The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 7, 1985 - Page 3 HAPPENINGS- Highlight Rackham Student Government is sponsoring a two-day lecture begin- ning today by Paul Sweezy, the author of the book on Marx's economics, The Theory of Capitalist Development. He will speak on "The Casino Society: Where does it lead?" at 7 p.m. at the Union Ballroom. Films Hill St. - All the King's Men, 8:30 p.m., Hill St. Cinema. AAFC - Apocalypse Now, 6:45 and 9:30 p.m., MLB 4. CG - The Natural, 7 and 9 p.m., Angell Hall Aud. A. Anthropology - Eduardo the Healer, The Spirit of Possession of Alejandro Mamani, 7 p.m., Room 2 MLB. Performances Music at Midday - Darleen Catelo, harpsichord, 12:15, Pendleton Room Union. Project Theatre - Antique Pink, 8 p.m., Mendelssohn Theatre; Ubu Roi, 8 p.m., Trueblood. Major Events - Night Ranger and Starship, 7:30 p.m., Crisler Arena. Ark - Martyn Wyndham-Read, 8 p.m., 637S. Main. Speakers Archaeology - Charles Hastings, " 'Weekend' Archaeology: Side Trips into Unstudied Valleys in the Eastern Andes of Peru," noon, 2009 Museums Building. Public Health - Kjell Samualson, "Information System and Multiway Video for Knowledge Support and Telemedicine," noon, West Conf. Room Rackham Hall. Statistics - J. Michael Steele, "Aspects of Simulated Annealing and Probalistic Computations," 4 p.m., 439 Mason Hall. Japanese Studies - John Jackson, "Japan and U.S. Trade: What is Un- fair?", noon, Lane Hall Commons Room. Sociology - Hawley Lecture, Sidney Goldstein, "Forms of Mobility and Policy Implications: A Comparison of Thailand and China," 4 p.m., Lane Hall Commons Room. Business Adminsitration - William Lucas, "Business in Gover- nment/Government in Business," 4 p.m., Hale Auditorium; H. Renton, "Building a Bio-Tech Company," 4 p.m., Michigan Room; M. K. Haben, "Brand Management at Kraft," 4 p.m., Wolverine Room. History of Art - Robin Hamlyn, "Visions of Hipe and Glory - Charles Robert Leslie, An American History Painter in London, 1811-1825," 5 p.m., 130 Tappan Hall. Med Chem - Fred Hershenson, "Research Strategies Directed at the Treatment of Age-Related Cognitive Disorders; Synthesis and Evaluation of a Series of Cyclic Imides Including CI-911," 4 p.m., 3554 CC Little. MHRI - Joan Heller Brown, "Muscarinic Receptor Coupling to Phosphoinostitide, Calcium and Cuclic AMP Metabolism," 3:45 p.m., 1057 MHRI. Psychology - Thomas Morrow, "Arousal-Related Response Modulation of Somatosensory Thalmic Neuron," 12:15, 2055 MHRI. Linguistics - Paul Hopper, "What's in a noun?" 4 p.m., West Conf. Room Rackham. U-M Dbn - Sidney Bolkosky, "A Jew Today: Jewish Identity after Auschwicz," 7:30 p.m., Garbiel Richard Center. Genetics - Daniel Hartl, "Population Genetics of Transposable Elements," 4p.m., West Lec. Hall Med Sci II. Center Research on Soc. Org. - Brown Bag, Mick Taussig, "Disorder and Power," noon, 4501 LSA. Chem - Irene Newhouse, "Energy Transport in Naphtalene," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem. Biostatistics - Christy Chung, "Applications of Monotone-Scores Models to Ordinal Phamaceutical Data," 3:30 p.m., Room M4332 SPHII. Christian law Students - Fred Cassidy, National President of the Christian Legal Society, 4:30 p.m., Cook Lounge. Meetings Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship - 7 p.m., Kuenzel Room Union. Univ AA - noon, 3200 Michigan Union. Univ. Age Concerns Council - U-M's pre-retirement seminar and other resources, noon, Conference Room 4 League. Lesbian Network - 7:30 p.m., Guild House. Michigan Freshman Connection - Stress and Time Management Meeting, 6 p.m., Room 1209 Union. Women's Research Club - 7:45 p.m., West Conference Rackham Building. Ann Arbor Libertarian League - 7 p.m., Michigan League. Miscellaneous Microcomputer Educ. Center - Workshop, Microsoft Word for IBM Compatible Microcomputers, 1 p.m., 3001 SEB. HRD - Resume writing, 7-9 p.m. Cont. Med Educ - 2-day course, Recognition and Mangement of the Asphyxiated Newborn, Towsley Center. League - International night, Audtralia, 5-7:15 p.m., cafeteria. Scottish Country Dancers - Beginners 7 p.m., intermeds 8 p.m., Forest Hill Comm. Center, 2351 Shadowood. His House Christian Fellowship - Bible Study, 7:30 p.m., 925 E. Ann. Critical Theory Colloquium - Ruth Bradley, American Culture, 8 p.m., West Conference Room Rackham. Eyemedia - Drifting along in the unconscious. A film and video com- pilation, 7 p.m., Kerrytown Concert House. Women's Crisis Center - training for volunteer phone counselors, 994- 9100. Community Councils - Developing a Nursing Home Community Council, 9:30 - 3:30 p.m., 1200 Earhart Road. Labor Studies Center - School for unions, workpeace participation and Democracy, 8 a.m., North Campus Commons. College of Engineering - Design of Reliable VLSI Architectures, 9 a.m., 2212 EE; Problems in Workstation Configuration for Electronic Assembly Systems, 3:30 p.m., 165 Chrysler Center. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Rackham Student Government Speaker Series presents Paul Sweezy on "The Casino Society: City won't use 'boot' on4 By AMY MINDELL The city of Ann Arbor won't "boot" your car until members of city Coun- cil settle on a fee for having the wheel lock removed. City Council voted 6-5 two weeks ago to begin using Denver Boots in- stead of towing cars with six or more unpaid parking tickets. But coun- cilmembers tabled a discussion Mon- day night on the removal fee because of an extra long agenda. "THE RESOLUTION is in limbo," said Bruce Laidlaw, city attorney. Student faces racial vandalism (Continued from Page 1) highest percentage ever recorded. Asian American enrollment clim- bed to 4.5 percent, the largest in- crease reported among the minority groups. "I think racism on campus is something often ignored," said Wong. "It (the incident) comes at a time when the University is patting itself on the back for increasing minority enrollment." Wong said he did not believe the at- tack was directed at him personally. Although he said he had served as a University teaching assistant in the past, he had been out of the country for over a year and is not currently teaching. In another racially motivated in- cident last year at Mary Markley's Angela Davis Minority Lounge, "Somebody came in and threw watermelon over murals depicting minority heritage," according to Darrell Thompson, an LSA Michigan Student Assembly representative. Ir fli 802 MONROE ANN ARBOR. MI H BE48104 NOON FORUM Friday, November 8 PROFESSOR LEUMEL JOHNSON Eng. Long. 8 Lit. "Blacks, Nuclear War, and the University of Michigan" Lunch ovoiloble for $ 1. "We could boot a car, but can't charge a fee." The ordinance change is to be made official today, but won't be implemen- ted by the city's transportation depar- tment until the council takes up the fee issue again at its Nov. 18 meeting. Deciding on a charge may not be easy, though. Councilmember Kathy Edgren (D-Fifth Ward), who proposed the boot be used, had the transportation department study the cost of buying six additional boots (the city already has three), and a mini van with a two-way radio to carry the boots around, and creation of a full-time position to install and remove the boots. The transportation department recommended a fee of $20. BUT COUNCILMEMBER Larry Hahn (R-Fourth Ward) questioned whether the city would be liable for car damage caused by the boot and suggested the issue be investigated before the lock is implemented. "What if there is a boot on your car and you drive it and damage your car?" he asked. Jim Stein, an assistant parking manager for the transportation department, said a car's fender would be damaged if its owner drives for- ward when a boot is attached. The suspension would be damaged if the owner drove backward, he said. LAIDLAW SAID the liability problem "is not a serious issue," and that he will check with attorney in other cities where the boot is used cars yet about probability of lawsuits. Laidlaw said, however, that the city would not be held responsible for any damage as long as a warning notice was placed on the car. Edgren said she proposed the Den- ver Boot instead of towing because they are preferred by drivers who hate having to pick up a car at a garage. The boot, if used with a $20 removal fee, would also be cheaper than towing at a standard cost of $25- $30, she added. Learn to live with someone who's living with cancer. Call us. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY' Citicorp Investment Bank is pleased to invite seniors and graduate students to attend a presentation outilning our exciting career opportunities in SALES and TRADING, PUBLIC FINANCE and CORPORATE FINANCE. Backed by the resources of Citicorp, the largest global financial service organization in the world, we have at our disposal the largest capital base of any investment bank, plus the most sophisticated technological network in existence. We are: " The Largest Foreign Exchange Dealer " The Only Truly Global Investment Bank " The #1 Bank in the Commodities Market " The Industry Leader in the Swaps Market * One of the Top 3 primary dealers in U.S. Government Securities Please join us to learn more about these job opportunities. DATE: November 19, 1985 TIME: 4-6 p.m. LOCATION: Hale Auditorium SPEAKER: J. Michael Payte, Vice President, North American Investment Bank TOPIC: Swaps and the International Capital Markets CITICORPO INVESTMENT BANK - p .%