HAPP NI SUNDAY Highlight Sc ool o Music faculty members perform in a i works ly Reger, Mohler, Beethoven, and Rachmanin sored by the University Musical Society, begins a Auditorium. IFilms Cinema Guild - The 22nd Ann Arbor Film Festival 11 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Alternative Action - Born in Flames, 8p.m., Nat. S Performances School of Music 2tyni Peithfin, &eflO re if Professional Theatre Program - Miss Jue 2 Arena, Frieze Bldg. Ark - Footloose,8 p.m., 1421 Hill. UAC - Comedy Co. Comedy Troupe, 7:30 p.m.; din Hillel - One-act play, incident at Vichy, 7:30 p.m., Speakers . llet Foun-dation Henry Feingold, "How Uniqu 2:30 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Wesley Foundation - Beth Nissen, "The Church an America," 7 pin., First United Methodist Church, 602 First Presbyterian Church - Rev. Paul Dotson, 9:30 a.m.,1432 Washtenaw. Miscellaneous Free University - Workshop, "Subversion of th p.m., 3361/2 State. Men's swimming - Wolverine International, 3 p.m Music Education National Convention - Student in Our Schools Week," 4 p.m., Recital Hall. Muslim Students' Association - Islamic educatio Muslim House, 407 N. Ingalls. 4. MONDAY Highlight New Jewish Agenda sponsors a forum for repr Democratic presidential candidates. Be politically Pendleton Room of the Union at 7:30 p.m. Films. Cinema Guild - Throne of Blood, 7 p.m., Lorch. AAFC - The Given Word, 8 p.m., MLB 1. Speakers Near Eastern & North African Studies - Brown b ternational Youth Year in Oman, 1983," noon, Lane H Chemistry - Danae Christodoulou, "Coordina Synthesis by Template Reactions & Recent Chemist Neuroscience - Reveca Anderson,r Tbe Pki a1 I n ~.i40579MHBRI. mnrg'i 1.. Great Lakes & Marine Environment -Sallie Regulation in Marine Phytoplankton" 4 p.m., White Meetings Society for Creative Anachronism -8 p.m For m 4290. Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice, 6 p.m., CCRB Mart Turner Geriatric Clinic - Intergenerational Wom WallSt- Asian American Assocation - 6:30 p.m., Trotter H Human Growth Center- Eating disorder self-hel Hogback Rd;, -13. Miscellaneous Eclipse Jazz - workshop in Jazz Improvisation musicians, 7 pim:, Assembly Hall, Union. Hillel Foundation - Panel discussion, "Contem Holocaust," 7:30 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. School of Music - Composers forum, 8 p.m., Recit Guild House - Poetry Readings, Laynie Deutsch p.m.,802 Monroe. SYDA Foundation - Meditation class, "Love Wit Hill. CEW - Classes in reading effectiveness, study s 350 S. Thayer. For more information call 763-1353. Performance Network - Staged play reading Yaroslavl, Mozart & Salieri, 7 p.m., 408 Washington. HRD - Joyce Morgan/Maria Hunsberger, "W+ On,".1-4 p.m., Administrative Services, Rm.1050. Washtenaw Community College - panel discuss You: A Practical Look at Your New Telephone Cho Theatre, 4800 E. Huron River Rd. f] rl( it f: t n 1 u rl( 2 it 1. c 01 rF r NGS- free concert featuring off. The concert, spon- t 4 p.m. in Rackham Winner's Night, 7, 9 & ci. " n fteital HALl p.m., New Trueblood ner, 6 p.m., U-Club. 1420 Hill. te was the Holocaust?" d Revolution in Central 2E. Huron. 'Prospects for Peace," e War Powers Act," 2 ., Matt Mann Pool. chapter recital, "Music n in England, 10 a.m., esentatives of the five aware - come to the ag, Peter Witteree, "In- fall Commons. ited AZA-Macrocycles- ry" 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. Chisholm, "Cell Cycle Aud., Cooley. ore information call 996- ial Arts Rm. en's Group, 10 a.m., 1010 ouse,1443 Washtenaw. p group, 7:30 p.m., 2002 for intermediate level nporary Lessons of the al Hall. and Lemuel Johnson, 8 hout Fear," 8 p.m., 1522 kills, academic writing, s, The Matchmaker of rord Processors, Hands sion, "The Breakup and ices," 7:30 p.m., College Women have By NAOMI SAFERSTEIN assertive. E Women in today's job market have a competitive job at the ri edge over men, according to Detroit News Film critic " YOU H Susan Stark, the featured speaker yesterday at the manipulati Women's Career Fair. 'enlightene "It's sort of a protracted adolescence," Stark said. Anotherf "Women now have a career advantage for at least juggling a the next three to five years, or until the imbalance of jugglingdr men and women is more head to head." two childri MARIA HUNSBERGER, an organizer of yester- well. day's conference at the Modern Language Building, there are c warns that despite the advantages .that women currently enjoy, discrimination still exists in the job me. But t market. weeks of "You're trying to change the norm of behavior together. B that's been around for hundreds of years, and it again," Sta doesn't change quickly, no matter how loud you yell," For a w Hunsberger said. willing to s Stark told the crowd that to be successful, a woman work, she s must be determined, hard working, and above all, "WHEN edge Being assertive can include" ght time." AVE to be shrewd," Star on in our own behalf. I li d self-interest."' problem for working women career and a family. Stark, t en, says she understands ti Jdren and I have an unders ertain times when they won't :hese times are often follow vacation, where we're c By then, they're ready to g ark said. oman to achieve success, eparate herself from her fa. aid. I WAS pregnant, befor Tests find poison in Iranian soldiers VIENNA, Austria (AP) - Tests on wounded Iranian soldiers show "with certain proof" the men were stricken by mustard gas and "yellow rain," a physician, said yesterday. Iran had repeatedly accused Iraq of using the banned weapons in the Persian Gulf war. Iraq has issued several denials of the allegation. DR. HERBERT Mandl said laboratory tests on two of 10 Iranian fighters under hospital treatment in Vienna revealed traces of mustard gas and mycotoxin, a poison derived from fungi commonly referred to as "yellow rain." Such chemical weapons are banned for use in warfare under the 1925 Geneva Protocol. A State Department spokesman said last week the United States has known since last year of the use of chemical weapons by Iraq in the 31/2-year-old war, but Mandl's statements represen- ted the most specific detailing of the charge so far. MANDL, WHO is treating the Iranians, said that the tests were per- formed by the Toxicological Institute of Ghent, a prominent poison research center in Belgium. He said high concentrations of both poisons were "determined with certain proof" in specimens of urine, feces and blood taken from the two Iranians un- der treatment at Vienna's Second Un- iversity Clinic. Mandl said "no specific antidote is known" for exposure to either chemical. HE SAID doctors can develop an ap- proach to treating external and internal burns and other injuries caused by mustard gas - which was first used during World War I. However, yellow rain in "completely unknown" to the medical profession, said another attending physician, Ger- not Pauser. "It's use is unique, and should there be a medicine against it we don't know it," he said. Symptoms of yellow rain exposure include bleeding from the nose, mouth and intestines, nausea, skin rash, sleep disorders and a decline in the body's ability to protect against disease. TEN IRANIANS were flown to Vien- na on March 2 with afflictions that in- cluded burned skin, lung disorders and a gradual destruction of blood cor- puscles and bone marrow. The Michigan Daily - Sunday, March 11, 1984- Page 3 in job iarket taking a bad obstetrician, I had a woman lined up to take care of my child." k said. "It's For Stark working without not feeling guilty for ke to call it being away from home comes easily because her mother w as aliso a ca reer wom an. S:tark says, s "A friend pointed eu to me the difference of being the mother of a first or scond geeraion \working woman" Stark hat dilemma said. "I didn't e t a her who made soup and peanut butter sandw ches. She was a lousy cook. You tanding that wouldn't want to eat her pemaut butter sandwiches see much of even if she did make them. I never had to deal with ed by three the guilt of not being a housewife. I never expected to continuously be one, so I didn't have to break away." et rid of me The conference brought together women in the community to give themi an opportunity to enhance she must be their career development, s a id Meryl Pollaner, an mily while at organizer of the fair. The fair was designed to bring career women together, to share experiences and e I had an serve as role models. Abandon ship AP Photo Firefighters exit from the forward hatch of the smoke-filled cruise ship Scandinavian Sea yesterday at Port Canaveral, Via. The'506-foot ship caught fire Friday night as it was ending a short cruise. Officials say that an electrical short circuit mayhave caused the fire. Heavy fighting claims fourteen lives in Beirut >a H, al tl is 1 a is ti e 31 n m t: h tl sl ;s Vi S A From AP and UPI BEIRUT, Lebanon - Heavy fighting raged through most quarters of the capital yesterday and an artillery shell slammed into a clinic, killing seven people. Political leaders went to a con- ference in Switzerland to try to "put an end to Lebanon's agonies." Fourteen people were killed, in- cluding four Lebanese army soldiers, and dozens were wounded in the fighting yesterday, police said. BY NIGHTFALL, barrages of ar- tillery and mortar fire battered much of east and west Beirut, as well as both its Christian and Moslem suburbs, police said. In the predominantly Shiite Moslem southern suburbs, officials at the Al Zahraa Hospital said seven people were killed and at least 22 were injured when a shell struck a medical clinic. Officials at the hospital, .where vice- tims from the clinic were taken, said some of the casualties were children who had been waiting for treatment. The officials declined to be identified. A FIELD hospital near the Sabra and Chatilla Palestinian refugee camps came under fire yesterday, with an un- determined number of injuries. Police reported heavy exchanges of fire along the "green line" frontier between Christian east and mostly Moslem west Beirut. At times all sec- tions along the front were engaged in the fighting, which pitted the Lebanese army against Syrian-backed Shiite and Druse militiamen. Efforts to arrange a cease-fire were under way, and state-run Beirut radio' said Lebanese President Amin Gemayel called Syrian President Hafez Assad by telephone during the day and "exchanged views on efforts to close Lebanese ranks." HOWEVER, THE Voice of Lebanon radio run by rightist Christian factions said the fighting spread after dark to the central mountains east of Beirut. The radio said army positions at the Frances McDonnell, spokeswoman for the lottery, noting that 10.8 million tickets had been sold through Friday night. The state's population is only 5.7 million. strategic mountain town of Souk el- Gharb came under attack and were returning to fire. A fter his call. to Assad, Gemayel pir, ra stopovers in Paris and Geneva, Switzerland, before arriving Monday inl Lausanne, Switzerland, for the start of a national reconciliation conference, according to Lebanon state television. The conference was part of an arrangement Gemayel and Assad worked out in talks in Damascus at the beginning of March. As part of the agreement, Gamayel gave up Lebanon's troop withdrawal pactwith Israel, and Syria pledged to help bring to an end the renewed Lebanese war. "People are buying up to 50 or 60 tickets at a shot," said Ed Bookman, owner of Schubert's Smoke Shop and News. "Business is up three to four times more than usual." Winner of lottery gets record jackpot join the Daily News Staff! BOSTON (UPI) -- Aspiring multi- millionaires jammed stores yesterday - only hours before the drawing - for a 2 million-to-i shot at the Megabucks jackpot of an expected $18 million, the biggest lottery prize in American history. At 10 p.m., lottery officials planned to draw the winning six numbers with all three Boston stations televising the event, but spokesmen said it will be early today before the computer determines whether there is a winner. "It's really mind boggling," said POETRY READING with LAYNIE DEUTSCH LEMUEL JOHNSON of the 8:00 p.m. GUILD HOUSE MONDAY, MARCH 12 802 Monroe i To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Malicitous intent s 1~ S. The Quest for the Kingdom of God LECTURE-DISCUSSIONS ON ANCIENT AND CURRENT QUESTS FOR CARING HUMAN COMMUNITY I. BIBLICAL PERSPECTIVES MARCH 12: "PROPHETS AND PROPHECY, LEARNING FROM THE PAST FOR THE PRESENT" SPEAKER: Dr. David N. Freedman, Arthur F. Thurnau Professor of Biblical Studies; Director, Studies in Religion, University of Michigan MARCH 19: "UNDERSTANDING OF GOD, COMMUNITY AND IDOLATRY" SPEAKER: Dr. George Mendenhall, Professor of Ancient and Biblical Studies and Near Eastern Studies, University of Michigan MARCH 26: "THE PURSUIT OF JUSTICE IN CENTRAL AMERICA" SPEAKER: Dr. Walter Owensby, Director, Inter-American Designs for Economic Awareness, a church-sponsored program relating to Latin America. II. CARING COMMUNITIES IN ANN ARBOR APRIL,2: "THE CHURCH AS A CARING COMMUNITY OF SUPPORT" SPEAKERS: The Reverend William Ferry, Senior Minister Emeritus, First Presbyterian Church Mrs. Libby Hillegonds, Member, Ecumenical Campus Center Board of Directors APRIL 9: "THE CHURCH AND THE HOMELESS" SPEAKER: The Reverend James Lewis, Senior Minister, St. Andrews Episcopal Church III. CARING COMMUNITY IN THE WORLD APRIL 16: "COMPASSION AND JUSTICE IN SOUTHEAST ASIA" SPEAKERS: The Reverend Barbara Fuller, Indo-China Consultant, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) The Reverend Russell Fuller, Senior Minister, .v ^. i _. ~ . . e '" < 98 -5 G X TES!