The Michigan Daily-Friday, October It, 1980-Page 3' -HAPPEIG FILMS Ann Arbor Film Co-p-Dawn of the Dead, 7,9:30 p.m., MLB Aud. 4. Cinema Guild-Pickpocket, 7 p.m., Une Fenmme Douce, 8:15, Lorch Hall Aud. Cinema I1-The Barefoot Contessa, 7 p.m.; Sunset Boulevard, 9:15 p.m., Angell Aud. A.' Gargoyle Films-Allegro Non Tropo, 7, 9 p.m., Hutchins Hall. Mediatrics-Forbidden Planet, 7:30 p.m., THX-1138, 9:40 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Astrofest-Man in Space, Mars in 3-D, 7:30 p.m., MLB Aud. 3. SPEAKERS Guild House-Howard Simon, "Civil Liberties and the Draft," 12 p.m., 802 Monroe. Department of Chemistry-Organic Colloquium: "Epoxidation and Hydroxylation Catalyzed by Ferric Porphyrins", 2 p.m., 1300 Chemistry. Bio. Tech. - Robert Helling, "Current Status of Recombinant DNA" (Part 2) 3 p.m., 104 Engineering IA. Department of Physics-Samuel Ting, "A Search for New Particles," 4:15 p.m., 296 Dennison. NES-R. F. Poswick, "Concordance de la Bible," 4 p.m., 3050 Frieze: Department of Dance- Malini Srirana, "History of Indian Music and Dance," 8p.m.., Dance Building Studio Theater. History of Art-David Strohach, "Excavations at Tepe Nush-i Jan, Iran: The Rediscovery of Ancient Media," 8p.m., Angell Aud. A. MEETINGS University Duplicate Bridge Club-open game, inexperienced duplicate players welcome; 7:30 p.m., Michigan League Henderson Room. U of M International Folk Dance Club-Open meeting, 8 p.m., until mid- night. U of M Aikido Association-Gozo Shioda, Japanese martial arts demon- stration, 8 p.m., CCRB gym. PERFORMANCES University Choir-Thomas Hilbish, conductor;, Basset; Notes in Silence; Moneverdi, Gloria; 8 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Canterbury Loft-~"Kennedy's Children," 8 p.m., 332S. State. Office of Major Events-Dixie Dregs, 8 p.m:, Power Center. Ark-Paul Geremia, blues guitar and harmonica, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill St. MISCELLANEOUS International Center-Wilderness camp weekend, register in Room 18 of the International Center. Trip leaves International Center Lounge, 5 p.m. Women's Hospital-Fashion show to benefit infants' nursery, 1 p.m., Bar- ton Hills Country Club; 764-6892. Open House for all students at President's House-3-5 p.m., 815 S. Univer- sity. Men's Cross Country-Meet with MSU, 4 p.m., Michigan Golf Course. Trotter House-Yusuf Rasheed, 'art show opening, 4-7 p.m., 1443 Washtenaw. See HAPPENINGS, Page 5 1 Capt. John Claus Voss arrived in England Sept. 2, 1904, after circum- navigating the globe in an Indian dugout canoe. Voss took three years, three months and 12 days to make the trip. The vessel, for which Voss paid $75, had been carved 50 years earlier by a Nootka Indian on the west coast of Vancouver Island. The canoe carried no auxiliary motor but sailed under three masts. Voss died in California in 1922. / K T ' ' 0- GREEKS invented almost everything except pizza. Now they can claim they perfected that, too! BELL'S GREEK PIZZA S. State and Packard 995-0232 Open 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. daily Until 2 Friday & Saturday FREE DELIVERY from 4:30 daily / MIX OR MATCH COORDINATES TEAM HEATHER PLAIDS WITH VELVETEEN, BEAUTIFULLY. Make the move from desk to dinner in these soft and pretty separates. By Modern Juniors in wine, sizes 5-13. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI, 48109.' A. Short, double-breasted plaid jacket, velvet collar. Of polyester/wool, $68; matching pleated skirt, $35. Pleated-front blouse, white or pink polyester, $27. B. Plaid blazer of polyester/wool, $69. Cotton velveteen vest, $28; Matching velveteen pant, $45. Ruffle/lace trim blouse, off-white polyester, $29. FREE DELIVERY 7 DA YS A WEEK! IN OUR .MISS J SHOP AT Jac-obson~s WE DELIVER Mon-Thurs 5 pm-1 am Fri-Sot 5 pm-2 am Sun 5 pm-11 pm Breakfast Served Anytime Free Nash Browns With Any Eggs or Omelettes : Hf BACCHUS' GARDENS 338 S. State Street NE DELIVER: Round Pizzal Sicilian Pizza! $andwjckes Dinners! Greek, Italian, American Dishes! Beer, fCocktails, and Extensive Wine List. TASTE THE BEER THAT OUTSELLS ALL THE OTHERS IN CANADA:; LABAITS. for fast pick-up orders call: 663-4636 I I- Good news! Labatt's, Canadas No. 1 selling beer, is now imported to the U. S. So, now it's easier to try our Labatt's-and understand the secret of its popularity We think you'll discover a taste that's crisp, clean and natural- truly; the beer that tastes as good as the country it comes from. ._ t i If d