Thursday, April 20, 1972 THE MICHIGAN GAILY Page Seven ECONO-CAR SPRING WEEKEND SPECIAL Get with it ..it's springtime! Shed the coats and boots and head for the country in a new Ford or Chevy. From Friday noon through Monday noon pay only r$~17 *5O and only 8c a Mile CALL 663-2033 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN THURSDAY, APRIL 20 Day Calendar Physics Seminar: J. Stern, "Light Cone Property of Current Commuta- tors," 2038 Randall Lab, 11 am. Psychiatry & Anatomy Lecture: T. Lentz, Yale Univ.. fNeurotrophic Inter- actions at the Neuromuscular Junc- t ion," 1057 MHRI, 3:45 pmn. Physics Seminar: P. Kusch, Colum- bia Univ., "The Observation of a Lip on an Excited State of Molecular Ce- sium," P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 pm. Mathematics Le c t ure: M. Ross, "Ecology," 3201 Angell Hall, 4 pm. Nuclear Colloquium: R. Ascuitto, Yale Univ., "Transfer Reactions in Deformed Nuclei," 229 Chrysler Ctr., 4:15 pm. International Night: Lincoln Country food, Mich. League Cafeteria, 5 pm. Dance Program: Spring Mini Concert, Schorling Aud., SEB, 8 pm. Music School: Contemporary Direc- tions Ensemble, Hill Aud.. 8 pm. Ctr. for Cont. Education of Women: CEW Merit Scholarship Awards Pre- sentation, W. Conf. Rm., Rackham, 8 pm. P iWomensIn Science Meeting: 296 Physics-Astronomy Bldg.,8 pm. Special Physics Lecture: Polykarp Kusch, Nobel laureate, Columbia Univ., "The Agony of Science in the Uni- versity," Aud. No. 3. Mod. Languages Bldg., 8:30 pm. Music School: Collegium Musicurn, Sch. of Mus. Recital Hall, 9 pm, SUMMER PLACEMENT 212 S.A.B. For more info. about any of the fol- lowing, stop in or call 763-4117. } n e ttVewingthe iy's galleries (Continued from Page 2) undergraduates. gram. The idea of the program is The art shown at the Lantern to give people a chance to learn is consistently more modern thanj what kind of art they enjoy. Un- any of the other galleries. Simsar der the program, members take described it as "very contempor- home different paintings or prints ary and yet not'Ito the ultra-ex- every month, keep them in their perimental." By my standards it home, and get some reeling for has the most sophisticated art of what it is they like or dislike any of the galleries. about them, Essential to the idea of the gal- Like the Pyramid Gallery, the{ lery is that it should represent a Lantern Gallery has a special art genuinely widee rangeofastylesofprogram, called the Collector's art.unykkenange o tyesao Club, although it is somewhat dif-3 member of the program will start ferent. Membership is limited to ut choosing the more realistic 25 couples, and it is designed to outchosinguthesX morehs raisi "acquaint them with what's go-1 { pieces, but by six months will be ing on," They show films andt taking home and appreciating bring in artists. One of the things works as contemporary as the geo- that has made the club very pop- metrical, completely asrc ular is that gallery artists have paintings he was exhibiting then. ma ris of prn ts l vey The gallery looks at the program made series of prints exclusively as educational as well as a means C for its members. to sell art. Two of the galleries in Ann The Lantern Gallery does not Arbor deal in rather specific kinds aim at any particular type of cli- of art. The Judlo Gallery, in the entele, but the people who come basement of Logos Bookstore deals there are generally people who primarily in arts and crafts, espe- "know what they're looking for", cially arts and crafts by South- one of the two women who own west American Indians. It is one the gallery, Alice Simsar, explain- of the few private galleries in Ann' ed. They are "looking for what's Arbor which will show student happening currently in art." The work. The gallery is now restricted bulk of their clients are "40 to in size by the children's book sec- 45" or under, and they are more tion of the bookstore, and thus likely to be graduate students than seems more like a shop than a gallery. But it is still a very in- teresting shop, and particularly S-y a authentic. Most of the collection was chosen by an anthropologist in the Southwest. There are blan- kets, weavings, jewelry, Navaho E sand paintings and pre-Colum- (,"'(.' gallery bian ceramics. All the art in the Collectors House of Art is concerned with wildlife. They deal largely in lim- ited edition prints, the work of five artists. The prints are for the most part very realistic pic- tures, sometimes a neat carefully detailed bird in the Audubon tra- dition, sometimes a tiger's head or an elephane peaking over the jun- gle bushes. They also sell eskimo sculpture and little copper enam- el birds on branches, made in Michigan. The gallery attracts a lot of natural science students and people who just like the outdoors. Art galleries in Ann Arbor of- fer a variety of pleasures. They invite your perusal. Organization Notices Ann Arbor Tenants Union meeting April 20 7:30 PM, 1528 SAB. All tenants welcomed. Housing Policy Committee, April 20, 3-5 PM, Multi-purpose room West Quad. Bike-A-Thou starting at Farmers Market, April 23, 1:30-5:30 PM, Infor- mation call, 764-4410 or 761-3186. Spon- sored, by Enact, Ecology Center, A~n Arbor Bicycle League For The Student Body: LEVI'S Denim Bells 18.5O JCHECKMATE State Street at liberty Pre-Finals Special FROM THE VARSI TY SHOP AT WILD'S Very Large Group ' OF Casual Sax REDUCED 20% FRIDAY, APRIL 21 AND SATURDAY, APRIL 22 ONLY WILD'S Varsity Shop State St. on the Campus DON'T LET AI LEAKY MUFFLER \ . : , 1 s a . LEAKY , MUFFLERS CAN KILL! Y" Y FREE INSTALLAT[ N N MINIMUS WRITTEN GUARANTEE 7 . For as long as you own your car. Guarantee honored from Coast to Coast. od April 1 8 rnrw bat1',, April 22, 1 9 1 M GcdodIAnril 18R thru, Sat..Arbi'l 22 19Q7 UU r : nn n-.n iasvv e v r r wi n r s " ww I