The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 18, 1977-Page 3 "FrJUSEE wS HMAP' E.CAL' .. And your little dogwood too! Poppies! Poppies! Well, not really poppies. But there will cer- tainly be a lot of foliage in the Union Ballroom beginning today, from the bizarre to the ordinaire, as the Panhellenic Council holds its an- nual plant sale. From 10 a.m. to8 p.m. through Thursday, you can take your pick of any of dozens of green luscious varieties of real Michigan house plants on display. Buy one to keep your window sill company while you're away! Proceeds Benefit the Children's Psychiatric Hos- pital. Former admissions official dies Sidney Straight, assistant director of undergraduate admissions at the University from 1951 until his retirement in 1972, died suddenly Sunday night.at his cottage in Chelsea. Straight, 73, coordinated the admissions program with Michigan high schools. He also taught English, drama and speech at Adrian College, Lincoln College in Lin- coln, Ill., University High School in Ann Arbor, aridInterlochen Arts Academy. Straight is survived by his widow, Ruth,-and a son and daughter. Happenings.. . for all you late-sleepers and music lovers out there, con- veniently begin at noon with a "Music at Midday" concert in the Union's Pendleton room ... brown-baggers are welcome at the Inter- national Center's luncheon featuring Suad Aamiry, a Palestinian stu- dent, speaking on a "Peace Settlement in the Middle East?" ... at 3:00 in 1025 Angell Hall, Jonathan Shear, chairman of the Philosophy Department of Maharishi International University, discusses "Plato, Piaget and Maharishi Mahesh Yogi on the Evolution of Conscious- ness" ... Sir Norman Anderson has comefrom the University of Lon- don to speak on "The Study of Islamic Law" at 3:30 in the Law School's Hutchins Hall ... back at the International Center, in the Recreation room, learn about "International Careers in the U.S. Govt. and Int'l Organizations" at 4:00 ... Amnesty International, this year's Nobel Peace Prize winner, will have a representative, Josh Ruben- stein, speaking at 4:00 in Aud. 3 MLB as part of Viewpoint's Fall Lec- ture series ... Sociocinema presents two free movies, "Rape Culture" and "Night and Fog" at 4:00 and 7:30 in Aud 4 MLB .. Mona Van Duyn, a 1971 National Book Award winner, reads her poetry at 4:10 in the Union's Pendleton Room ..,. over in 231 Angell Hall at 4:15, Fred- erick P. Pickering, professor emeritus of German Literature at the University of Reading, England, presents a slide lecture on "The Dan- ce of Death" ... for you budding Milton Friedman's out there, the Michigan Economic Society holds a meeting in 301 Econ. Bldg. at 7:30 .at the same time, 'U' Chicano Advocate Lino Mendiolo speaks on Chicano rights in Alice Lloyd's Blue Carpet Lounge ... Tau Beta Pi, the engineering honors society, has its meeting at 7:30 in 170 P&A, featur- ing Ted Paps, the president of Systems Products Division ... over in Rackham's Ampitheater, Lord Eric Ashby confronts "The Politician's Dilemna: Decision Making in a Technological Society" at 8:00 ... the Students for Free Discussion are sponsoring a forum on racism at 8:00. in the Union's Kuenzel room ... the Ann Arbor Democrats meet at 8:00 at the city's public library when State Senator John Otterbacher, a U.S. Senate hopeful speaks ... c'est tout. On the outside..., Coming off a week where 78 per'cent of their forecasts were on target, our trusty weatherfolk confidently predict that today's high will hit 600. Skies will be partly cloudy and 15 to 20 mile an hour winds are heading in from the Northwest. The nighttime temperature will be skirting the freezing pointwhen the low dips to 34 Chimp heart graft patient dies CAPE TOWN, South Africa-Doctors at Groote Schuir Hospital here blamed circulatory failure for the death early yesterday of Benjamin Fortes, the first man ever to have a chimpanzee's heart graftedinto his chest to back up his own failing heart. The Cape Town accountant, 59, lived for 31 days with the "piggy back" heart beating beside his own. It was implanted in a four-hour operation Thursday night by a Groote Schuur surgical team headed by heart tran- splant pioneer Dr. Christiaan Barnard. FORTES, married and the father of three, was the second recipient of a chimpanzee heart transplant, but the first to get one as an auxiliary pump. In 1964, Dr. James Hardy of the Univer- sity of Mississippi replaced a 68-year- old man's heart with that of a chimpan- zee. The man died two hours after Daily Official Bulletin The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceeding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday, Sunday, and Monday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more informa- tion, phone 764-9270. Tuesday, October 18 DAY CALENDAR Panhellenic Plant Sale: Proceeds to Children's Psychiatric Hosp., Union Ballroom, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Ecumenical Campus Ctr./Int'l. Ctr.: Suad Aami- ry, "Peace Settlement in the Middle East?" 603 E. Madison, noon. Pendleton Ctr.: "Music at Midday," chamber quartet, 2nd fl., Union, noon. Environmental Studies: T. Anton, "The Politics of Environmental Policy," 1528 C.C. Little, 3p.m. Ctr. Near Eastern, N. African Studies Law Sch.: Sir Norman Anderson, U. of London, "The Study of Islamic Law," Rm. 100 Hutchins Hall, 3:30 p.m. Int'l. Ctr.: "International Careers with. the U.S. Government and with Private and Non-Profit Organ- izations," 603 E. Madison, 4 p.m. UAC Viewpoint Lectures: John Rubenstein, Am- nesty Internat'l., "Violations of Human Rights," Aud. 3, MLB, 4 p.m. 'English Dept.: Mona Van Duyn, poetry reading, Pendletopn Ctr., Union, 4:10 p.m. Pilot Program.: Lino Mendiola, "Chicano Rights," Blue Carpet Lounge, Alice Lloyd Hall, 7:30 p.m. Engineering: Lord Eric Ashby, educator and bot- anist, "Technology and Democracy," Rackham Amph., 8 p.m. Music School: Faculty Chamber Recital, Rack- ham Aud., 8 p.m. Music School: Sina-Weckler Duo, SM Recital Hall, 8 p.m. 17th Annual Conf. on Organ Music: Martin Hasel- brock, organist, Hill, 8:30 p.m. The oldest students to attend the University in 1976 were a 75-year-old undergraduate man and a 75-year-old graduate woman. The youngest studen- ts were 11 males and 13 females who were 16-year-old. surgery. Banard had said the chimpanzee heart implant' was a temporary measure. Hospital sources said the surgeon plan- ned to remove the animal heart when a human organ became available. Barnard was unavailable for com- ment following Fortes' death. AT MIDDAY Sunday, the hospital re- ported Fortes in satisfactory condition, and a spokesman said it might take two weeks to determine is his body would reject the animal heart. A statement issued by the hospital yesterday said Fortes' "condition star- ted deteriorating at about 11 o'clock Sunday night. All attempts to improve the circulation failed, and he died. yesterday morning. "The cause of deterioration in the circulation is not known, and will only be established when details from the post-mortem examination become available." In the past three years, Barnard, who performed the world's first successful human heart transplant a decade ago, has carried out 17 straight successful piggyback implants, using a second human heart in each case. He and his cardiac team pioneered the piggyback technique in an operation on a 58-year- old man in 1974. Last June, Barnard, 53, made his first attempt with an animal'heart, grafting a baboon's heart into the chest of a 26- year-old Italian woman. The woman, Marilena Mattiuzzo Portello, lived only four hours. After the operation, Barnard said the baboon heart "just couldn'd cope with carrying the full circulation." THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVIII, No. 35 Tuesday, October 1$, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Pub- lished daily Tuesday through Sunday morning dur- ing the -University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Atgbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through Apri (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Pedal. Just for the health of it. Get moving, America! March 1-7. 1977 is National Physical Education and Sport Week Physical Education Public Information Ameican Atiance for Health Physical Educaton and1 Recreation 1201 16th St N W Washington . 0 C 20036 the ann arbor film cooperative TONIGHTI TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18 THE HARDER THEY COME (Perry Henzell, 1973) 7 & 9-Aud. A An exotic glimpse of Jamaican life in this first film from the isle of reefer. A violent tale of a young innocent who seeks his fortune as a pop star and ends up as a renegade desperado. Based on a true story. Reggae music by Jimmy Cliff, Toots and the Moytals, the Slickers, and others throbs with vitality throughout the film. "THE HARDER THEY COME has more guts, wit, humor and sheer exuberance than most movies you'U ever see in any one year of movie-going"-Vincent Canby. In Jamaican dialect, with subtitles. ADMISSION $1.50 * FREE * JOHN HUS TON 1948 THE TREASURE Of SIERRA MADRE Starring: HUMPHREY BOGART 8:00 P.M . TONIGHT s PresbyterianChurch 8.00P, M TONGHT1432 Washtenaw The Ecumenical Campus Center presents the 1977 Distinguished Facuy Series WIHLECTURES BY DR. DAVID NOEL FREEDMAN- Friday, Oct. 21 Director of the Program on Studies in Religion "EBLA AND THE BIBLE" DR. ANGUS CAMPBELL-- Friday, Oct. 28 Program Director, Survey Research Center, Institute for Social Research tenter and Former Director of the Institute "WELFARE AND WELL BEING" DR. ALBERT FEUERWERKER- Friday, Nov. 11 Director, Center for Chinese Studies "CHINA IN THE LAST QUARTER OF THE 20TH CENTURY" DR. NIARA SUDARKASA - Friday, Nov. 18 Professor, Dept. of Anthropology and enter for Afro-American-African Studies m m