230 Mott Hosp. Fencing Club - Practice, 8-10 p.m., Coliseum, Hill & Fifth. Psychiatry - Ankiety Disorders Support Group, 7:30 p.m., 3rd Floor Conf. Rm., Children's Psych. Hosp. College of Engineering - Michael Brady, "Artificial Intelligence and Robotics," 3:30 p.m., Carroll Auditorium, Chrysler Ctr. Ann Arbor Support Group for the Farm Labor Organization Committee - 7 p.m., Rm. 4318, Union. Baptist Student Union - Open Bible Study, 7 p.m., Rm. C, 3rd Floor, Union. Graduate Christian Fellowship - John Sonego speaking, 7 p.m., Rm. D, League. Michigan Alliance for Disarmament - Nuclear Free Zone Campaign, Mass meeting, 7:30 p.m., Canterbury Loft, 332 S. State. McGovern at Michigan - 7:30 p.m., Michigan Rm., Union. Miscellaneous Michigan League - Michigan vs. Korea, 5-7:15 p.m., Cafeteria. Scottish Country Dancers - Beginners, 7 p.m.; Intermediate, 8 p.m., Forest Hills Community Ctr., 2351 Shadowood. Students Wood & Crafts Shop - Advanced Power Tools Safety, 6-8 p.m., 537SAB Basketball - Michigan vs. Wisconsin, 8 p.m., Crisler Arena. Student Alumni Council; Residence Hall Association - Li'l Sibs Weekend Registration, outside dorm cafeterias. Free University - forum, "Military Research at the University," 8 p.m., South Quad. 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 3 y 2 $ Y 6ur r ri r The Michigan Daily --Thursday, March 1, 1984 - Page 3 Black colleges n i By ALLISON ZOUSMER On the last day of Black History Mon- th yesterday, 30 students and faculty at the School of Education looked at one of black America's most troubled in- stitutions - black colleges. Timothy Donaldson, chairman of the board of trustees of Fisk University admitted the school faces problems, but said "Fisk will survive." OVER THE last five years, the Ten- nessee school's enrollment has dropped from 1,200 students to 700 students, and students have even asked for money on street corners to help pay heating bills. "Money is always a problem for black colleges," Donaldson said. He said Fisk faces "outstanding bills of $2 million." Despite its current problems, Donaldson said "Fisk will survive (and) . . . continue its mission . . . to educate people of color." BLACK COLLEGES have been deeply hurt by the recession, according to Donaldson, and they do not have the same financial resources to draw on as white schools. He said an average white family who sends a child to college has an income of $26,800 a year, while their black counterpart only makes $12,000 a year. This disparity forces about 60 percent of the students at a school like Fisk to seek financial aid, which drains a college financially. But Donaldson said that Fisk, which was one of the first to "dare to give, blacks an education in Greek and, literature" and other liberal arts topics, will survive. HE POINTED to a Carnegie Foun- dation study which says "black- colleges, even with fewer resources, educate black students better 'than white colleges do." Fisk is also far ahead in the number of students who go on to graduate school, according to Donaldson. He said 75 percent of Fisk students go on to graduate school compared to 43 percent of undergraduates nationwide. Donaldson criticized suggestions that. black colleges such .as Fisk practice segregation. He said Fisk's charger prohibits "anything that smacks of racial discrimination," adding that the school is willing to accept white students. Such attacks on black colleges are unfair, Donaldson said, when all-women schools such as Wellesley College, and religious schools such as Notre Dame are not included. "FISK IS a valuable asset," Donald- son said and the school will not give up its uniqueness to merge into Ten- nessee's public university system to solve its current problems. Tuesday night, black students from, the School of Music made their con- tribution to Fisk by playing a benefit; concert at Hale Auditorium to raise money for the school. Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Timothy Donaldson, chairman of the board of trustees of Fisk University says at the School of Education yesterday that black colleges educate black students better than white colleges do. Bartender testifies in alleged gang rape, From AP and UPI FALL RIVER, Mass. - A New Bed- ford bartender testified yesterday he tried to get help for a young woman being gang raped on his tavern's pool table, but one of her attackers blocked his path to a telephone. The woman said she had gone to Big Dan's bar to buy cigarettes and stopped to talk to a woman. She bought a drink, played a tune on the jukebox and wat- ched two men play pool while she showed pictures of her two daughters to the woman. WHEN SHE got up to leave, someone grabbed her from behind. Someone grabbed her legs. She was dragged to the pool table in the back of the bar, stripped from the waist down and raped by one man while another man held her. down, she said. The 0,06traded places and, she said, she was raked again: Two men tried to force her to perform oral sex. There were others in the bar, she said but no one helped. "I was begging for help. I was pleading," she said. THE BARTENDER, Carlos Machado, whose remarks were tran- slated from Portuguese into English by a courtroom interpreter, characterized the attack as a "dirty thing" and testified how he had tried to leave Big Dan's Tavern to call police. But, he told the Bristol Superior Court jury, defendant Virgilio Medeiros blocked his way, saying: " 'Where are you going? You're not going anywhere.'" Machado said he gave another bar- tender a dime for a pay phone, but the man told him he was afraid of the woman's alleged attackers. He never made the call, Machado said. BIOLOGICALIPHYSICAL SCIENCES... You're Needed All Over the World. Ask Peace Corps volunteers why they are using their Science major, minor, or aptitude in health clinics and classrooms in Malaysia. Why do they use them in fish pond culture projects and experimental forms in Western Samoa? They'll tell you their ingenuity and flexibility are as important as their degrees. Ask them why Peace Corps is the toughest job you'll ever love. PEACE CORPS STUDENT HEALTH AIDES SValuable work experience in health care Provide to education and service Air Force jet hits Spanish peers App Iic a t ions / hills, 1 7 die Infor mation Education - 1320 (Continued from Page 1) Health 763 target. Lt. Col. William Johnson, spokesman at the U.S. Air Force's European headquarters at Ramstein, West Ger- many, said rescue workers recovered the bodies of the 17 American and one Spanish victim from the weckage of the plane. U.S. officials in West Germany said they would not know the cause of the crash until an official investigation was complete. UniVersit, 7 Health Service' Appl ic at ion Deadline March 12, 1984 ISN'T THAT. NERB's WIFE RUNNING AR~OUND WITH THAT HAMSTERp? C Eric Taylor-Andy Hill The Michigan Daily INDUSTRIAL ARTS!VOC ED... You're Needed All Over