The Michigan Daily - Sunday, January 15, 1984 - Page 3
-HAPPENINGS-,
Reagan pushes Kissinger plan
From AP and UPI said Reagan does not believe the government of El Salvador defeat the region.
FAdrmAP and UPIsd eaga n d s nt b e the. ~leftist guerillas who seek to topple it. Meanwhile, all three
WASHINGTON P d Prc tn acn Kiscinp rnm i cin' taro f o .._ .._ _ ---
AA
major
Highlight
Today is the last chance to see the Museum of Art's exhibit "Goltzius &
Rembrandt: Prints From the Permanent Collection." Works by the prin-
tmaker and painter, both Dutch, will be shown from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Also on
display at the museum is an exhibition entitled "The Woodcut: History and
Technique."
Films
Cinema Guild - All Quiet on the Western Front, 7 & 9 p.m., Lorch Hall.
Cinema Two - That Man From Rio, 7 p.m.; IHi Mom!.; 9 pm., Aud. A
Angell.
Mediatrics - A Raisin in the Sun, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Nat. Sci. Auditorium.
Classic Film Theatre - Funny Girl, 3:30 & 9:30 p.m.; Funny Lady, 6:30
p.m., Michigan Theatre.
Latin-American Solidarity Committee - Nicaragua Fromthe Front, 4
p.m., 126 East Quad.
Speakers
Society of Women Engineers - Kurt Salmon, "Management Consulting,"
7 p.m., 1048 East Engineering Bldg.
Meetings
Progressive Student Network -8 p.m., Canterbury Loft.
Economic Justice Committee - 7:30 p.m., for information call 761-8044.
Miscellaneous
Women's Basketball - Michigan vs. Wisconsin, 2 p.m., Crisler Arena.
Women's Swimming & Diving - Michigan vs. Northwestern, 1 p.m., Matt
Mann Pool.
Muslim Students Assoc. - Classes for Quran study, Arabic, and teachings
' of Islam for children and adults, 10 a.m., Muslim House, 407 N. Ingalls.
Exhibit Museum - "Scientific Illustrations at the U-M Museums," exhibit
1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
MONDAY
Highlight
For anyone who has dreams of performing on stage, off stage, or just in
the backyard, Eclipse Jazz is offering a workshop in jazz improvisation to
intermediate level musicians. The clinic, led by David Swain, will be in,
Assembly Hall of the Union at 7 p.m.
Films
AAFC - The Promised Land, 8 p.m., MLB 1.
Cinema Guild - The Wooden Gun, 7 p.m., Lorch Hall.
Speakers
Near Eastern & North African Studies - Leah Adams, "Culture &
Education in North Yemen," brown bag, noon, Lane Hall Commons.
Faculty Women's Club - Nathaniel Rowe, "New Frontiers in Dental
Health," lecture and lunch, 11:30 a.m., Michigan Rm., League.
Near Eastern Studies - Joseph Hoffmann, "Expectation & Delay:
Psychology of Apocalyptic, Faculty Colloquium, 4:10 p.m., 3050 Frieze.-
Computing Center - Forrest Hartman, "Intro to Display Terminals,"
3:30 p.m., 165 Business Admin. Bldg.'
Chemistry Dept. - Hung-wen Liu, "Stereochemical Studies on the Reac-
tions Catalyzed by i-Aminocyclopropane-1-Carboxylate Deaminase,"3 p.m.,
3005 Chem Bldg.; John Stickney, "Electrochemistry of Well-Defined
Platinum Electrodes," 4 p.m., 1300 Chem Bldg.; Kimberly Painter,
"Oxidation of Unsubstituted Olefins by Transition Metal Complexes," 4
p.m., 1200 Chem Bldg.
Meetings
Ann Arbor Support Group for the Farm Labor Organization CommitteeT
7:30 p.m., 308 E. William.
Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice, 6p.m., CCRB Martial Arts Rm.
Christian Science Organization - 7:15 p.m., Room D, League.
Turner Geriatric Clinic - Intergenerational Women's Group, 10 a.m., 1010
Wall St.
University Climbing Club - Organizational meeting, 7:30 p.m., Anderson
Rm. A, Union.
SACUA -2 p.m., 4025 Fleming Admin. Bldg.
Washtenaw Committee Against Registration & Draft - 7:30 p.m., First
Unitarian Church, 1917 Washtenaw.
Eating Disorders Self-Help Group - Open to people with anorexia ner-
vosa, bulimia, and other eating disorders, 7:30 p.m., Classroom 8, St.
Joseph's Hospital.
Miscellaneous
Exhibitionand Sale of Art Prints and Posters - 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Pond
Rm., Union.
SYDA Foundation - First class in course entitled "Hatha Yoga," 7 p.m.,
1522 Hill.
To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of
Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109
i -e
Ma icious intent
1I
WY nomi,4 u i v - rresi enn Reagan
said yesterday he will ask Congress to
help shore up the economics of Central
American nations "to improve the lives
of our neighbors so they can vote with
ballots instead of bullets."
And a senior administration official
n1ger Commsso51ns5 argei v
providing $8.4 billion over five years is
exorbitant, given the gravity of the
turmoil facing the region and the threat
it poses to U.S. security.
Reagan made clear he also will seek
to provide additional aid to help the
North Star Bus Co.
to close in spring
HE ALSO warned the leftist leaders
of Nicaragua that they must under-
stand "they cannot threaten their
peaceful neighbors, export subversion
and deny basic human freedom to their
own people."
Reagan said he will send a plan to
carry out the Kissinger panel's basic
recommendations to Congress when it
reconvenes later this month.
He said the plan - the Central
American Democracy, Peace and
Recovery Initiative - will be known as
the Jackson Plan in honor of the late
Sen. Henry Jackson, (D-Wash.) who
first suggested a bipartisan com-
mission consider the challenges posed
to U.S. policymakers by strife in the
Salvadoran human rights organizations
said that rightist death squads
allegedly responsible for more than
30,000 assassinations are intact and
functioning despite U.S. pressure to
halt them.
"The death squads continue to be ac-
tive, the bodies of the young, workers
and the kidnapped continue to appear,"
a joint statement signed by the in-
dependent Human Rights Commission.
the .Catholic Church's legal aid
organization, and the Mothers' Com-
mittee of the Disappeared said.
Vice President George Bush repor-
tedly gave both U.S. Embassy person-
nel and the government a list of suspec-
ted death squad members on his Dec.
11 visit.
By CAROLINE MULLER
WITH WIRE REPORTS
University students from East Lan-
sing and Grand Rapids who use North
Star Bus Lines to travel home will have
to find alternative transportation this
spring.
North Star, the only bus company
that runs from the Michigan Union to
East Lansing and cities in northern
Michigan, will shut down this spring
because of a labor dispute.
Union employees rejected the Grand
Rapids-based company's final contract
proposal Friday, said North Star Bus
Lines President Lawrence Post.
GREYHOUND buses will probably
replace North Star's Detroit-Ann Arbor
route, but it's not cedrtain how the
company's service to northern
Michigan will be replaced, said John
Copeland, who works in the Union
ticket office.
"We sell lots of North Star tickets,"
Copeland said. "Probably more than
Greyhound.'
Post said the company lost $414,000 in
1981 and 1982 and he expects 1983 losses
to approach $400,000.
"You don't go on losing like that," he
said. "I have to minimize my losses."
"I'm not going to go through Chapter
11 bankruptcy. I don't want to be sad-.
dled with that reputation."
Post learned late Friday that 44
drivers and mechanics of the
Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1303
had refused contract concessions.
'U' students count
109 deeri
By TAAJ SURI
Special to the Daily
PINCKNEY - The students stood 40
feet apart, walking steadily over the
marshes and frozen ponds. As the line
of 70 marchers advanced, startled deer
broke through to stand up and be coun-
ted.
It was Deer Drive time for the School
of Natural Resources yesterday mor-
ning, the annual roundup when students
count the deer herd in the University-
owned George Reserve near Pinckney.
THE STUDENTS tramped through
the snow driving the deer before them
to the fence two miles away, until they
turned around to bound through gaps in
the line.
The drive is led by Dale McCullough,
a natural resources professor at the
University of California at Berkeley.
He has been rounding up students for 14
years to help him with his population
studies on the reserve. McCullough had
hoped more students would turn out, and
thinks some deer remained hidden in
the thick bush.
The group counted 109 deer, but Mc-
Cullough estimated another 25 deer
remained hidden.
THAT LOW count may have let a few
deer enjoy one more winter. When the
population rises above 135, some of the
deer are shot to prevent the herd from
starving. The meat is sold and the
money is used to help support graduate
students.
McCullough, who left the University
four years ago for California, said he
will probably lead the drive next
January for the last time. "After all, I
can't keep this up forever,",he said.
Although most students 'seemed ex-
cited to see the deer running,, some
looked at all that venison a bit wistfully.
Speakers
urge blacks
to continue
fight,
(Continued from Page 1)
but we need to know the story," Mitchell
said.
"Because you don't know, you suffer
from an illusion and a delusion," he ad-
ded.
Even though blacks are more accep-
ted in society now than 20 years ago,
Mitchell said the fight for real equality
must not end now.' "We must never
retreat. We must never give up," he
said. "Our job is to control it, keep it at
its lowest level."
AND UNTIL racism is controlled,
Mitchell vowed to continue the fight.
"There's a fire inside of me that's an
unquenchable fire," he said.
In an election year when black
Democratic candidate Jesse Jackson
has established credibility by aiding in
the release of a captured American
pilot from Syria, Judge Taylor from
Detroit said political power can turn the
tide of racism.
"This is a high stakes year, a water-
shed year," she said. "We must not lose
the opportunity of this watershed year.
rorundup
"IT WAS a good chance to get out and
see what we are studying," said SNR
freshman Jim Skochelak, but "it was
really frustrating to see all those deer
when I didn't see any all hunting
season."
The herd itself was not uppermost in
everyone's mind. Natural resources
junior Jim Kneebone did not brave
thorny thickets just to answer the call
of the wild. "I think the best thing
about it is the hot chocolate.at the end,"
he said.
DIAL- A
JEWISH - STORY
995-5959
Another Project of the Chobod House
Ann Arbor Civic Theater
AUDITIONS
"The Diviners"
January 14-16; Callbacks January 18
Jan. 14 Mass Meeting and Open Auditions, 1:30-4:30 p.m.
Jan. 15 Open Auditions, 1:30-4:30 p.m.
Jan. 16 Auditions by Appointment Only, 7:30-9:30
Roles: 7 Male, Ages 14-55 - 5 Female, Ages 16-50
Call 662-9405 for Appointment and Information
scripts Available ANN ARBOR CIVIC T HEATER
at AACT Offices. 338 S. Main - 662-9405
the stop
A Workshop for the Photographic Arts
CLASS BEGINNING WEEK OF JAN.23
Advanced 35 mm Photography
Introductory Studio Lighting
Beginning Camera and Darkroom
Introduction to the Zone System
Printing from Color Slides
Photographing Stage Events
SPECIAL 1-DAY WORKSHOP
PHOTOGRAPHING ARTWORK
Saturday, January 21
Ca/l 663-7867 to register
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