PAGE TWO TAE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1968 PAGE TWO TIlE MICHIGAN BAIT A WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 14.. 1~R " .sYi _., 1+ - a 1 a a.ai4i/#.V .laaiY; a 1VVal I dance Dance Troupe Plans Program By JAN MALINOWSKI "Modern dance allows a dancer self-expression and freedom of movement, says Adele Moore,, '71. "Once you learn to choreo- graph and use an idea, it allows you to do what you want." Miss Moore is a member of the Concert Dance Organization, the University's resident m o d e r n dance .group, And on Feb. 23 and 24. the troupe will present its big- gest program of the year.{ Sub Actor, Stand sIn F"or Warhol' Pop impresario Andy Warhol has earned considerable notoriety for the new art forms that he has introduced in the past, but a ca- per he engineered at he Univer- sity of Utah last month shows that Warhol uses one of man's oldest arts - a substitution act. Scheduled to' appear on the Utah campus to deliver a lecture- concert as part of a university series,' Warhol instead sent Uni- versity of Oregon actor Alan Mid- gett unannounced in his place and no one at Utah noticed the dif- ference. Midgett, according to Paul Morrisey, Warhol's manager. Is using the $2600 fee paid by the Utah administration to go to Eur- ope to appear in some Italian films. Contacted in New York, Warhol' justified the substitution act on grounds that "I don't really have much -to say, so he was better than I am. . he was what the people expected. They liked him better than they would have me because I have been going on tours since then, because they would rather have someone like that than me." Elaborating on his client's cry- ptic statement, Morrisey confirm- ed the justification. "Andy Warhol thought that his substitute would be better for public consumption. Like a person that was younger and better and better spoken. Andy used the medium of the lec- ture circuit, you might say, in an original way." The Utah administration has not yet decided whether to file a law suit against Warhol for the misrepresentation. The upcoming program, the cul- offer interested individuals the mination of months-long work- opportunity to explore dance and! shop and in-class training, fea- dancing - and the concomitant tures James Payton of the Ohio experimentation. State University d'ance depart. The workshops, as well as the ment. A veteran of the Jose Li- concerts themselves, are held in mon Dance Company, Payton and the dance studio in Barbour Gym- his wife, Susanna Newman, will nasium. On Tuesday nights at present a self-choreographed duet. 7:15, coeducational programs are Payton will also perform with offered; on Thursday nights, a Mrs. Elizabeth Bergmann of the co-ed workshop follows men-only University's physical education classes. The classes all emphasize department in a dance created by choreography rather than tech- Mrs. Bergmann. nique, but the latter is often in- Also featured on the program cluded in the evening sessions. is "Water Study," the 1927 Doris Special dance classes at theI Humphrey dance. Specially re- University include a dance com- constructed by Mrs. Janet De- position class and a dance pro- scutner of the physical education duction class. While students of Health Care in 'Dire' Situation, U.S. Medical Chairman Warns By GEORGE MILLER A relaxing of some of the strict ally the older, retired, affluent The present situation of health qualifications for entrance into practitioners who support the care in the United States is a medical school would serve to in- AMA." "dre crease the number of persons ac- "dire" one, and an increase in cepted by the schools. Young said Differing with Young's com- medical school enrollment as well cep ted sch Y wousi mentary. Payne noted that phys- as the development of a new kind He later indicated that he wouldi icans are generally conservative of medical professional are need- admit s aing in o er- and the AMA reflects this attitude. ed to remedy the situation. disadvantaged young per- He offered an explaination as to sons with professional potential why medical students usually end This was the warning made last into the medical schools, noting up being conservative, although night by Dr. Quentin D. Young, the added cost of necessary ad- they might enteramedicaltschool national chairman of the Medical ditional tutoring. l a titue. "Asthey Committee on Human Rights, in A consequence of the shortage progress through the medical cur- a forum in the amphitheater of of physicians in this country, riculum, they find themselves in- department, the number will be performed by student dance ma- jors. Students from the dance com- position class will offer five: dances to Bartok's 'Microkosmos." Speech department students will present a series of pre-classical dances, and a piece choreographed to a Theodore Bikel-sung Israeli folksong will be featured. The function of the ConcertI Dance Organization, says Dana Reitz, '7OEd, is "to introduce tech- niques and create an atmosphere in which students can experiment with themselves and with others." To this end, the dance troupe's workshops, classes and programs the composition class have worked on actual performances for the up-coming concerts, students in production have been focusing on the technical aspects of the two- night program. For students interested in ex- tending their dance "arenas" be- yond the classroom, there are a number of outlets in Ann Arbor other than the Concert Dance Or- ganization itself. The city Rec- reation Department's Ann Arbor Dance Theater conducts both classes and public concerts, and Philip Stamps of the Concert Dance Organization teaches spe- cial Monday evening classes in primitive dance at Ann Arbor High School. Lne xieucai ,3IzeI1ce £1Ua. lattb night. The forum titled, "Crisis in Medical Care" was sponsored: by the Student Health Organiza- tion and also included Dr. Beverly Payne, assistant dean of the Uni- versity's medical school, as a panel member. Young said that a "paraprofes- sional" was needed to cope with the expanding world and the hope- less plight of persons from dis- advantaged areas. "We want to see nurse-sociologists and physi- cian-psychologists; we want a ver- tical as well as horizontal move- ment" in medical school training. Young noted, is the fact that twenty per cent of the doctors who begin practice each year are those imported from foreign coun- tries. "We should be sending med- ical professionals to other coun- tries instead," he said. Young, a member of the faculty of the University of Illinois med- ical school, had some harsh words for the American Medical As- sociation. Calling the organization a "dinosaur" which "stands in the idoorway of progress," he said that it wasn't really the powerful force many think it is. "It is usu- volved with a process that details the knowledge of caring for dis- ease rather than caring for the patients as individuals." One remedy for the crisis in health care, Young explained would be the establishment of a national health corps consisting of young health professionals, who would specialize in working in in- ner city and rural disadvantaged areas, thus providing improved care for the persons in these areas of the country. LION IN WINTER Margaret Phillips and Walter Slezak are the stars of the next Professional Theater Program production, "The Lion in Winter," a comedy by James Goldman. The second play in this year's PTP series, "Lion" comes to Hill Aud. Monday and Tuesday, Feb. 19 and 20. I FOUR ANN ARBOR POETS AN DREW CARRIGAN KATHY KOEPEL TOM SNAPP W EN DY ROE NATIONAL 8~NERAL CORPORATION ,.~ I MON.-THURS. 7:00-9:00 FRI. 7:00-9:00-11:00 OX EASTERN THEATRSL FOX VIL6E 375 No. MAPLE RD. -769.1300 SAT. 3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00-11:00; SUN. 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 -2nd BIG WEEK- "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 EST! A PICTURE YOU'LL HAVE TO SEE-- AND MAYBE SEE TWICE TO SAVOR ALL ITS SHARP SATIRIC WIT AND CINEMATIC TREATS!" -NEW YORK TIMES "THE FRESHEST, FUNNIEST AND MOST TOUCHING FILM OF THE YEAR!" -SATURDAY REVIEW "DON'T MISS IT!"-NBC-TV TODAY SHOW JOSEPH E. LEVINE MIKE NICHOLS LAWVRENCE TURMAN,- t AI ", I ' I THIS WEEK AT BOB WH IT E- (last Ann Arbor appearance before going to East Coast) singing traditional ballads and fun songs, ,playing guitar, banjo, 1421 Hill St. and autoharp. 8:30 P.M. FRIDAY and SATURDAY Dove sigIin and Shelly Posen Singing City Folk Music, playing E & 12 string guitar and banjo $1.00cover includes entertainment and refreshments! WEDNESDAY, FEB. 14 CANTERBURY HOUSE 330 Maynard (FREE) 8 P.M. I 111 Feature at 1 :15-3:20 5:25-7:25-9:35 NTO-6 NO 2-6264 LEEMARVIN 90 V ti Ufi NE5A REAL 1"THE CASE AGAINST SERGEANT RYKER" I __ I COMING THURSDAY t STARTING THURSDAY 1 Starts TOMORROW! "SINATRA KNOWS WHAT HE IS DOING AND HE IS SUCH A GIFTED ACTOR AND COMEDIAN THAT HE CAN DO IT WELL. His Tony is a real guy...aloner. Flashy women burst into his life and promise him anything. He talks a good game and acts a better one with four- z bit hoods, shopworn strip- pers, defrocked physicians, trembling fences and simperingt pushers. Sinatra knows his milieu, which is a fine thing for any artist to do" -Newsweek Magazine ENDING THURSDAY HERE IT IS.. The Long Awaited W. C. FIELDS Film Festival! The Greatest Laffs Of The World's Funniest Man 2 Full-Length FEATURES "THE BANK DICK" --And-- "NEVER GIVE A SUCKER AN EVEN BREAK" TODAY IS LADIES' DAY "SUCKER" AT 1:05, 3:40, 6:15, 8:45 "BANK DICK" AT 2:15, 4:45, 7:20, 10:00 DIAL 5-6290 Friday: "The Ambushers" 9 I I I- __ ___ I frank sinatra :s tong rome Co-Starring JILL ST JOHN" RICHARD CONTE " GENA ROWLANDS- SIMON OAKLAND JEFFREY LYNN LLOYD BOCHNER SHECKY GREENE and SUE LYON as Diana- Produced by Aaron Rosenberg Directed by Gordon Douglas-"Screenpay by Richard Breen Bas~dOlhe e l e1n e V5th Ave. near Liberty-761-9700 V th f'oru mMon. thru Thurs., 7-9 Fri. & Sat., 1-3-5-7-9-11; Sun., 1-3-5-7-9 ENDS TONIGHT "AN ABSOLUTE KNOCKOUT OF A MOVIE! ...one of the best films of the year!" - Bosley Crowther, N. Y. Times "A classic chiller of the 'Psycho' school!" -Time I I U I I "A tour-de-force of sex and suspense!" -Life PRESENTS Stratfbrb National Theatre of Canada In SHAKESPEARE'S "A Midsummer Night's Dream" with 46 ROMAN POLAN K1' REPUESY STARTS TOMORROW T1I f MOVIE EVERYONE'S BEEN WAITING FOR - cHaRD LESTER's "WW II WITHOUT ITS PANTS ONI"--Ramparts "IT TRULY HURTS WHEN YOU LAUGH!I" .. - .-.I I Ar A e ~ V ~ .~-iir DOUGLAS RAIN MARTHA HENRY as Bottom as Titania Directed by JOHN HIRSCH Designed by LESLIE HURRY SOLE U.S. ENGAGEMENT! .. A "1 1 i t 1 !1 t ._ 0 I I A AA Yr lalccnl ,r I knr7+rcn I