PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN ?VATT.V vimvT ar VAGETWO HE MCH~t&N UAE__ T UEI DAY, 4 poetry and prose music i IO 4: 'Logic' of Alchemy Buff 'Adorable' But This Week's Events TUESDAY, OCT. 2 "The Structure and Evolution of 8 p.m. -The Professional Thea-. the Sun." To observe : A Star tre Program will present George Cluster and a Double Star at Aud. Kelly's "The Show-Off" in the FD. ANDREW M. LUGG abstract mathematics and topo- Some "little" magazines start logy." out with a great flourish but never However incomplete this list get beyond two or three issues. might seem to be, it presents a Contributors lose interest. and in considerable body of subject mat- the 'ensuing desperate attempt to ;ter for study. 10 4 covers most of obtain. copy, the point of view these topics systematically and of the magazine gets lost. Others in depth. I use the word "systema- (fewer in number to be sure) im- tically" advisedly because this is just what sets Grossinger apart prove with each issue.. from the crypto-alchemists to be Richard Grossinger and Lindy found in, for example, the San Hough Grossinger's "10," produced Francisco "Oracle." here- in. Ann -Arbor, falls into the "h Tbtr oko h ed, second category; 10 has developed The 'Tibetan Book of the Dead' from- being 'a collection of poems is, finally, a map of the world of and essays chosen because they the dead, not of a drug-trance," deal with particular themes-al- says Grossinger, underlining the chemy cosmology, Western mys- difference between his approach ticism and the occult, anthropolgy and that of the hippies. (the American Indian) and folk- Behind all the essays in the .ore-to be a detailed study of the magazine we find a concern with themes themselves. a number of topics: time, love, the The newest issue, 10 4 is de- effect of the cosmos on the in- voted to alchemy., In his intro- dividual, dreams and the "pysche." duction Ricard Grossinger spells Robert Kelly's brilliant "An Al- out the traditions that he includes chemical Journal" considers some under the name "Alchemy": "The of these topics. tradition of ancient wisdom from It works on a number of levels. Egypt and pre-Egypt; the phil- One section reads: "Silence is in-{ osophy of matter in the ancient struction. Al and Carola had a world . . . all forms of Platonism; long way to drive. Overweening the spiritual magic of Hebrew and Oracles. Aaufrages, Simplicitty. I Christian occult documents. I remember a story. Why I was Also included are: the prechem- there. Why the sun shone. They istry and prepharmacy of the had a long way to go. Presence Western World; Hindu and Bud- fills her. Her body turns over, dhist theories of creation and sus- she sees me watching her." tenance; Aterican Indian cere- The logic works in a manner monial medicine and rain magic; that we are fast losing the knack, shamanistic study of dreams and f appreciating, namely that A dic- visions . . . (unidentified flying tates B, C, D, E . . . not just B. objects) . . the cosmology of Transformations are not one-to- Rental Union Handles Apartment Complaints _ E i yF S (Continued from Page 1) things happened in 1966, and itI was not under my control," he says. One girl accused another agency of failing to install a phone cable, a stove, or, for that matter, any furniture at all (except beds) for the first month. The agency's spokesman says this is "not true, at all, The phone cable is the phone company's responsibility, and has nothing to do with us." He points out that this apartment was in a "brand new building," and that the time taken for the furniture to arrive "wasn't any-- where near that long. .The stove was in in three days." The small landlords, too, are' blamed. One of them allegedly evicted a girl in order to house her daughter who was returning home. The girl had not signed a lease, nor had she ever met her landlady, whose relatives had leased out the apartment while the landlady was abroad. The landlady says, however, that the tenant had paid no rent and that her friends living there were "re- cently arrested for dope-push- ing." Boycott Planned A girl who has now moved back into Alice Lloyd Hall claims she had a landlady who used to leave notes- around the apartment cri- ticizing her (the girl's) messi- ness. When the girl asked that the snow be cleared from the steps, she reports getting a note from her landlady saying, "Tell the mailman to keep the mail un- til the snow thaws." The landlady says, "I deny everything," adding that this girl was "the worst tenant I ever had." The snow wasn't cleared, she says because "it was so bad that it eventually had to be chop- ped off." And one landlord has had no complaints filed against him and even one note calling him "a really great landlord." Overall, the town with the rent' average closest to Ann Arbor's is Berkeley, Calif., where' there are eight-month leases, and here,. SRU's Schreiber plans a selective boycott of major agencies in gen- eral protest of the student rental problem. He hopes the boycott will engender eight-month leases. SRU also plans to publish a rec- commended list of landlords, then select "several irresponsible and uncooperative landlords and stick them with a loss." Schreiber add- ed that there is already a five to ten per cent vacancy rate in Ann Arbor housing which makes a boycott feasible. He calls his proposed boycott "a symbolic and real act of stu- dent consumer pressure." Phone 434-0190 E£t ce On CARPENTER ROAD OPEN 6:30 P.M. FREE HEATERS _ E i yF S 4 4 I i t one, they are constructed poly- morphically. Likewise, or conversely, a myriad of things suggests a unity: "I'll say this for IBM: from them we may one day relearn that there is no number but one, no repose but zero." Kelly has no difficulty in deal- ing with anything and everything. Any detail or event is to be syn- thesized- looked at as the whole -and broken down into smaller events-looked at as a set of elements. ("All things are finally brought into the Furnace of Love. We have that assurance. The temperature" or "the beautiful thing about time there is no mis- taking it. No mistake in it.") Richard Grossinger's autobio- graphical essay from his "Solar Journal" is also blessed by the "polymorphic" approach. The nar- rative moves along subtly blend- ing the common-place with the universial ("We can only observe the connections.") Geographical 'states (Michigan, Ohio, etc.) are treated as states of mind, but also in their concreteness - where events happen. Dreams are seen as preceeding actual events as well as. coming after them. Connections abound. Implied is a superstructure that includes the Coca-Cola bottle with the rituals of the Snake People in West Virginia. America, of course, is the most diverse and yet the most single-minded of coun- tries. There are a number of other modern "alchemical" essays in IO 4, including two by Jorge Borges and extracts from two lectures on UFOs by Mel Noel. Three ac- counts of Anlerican Indian myths translated in the nineteenth cen- tury are included and source ma- terial from the heyday of alchemy, the 13-15th centuries, has been especially translated for this is- sue. This latter emphasizes just how divorced the sciences and the humanities have become with our present-day notions of causality and isomorphic relationships and with Freud and Co.'s thermodyn- amical description of the pysche. But maybe this is changing. Grossinger suggests that "there is a conection between astrological and alchemical works and the work of quantum physics." Mel Dropkin in his essay "Mathematics Article" connects the cosmos and dreams with abstract algebra in a way (necessarily but unfortun- ately) that is not for the uniniti- ated. IO 4, which is more of a book than a magazine, is one of the richest and most stimulating col- lection of essays that I have read for a long time. I have in no- way covered the material pre. sented there but I hope to have implied that this issue is an ex- tremely competent study which reveals the subtleties of the sub- ject. 6th "ATIONAL GENERAL CO thOX EASTERN THEATR AN D 3 a m in Ramsey 'Horrible' By JOHN MILLER You believed her, you liked her, you wanted to take care of her, and you wanted her to take care of you. You don't like Buffy Sainte-Marie cause she sings well, or cause she writes well, or even because her hair is worthy of wor- ship. She's adorable, a little woman, a little girl, a little do- mestic, and a tiny bit nervous. Nobody really cared what the first tune was on account of her medieval - gothic - leprechaun - leotard - tennis - Esmeralda - will present the University Wood- start until after eleven or you Wind Qiuntet in concert in Rack- weren't quite sure if your blind ham Lecture Hall. date saw through Ramsey. Or WEDNESDAY, OCT. 25 maybe you were being destroyed 4:10 p.m.--The Department of by "Intimate" on one side and Speech Student Laboratory Thea- "Shalimar" on the other. tre Program will present G. B. When Ramsey announced that Shaw's "Poison, Passion, and Pet- the next tune they were going to rifaction" in the Arena Theatre play hadn't really been rehearsed, of the Frieze Building. I was looking forward to it cause 4:15 p.m.--As part of the Wil- the rehearsed ones were terrible. Liam W. Cook Lectures on Amer- And to and behold they played ican Institutions-"The Govern- "In Crowd." If you are doing a ance of the Schools"-Francis sociological study of 1,959 rock- Keppel will give a speech entitled and-roll licks you learned a lot, "The Effect of Numbers" (Lecture although I must admit that IV) at 130 Business Administra- drummer Maurice White could tion Building. play with most rock bands in 8 p.m.-The Professional Thea- town. tre Program will present George Cleveland Eaton, the bass play- Kelly's "The Show-Off" in the er, I'm not so sure of. It's a Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. hung-up city and he's a hung-up 8:30 p.m.-The School of Music guy. There's nothing really wrong will present the University Sym- about a bass player tuning a cello phony Orchestra with conductor like a bass. But when you can't Josef Blatt and soprano soloist play it and you rant and rave Eva Likova at Hill Aud. for twenty out-of-sight, up-tight, THURSDAY, OCT. 26 down-home, soul, funk, nitty- 4 p.m.-The Departmentof gritty groove solid boss minutes, Classical Studies will present Prof. then there's something wrong. I Hugh Lloyd-Jones of Oxford Uni- He started out with Art Blakey's versity speaking on "Zeus and "Blues March" and ended with Justice in Homer" in Aud. A. "Ode to Billy Jo." It was the 4:10 p.m.-The Department of middle section though that sin- Speech Student Laboratory Thea- cerely was out-of-sight. Don't tell tre Program will present G. B. me it was soulful cause that Shaw's "Poison, Passion, and Pet- would mean that Leonard Bern- rification" in the Arena Theatre stein's classic lecture on the of the Frieze Building. flatted third and diminished fifth 7 and 9:05 p.m.-Cinema Guild is soulful. will show James Whale's "Frank- But Cleveland is a crowd pleas- ! enstein" in the Arehitectir Aid Coming Fri., Buffy Sainte-Marie Charles Addams - minihaha skirt w h i c h unquestionably touched your body with your mind. You didn't even miss the Motown backing on "Cripple Creek" and "Lazarus" cause Buffy made it so swinging and open that you felt drums and basses and baritone saxes. If there were to be a Buffy Sainte-Marie Day and I was Gen- eral Co-Chairman with Ramsey, (who would never attend meet- ings cause I'd insist that he stay home and listen to Art Tatum records), I'd have the day broken into four sections: 1. 9:00-12:30: wake up and sing "Suzanne." 2. 1:30-5:00: all girls parade in front of my apartment wearing Buffy outfits in either emerald, olive, purple, or mocha. 3. 6:00-6:10: remembering that Buff wrote "You're not a Dream." 4. 6:30-Forever: Buff and I hitch to Sweden and make love on the beach. Ramsey Lewis was horrible. Horrible. Horrible. Horrible. There were a lot of people who went to the concert just hear the trio and we were glad that Buffy was on first. But as soon as they began "Unit 7," the first tune, you weren't quite sure why the hell to stay. Maybe the parties didn't SPoRt;ON Feature Times 0 Ate, . Mondav - Fridav~ er. As a matter of fact the only thing he left out was a lick from the "Victors" and the vomit scene from "Night Games." I guess the reason why it's hard to talk about Ramsey is simply because he didn't do anything. Perhaps he tried on "Shadow of Your Smile," but perhaps the lighting man didn't like for peo- ple to practice on the job and that's why he cut the trio off just a little sooner than Ramsey planned to. At the end of the concert I ran across the street to catch a little of Odetta. She was singing "He's Got the Whole; World in His Hands" and I thought about Buffy and Ramsey playing To Tell the Truth on God's palms. - - - _ Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. 8:30 p.m.-The School of Music 8 p.m.-The Professional Thea- tre Program will present George Kelly's "The Show-Off" in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. 8:30 p.m.-The School of Music will present pianist Reid Nibley in a concert at Rackham Lecture Hall. 8:30 p.m.-The University Musi- cal Society will present Jose Mo- lina Bailes Espanoles at Hill Aud. SATURDAY, OCT. 28 7 and 9:05 p.m.-Cinema Guild will show Val Newton's "The Curse of the Cat People" in the Archi- tecture Aud. 8:30 p.m. - The Professional Theatre Program will present George Kelly's "The Show-Off" in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. SUNDAY, OCT.29 7 and 9:05 p.i-Cinema Guild will show Marion C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedasach's "King Kong" in the Architecture Aud. 8 p.m.--The University Musical Society will present Carl Orff's! "Carmina Burana" at Hill Aud. 2:30 and 8 p.m.-The Profes- sional Theatre Program will pre- sent George's Kelly's "The Show- Off" in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. , House. 802 Monroe, - * **AG111 u btlc ~c1 tt. A UfU IA. 8 p.m.-The Professional Thea- tre Program will present George Kelly's "The Show-Off" in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. FRIDAY, OCT. 27 4:15 p.m.-As part of the Wil- liam W. Cook Lectures on Amer- ican Institutions-"The Govern- ance of the Schools"-Francis Keppel will give a speech entitled "The Governance and the Individ- ual" (Lecture V) at 130 Business Administration Building. 7 and 9:05 p.m.-Cinema Guild will show Howard Hawkes' "The Thing from Another World" in the Architecture Aud. 8 p.m.-As part of the Depart- ment of Astronomy Visitor's Night, Dr. Richard L. Sears of the Uni- versity of Michigan will speak on I WITCH-WATCH BASH North Campus Commons a 9-12 P.M. 4 I I WEDNESDAY and TH URSDAY Oct. 27 ORGANIZATION NOTICES UsE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NO'UCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student orga- nizations only. Forms are available inIny Rm. 1011 SAB. Young Friends, T Group weekend, Oct. 27-29, 8:00 meet at Friends meet- ing house, 1420 Hill. Bring sleeping bags if possible. Communication Sciences Lecture Series, Tuesday, Oct. 24, 4:10 p.m., Michigan Union, room 3A., speaker Dr. Abbe Mowshowtz: "The Social Role of the Scientist." * * . Graduate Assembly, general meeting. Wed., Oct. 25, 7:30 p.m. East Con- ference room (fourth floor), Rackham Bldg. Agenda to include: "Graduate Students and the Draft," "The Role of Graduate Students in University Policy Making." * * * Concert Dance Organization is holding modern dance classes every Tuesday 7:30 and Thursday 8:15 at the Barbour Gym Dance Studio. Classes are held for men on Thur. at 7:30 p~m. Sigma Theta Tau, first meeting of year: Business meeting and program. Oct. 24, 7:00 p.m., School of Nursing Building. * * * Bach Club, meeting; talk by Dr. David Crawford on "Bach's Cantata no. 140. ra Unionof the Sacred and the Secular," Thursday, Oct. 26, 8:00 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. r 4:10 P.M. Department of Speech STUDENT LABORATORY THEATRE presents POISON, PASSION AND PETREFACTION or The Fatal Gazogene by George Bernard Shaw 04 t OCTOBER 25th and 26th ADMISSION FREE Arena Theatre, Frieze Building A FINAL rn' VILL E WEEK 75 No. MAPLE RD.-769-130* III CINEMA II presents FEDERICO FELLINI'S LA STRADA THE MIRWCS' JUIE ANDREWS ".4TTM iAXL.VI I I TEC Io.THE GEORGE ROY HILL WALTER MIRISCH PROI HNICOLOR { CORPORAION PRFSEMT ON SYDOW-RICHARD HARRIS )DUCIoN a"HAWAII"ANAVIsIoN. COU ,tix *1 4 I ANTHONY GIULIETTA QUINN MASINA Barbara Sf PLUS, ee e 0. . . SHORT: Chapter 6 Flash Gordon Friday, Saturday and- Sunday 7 and 9:15 P.M. Auditorium A Angell Hall 50c reter aldwin HE WAS A MAN ON THE LAM! I STARTS THURSDAY! Direct From ItsRoadshow Engagement-.EveryTicket HolderGuaranteed A Seat SPECIAL POPULAR PICES - SPECIAL SCHEDULED PERFORMANCES 'SEATS RESERVED -N.Y DAILY NEWS "STEVE McQUEEN THE SAND AT HIS BEST!" PEBBLESI -N. Y TIMES AN ARGYLESOLAR PRODUCTIONS PICTURE FILMED IN PANAVISION'-COLOR BY DELUXE_"t I I e i t RICHARD LONG i 11 3rd WEEK c "'TO SIR, WITH LOVE' IS ENTERTAINMENT OF THE WARMEST SORT, SO RIGHT THAT YOU WOULD STAND UP AND CHEER!" -Archer Winsten, New York Post SIDNEY POITIER THIS WEEK AT ThE ARK 1421 Hill Street 8:30 P.M. 'jWednesday- A ,HIO9T!.--with Bob Wie Marty Ecclestone, Judy Ig. I X -W:, i