Theta Chi ehustles for heart fund By ANNETTE STARON How many bounces does it take to get from Ann Ar- bor to East Lansing when it's 17 degrees outside? Thirty-two members of the Theta Chi fraternity had a chance to find out last night. They're in the por- cess of dribbling a basketball from Crisler Arena to Jenison Field House at Michigan State University in an attempt to raise money for the American Heart Association. Wearing "anything they can find to keep warm" the fraternity brothers started dribbling last night at 6:30, Chapter Treasurer Jim Bokshan said. They hope to make it to East Lansing in time'for today's MSU-Michigan basketball game's 1 p.m. tipoff. Protected by a car in front of them and a van behind, each dribbler bounces a ball for one mile. Six members rotate on each shift and continue until each person has completed two miles. Then another new van of fresh, alert Theta Chis replaces them. The men have been preparing for the event for the past two weeks, Steve: Noskin, the originator of the fund raiser said. The group hopes to raise $2,000, he added. "The house has wanted to do something for charity for about a year," Bokshan said. Despite their frigid run, the dribblers don't have tickets to the basketball game, which was sold out three weeks ago. However, they were offered stan- ding room for free. Te Michigan Daily-Saturday, February 14, 1981-Page .3 Woodcock acceptsAI ' U' offer to teach in fall Jules Verne lives By LINDA RUECKERT Former United Auto Workers President and U.S. Ambassador to China Leonard Woodcock has accepted an offer to teach at the University, University President Harold Shapiro said yesterday. Woodcock, who received an honorary doctorate of laws from the University in 1977, will most likely begin teaching in the fall, Shapiro said. RECENTLY, Shapiro wrote Wood- cock and offered him a visiting professorship at the University. Although final arrangements have not been made, Shapiro said Woodcock may teach antd do research primarily in the political science department and also participate in programs within the Law School, Center for Chinese Studies, and Office of Transportation Research. "The University considers you a 'native son' whose distinguished record on behalf of your country has benefited us all," Shapiro wrote to Woodcock. Acting Chairman of Political Science Harold Jacobson said he is "very pleased" about Woodcock's appoin- tment. Non-stop By the Associated Press The balloon Jules Verne was floating over Pakistan last night, expected to reach New Delhi, India, by morning and was "very much on target" for its round-the-world journey, trackers reported. The two aeronauts, reached by a direct radio linkup at 5 p.m. EST, said they were about four hours outside Karachi and should reach New Delhi by 5 a.m. Saturday, reported Dee Schelling, a spokeswoman for the Bed- ford, Mass., tracking station aiding the round-world balloon on course effort. THE TWO adventurers, Maxie An- derson of Albuquerque, N.M., and Don Ida of Boulder, Colo., took off Thursday from Luxor, Egypt, in a 20-story-high balloon. They are trying to complete the first nonstop, manned balloon flight around the world. Schelling discounted a report from one of the balloonists at midnight Thursday that the voyage may have to be abandoned because the balloon was leaking. "Maxie said today he wasn't sure that he even had a leak. And if there is one, he said it is down low in a position where it wouldn't create that much of a problem," she said. "THEY'RE ON A good trajectory right now and very much on target for what we had projected," she said. "They're staying at about 22,800 feet, traveling at 70 miles an hour. It's cold outside the gondola, though - minus 22 degrees Fahrenheit." Anderson, of Albuquerque, N.M., and Ida, of Boulder, Colo., lifted off Thur- sday from' the resort city of Luxor, Egypt for what they anticipated would be a 10-day, non-stop flight. Anderson, a mining-investment executive, piloted the Double Eagle II from Canada to France in 1978 in the first trans-Atlantic manned balloon flight. Last year, he and son Kris claimed the first crossing of North America in the balloon Kitty Hawk. The balloon is named for the 19-th century French writer whose fictional hero Phileas Fogg went around .the world in 88 days. Woodcock .. to teach at U' the ann arbor r ilm cooperative1 -H APPENINGS- FILMS Gargoyle Films - Woman of the Year, 7, 9p.m., 100 Hutchins Hall. CFT -Romeo and Juliet, 7, 9:30 p.m., Michigan Theatre. AAFC -11th Annual Film Festival, 2, 7, 9 p.m., SEB Schorling Aud. AAFC - Erotic Film Festival, 7 p.m., MLB 3; A History of the Blue Movie, 9 p.m., MLB 3. Alt. Action Films - Julia, 7,9:30 p.m., MLB 4. Cinema Guild - Caddyshack, 7, 9p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Cinema II - Don Giovanni, 8 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Mediatrics - Tha Man in the Glass Booth, 7,9:15 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. SPEAKERS School of Music - Stearns Lecture Series, James Borders: Stearns, 3 p.m. Grad. Christian Fell. - Potluck supper, Jim Shire, "Knowing and Believing," 6 p.m., Campus Chapel. School of Education - Michael Orlansky, "Current Issues in the Education of Deaf-Blind Children and Youth," 4 p.m., Whitney Aud. SEB. PERFORMANCES Canterbury Loft - "Happy Days," 3, 8 p.m.,332. State. Dratman Theatre Co. - "Curse of the Starving Class," 8 p.m., Schorling Aud. SEB. Friars - 4th Annual Winter Concert with Harmonettes, Grunyons, 8 p.m., Rackham Aud., 40s Swing Dance/Reception, The Ambassadors, 10 p.m., Campus Inn Regency Room. Housing -"The Bursley Show," 8p.m., Bursley cafeteria. PTP/Theater and Drama-"I Can't Hear the Birds Singing," 8 p.m., Power Center. Ark -Debby McClatchy, banjo player, 9p.m., 1421 Hill. Fleming and Associates - University Marching Band in concert, Michigan Theatre. Saline Area Players - "George M!" 8 p.m., Saline High School Aud. School of Music - Love expressed through Baroque songs with har- psichord, Renaissance serenades, and wedding music of the Phillippines, 3 p.m., Stearns Bldg. Pioneer High School - "Kismet," 8 p.m., Pioneer Aud. E. Quad -- Womanspace, benefit for women, dance, "Fancy Valentine Prom," 9 p.m., E. Quad Halfway Inn. MISCELLANEOUS Rudranada Ashram - Intro. Meditation, Kundalini Yoga, by appt., 640 Oxford. SYDA - Workshop, "Shaktipat: The Power of Transformation," 1521 Hill. Rec. Sports - Children's Sports-O-Rama, 9 a.m., NCRB. Synchronized Swimming - Michigan Invitational, 9 a.m., 1 p.m., Margaret Bell Pool. Men's Swimming - vs. Ohio State, 3 p.m., Matt Mann Pool. Women's Indoor Track - vs. CMU, WMU, 6 p.m., Track and Tennis. Men's Wrestling - vs. Ball State, 7:30 p.m., Crisley Arena. School of Metaphysics - Casino Night, 6 p.m., 219% N. Main. WCARD- National Anti-Draft Conference workshops, Wayne State University, Detroit. Film / Video - "Close-ups: The Cinematographer," featuring Larry Trinkaus, 9 a.m., meet at Frieze parking lot. Michigan Historical Museum - Winter Festival, quilting, valentines, 2 p.m., 208 N. Capitol Ave., Lansing. Detroit Science Center - "Electricity. . . Watts Up?!" workshop, 5020 John R. Street, Detroit. University Exhibit Museum Planetarium -'"Cosmos: The Voyage to the Stars," narrated by Carl Sagan, 10:30, 11:45 a.m., 1:30, 2:45, 4 p.m. WCBN - Second Annual On-The-Air Fundraiser, continuous segments of special programming interspersed with comments and discussion, 88.8 FM. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI., 48109. MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR THE POSITIONS OF: ELECTION DIRECTOR Responsible for management and organization of campus- wide MSA General Election for April 7 & 8, 1981. SALARY-$500 Reagan plan may kill TONIGHT TONIGHT gun contro WASHINGTON (AP) - The federal agency that enforces gun controls would be radically reduced or abolished under the Reagan administration's deregulation and budget cutting plans. Any such action undermining tier Treasury Department's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms would be a big victory for "New Right" con- servative supporters of President Reagan, and for the National Rifle Association, which has tried for years to accomplish the same thing through legislation. HAMSTRINGING the bureau would be one of Reagan's first major con- cessions to his conservative allies, in- cluding the anti-gun control forces which spent heavily in support of his election. The bureau has been under fire from other quarters as well, stemming from charges of arbitrary or violent in- vestigative and arrest tactics against some of its agents. Proposals under study would transfer some functions of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms to other agencies and possibly eliminate the agency's gun control enforcement. The agency's current budget totals $151 million annually. FEDERAL LAW requires licensing of gun manufacturers, importers and de lers. Persons buying guns must fill out forms giving their names and ad- dresses. The law prohibits sale of firearms to such persons as convicted criminals, fugitives from justice, unlawful users of narcotics, and to insane or mentally in- competent persons. Repeated efforts 'in Congress to repeal the law have failed, but the latest move by the Office of Management and Budget could accom- plish essentially the same thing through the budget process and executive reorganization. WORD OF THE impending changes reached the agency Thursday from the presents EROTIC FILMH FESTIVAL 7:00 MLB Aud. 3 11 A New and Vital Black Drama I Can't Hea r the Birds Singing February 11 - 15 Wed -Sat 8pm Sun 2 pm GUEST ARTIST Earl D.A. Smith PTP Ticket Office Michigan Leag ue Mon- Fri 10.1 & 2.5 Phone 764-0456 ol agency 0MB by way of the Treasury Depar- tment. Bureau officials were briefed on the reports. "We have been told unofficially that there will be some large cuts, both in people reduction and program reduc- tion, and possibly even dismantling the bureau," one agency official said. It was unclear from the reports exac- tly what would happen to the bureau's responsibilities on firearms, but the consensus was there would be no enfor- cement agency left. The bureau's jurisdiction over arson and explosives case would be tran- sferred to the Justice Department and handled as other criminal cases are. "We were told the functions that would be eliminated or stopped, whatever word you choose, would be firearms, tobacco and arson, which is pretty much our whole criminal enfor cement function," one bureau official said. "It's practically everything we do." A HISTORY OF THE BLUE MOVIE 9:00 MLB Aud. 3 SINGLE FEATURE: $2 DOUBLE FEATURE: $3 l. v MARTY'S...GOESDUTCH TREATWITH:THEIR SIXTH ANNUAL. FINAL WINTER TCH C T NCLEARANCE Now Thru Saturday REGULAR PRICE $125 5155 Si185 $225 $255 $275 $295 DNESDAY'r O TCI4THEA $D :270 -SUITS- D HTR6T DUTCH TR$/T f 3f ste0 $220 1 SATURDAYS DUTCH TREAT 4 $73 $102 $145 4135 4175 1195 REGULAR PRICE $"5 $95 $1 15 $145 $175 $200 5275 SPOR T COATS DNESDA Y ' HURSDAY' RIDAY'S SATURDAY'S D TCH TRE TCHR T D CH TR T DUTCH TREAT $109 Eff$10 1 30$135 $20 17133 1140 $25 $23$213 $193 i Wed. - 20% Off COATS Thurs.-30% Off JACKETS Fri.-40% Off LACKETS Sat.-50% Off LEATHERS ALL SWEATERS wed-20% Off V and Crew Neck, Thurs. - 30% Off Turtle Neck, r.-0%'Off Cardigan, Fi 4 f Fashion Styles Sat. -50% Off wed.-20% Off GROUPS OF Thurs.-30% Off WINTER Fri.-40% Off SLACKS Sat. - 50% Off DRESS SHIRTS Sale Ends on Saturday, February 14th All Sales Final Open Thursday A Friday Nites 'til 8:30 j- HIS LADY SHOP FOR WOMEN- Wednesday Thursday 20 % BLAZERS 30% OFF SKIRTS OFF Friday SLACKS Saturday DRESSES 50% OFF OFF I Wed.-20% Off SPORT SHIRTS Thurs.-30% off Plain & Fancy Fri.-40% Off Knits, Cut& Sat.-50 % Off Sewn, Fancy and Solids From His Lady Shop For Women Special Groups of Winter Wed. - 20% Off BLOUSES Thurs. - 30% Off SHIRTS Fri. - 40% Off SWEATERS Sat -0% Off From His Lady Shop For Women Wed. - 20% Off Spcal Groups of Winter Thurs. -30 % Off, CO T Fri,-40% o 0f CO Sat. - 50% Off JACKETS All M.rchandls on sal. is from our fll and wint.r stock. Not all si.es and colors available In all items. VISA,*MASTERCHARGE AMERICAN EXPRESS Pork fro* In Maynard St. Carport; We Validate Your Tiket E: VI RYR 4NG Pt. n iiMAN (3419d~ca APPAREL FOR WOMEN 306-310 S. State, Ann Arbor Take a Sentimental Journey.. with the Friars joined by The Harmonettes and The Grunyons 8 p.m. Valentine's Day Frhn arv 14 followcd by a Dance/Reception Ca mpus Inn Regency Room (space limited to 300) 10 p.m. Biq 13andl music by the Ambassadors $5.00