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March 12, 1986 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1986-03-12

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THE LIST
What's happening
around Ann Arbor

The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 12, 1986 - Page 3
MSA seeks apology from'U'

Campus Cinema
The 24th Annual Ann Arbor 16mm
Film Festival (CG), 7, 9, & 11 p.m.,
Mich.
This is the oldest film festival in
North America dedicated to in-
dependent and experimental
cinema. The festival started yester-
day and runs to Sunday, which is
winner's night. There will be more
than 80 films open to public
screening. A must for all film buffs.
Stardust'. Memories (Woody Allen,
1980), CG, 9:30 p.m., MLB 3.
Based on Fellini's 8z, Allen plays
a filmmaker with a desire to be
serious. It is a cold look at fame and
responsibility.
Suspicion (Alfred Hitchcock, 1941)
Hill St., 8 p.m., 1429 Hill St.
Joan Fontaine and Cary Grant
have a slight marital problem: Fon-
taine, a shy British girl, thinks that
her husband, a liar and a cheat, is
out to kill her. This film won Fon-
taine an Oscar for best actress. Also
nominated for best film of the year.
The Toughest Job You'll Ever Love
7:30 p.m., U-M International Center.
Peace Corps experiences of three
Americans overseas in Asia, Africa
and South America.
Performance
Berlin Ballet-University Musical
Society, 8 p.m., Power Center (665-
3717).
This company, established in 1955,
is directed and choreographed by
Gert Reinholm. It is now the official
BerlinStat( Opera dance company.
Tonight's program will include
Ravel's Daphne and Chloe,
Debussy's Afternoon of a Faun, and
"Pas de Deux" from Minkus' Don
Quixote.
Faculty Harpsichord Recital
School of Music, 8 p.m., School of
Music Recital Hall, North Campus
(763-4726).
Harpsichord professor Ed Par-
mentier will perform works by Bach,
Couperin, and Forqueray.
Golden Palominos - Prism
Productions, 10 p.m., Nectarine
Ballroom (996-8742).
This rock 'n' roll band features
founder Anton Fier, Michael
Laswell, and Jody Harris.
Bars & Clubs
The Ark (761-1451) - Doc Watson,
mountain music.
Bird of Paradise (662-8310) - Ron
Brooks Trio, jazz.
The Blind Pig (996-8555) -
Crucial, reggae.
The Earle (994-0211) - Larry
Manderville, solo piano.
Mr. Flood's Party (995-2132) -
Juanita McGray and Her Motor City
Beat, blues.
Mountain Jack's (665-1133) -
Billy Alberts, easy listening.
The Nectarine Ballroom (994-5436)
- Dollar Night Dance Party, DJ the
Wizard.
Rick's American Cafe (996-2747) .
Bob Cantu and Joyhouse, rock.
U-Club (763-2236) - Laugh Track,
open mike comedy.
Speakers
Robert Arking - "Genetic
Regulation of Longevity of
Drosophila," Biology, 4 p.m., Lec-
ture Room II, MLB.

Charles Hofz - "The Lewis-Acid-
Catalyzed Eve Reaction,"
Chemistry, 4 p.m., 1300 Chemistry
Bldg.
Walter Kleeman - "Mental
Health Faculty Design Based on
Patient Participation," School of
Art, 7:30 p.m., Auditorium, Art and
Architecture Bldg.
William Stein - "Devonian
Pteridophytes Past and Present,"
Botany, noon, 1139 Natural Science
Bldg.
R. Kent Greenawalt - "Liberal
Democracy, Rationality, and
Religion," Law School, 4 p.m., 120
Hutchins Hall.
William Dever - "The Settlement
of the Israelite Tribes in Canaan,"
Near Eastern and North African
Studies, 4 p.m., Aud. D, Angell Hall.
Shi Duo Huang - "Thermospray
Interfaces for LC/MS," Chemistry,
4 p.m., 1200 Chemistry Bldg.
Leon Irish - "Possible Initiatives
of the Rockefeller Foundation in
Poland," Russian and East
European Studies, noon, Commons
Room, Lane Hall.
Rosemary Sarri - "The Future of
Families in Poverty," Social Work,
12:15 p.m., 3063 Frieze Bldg.
Joseph Fenstermacher - "Local
Differences in Capillary Structure
and Function Among Various
Neural and Neuroendocrine Struc-
ture of the Rat Brain," Physiology, 4
p.m., 7745 Medical Science II Bldg.
Reuven Rubinstein - "Sensitivity
a'nd Optimization of Computer
Simulation Models," Engineering, 4
p.m., 241 Industrial Operations
Engineering Bldg.
Mohammad Darouwshe - "The
State of Arab-Jewish Dialogue in
Israel: Prospects for Peace?"
Hillel/MSA, 8 p.m., Pendleton
Room, Union.
Massoud Kaviany - "Effect of
Solute Concentration Gradients on
the Onset of Convection: Uniform
and Nonuniform Initial Gradients,"
Mechanical Engineering/Applied
Mechanics, 4p.m., 2281 Brown Lab.
Robert Sawyer - "Epithelial-
Mesenchymal Interaction During
the Genetic Regulaton of
Keratinization," Biology, 12:05
p.m., 5732 Medical Science II Bldg.
Meetings
Archery Club - 8 p.m., Coliseum.
Ann Arbor Film Co-op - meeting
for prospective members, 7 p.m.,
room 7, League.
Latin American Solidarity Com-
mittee - 8 p.m., 2443 Mason Hall.
Take Back the Night rally and
march - organizational meeting,
7:30 p.m., Fire Department.
Dissertation Support Group- 8:30
a.m., 3100 Union.
Ensian Yearbook - 7 p.m.,
Student Publications Bldg.
Science Fiction Club - Stilyagi
Air Corps, 8:15 p.m., League.
Michigan Gay Union - 7 p.m., 802
Monroe.

By MARY CHRIS JAKLEVIC
The Michigan Student Assembly
last night resolved to hang a banner in
the Diag asking University President
Harold Shapiro to apologize for the
way campus security officers dealt
with student protesters.
The resolution was debated in the
assembly after two student protesters
related their experience at a protest
that took place last Friday against
Lawrence Livermore Labs, a major
defense contractor which was
recruiting on North Campus.

The protesters said they were not
allowed into the Stearns Buildings,
where the interviews were being held.
They were videotaped by Ann Arbor
police while they waited outside, and
were followed home by a police officer
and a member of campus security in
an Ann Arbor police car.
The protesters said security was
beefed up for no reason and that the
officers' actions amounted to
harassment.
The resolution suggested that
security forces "be used fir urgent

caipus safety problems rather than
for infringing on demonstrators' con-
stitutional rights."
Also yesterday, Michigan Student
Assembly election officials said they
will begin looking for arbitrators to
decide whether three candidates in
this year's election should have been
allowed to change from party can-
didates to run as independents.
The candidates who changed were
MSA President Paul Josephson and
Vice President Phil Cole, who were
running as LSA representatives on the
Meadow party ticket, and business

school candidate Fred Smithson, who
was with the Student Rights party.
The three candidates were allowed
Monday night to change to indepen-
dents because their parties had signed
up too many candidates to fill the
positions they were seeking, and thus
violated election rules.
An appeal was later filed by an MSA
member suggesting that the can-
didates not be allowed to run at all,
since MSA election rules state that
"misinterpretation, ignorance, or
mistake of law shall not be an accep-
table defense for a violation or excuse
for a disability suffered."

Police investigate Brown prostitution ring

PROVIDENCE, R.I. -(AP) A police:
task force began an investigation yesterday
into the extent of a suspected
prostitution ring in which two Brown
University seniors were accused of
soliciting sex from an undercover of-
ficer.
School officials said that they

Furthermore
Women's Rugby
p.m., Coliseum.

practice - 4

Beans and rice dinner - Guild
House, 6 p.m., 802 Monroe.
Investigating Careers in Gover-
nment - Career Planning &
Placement program, 4:10 p.m.,
Student Activities Bldg.
Finding a Summer Job: Strategies
for the Procrastinator - Career
Planning & Placement program,
4:10 p.m., Student Activities Bldg.
On-Campus Recruiting Discussion
- Career Planning & Placement
program, 12:10 p.m., Student Ac-
tivities Bldg.
Negotiation and Mediation Skills
- SODC workshop, 6:30 p.m., 1310
Union.
Long Range Planning - HRD
workshop, 1 p.m.
Office Management Kit, Part II -
HRD workshop, 1 p.m.
Listening Skills - HRD workshop,
8:30a.m.
Personal Budgeting - HRD
workshop, 5 p.m.
dBASE III, Part II - Microcom-
puter Education workshop, 8:30
a.m., 3001 School of Education
Bldg.
Microsoft Word for the Macin-
tosh, Part I - Microcomputer
Education workshop, 8:30 a.m., 3001
School of Education Bldg.
Learning to Use the Macintosh -
Microcomputer Education
workshop, 2 p.m., 3001 School of
Education Bldg.
Tutoring in math, science and
engineering - Tau Beta Pi, 7 p.m.,
Red Carpet Annex, Alice Lloyd Hall.
Tae Kwon Do practice - 6 p.m.,
2275 CCRB.
Worship - Lord of Light Lutheran
Church, 7:30 p.m., 801 S. Forest.
Holy Communication - Wesley
Foundation, 9:30 p.m., 602 E. Huron.
Creative Artist Grant Workshop -
Washtenaw Council for the Arts,
7:30 p.m., International Center.
Ithpact jazz Dance Workshop -
UAC, 7 p.m., Ballroom, Union.

requested the inquiry and that the
scope of the suspected activity exten-
ded far beyond the Ivy League cam-
pus.
ON THURSDAY, Providence police
arrested the two Brown students, both
from exclusive Connecticut suburbs,
on charges of soliciting sex from an
undercover officer.
Dana Smith, of Avon, Conn., and
Revised gun
bill reaches
House floor
WASHINGTON (AP) - The House
Judiciary Committee yesterday sent
to the House floor a compromise gun
control bill that the gun owners' lobby
argues would fall far short of easing
burdensome provisions in the historic
safe streets law of 1968.
The committee bill, approved 35-0,
would be the first major revision to
the nation's 18-year-old federal gun
control law. House Majority Leader
Jim Wright (D-Texas) said it could be
scheduled for a vote as early as next
week.
The measure includes a provision
for interstate sales of rifles and
shotguns-but not handguns-and a
records check, but no waiting period,
for firearms customers.
The National Rifle Association,
calling the bill too restrictive for law-
abiding gun owners and sportsmen,
vowed to continue backing a rival
Senate-passed bill which would
significantly weaken the 1968 law.
Representatives of law enfor-
cement and handgun control groups
said they could support the House
Judiciary bill,

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Rebecca Kidd, of Orange, Conn., both
21-year-old seniors, pleaded innocent
Friday to charges of loitering for
prostitution, a misdemeanor carrying
a maximum penalty of six months in
prison and a $500 fine for first offen-
ses.
They were ordered to return to
court March 19 for a pretrial con-
ference.
Robert Reichlev. Brown vice

president for university relations,
said the University asked Providence
police several months ago to in-
vestigate allegations of prostitution
involving college students. The day
after the arrests, police raided the
home of a man and seized evidence,
according to police sources who spoke
on condition of anonymity. He was not
charged.

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