HAPPENINGS- Highlight The Michigan Alliance for Disarmament will present tonight "Images of Apartheid," a slide show and discussion group on the crisis in South Africa. The program will be led by Roger Kerson, a UAW writer who was recently in South Africa, and will begin at 7:30 p.m., in Anderson room D of the Union. Films Ann Arbor Film Co-op - Fountainhead, 7 & 9 p.m., MLB 4. Anthropology - Chulas Fronteras; American Showshine, 7 p.m., room 2, MLB. Cinema Guild - Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, 7 & 9:05 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Cinema II-SPickup on South St., 7 p.m.; Odds Against Tomorrow, 8:30 p.m., Natural Science Bldg. Eyemedia - Before Hindsight; The Answer, 8 p.m., Kerrytown Con- cert House. Hill St. Cinema - I Love You, Alice B. Toklas, 7 & 9:15 p.m., 1429 Hill St. Michigan Theater Foundation - Repro Man, 8 p.m., Michighan Theater. Performances Ark - Garnet Rogers, 8 p.m., 637S. Main St. Michigan Union Cultural Programs - Oboe recital, Elizabeth Tomor- I sky, 12:15 p.m., Hussey room, League. Performance Network - Sticks and Bones, 8 p.m., 408 W. Washington St. Residential College - Play, The Flies, Jean-Paul Sartre, 8 p.m., Aud., East Quad. School of Music - String Department Recital, 8p.m., Recital Hall. School of Music - opera, Cosi fan Tutte, Mozart, 8 p.m., Mendelssohn Theater; University Players, Marathon 33, Patricia Boyette, director, Trueblood, 8 p.m. Speakers Susan Gregg, "Current Research in the Alpine Foreland: An Update on Neolithic Archaeology," noon, room 2009, Museums Bldg. American Friends Service Committee - Anne Nixon, 7:30 p.m., First Congregational Church. CEW - Brown bag lecture, Evelyn Barbee, "Age and Aging in Middle Age Black and White Women," noon, 350 S. Thayer St. Chemistry - Ron Naaman, "Reactions of van der Waals Molecules," 3 p.m., room 1300, Chemistry Bldg.; Stanley Pierre Ngeyi, "Ther- modynamics of Lithium, Potassium and Thallium Metal n-Alkanoates and Their Phase Transitions," 4 p.m., room 1200, Chemistry Bldg. Chemistry - Rhoda E. R. Craig, "Diels-Alder and Metal Hydrife Reduction Reactions in Natural Product Synthesis," 4 p.m., CC Little. Engineering - Daniel Julioette, "Saturn Manufacturing Concepts," 3:30 p.m., room 165, Chrysler Center; Faud Kahn, "Detection of Moving Acoustics Underwater Sources," 3:30 p.m., room 2031 E. Engineering Bldg.; Robert Lowe, "The Hydroxyl Airglow Revisite. Graduate School of Business Administration - RPD-General Motors, "Competitive Strategies," 5:30 p.m., Michigan Lobby. Graduate School of Business Administration - Mike Thompson, "In- ternational Auditing," 4 p.m., Assembly Hall. Japanese Studies - Brown bag lecture, Toshikazu Aouchi, "Political Attitudes of Japanese Children: the Declining Image of the Prime Minister," noon, Commons room, Lane Hall. Linguistics - Marilyn Shatz, "Studies in the Acquisition of Auxiliaries," noon, room 3050, Frieze Bldg. MHRI - Robert Aronstam, "Drug Interactions with the Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Complies," 3:45 p.m., room 1057 MHRI. Medical Center - "AIDS Update: Risks & Treatment," 12:10 p.m., 415 N. Fourth Avenue. Ophthalmology/Psychology/Physiology/Bioengineering - Richard A. Young, "A Gaussian Derivative Model for Spatial and Color Vision," 12:15 p.m., room 2055, MHRI. School of Business Administration - Mike Thompson, "International Auditing," 4 p.m., Assembly Hall. School of Education - Gertrude Goldhaber, "What Can We Learn from the Lives of Outstanding Women Scientists of the Last Two Centuries?" 4 p.m., Library, League. Strategic Planning Club - Guy Jones, "Divisional Finance," 4 p.m., Michigan room. Women in Sci. Prog., CEW - Gertrude Goldhaber, "What Can We Learn from the Lives of Outstanding Women Scientists of the Last 2 Cen- turies?", 4 p.m., Library, League. World Hunger Education - Action Committee - Teferi Fufa, "The Right to Eat for a People Without Rights," 7 p.m., Rackham am- phitheater. Meetings AAUP - noon, Michigan room, League. Archery Club - 7 p.m., Coliseum. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship - "The Lordship of Jesus Christ," 7 p.m., room D, League. Lesbian Network - 7:30p.m., Guild House. University Alcoholics Anonymous - noon, room 3200, Union. University Council - 4 p.m., room 3909, Michigan Union. Miscellaneous Committee Against Reacism and Apartheid - Public forum, "Fight Racism," 7p.m., Trotter House. Continuing Medical Education - Course, Ear, Nose and Throat Problems, Towsley Center. Critical Theory Colloquium - Paula Rabinowitz, 8 p.m., W. Conf. room, Rackham. Economics - Conference on the Economic Outlook, 9:30 a.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Ext. Svc. - Conference on the Economic Outlook, registration, 8:30 a.m., Rackham; 1985 Tax Practitioner Institutions: Individual Federal and State of Michigan Income Tax Returns, registration, 8 a.m., Holiday Inn West. HRD - Workshop, interviewing, 7 p.m. Hillel - Israel information, 10 a.m., Hillel. His House Christian Fellowship - Bible study, 7:30 p.m., 925 E. Ann St. League - International night, Spain and Portugal, 5 p.m., cafeteria, League. Michigan Alliance for Disarmament - Slide show and discussiion of South African crisis, 7:30 p.m., Anderson Room D, Union. Microcomputer Education - Workshops, "WordStar for IBM- CompatibleMicrocomputers, Pt. II; "MacDraw and MacPaint," 8:30 a.m., room 3001 SE$. Puerto Rican Assoc. - Conference, "Hermitage, History and Habitat: Harbingers in Puerto Rican Architecture," 7:30 p.m., Whitney Aud., SEB. The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 21, 1985 - Page 3 Dorm residents to fast for hunger relief i By MARC CARREL In residence halls across campus 4,288 residents have agreed to forgo their meal this evening and will be fasting to raise money for charity. The event, held in conjunction with Oxfam America's 12th Annual Fast for a World Harvest, is being spon- sored locally by the World Hunger Education Action Committee (WHEAC). All residence halls are participating in the meal-fast with Couzens Hall having the most participation at 76 percent and Alice Lloyd with the least resident participation at 32 percent. THE MONEY will be donated by the University food service in one lump sum, equaling the raw food cost of meals to be missed. This amount, along with the money raised by the bucket drive, will be donated to charities residents requested when they first signed up and distributed by WHEAC. The charities receiving money will be the Soup Kitchen of Detroit, the Ann Arbor Hunger Coalition, and Ox- fam America, an international agen- cy which funds self-help projects in Third World nations. Residence halls are not the only groups fasting on campus, as fourteen sororities and seven co-ops are also sacrificing dinner. No fraternities are participating in tonight's meal-fast. BESIDES the meal-fast, other events are also being conducted. A bucket drive begun yesterday will continue through today and is also being organized by WHEAC mem- bers. From 5 to 7 p.m. tonight at the West Quad Main Concourse, Oxfam will show a slide and film presentation on the type of projects they are involved in. "Since people are giving up a meal, they may want to see what their money is going toward," said Gita Pillai, co-coordinator of the meal-fast for the residence halls. Teferi Fufa will speak on "The right to Food for People Without Rights," at 7 p.m. in the Rackham Am- phitheatre. Fufa, the U.S. representative of the Oromo Relief Association, fled Ethiopia in 1972 as a college student when he was being politically per- secuted. He is a member of the Oromo tribe, which is a. persecuted ethnic group living in southern Ethiopia. A benefit dance, set for Sunday at Rick's American Cafe on Church Street, will raise funds toward a WHEAC outreach program. The program hopes to raise enough money to send a representative to Oromo refugee camps in the Sudan. MSA changes approved (Continued from Page 1) the MSA constitution that will revise the assembly's representative struc- ture. A total of 1,827 students cast ballots, with 1,468 supporting the proposed changes and 359 opposing them. MSA WILL now hold two elections- each November and March - compared to only one in the present system. Assembly leaders have said this will allow them to train their representatives more efficiently. The assembly will also increase its number of representatives by 25 per- cent, and will impose stricter requirements on representatives, for- cing them to serve on an MSA com- mitte and to contact students more frequently. According to Bruce Belcher, a representative from Rackham who was integrally involved in proposing the changes, the new structure will take effect with next March's MSA elections. "IT'S GOING to have a long-range effect and will not strongly be felt un- til after this assembly," Belcher said. MSA President Paul Josephson called the results a "vote of confiden- ce" for his assembly which showed "confidence in what MSA thought was best for the student body." Josephson said he has urged present representatives to contact constituents and regularly attend meetings "on their honor" but that this will not be required of represen- tatives until part of the next assembly is elected in March. HE ADDED that the Development Committee, which is charged with seeking external funding sources for MSA, will begin work in January. Josephson said last week that if the committee secures enough funding from private industry sources, MSA may eventually be able to reduce the $5.07 it currently charges each term on students' tuition bills. Josephson said the assembly will probably not determine its official policy on the computer fee question until the end of this term. He mentioned a boycott as a possible strategy, and added that some students have told him they are considering symbolic action such as paying their $50 fee next term in pen- nies. STEVE HEYMAN, chairman of the assembly's Legislative Relations Committee and one of the primary organizers of the computer fee questions, said his personal strategy will be to urge the adininistration to seek private and state funding. "I think this is an overwhelming statement against the computer fee," Heyman said. "I don't think they've seriously sought out alternative fun- ding sources." But Virginia Rezmierski, assistant to the vice provost for information technology, said the University is already receiving donations from private corporation such as Zenith and IBM to help pay for computer ex- pansion. cSas Wai at Full Japanes Reetaurant I SUSHI Combination LUNCH $6 50 - DINNER $900 ISRAEL INFORMATION Thursday, Nov. 21, 10:00 - 5:00p.m. Thinking about summer in Israel, a year of study, Kibbutz, aliya? Benny Schwartz, the representative of the Jewish Agen- cy's kibbutz-aliya desk, will be at Hillel to answer questions and provide information about a whole variety of programs in Israel. Callfor appointment: 663-3336 OPEN SUN. BIIO12 - 4:30 FUTOMAKI (Giant rice roll with egg, gourd, cucumber and fish powder)I an u 2Dinner $7.50 Fuli Restaurant " 327 Braun Ct. " 663-3111 CHRISTIAN CHURCH ISAIAH 26 16 S UNIVER N CO - 07 SCO C J7 Qty/ Mike Caulk Pastor People dedicated to knowing and communicating Jesus Christ. 1954 South Industrial Information: 769-2910 Meetings: Sunday 10 am & Wednesday 7 pm l _ --- $30.00 OFF All 14K Gold Rings $40.00 OFF All 18K Gold Rings White Lustrium Rings on Sale $99.95 It pays to take thistest. " Do you want an early pregnancy test that takes just one simple step? " Do you want a test that's as easy to read as "red, no - "white, yes?" " Do you want a test that's totally private to perform and to read? " And a test that's 98% accurate- as accurate as most hospital and lab tests? * Do you want to save money? If you answered "yes' you get a Plus. And a dollar off the price. JO STENS Stop by and see a Jostens representative this week to save on the gold ring of your choice. AZ1 YEARS "'-"---"-" "-" OA"" weanesaay NOV. zuin ~1YEARS A vvuuiiu~uay riuv. LUIII - - ------ -