Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, September 5; 1970 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, September 15, 1970 m -Daily-Tom Gottlieb theatre Avadon-Black: View from the road Steak and Eggs for $1.20 AT CAMPUS GRILL RESTAURANT 808 S. State St. * Back by popular demand JOHNNY * and the I HURRICANES Open11a.m. to Sp.m. * Serving * BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHES DINNERS 3 p.m.toa.m. * ' Fine Food * Your Favorite Cocktails 1*4 * 314 S. Fourth Ave 7613548 * Open Seven Days * * Monday-Friday T ITo a.m. t 2a.m. Saturday and Sunday *P.m. to 2 a.m. ** * * * * AUD. A-TUES., SEPT. 15 AT LAST! It's kick-off weekend for Ann Arbor's new rock spot that has what you've been looking for. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, September 17, 18, 19 at the ODYSSEY you'll enjoy and dance to Ann Arbor's favorite rock groups. No cover. No minimum. Food and liquor 'tij 2 a.m. Thursday-9:30-1:30-LOVE'S ALCHEMY Friday-9:30-1:30-LEAVES OF GRASS Saturday-5-7 (after game Happy-Hours) -LOVE'S ALCHEMY 9:30-1:30-LOVE'S ALCHEMY ANN ARBOR FILM COOPERATIVE PRESENTS ROSEMARY'S BABY A Roman Polanski film starring JOHN CASSEVETES and MIA FARROW. THG ODYSSEY-208 W. Huron l5c 1 GAY LIBERATION FRONT ORIENTATION FOR RADICAL LESBIANS- Tues., Sept. 15, 8:30 P.M., 3-C Union NEW MEMBERS MEETING-Wed., Sept. 16, By JIM HENNERTY You niay have seen him doing magic tricks on the Diag or im- personating a factory worker before a Cinema Guild showing. Avadon-Black has been meeting people around town, finding places to sleep and eat, lecturing a class on medieval theatre and publicizing his performances. Avadon-Black is an amazing. person. Two years ago he was becoming disillusioned with the current state of theater as he experienced it in the U.C.L.A. Theater Arts Department. He was tired of professor-directors' command performances of plays which were strictly "academic" exercises; he was deeply discour- aged and disturbed by. the half- empty houses which greeted such productions. Armed with a few ideas about bringing' theater to the people, and car-, rying 45 pounds of clothes and possessions on his back, he set out to -search 'for a life style based on communication through a theatrical medium. Seventeen months later, Ava- don-Black is in Ann Arbor, after visiting e i g h t e e n campuses throughout the country, hitch- hiking from Iowa to New York, Louisiana to Michigan. He bills himself as a "troubadour for now," presenting a one-man show in which he communicates his experiences on the road. In last night's free perform- ance in the Union Ballroom (which will be repeated again this evening at 8 p.m.) he show-, ed some of the men who have given him rides across the coun- try. These dramatic portraits are skillfully drawn. Each evokes a mixed reaction of tumor, sad- ness and everr horror. A soldier on leave from Ft. The Michigan Daily, edited and man-. agec, by students at the niversit of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard .St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5, by carrier, $5 by mail. Rent your, Roommate with a Classified Ad Orr tells of his army experi- ences: the cold inhumanity of military bureaucracy, a des- perate need for money to sup- port a family, and a irightening murder by prison "guards. Two truck drivers appear: one, a Texan and a good family man who has a most interesting and exciting tete-a-tete with the bank teller's wife; and an Ital- ian immigrant from New York who hurls abuse at California drivers and tells of his experi- ences as part of an army as- sassin squad in World War II. Avadon-Black's aim to to pre- sent the problems all human beings face, and show how men of different backgrounds, from various segments of society, confront them. These portraits are much more than c l e v e r impersonations; they let the audience enter into different worlds and patterns of thinking. They teach something about the nature of the human beast and the society in which he functions. Interspersed with these pic- tures of others is the vision of the artist himself stated in forceful poetic and imagistic terms. He feels himself melt in the desert sun and travel as steam to a winter landscape. He metamorphoses into a Caliban- like freak in a carnival crawling about and hissing at the audi- ence. Imaginative power and dramatic skill are carefully combined to communicate this personal vision to the audience. Avadon-Black thinks the con- ventional actor has become shut up in the ivory tower of a the- ater, physically and spiritually WOW! A three - piece Treasure Chest chicken dinner, plus french fries. Larger take-home orders also. Try a box soon! distant from the audience who usually have to pay a sizable price to get inside in the first place. Communication is further hampered, in his view, by the structure of the drama itself: an actor never really represents himself to the audience, he is only a part of "the play." "I've always been a performer. And this set-up gives me a great deal of freedom to communi- cate by performing, improvis- ing, responding to a particular audience at a particular no- ment. . . . Just as the medieval troubadour went from town to town carrying news by perform- ance, I try to tell the audience about the things I've seen, and have them respond to what I'm doing." Paid admission automatically excludes many people from the- ater, therefore Black insists on free performances. He lives on donations from the audience, in, the form of money, food, lodg- ing, or anything else. Black wants to return to Los Angeles eventually and form a t r o u p e which would travel around and bring theater to towns and cities. They would -Daily-Tom Gottlieb attempt to involve the general community in their activities, and solicit support (food and other necessities) from their audiences. The social implica- tions are interesting, to say the least. Judging from his perform- ance, the new concept of the- f $:00 P.M., 117 N. Thayer, No. 4 MASS MEETING-Thurs., Sept. 17, r J:Y F ' L :^r1 ............:".: ater Avadon-Black a very effective brings theater and represents is one, which society into 8:30 P.M., Assembly Hall, Union Basement ---ALL WELCOME--- Students and Faculty, "U" and "Non-U," closer and more meaningful contact. Straight and Gay #I -- i ..y;h;,;".;y.} '.v{::ii4:}Yr:"'S":t'r,";""::-y1:? .......... :::;: AVOID AN "UGLI" MESS Leano to use our Library System Programs are designed to acquaint you with Humanities resources -in the Undergraduate Library WEDNESDAY, Sept. 16 at 3:10 P.M. and 7:30 P.M., THURSDAY, Sept. 17 at 7:30 P.M. All Programs in the UGLI Multipurpose Room i i f j : ' I :; i s: ..... 4 TV RENTALS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 I I - i ..w. ti v ?:- A -DEBATE ROBERT KNAUSS, the new Vice President of StudentAffairs ARTHUR MENDEL, Professor of History BOB ROSS, New University Conference Activist The University in Society TONIGHT-Tuesday-TONIGHT4 7:30 P.M. Natural Science Aud. Sponsored by:; Issues, Strategies and Analysis in Political Action-A course in the planning ."rl,.,r... X1 :t't~::"I .:.: __________________________:____ ..................................................______________ DIAL 8-6416 Doors Open 6:45 P.M. Shows at 7, 9 P.M. "A FRANTIC FUNNY COMEDY.. . ... one is indeed made weak with laughter." L.A. HERALD EXAMINER I E I 3i i # I, I . get EXCELLENT SENIOR PICTURES "START THE REVOLUTION WITHOUT ME"1 Gene Donald Wilder *Sutherland fresh from "The Producers" M*A*S*H NEW IN ANN ARBOR "JUMBO" STEAK HOAGIE 1139 Broadway 769-3524 me NOTES IN SOUND Are you still reading Isle way your parents Bread? In the first grade, when you were taught to read "Run Spot Run," you had to read it out loud. Word-by-word. Later, in the second grade, you were asked to read silently. But you couldn't do it. You stopped reading out loud, but you continued to say every word to yourself. Chances are, you're doing it right now. This means that you read only as fast as you talk. About 250 to 300 words per minute. (Guiness' Book of World Records lists John F. Kennedy as delivering the fast- est speech on record: 327 words per minute.) The Evelyn Wood Course teaches you to read without mentally saying each word to yourself. Instead of reading one word at a time, you'll learn to read groups of words. To see how natural this is, look at the dot over the line in bold type. grass is green You immediately see all three words. Now look at the dot between the next two lines of type. and it grows when it rains With training, you'll learn to use your innate ability to see groups of words. As an Evelyn Wood graduate, you'll be able to read between 1,000 and 3,000 words per minute . . . depending on the difficulty of the material. At 1,000 words per minute, you'll be able to read a text book like Hofstadtler's American Political Tradition and finish each chapter in 11 minutes. At 2,000 words per minute, you'll be ,able to read a magazine like Time or News. MINI LESSON SCHEDULE week and finish each page in 31 seconds. At 3,000 words per minute, you'll be able to read the 447 page novel The God- father in 1 hour and 4 minutes. These are documented statistics based on the results of the 450,000 people who have enrolled in the Evelyn Wood course since its inception in 1959. The course isn't complicated. There are no machines. There are no notes to take. And you don't have to memorize any- thing. 95% of our graduates have improved their reading ability by an average of 4.7 times. On rare occasions, a graduate's read- ing ability isn't improved by at least 3 times. In these instances. the tuition is completely refunded. Take a free Mini-Lesson on Evelyn Wood. Do you want to see how the course works? Then take, a free Mini-Lesson.-r The Mini-Lesson is an hour long peek at what the Evelyn Wood course offers. We'll show you how it's possible to accelerate your speed without skipping a single word. You'll have a chance to try your hand at it, and before it's over, you'll actually increase your reading speed. (You'll only increase it a little, but it's a start.) We'll show you how we can extend your memory. And we'll show you how we make chapter outlining obsolete. Take a Mini-Lesson this week. It's a wild hour. And it's free. qLI !iL~fl~k{ rtw aI t odern L6ing DIAL 5-6290 603 E. LIBERTY ENDING THURSDAY iII~Il4U "Quality Sound through Quality Equipment" Sony's New Model 70 Tape Recorder for a New Age Enter the electronic age with Sony's new Model 70 AC/DC portable cassette tape recorder. As your electronic note pad, the Model 70 ends the chore of pad-and-pencil note-taking. It's an effortless pleasure to use, too, thanks to its back-space review button and end-of-casette alarm. See this one for yourself today. Only $74.95 brings you up to date'. 9 TI IIP tAiPD M H VVALI C f IVIIhIOl rl -i 0U II I II I ULO. VILU. I