Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAM Sunday, September 8, 19,14 Page SIx THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 8, 1914 Surprise Son ePe pecial with a 1~I - ~ - A joy to receive for any occasion. Easy to send! Just call us for immediate delivery here in town or many miles away. Our affiliation with Telefood Specialists throughout the country assures you of the some quality and personal serv- ice for your out-of-town orders, that we provide in our own store.Delivery and satisfaction are always guaranteed. Our fruit basket gifts are available from $12.50 to $25.00. Ideal for anniversaries, 'irthdays, ThanksgivinF, Christmas, New Year's, Valentine's Day, Mother's Day, Father's Day, Bon Voyage, sympathy or Shiva baskets. Delivery Available to Ann ,,-e~Er Arbor, Detroit andsub-ele urbs. Also out-of-state. prompt delivery anywhere We are your Telefood gift specialist YEAR 'ROUND HOSPITAL SERVICE INDUSTRIAL and COMMERCIAL accounts welcomed OTHER SERVICES: We also feature U.S.D.A. aged prime meats, imported and domestic fine wines, live lobsters, home-made German- style sausages and lunchmeats, fresh made Italian, Hun- garian and Polish sausages, and imported cheeses. Ray's Prime Meats, Inc. IN THE BRIARWOOD MALL-Ann Arbor AC TD RR E ACCEPTED CREDIT' CARDS 5 AY FOR FOOD G IFTS 37 R PGG Knievel set for canyon leap IN TRODUCING Peugeot-Diesel, VC (Continued from Page 1) from all the broken bones he has suffered as a result of acci- dents during his career as a motorcycle stuntman. The. self-proclaimed world'sI leading authority on self-de- struction, Knievel has always prided himself on riding a mo-1 torcycle "by feel." He says he has never souped up the engines of the bikes he used and never had a speed- ometer or a tachometer to help him jump the rows of trucks anigashe a iled ouvrto the of Evel Knievel items this year. Live television broadcasts of the event will not be permitted so that the jump's promoters can sell tickets at an average of $10 each to closed circuit television broadcasts around the country. Marketing a possible suicide is very profitable. Promoter Bob Arum says roughly 1.8 million seats for the closed cir-I cuit broadcasts have been sold in the United States and Can- ada. ed to be slightly the worse for we:r from beer and pot - from pushing each other into the canyon. The ground approaching the launch site slopes upward through several pastures until it reaches the canyon edge, the only good place to watch the entire two and a half minute flight. Sheriff's deputies say they fear a surge forward which might send many spectators plunging to their death 600 feet into the Snake River below. i 4-door, sunroof INTRODUCING: the only Die- sel station wagon in America. INTRODUCING: The sedan that costs about $2,500 less than the other Diesel. TOYOTA ANN ARBOR Inc. 907 N. MAIN at DEPOT ST. 769-7935 4th HIT WEEK! 231 S. STATE ST. Dial 668-6416 SIDNEY POITIER - BILL COSBV And HARRY BELAFONTE As Geechie Dan CLUPTOWN SSATURDA NIGHT They funny get when you mess with their money! ADD IT I ON AL mer- delight of millions of spectators chandising revenues should TO GUARD against this, Kni- IN AN ARTICLE about Kniev bring the total gross intake to evel order two lines of fenc- el recently Business Week mag- about $26 million. ing erected along the canyon azine said that at le'ast 15 busi- Knievel himself has added to rim. The strongest is eight feet ness corporations expect to the image - firing two test tall with a' row of barbed wire make at least $1 million each on machines from the launch and along the top. products and endorsements watching both of them plunge Just behind that is a six-foot based on Knievel and the Snake hundreds of feet into the river chain link fence anchored by River Canyon jump. below. It transpired that the poles set five feet into the The products cover just about spiralling nose-dives into the ground. anything that could possibly be canyon had been deliberate, But Joe Rob Bledsoe, a associated with a motorbikea-- merely intend dto test the rancher from Jackson Hole, from scale-models to decorative launch mechanism.I Wyoming, is not convinced it decals. More than 50,000 people, pay- will hold. "Consumers react to the im- ing $25 each, are expected to' age Evel projects - the dare- turn up at the canyon site for BLEDSOE has purchased devil, the reckless adventurer, what has been billed "the event several dozen yards of nylon but a man who is truthful to his of the century." The more than rope to make sure he doesn't word," says Stewart Sims, di- 200 toilets they are expected to go over the edge even if Knievel vision manager of Ideal Toy need are already in place. does. "I'm tying one loop Company in New York. around my waist, another loop THE COUNTY , sheriff's de- around my wife's waist and' THE IDEAL Company hopes partment has announced a plan we're anchoring the whole damn to sell about $18 million worth to prevent the crowd - expect- thing to a tree, just in case," __ ------ -----says Bledsoe. switch to release a parachute that will - hopefully - bring him floating safely down to earth. If the first parachute fails, there's a spare. On either parachute, it looks to being the softest, sweetest, and most lucrative groundfall in a long, long time. Y 'The Advertsrng C gdrd your job. But today, we all havo to consider how we can do our work a little better. That's how each of us.can help keep our jobs here in America. For now and for the future. America. It only works as well as we do, 7'k Naronai commiss... o " an s . . rnhfl ofD.C. Have a flair for artistic writinq? If you are interest- ed in reviewing poetry, and music I or writing feature stories a b ou t the drama, dance, film arts: Contact Arts Editor, c/a The Michigan Daiy I--- -Next- Marx. Bros. CRACKERS" Sat., Sun., & Wed. open 12:45 Shows at -1, 3, 5, 7, 9 pm. Mon.-Tue.-Thur.-Fri. at 7 & 9 Only I w: f Dial 665-6290 603 E. LIBERTY ENDS TUESDAY! 121 S. UNIVERSITY Dial 668-6416 ENDS TUESDAY! KAPPA ALPHA PSI SIGMA CHAPTER presents COMEDIAN Richard Pryor IN CONCERT "THAT NIGGER'S CRAZY" Knievel is fanning the en- thusiasm of the varied crowd that is gathering. He sees this jump as the climax of his ca- reer and he is spending great quantities of money on food, drink avid entertainment f o r those who have come to watch. "THESE PEOPLE aren't here to see me die," says Knievel. "They want to see me defy death and live. I am not, a stunt- man. I am an explorer, a man who searches into, the un- known." Once he gets over to the other side, Knievel will pull a }t 1 E (( 7k f I i also featuring LABELLE Texts Inistruments INCORPORATED CALCU LATORS. IN STOC K Join The Daily Staff Hill Auditorium-8 p.m. Tickets $4, $5 &$ 'Api on sale at-.. Michigan Union & Hudson's Grinnell's Bop Shop Trotter House TI-1500 TI-2500 TI-2550 TI-2510 $ 59.95 ..,$ 44.95 . $ 69.95 $ 39.95 SR-10 ....$ 69.95 SR-11 .$ 79.95 SR-20 $139.95 TI-3500 $ 79.95 UNIVERSITY BOOKSTC OPENS TODAV 'Y 12--5 SuN p iles BANKAMERICARQ TI-4000 $119.95 WE ACCEPT COMPANY P.O.'S this concert is RATED X ULRICH'S Bookstore 549 East Univ. Ave. Ann Arbor,. Mich. 662-3201 master charge- -TNE.INIERBAMR;CAMO i - =Mona a B I IDRASH *t PROGRAM IN JUDAIC AND HEBRAIC STUDIES-FALL 1974 Textbooks and at DISCOUNT PRICES COURSE OFFERINGS: BEGINNERS HEBREW: a multi-media audiovisual approach to the teaching of language.' INTERMEDIATE HEBREW HEBREW SPEAKING CLUB BASIC JUDAISM: two levels offered, basic and not so basic. HOW TO READ THE BIBLE: or how to get be- yond the "thees" and "thous," what manner of person was an Adam, a Noah, etc., what did they dream about at night, what were their fears and hangups? SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE AMER- ICAN JEWISH COMMUNITY: immigration pat- terns, status, the "Jewish Establishment" ex- posed, antisemitism. GEOGRAPHY OF THE LAND OF ISRAEL: the des- ert, the Dead Sea, the galil, with extensive use of slides. THE ROLE OF WOMEN IN JUDAISM: no descrip- tion needed. JEWISH HERETICS: rebellion Qnd dissent from biblical times to Lenny Bruce. JEWISH ART: History development plus Design Workshop. AMERICAN JEWISH LITERATURE: the Ameri- can Jewish experience, Jewish identity, antisemi- tism in the works of Bellow, Roth, and Malamud. JEWISH YEAR: all about the major holidays and life cycle events. SOCIAL PROBLEMS IN MODERN DAY ISRAEL: poverty, the social welfare system, integration of minorities, the Soviet aliyah. THE HISTORY AND CULTURE OF SEPHARDIC JEWRY: the Jewish communities of Islam, Ye- men, Egypt, Syria, Persia, Kurdistan, their liter- ature, art, music, and dance. PSYCHOLOGICAL ISSUES IN JEWISHINESS: the effects of being' a cultural minority, denial and assimilation, insecurity, and social mobility. MODERN JEWISH THOUGHT: Buber, Heschel, Rosenzweig, existentialism, the challenge of mo- dernity, ecstasy, and fever, the crisis of faith in the secular city, redemption vs. salvation. H-ASSIDISM: Jewish mysticism in its mass re- vival of 18th and 19th century Eastern Europe, prayer and song, dancing, and swaying, ascent to the heights of the "ein sof." for course books and supplies REGISTRATION-SEPTEMBER 10, 11, and 12, 7:30-9:00 p.m. at Hillel Ii