I The Michigan Daily-Friday, February 23, 1979-Page 3 rF MU XSEE NRAPPE14 CALLZDAIL For love or money Marty Britsch's. heart was in the right place, but his boss, the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority (AATA) board, is not pining away for their employee who has been suspended without pay for one week. Britsch, an AATA bus driver, was disciplined because he offered free bus rides to customers on Valentine's Day, despite the fact that this is not permissible under the terms of his contract with the board. Love was apparently not enough to keep Britsch, and the board, together. No vacancy In the wake of Wednesday night's dorm lottery many students were perhaps saddened at being denied, at least temporarily, a spot at their favorite accommodations. But one student was able to maintain her composure following the confusion. She appeared at the Markley desk and began frantically searching through a list of names of students who had been reaccepted into that dorm. Her name was not among those lucky returnees, probably because the list was only for returning male residents. But when advised of her "mistake" the young woman said,swith a smile, that she was aware of the sex of those residents on the list. Happenings FILMS A-V Services - Starphac; Five Minutes to Live, Aud. SPG II, 12:10 p.m. Mediatrics - Bahia, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7, 9 p.m. Cinema Guild - The Philadelphia Story, Old Arch. Aud., 7,9:05 p.m. Gargoyle Films - Zimmerman's From Here to Eternity, 100 Hut- chins Hall, 7,9:15 p.m. Ann Arbor Film Co-op - Anne Hall, 7, 10:20 p.m., Woody Allen Retrospective, 8:40, Aud. 3 MLB. Cinema II - Twentieth Century, 7, 10:20 p.m., Holiday, 8:40 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. SPEAKERS Guild House - Phyllis Ocker, Associate Director Women's Athletics, "The State of Women's Athletics at the University of Michigan," noon, Guild House, 802 Monroe. Center for Western European Studies - Charles Tully, professor of history and sociology, "Patterns of Conflict in Nineteenth Century Britain and France," noon, Michigan League Conference rooms. Psychology - Psychology Prof. Julian Rappaport and Ed Seidman, University of Illinois, "The Search for Alternative Conceptions, Methods, and Interventions," 4 p.m., 447 Mason Hall. Wesley Foundation - Jay Goldfarb, "An Energy-sharing Introduc- tion to T'ai C'hi, 7 p.m., Methodist Church, corner of State and Huron. Saint Mary's Chapel - Bishop Thomas Gumbleton, auxiliary bishop of Detroit, "The Meaning of Lent," 7:30 p.m., St. Mary's Student Chapel, 331 Thompson, Sunday. U.S. - China People's Friendship Association - Robert Williams, former consultant in the Center for Chinese Studies, "Current Events in China, 8 p.m., Michigan Union Conference Room. National Alliance Against Racist and Political Represssion - Forum on "Human Rights at Home: Repression of Labor in the United States," Saturday, Feb. 24, 1-5 p.m., Angell Hall, Aud. B. SPORTS Men's Indoor Track - Wolverine Invitational: Track/Tennis Building, preliminaries, 3 p.m., finals 6 p.m. PERFORMANCES Residential College Players - Two original one-act plays, The Babysitter, and The Six Page Play, 7:30 p.m., East Quad Half-Way Inn, free admission. Canterbury Loft - Stone, performed by the Radical Arts Troupe, 8 p.m., Canterbury Loft, 332 S. State St. Williams Baroque Ensemble, Italian baroque chamber music, 8 p.m., St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, free admission. The Ark - Michael Cooney, something for everyone, 9 p.m., $3.50. Dance - Student Composition Showcase, Studio A, Dance Building (behind-CCRB), 4:15 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS Hillel - 6 p.m., orthodox minyan, Hillel, 1429 Hill St., 8 p.m., reform minyan; 9 p.m., Jewish graduate students/singles, one shabbat and informal discussion, "Being Single and Jewish," Hillel. Cobblestone Farm Association and Cobblestone Country Dancers - Fifth Anniversary Celebration of founding of the organization, 6:30 p.m., St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, 306 N. Division. Wesley Foundation - From these Roots, Pine Room, Methodist Church, corner State and Huron, noon. They're only human While students are often warned about buying term papers, it seems i professors are offered the same opportunity for scholarly enrichment. The Society of American Law Teachers, according to the College Press Service, has instituted an "Exam and Paper Exchange Ser- vice" for its members. Professors can buy testing materials such as take-home papers, projects, or drafting exercises from the society. So if you're taking a class in Constitutional Law, Civil Procedures, Criminal Law, or Evidence, Contracts, and Property, try calling a professor at another school to see if he or she has an idea of what might be asked on an upcoming exam. h Oln fthe jtvidi, Plans for therapeutic greenhouse tabled By CHARLES THOMSON Plans to build an experimental greenhouse for use in therapy and rehabilitation programs for the han- dicapped were tabled last week by the University Botanical Gardens Executive Committee. The structure, proposed for construc- tion south of the Matthaei Botanical Gardens greenhouses on Dixboro Rd., would provide all its own energy needs for winter heating through a sytem of heat pumps, windmills, and solar heat collectors. WHILE EMPHASIZING the plans for the structure are tentative, Mary Man- deville, director of the experimental greenhouse project, said, "I am really excited about the structure and I think the University would really benefit from it." Plans for the structure are an outgrowth of the University's Hor- ticultural Therapy Project, a program which assists groups and organizations for the handicapped which utilize hor- ticulture for therapy. Among the devices incorporated into the proposed structure are a computer to regulate the operation of the win- dmill, the heat pump, and the solar energy collector, as well as special insulation placed between the plants and the greenhouse windows to reduce heat loss at night. Mandeville predicted that within 10 years, the existing greenhouses of the botanical gardens would have to be insulated in a similar manner. BOTAN ICAL gardens administrators have been trying to conserve energy in the greenhouse, though the attempts have been limited mostly to a rearranging of plants in such a way that the temperatures in some of the greenhouses could be lowered. Dr. William Benninghoff, director of the botanical gardens, says that heating the greenhouses for a single winter is equivalent to heating 15 to 25 small houses. At one time, according to Mandeville, a plan to install energy conserving devices on one of the existing greenhouses was under consideration. The plan also called for a measure of savings of energy and money to see if further installations would be warran- ted. The plan, Mandeville said, fell through. "Nobody's had the time to do it," she commented. l H.AL DAYS STORE CLOSING 0 OF over 100,000 new books still in stock EVERYTHING MUST GO SOON' CENTICORE GOOKSHOP 336 Maynard =.i 9:30-10 p.m. Mon.-Sat. L 12-8 p.m. Sun. K _ 0 Call Red cross toayabout learning CPR-. cardiopulmonary resuscitation. - Red Cross