HAPPENINGS- Highlight SUNDAY Congressman Sander Levin (D-Mich.) will speak on the strategic impor- tance of U.S.-Israeli relations today at 3:30 p.m. in the Pendleton Rm. of the Union. Levin's speech is sponsored by the Undergraduate Political Action Committee. Films Classic Film theatre - The Time Machine, 4:50 & 9:05 p.m., Michigan Theatre. AAFC - Loves of a Blonde, 7 p.m., MLB 4. Cinema Guild - The Mystery of Edwin Drood, 7 p.m., The Women in White, 8:45 p.m. Lorch. Hill Street Cinema - Exodus, 8 p.m., 1429 Hill St. Russia & East European Studies - The White Bird with a Black Spot, 3 p.m., Aud. A., Angell Hall.. t Performances PTP - Miss Julie, 2 p.m., Trueblood. Union Arts Program -Bach Cantata Sing-along, 4-9 p.m., Kuenzel, Rm. Union. School of Music - 'U' Dance Co., 2 p.m., Power Center. School of Music -Piano Recital, Rachelle McCabe, 2 p.m.; violin recital, Christine Oldenburg, 4 p.m.; voice recital, Versell Smith, 6 p.m.; and horn students recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. School of Music - Faculty Cello Recital, 4 p.m., Rackham; Michigan Youth Symphony, 4 p.m., Hill Aud. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church - Organist Thomas Strode, 4:30 p.m., 306 N. Divisioh. Yung People's Theater - "When It All Began," 1 & 2 p.m., 410 W. Washington. Speakers School of Music - "'Tonal' Forms in the Twelve-Tone Music of Arnold Schoenberg," Andrew Mead, 8p.m., Recital Hall. First Presbyterian Church - Director of Afro-American Studies at U-M s Flint campus, Jemadari Kamara, 9:30 a.m., 1432 Washtenaw Ave. A Burskey Board of Governors -- "Media Seminar '84," 5 p.m., West Cafeteria. Meetings Basketball Cheerleading - Mass meeting, 4 p.m., IM Bldg. Miscellaneous Muslim Students' Association - Islamic Education in English, 10 a.m., 407 N. Ingalls. International Center - Returned Peace Corps Volunteer Potluck, 7 p.m., 603 E. Madison. Dentistry - Oral Biology Seminar, 4 p.m., 1033 Kellogg. Lutheran Campus Ministry - Sunday Worship, 10:30 a.m., student sup- per, 6 p.m., program on Middle East Perspectives, 7 p.m., S. Forest and Hill Streets. MSA - Women of India at Michigan celebrate Holi with Qawaali Ki Raat, live music & dances, 7 p.m., E. Quad Auditorium. Continuing Medical Education - "Basic Cardiac Life Support," to register call 763-1400. Chi Alpha Christian Fellow - Winter retreat, "On Finding A Christian Alternative," Fa-Ho-Lo Park, Grass Lake, for info. call 769-4157. Women's Rugby Club - Benefit at Joe's Star Lounge, 9:30 p.m. Y MONDAY Films Eclipse Jazz - History of Jazz on Film Part I, 8 p.m., MLB 3. Alternative Action - Trial of the Catsonville Nine, 8 p.m., E. Quad. Cinema Guild - In the Shadow of the Earth, 7 p.m., Lorch. Perforianr e, , .4, I Ark - Odetta, Folk singer, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., 1421 Hill St. Guild House - Poetry Series, Alice Fulton & Keith Taylor, 8 p.m., 802 Monroe. School of Music - Percussion ensemble, Michael Udow, 8 p.m., Hill Aud. Piano Concertos recital, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Interfaith Council for Peace - Benefit concert for medical aid to El Salvador, 7:30 p.m., Pendleton Rm., Union. American Culture - "Samantha 'Rastles' the Woman Question," a one- {woman show, 8 p.m., Aud. B., Angell Hall. Speakers NeuroScience - "Vocal Learning in Birds: Neural Selection or Instruc- tion?" 4 p.m., 1057 MHRI. Macromolecular Research Center - "Polymer Compatability Through Hydrogen Bonding," Eli Pearce, 4 p.m., 3005 Chem. Bldg. :Dentistry - "Studies on Host Immune Inflammatory Responses in 'Childhood Gingivitis, Juvenile Periodontitis, & Adult Periodontitis," 4 p.m., 1033 Kellogg. Chemistry - "The Synthetic Model Problems in Fe-S Proteins. Is There ;Life Beyond the Cubanes?" Mercouri Kanatzidis, 4 p.m., Rm. 1200 Chem. Bldg. Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies - Brown Bag, "Who Am I? Identity Crisis of the 20th Century Muslim," Abdullah Ahsan, noon, Lane Hall Commons Rm., "State-Sponsored Reform in 19th Century Moroc- co: Success or Failure?" Wilfred Rollman, 4 p.m., Third Floor Rackham. Meetings Stamp Club - 7 p.m., corner of Arbana & West Huron Streets. Asian American Association - 6:30 p.m., 1443 Washtenaw. Faculty Women's Club - Lunch & meeting, "Art & the Gift of Reborn Vision," 11:30 a.m., Michigan Rm., League. Society for Creative Anachronism -8 p.m., for location call 996-4290. See HAPPENINGS, Page 7 Malicious Intent I The Michigan Daily - Sunday, March 18, 1984 - Page 3 Barricades removed after Miami violence MIAMI (AP) - Police barricades around troubled black communities were removed yesterday and merchan- ts promised to rebuild following two nights of violence sparked by the acquittal of a policeman in the fatal shooting of a young black man. "We're just in a watchful alert state," Miami police spokesman Ray Lang said. ISOLATED burglaries were reported early yesterday. Riot-trained police squads were told to be ready for another night of duty t just in case violence flared again. But police said they expected the city to remain calm. "We're not an- ticipating any problems,' said John Jones, a spokesman for the countywide Metro-Dade Police Department. City and county police arrested some 370 people on various misdemeanor and felony charges after city; police officer Luis Alvarez' acquital. AUTHORITIES reported that 37 people - including seven police officers - were injured. Two of the injuredof- ficers were wounded by glass shattered when a bullet crashed into their patrol car. Two jurors at first voted to convict city police officer Alvarez of manslaughter in the death of a young black man, but after a sometimes heated discussion, the all-white panel agreed to acquit him, one of the jurors said. Jim King, 53, said he and Robert Mendelson, 65, at first supported con- viction, but changed their minds Thur- sday night during the two-hour deliberations. KING SAID he initially agreed with the prosecution that Alvarez was negligent because the patrolman should have been able to arrest Nevell Johnson safely. Then he said he remembered the judge's instruction that reasonable doubt required an acquittal. Mendelson couldn't be reached for comment. There was no answer at his home yesterday. "We were charged that if there were any area of doubt at all, the benefit of the doubt goes to the defendant. There were a couple areas of doubt," King said. "He (Alvarez) just picked the wrong method at the wrong time. It was just a day of wrong decisions." Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Lecture time Arwulf, a disc jockey at WCBN, talks about blues music yesterday on, the corner of State and N. University. Stereotypes must be abolished, actress says, (Continued from Page 1) other women. "My grandmother marched to a dif- ferent drum. Because of her so have I," Thomas said, explaining that her gran- dmother has always been a liberated woman. 'Inspiration has been the means of our revolution," she said. ACCORDING to Thomas, the 15 years since the feminist movement began have enabled women to become real people, because women have grown to trust each other. A sense of sisterhood has developed, she said. This sisterhood, she added, among other things "produces laws that punish therapist, not the victim." In an interview after her speech, Thomas said she thinks young women today probably face many of the same Lebanon peace conference to resume today (Continued from Page 1L resume yesterday. Samaha said there would be "one or more" meetings Sun- day and that, as yesterday, they would be limited to the nine chief delegates and Saudi and Syrian observers. Aides and advisors, who attended previous full sessions, were asked to leave the conference hall 15 minutes af- ter the meeting got underway yester- day, one conference source said. "A lot of progress was made," said Wadib Haddad, Gemayel's national security adviser. "The discussions were frank and fruitful and there were no arguments." Meanwhile, Moslem militias in west Beirut and U.S. officials joined the hunt for kidnapped U.S. diplomat William Buckley. Little progress was reported in the search for Buckley, but Moslem Amal militia spokesman Akef Haidar said his men stopped'the American and his kid- nappers at a checkpoint minutes before the militiamen received orders to rescue him. The chief political officer of the U.S. Embassy was dragged from his car Friday outside his west Beirut apar- tment and forced into a white Renault sedan that sped to Khalde, nine miles southeast of Beirut. Haidar, political adviser to Amal leader Nabih Berri, said a white Renault with Buckley in the back seat was stopped a few hours after the kid- naping at an Amal checkpoint on the highway near the Quazi area, 5-miles south of Beirut. The militiamen at the checkpoint had pressures "That Girl" faced in the 1960s. She encouraged students to learn to trust each other to help further the gains of the equal rights movement, and to base their relationships on sisterhood. "Try not to be jealous of each other. Be supportive of each other. Don't be jealous of the girl who has the nicest dress of gets the better grade," she said. About 5,000 women participated in seminars and workshops on career strategies yesterday, the final day of a two-day conference. This was the third annual strategies conference sponsored by A Better Way, a career consulting firm in Detroit. Odetta s still strong SOMETIMES NAMES JUST STANDwas a headline performer at the oMtI N JNewport Folk Festival which at the For one reason or another, a person's time was the pinnacle of folk accom- name just plain looks like it's different. plishment. More often than not, though, when the Not content merely to be a folk name stands out, the person behind singer, Odetta went on to become active doesn't. That's been the big thing with in the politics of the day. She sang with heavy metal groups lately. They come DraMartin Luther King, Jr. in Selma, up with an ear-catching name, two Alabama in 1963 and also in that same guitar chords and they're all the rage. year she sang from the steps of the for about 25minutes. capitol in the march on Washington that Once in a while, though, that stand culminated with King's famous I Have out name really does correspond to a a Dream" speech. standout performer. unlike many of her contemporaries, "Odetta" is certainly an outstanding Odetta has continued to sing for protest. performer. At the same time as Bob Dylan was pOdetta is, and has been since she recording born again rock songs, and ma d is, debut in 1950, one of the Joan Baez was singing about the tur- premier voices in fold music. Her per- moils of life in your late 30s, Odetta was sonal rise to fame coincided with the singing once more at the steps of the great renaissance of folk music that Capitol building for the 20th anniver- came about at the end of the '50s' and sary of the original march on beginning of the '60s. Washington. Odetta's voice is still strong, and the Beginning her folk music career in songs she sings will always be strong. the folk clubs that dotted San Francisco So look for her this Monday night at the in the mid '50s, she expanded her Ark - she's doing two shows at 7:30 and audience by moving to the east coast as 9:30 p.m. with advance tickets .still well. In 1959 she and Harry Belafonte available at Herb David's Guitar Studio hosted a nationally broadcast television as well as at the door. And she still special. In 1960 and again in 1961 she stands out. - Joseph Kraus4 ME1 DIfEVlAL vOItErBA#LL 1 NICE G R A D U A T I O N CAPS & GOWNS Deadline for ordering is March All graduates attending commencement must wear a 24. cap & gown. i