The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 10, 1986 - Page 3 Chrysler pledges to reform gov't d--11 I 910 What's happening around Ann Arbor Campus Cinema Steamboat Bill Jr. (Buster Keaton, 1927) C2, 7p.m., MLB 4. In this comedy classic of silent film, Keaton plays a long lost son visiting his father and involving himself in the riverboat rivalries of the Mississippi. The Navigator (Buster Keaton, 1924) C2,8 p.m., MLB 4. Hilarious comedy about two poor little rich kids cast adrift on a deser- ted ocean liner. The General (Buster Keaton, 1927) C2, 9 p.m., MLB 4. A comedy classic inspired by an authentic Civil War incident in which a band of Confederate soldiers stole a Union locomotive. The Adventures of Robin Hood (Michael Curtiz, 1938) MED, 7:30 p.m., Nat Sci. Errol Flynn stars as the dauntless bandit hero determined to end the tyranny of Prince John, treacherous brother to King Richard. Captain Blood (Michael Curtiz, 1935) MED, 9:30 p.m., Nat Sci. Errol Flynn plays a wrongly im- prisoned doctor turned pirate who founds the Brotherhood of Buc- caneers and fights the evil James II. Two Women (Vittorio De Sica, 1960) AAFC, 7p.m., Aud A. The story of a mother and a daughter struggling to survive in Italy during WWII. Stars Sophia Loren. The Virgin Spring (Ingmar Bergman, 1959) AAFC, 9 p.m., Aud A. Based on Swedish legend, this is the story of a young virgin, Karin, who suffers a horrible fate at the hands of three strangers. Shoah (Claude Lanzmann,1985) Hill St., 6 p.m. (part 1), Mich. Critcally acclaimed, this is Lan- zmann's 9% hour Holocaust documentary that was 10 years in the making. Beautiful. Performances An Evening of One-Acts - Residen- tial College Players, 8 p.m., Residential College Auditorium, East Quad. RC students will perform four one- act plays, three of which comprise a trilogy. Freedom and Angelina - Clements Library, 8 p.m., S. University at Tappan, (764-2347). The City Stage Company, a Boston-based company, will present June Judson's musical drama about the life of the 19th century human rights crusader Angelina Grimke. The Pirates of Penzance - Univer- sity Gilbert and Sullivan Society, 8:15 p.m., Mendelssohn Theater, (761-7855). Steven Krahnke directs this Gilbert and Sullivan musical farce of 19th century England. Noye's Fludde - Youth Choirs of First Presbyterian Church, 8 p.m., 1432 Washtenaw. Conductor Donald Bryant and soloists Sally Carpenter and Philip Pierson lead 100 performers and an orchestra in the staging of this musical. Bars & Clubs BIRD OF PARADISE (996-8310) - Ron Brooks Trio, jazz. THE BLIND PIG (996-8555) - Ragin' Fire, punkabilly. THE EARLE (994-0211) - Larry Manderville. MAIN STREET COMEDY SHOWCASE (996-9080) - Lowell Sanders and Marty Micoli. THE NECTARINE BALLROOM (994-5436) - DJ, Afrika Bambaataa. RICK'S AMERICAN CAFE (996-2747) - (Bop) Harvey, reggae. U-CLUB (763-2236) - Soundstage. Speakers Lucian Pye - "Political Cultures of Contemporary China," Chinese Studies, 8 p.m., Rackham Am- phitheater. Leah Minc - "ResourceScarcity and Survival in N.W. Alaska," An- thropology Museum, noon, 2009 Museums Bldg. Rees Midgley - "Intercellular Communications and Control of the Ovary," Genetics, noon, 1139 Natural Science Bldg. Harold Stevenson - "Japanese, Chinese, and American Five-Year- Olds," Japanese Studies, noon, Commons Room, Lane Hall. Emily Jessup - "Embattled Lan- dscapes: Gender and Regionalism in the Midwest," Women's Research Series, 7:30 p.m., West Conf. Room, Rackham. Patrick Patillo, Gloria Scribbling, Rose Martin - Poetry reading, 7 p.m., Comfort Inn. Arthur Green - "The problems the Mystics Had With all of Those Jewish Commandments," 7:30 p.m., Hilel. Alice Cackley - Economic Development, 12:15 p.m., 361 Lorch Hall. Deborah Keller-Cohen - "The Making of the Michigan Bell Telephone Bill: Implications for Text-Processing," Linguistics, noon, 3050, Frieze Bldg. Gertrude Elion - "Mechanism of Action and Selectivity of Antiviral Agents," Chemistry/Rackham Pharmacy/Warner-Lambert/Parke Davis, 3:45 p.m., 3554 C.C. Little Bldg. L.S. Bartell, T.M. Dunn, L.L. Lohr - "Perspectives on Physical Chemistry: Frontiers of Research," Chemistry, 4 p.m., 1200 Chemistry Bldg. Thomas Cravens - "The Solar Wind Interaction With Comets Gialobini-Zinner and Halley: Results From the Ice and Vega Missions," Atmospheric and Oceanic Science, 3:45 p.m., 2231 Space Research Bldg. Sing Lee - "Optical Pattern Recognition," Industrial Technology, 3:30 p.m., 165 Chrysler Center. Meetings Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship -7 p.m., 52 East Quad. University Council - 4 p.m., 3909 Union. Campus Crusade for Christ - 7 p.m., Hutchins Hall. Hebrew Speaking Club - 4 p.m., 206 Angell Hall. Hands Across America - 6 p.m., 429 Mason Hall. AIDS and the Worried Well - 8 p.m., 3200 Union. University Alcoholics Anonymous - noon, 3200 Union. Furthermore Faculty Governance - American Association of University Professors/Senate Advisory Com- mittee on University Affairs program, 12:30 p.m., Michigan Room, League. The Gauss Bonnet Theorem: Cycloidal Curves: Tales From the Wanklenberg Woods - Math Show films, 4 p.m., 3201 Angell Hall. Safety class for new shop users, session II - Student Wood and Craf- ts Shop, 3 p.m., Student Activities Bldg. Microsoft Word for IBM PC- Compatible Microcomputers, Part I - Microcomputer Education workshop, 8:30 a.m., 3001 School of Education Bldg. Free help on tax forms - 11 a.m., Union. Communicating Upwards: What to Say, When, Where and How - HRD workshop. Labor Migration From the Middle East: Yemeni Experience - Near East and North African Studies con- ference, 1 p.m., Public Library. Italy - International Night, 5 p.m., Cafeteria, League. Tutoring in math, science and engineering - Tau Beta Pi, 7 p.m., 307 Undergraduate Library; 8 p.m., 2332 Bursley Hall. Scottish Country Dancers - Beginners, 7 p.m.; Intermediates, 8 p.m., Forest Hills Community Cen- ter. 2352 Shadowood. Bible Study - His House Christian Fellowship.7:30 p.m., 925 E. Ann. By DOV COHEN Dick Chrysler, owner of Cars and Concepts and a leading candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination, told an audience of about 35 students in Hale Auditorium that he would run the government like a business. "The government is big business. Businesses aren't buildings or machines or equipments. Businesses are people and if you can get people motivated and excited, you can create miracles," he said. ONE OF his goals would be to enact workman's compensation reforms to give the state "a job climate." "Workman's compensation's alleged reforms just nibble at the cor- ners....They're not true reforms," he said. "Forty-nine other states have good workman's compensation laws. It's time we look at the other 49 and pick one in the middle." Chrysler went on to blast the single business tax, saying "When we in- crease taxes we drive jobs out of the state. It's a disaster. It's a Washington mentality." CHRYSLER said he is more qualified than his opponents to create jobs because of his business experien- ce. After the speech, he said: "James Blanchard is grinning up there thinking he only has to run against (Republican Wayne County Executive) Bill Lucas. He doesn't- want to run against Dick Chrysler, who has no voting record, who is a self-made man, who has created jobs," he said. Chrysler said his popularity is in- creasing. "We did a benchmark poll in January and we had 6 percent and Lucas had 35 percent," he said. "We did one again in March and now we have 41 percent and Lucas had 27 per- cent." One of the reasons Chrysler may have made so much progress is that he is running "a full campaign through the (August) primary and in- to the general election." Apologizing for being 25 minutes late, Chrysler said, "We hit 42 cities last week, 5 today, and 7 tomorrow." Chrysler says the reason he is run- ning his primary campaign at such a breakneck speed is to "bring more people into the Republican primary. We want 800,000 voters in the Republican primary so we can get 1.6 million in the general election," he said. Chrysler ...wants efficiency Awards push to keep Ojibwa at 'U' By EVE BECKER There aren't many people who still speak Ojib- wa, but there may be even fewer if the University discontinues its tradition of teaching the Indian language. Native American representatives from the Chippewa, Potawatomi, and Ottawa tribes gathered in the Fleming Administration Building yesterday to pressure administrators into con- tinuing theUniversity's program as they com- memorated the 12th year the University has taught the language. THE representatives presented awards to University President Harold Shapiro, Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye, and Ojibwa elder and native speaker Hap McCue for their past support of the language. The ceremony was timed to coincide with the 14th Annual Ann Arbor Pow Wow, which will take place this weekend. It was also intended to put public pressure on the University to continue the program if Richard Rhodes, who is teaching the course of 30 students this year, gets a job at another university. Native Americans believe their language is the heart of their culture, said Bill Church, an Ottawa nation leader and executive director of the Michigan Commission of Indian Affairs. "WE ARE proud this establishment has a program to enable our young to learn what the language is," Church said. He recalled when he used to get in trouble for speaking English - "The other language." Since the University's linguistics department was dismantled last year, the Ojibwa course has been absorbed into the American Culture program. Rhodes, the only Ojibwa teacher at the University, said he is not happy with the switch, and he lamented the decline in quality that led to the end of the linguistics department. "What was once a very high-ranking department fell way, way down," he said. Michigan's Native American population has skyrocked in the past 15 years, from 10,000 in 1971 to 60,000 today. There are about 75 Native American students at the University. Three tribes gave the University its start in 1817 when they gave up 2,000 acres of land for the in- stitution that became the University. James McIntosh, director of the American Culture program, said the future of the Ojibwa course "is very up in the air." He said Rhodes has not received a reply from the University of Califor- nia-Berkeley, where he has applied for a position in linguistics with a speciality in American Indian language. 'U' fights state law requiring S. African divestment By KERY MURAKAMI Attorneys for the University and the state presented their arguments yesterday to a Michigan Court of Ap- peals over whether the state can require the University to completely divest its holdings in companies that do business in South Africa. The University's stock portfolio currently includes $500,000 in South Africa-related investments. That figure is 1 percent of the $50 million the University had invested in co- mpanies that do business in South Africa in 1983, when the Board of Regents voted for divestment. THE REGENTS kept the $500,000, they said, to have a legal basis for challenging a state law that they saw violates the University's con- stitutional right to autonomy. The law, passed in 1978, requires all public universities to divest com- pletely. The brief challenging the law, filed by University attorney Roderick Doan, says, "The constitutional history of Michigan reveals a clear public intent to insulate the Univer- sity of Michigan from legislative in- terference." The brief quotes a provision of the state constitution which says, "Each (university) board shall have general supervision of its institutions and the control and direction of all expen- ditures fromthe institution's funds." Attorneys for the state, however, say the University's autonomy per- tains to its "education functions," not its investments. In the first round of the dispute last summer, Ingham County Circuit Court Judge Caroline Stell ruled in favor of the state because the law requiring divestment did not usurp the regents' authority over the "educational sphere" of the Univer- sity. Regents yesterday wouldn't com- ment on whether the University will divest its remaining investments af- ter the suit is settled. SHIPPING OVERSEAS?. Malaysia * Nigeria e Thailand Kenya 0 Iraq * Europe South America " Middle East To Over 100 Countries Worldwide Photography in Israel June 30-July 31, 1986 $2,555 Landscape, portrait, nude, and various approaches to photoreportage. Excursions to Masada, Jerusalem, and the North of Israel. Directed by Philip Perkis. Total Design in Milan July 7-August 4, 1986 $3,100 Design history, theory, criticism, and studio work offered in collaboration with the Domus Academy. Critics: Giovanni Petteno, Ezio Manzini, Trini Castelli, Andrea Branzi, Rodolfo Bonetto, F. Binfare and Pierre Restany. Visits to design facilities, pro- duction factories and cities of interest to the contemporary designer. e 6 college credits * Professional facilities " Deluxe accommodations " Pratt faculty . Internationally renowned visiting lecturers " Regularly scheduled airlines. " " " Home Pick-up Phone Quote House to House Insurance " Export Crating " Air Freight " Ocean Freight SHOPPING FOR OVERSEAS? Televisions, VCR's, Cameras, Stereos Trunks and Luggage Major Appliances and Small Housewares 220 Volt 50 Cycle ABACO INTERNATIONAL SHIPPERS, INC. 1-800-621-4504 2020 N. Racine, Chicago, IL 60614 *7 .s s F -.-s * z* & * * >*d D $$ .* 5 Y * Z Ef * Graduate credit available at an additional cost of $180.00 For brochures or information, call B. Warmath, (718) 636-3624 or mail the coupon below. p r a tt B. Warmath, Pratt School of Art and Design 200 Willoughby Ave. Brooklyn, NY 11205 Please send me a brochure on: 11 Photography in Israel Q Totol Design in Milan Name Address City. State Zip Code m a S U M M E R '86:. a };:mt+?Jr."{ .J-:: J:::::w ::::::::w ::y ::::C.:::v::": W .::t:::::..:...-............T.. 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