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March 27, 1986 - Image 3

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1986-03-27

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The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 27, 1986 -Page 3

I

What's happeing

I

1 I Campus Cinema

Whiskey Galore (A. Mackendrick,
1948) CG, 7 p.m., MLB 4.
A fantastic comedy about a WWII
ship loaded with whiskey is
wrecked on a small island. The sud-
den supply of a beverage that has
vanished in wartimes shortages
provide a catalyst to stir the elemen-
ts of several Scottish islanders.
Father Brown, Detective (Robert
Harner, 1954) CG, 8:45 p.m., MLB 4.
Even the most militant atheist will
be forced to approve Father Brown's
clerical wiles to recover a precious
cross from the stone-hearted master
thief, Flambeau. Alec Guiness stars.
Fritz the Cat (RalphdBakshi,1972)
AAFC, 7 & 10 p.m., Aud. A, Angell
Hal.
The first X-rated full-length
animated film featuring cartoonist
R. Crumb's naughty pussy.
Heavy Traffic (Ralph Bakshi, 1973)
AAFC, 8:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angell
Hall.
An X-rated semi-autobiographical
masterpiece about an underground
cartoonist growing up in a night-
mare version of New York.
Taxi Driver (Martin Scorsese, 1976)
MED, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., Nat. Sci.
A most interesting and riveting
horror story about a New York cab-
bie's decent through loneliness into
violent madness. Fantastic perfor-
mances by Robert DeNiro and Jodi
Foster.
Moonraker (Lewis Gilbert, 1979)
MTF, 7 p.m., Mich.1
Roger Moore stars as James
Bond, who battles an evil billionaire
who has built his own space station.
Featuring arch-villan Jaws. 1
Octopussy (John Glen, 1093) MTF,
9:15 p.m., Mich.1
Roger Moore as Bond matches
wits with yet another enemy, Maud
Adams. Gadgets galore.<
Performances
Andres Segovia - University
Musical Society, 8 p.m., Hill
Auditorium.
Segovia, a classical guitarist, will
perform pieces by Tansman, Espla,
Torroba, Granados, Tchikovsky and
transcriptions of Handel and Men-
delssohn.I
Female Transport - Performan-
ce Network, 8 p.m., Performance
Network, 408 W. Washington (663-
0681).1
Steve Gooch's drama about the
journey of six female convicts on
their way to Audtralia explores
themes of women and their search of
self-worth.
Lysistrata-University Theater
Department Ensemble, 8 p.m.,
Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, (764-
0450).1
Philip Kerr will direct this student
ensemble in Aristophanes classical
Greek comedy. The women of
Greece, tired of waiting for the war
to be over, go on "strike" by
refusing to sleep with their husban-
ds.
.l
Student plays - Residential
College, 8 p.m., East Quad, (763-
0176).
Residential College students will
perform two student-written plays:
Naomi Saferstein's Little Jokes and
Charles Schulman's Angel.t
Bars and Clubsr
THE ARK (761-1451) - Dave
Crossland, folk and originals.

BIRD OF PARADISE ((662-8310) -
Ron Brooks Trio, jazz.1
THE BLIND PIG (996-8555) - The
Exciters, pop-rock.
THE EARLE (994-0211) - Larry
Manderville, solo pianist.
MAIN STREET COMEDY(
SHOWCASE (996-2132) - Michael1
Hampton Caine.
MOUNTAIN JACK'S (665-1133) -
Billy Alberts, easy listening.
THE NECTARINE BALLROOM
(994-5436) - The Watusies, rock 'n'
roll.
RICK'S AMERICAN CAFE (996-
2747) - Let's Talk About Girls, trash
rock and hard pop.
U-CLUB (763-2236) Soundstage.

round Ann Arbor
Leticia Lopez Robles - "Chicago
Film: A Response to Chaos,"
Hispanic Lecture Series, 7 p.m., 132
Hutchins Hall.
Hitomi Tonomura - "The Politics
of Alliance: Merchants and
Authorities in Pre-Unification
Japan," Japanese Studies, noon,
Commons Room, Lane Hall.
Asian Templeton - "Molecular
and Developmental Genetics of Ab-
normal Abdomen of Drosophila
Mercatorum," Genetics, noon, 1139
Natural Science Bldg.
Paul Welch - "Mississippian
Emergence in West-central
Alabama," Anthropology, noon, 2009
Museums Bldg.
D. Coucoucanis, W. Pearson, R.
Sacks - "Perspectives on Physical
Chemistry: Remarks on the
Curriculum in and Research
Collaborations with Physical
Chemistry From the Perspectives of
Other Areas of Chemistry,"
Chemistry, 4 p.m., 1200 Chemistry
Bldg.
Mark Fox - "Experiences in Ap-
plying Artificial Intelligence to
Manufacturing," CRIM-Industrial
Technology Institute Seminar, 3:30
p.m., 165 Chrysler Center.
Anita Chawls - Research on
Economic Development, 12:15 p.m.,
361 Lorch Hall.
Atmospheric and Oceanic Science
- 3:45 p.m., 2231 Space Research
Bldg.
Rez Naylor - "Focus vs. Tran-
sitivity," Linguistics, noon, 3050
Frieze Bldg.
Robert Stephenson - "The
Mutant Approach to Photoreceptor
Function in Flies,"
Ophthalmology/Psychology/Physi-
ology/Bioengineering, 12:15 p.m.,
2032 Neruoscience Bldg.
Daniel Ricca - "The Use of
Monoclonal Immunoconjugates in
Tumor Detection and Treatment,"
Chemistry, 4 p.m., 3554 C. C. Little
Bldg.
W. Moore, B. SMith - "Leading
Discussions," CRLT, 7 p.m., 109 E.
Madison.
Meetings
University Council - 4 p.m., 3909
Union.
Campus Crusade for Christ - 7
p.m., Hutchins Hall.
Intervarsity Christian Fellowship
-7 p.m., Henderson Room, League.
Microsoft Multiplan for the Macin-
tosh, Part I-Microcomputer
Education workshop, 1 p.m., 3001
School of Education Bldg.
University Age Concerns Council
- "Preretirement Investment Tax
Planning," Rooms 1 & 2, League.
AIDS and the Worried Well - 8
p.m., 3200 Union.
University Alcoholics Anonymous
- noon, 3200 Union.
Furthermore
Labor for Peace: New Directions on
Foreign Policy in the Labor

Movement-Democratic Socialists
of America, 8 p.m., Anderson Room
D,Union.
Women and Memory reception for
artists-Women Studies program, 5
p.m., Rackham Galleries.
The Sanction of the Victim -
video-taped speech by Ayn Rand
Students of Objectivism, 8 p.m., 130
Business Administration Bldg.
Spring into Fitness; public Health
or Public Panic? - U-M ACLU
forum, 4 p.m., 100 Hutchins Hall.
Tutoring in math, science and
engineering-Tau Beta Pi, 7 p.m.,
307 Undergraduate Library; 8 p.m.,
2332 Bursley Hall.
Basic Concepts of Microcomputer
Word Processing - Microcomputer
Education workshop, 10:30 a.m.,
4003 School of Education Bldg.
IBM PC and PC-Compatible
Microcomputer System Selection
Microcomputer Education
workshop, 3 p.m., 4003 School of
Education Bldg.

Associated Press
The U.S. Navy released this picture of a Libyan missile corvette, built by the Soviets, burning in the Gulf of
Sidra Tuesday. It was the last of five Libyan patrol boats hit by the U.S. in retaliation for this week's attacks
upon U.S. Navy jets.
U.S. and Libyan forces standoff

Students
react to
hostilities
(Continued from Page 1)
Larry Meiselman, an LSA
sophomore, agreed that the
maneuvers were necessary to
counter Khadafy's general
belligerence. "(Khadafy) is an
irrational man and his drawing that
'line of death' was an act of
terrorism," he said.
IN SPITE of this disagreement over
whether the Navy's exercises were
appropriate, there was a general con-
sensus that there may be harmful
fallout from the incident. Students ex-
pressed particular concern about
possible increase in Libyan-sponsored
terrorism.
Meiselman said he is worried about
increased terrorism both abroad and
in the United States. He said there is a
particular threat from Libyans in
Canada crossing the border to commit
acts of terrorism.
Estee Mermelstein, an LSA fresh-
man who condoned the Navy's exer-
cises, also expressed concern about
possible increase in terrorism. "It's
the only way (Khodafy) can strike
back," she said.
"THE sGOVERNMENT is
preparing for a fighting mentality,
getting (people) "gung ho" about our
soldiers," said Shatkin. Small in-
cidents like this make it easier for the
Americans to accept provocation
toward.other nations, she said.
The incident "makes us look pretty
belligerent, not as responsible as we
should be," said Daniel Peters, an
engineering student in his second year
of the masters program.

From AP and UPI
WASHINGTON - The military con-
frontation between the United States
and Libya in the Gulf of Sidra settled
into an uneasy standoff yesterday
with the U.S. 6th Fleet primed for ac-
tion against an enemy who didn't ap-
pear.
The Pentagon said ships and planes
from the U.S. naval battle group con-
tinued to operate below Libyan
strongman Col. Moammar Khadafy's
"line of death" in the gulf, but no
Libyan planes or patrol boats had
ventured farther than 12 miles from
the coastline since early Tuesday
morning.
MISSILES launched by U.S. light
bombers and the cruiser Yorktown
Monday and early Tuesday sank at
least three Libyan missile boats,
damaged a fourth and knocked out the
fire control radar at Sidra that directs
batteries of Soviet-built SAM-5 anti-
aircraft missiles, the Pentagon said.
The clash, touched off Monday
when Soviet-made Libyan SAM-5
missiles were fired at U.S. jets that
had crossed Khadafy's "line of death"
across the mouth of the gulf, resulted
in no American losses.
The United States said it attacked
the Libyan targets in retaliation for
Libyan efforts to shoot down
American war planes over the Gulf of
Sidra with surface-to-air missiles.
p.m., Forest Hills Community Cen-
ter.
Bible Study - His House Christian
Fellowship, 7:30 p.m., 925 E. Ann.
Sky Rambles/Comet Halley: Once
in a Lifetime - Exhibit Museum
Planetarium, 7 p.m., & 8:15 p.m.,
Exhibit Museum (764-0478).

KHADAFY claims nearly the entire
gulf as Libyan territory while the
United States and other nations main-
tain Libyan territorial waters are
limited to 12 miles.
At the State Department
spokesman Charles Redman said
Libyan agents have U.S. installations
around the world under surveillance
and may have targeted Americans for
terrorist attack in retaliation for the
gulf confrontaton.
A statement issued in Damascus,
Syria, said that "anything American
has become from now on a target for
our revolutionaries."
REDMAN called the situation
"potentially dangerous" and said
Americans abroad were being ad-
vised to be careful.
IN Libya, Khadafy urged Arabs
yesterday to form suicide squads and
attack American targets in retaliation
for U.S. strike in the disputed Gulf of
Sidra.
In a radio broadcast, Khadafy
called on Libyans to become "human
bombs" to destroy "American
terrorism" and said Arabs in general
should form suicide squads to hit
American "companies of terror."
The call came 24 hours after
Khadafy said on television Libya
would strike U.S. targets "all over the
world" if American forces escalated
the conflict in the Gulf of Sidra.
It was not known how many
Americans are in Libya. But
estimates have ranged from 100 to
nearly 1,000.
Anti-American feeling was evident
in Libyan street posters depicting the
United States as a skeleton wearing a
cowboy hat in league with a buzzard
representing Israel.
An airport poster pictured
President Reagan showing his face
against a desert background and a

skeleton, with the caption "The bar-
barian Reagan is a necrophiliac,
because his approach suffocates
humans."
In Moscow, meanwhile, Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev sharply
criticized the United States for its ar-
med clashes with Libya, and proposed
opening talks on withdrawing all U.S.
and Soviet warships from the
Mediterranean.
At a Kremlin banquet for Algerian
President Chadli Benduedid, Gor-
bachev said the Soviet Union has to
permanently base ships in the
Mediterranean only because of the
U.S. presence there.

I u

wwwwuwOF
------:o o ---o --

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