Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturdav. October 27. 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday Octoh~r 27 1 ~73 ...+. --Iv . a ...v -Rs . rr +.. . r Contemporary Music Festival Contemporary Directions Ensemble JAN DE GAETANI, mezzo soprano, guest artist SATURDAY, OCT. 27 -- 8 P.M. Rackhom Auditorium PAUL CH IHARA-Branches LUCIANO BERIO-Sequenza II I EUGENE KURTZ-Mot ivations I I MORTON FELDMAN-The King of Denmark GEORGE CRUMB--Night of the Four MoonsI Presented by the University of Michigan School of Music OPEN TO THE PUBLIC WITHOUT CHARGE CIEMII **** tonight only **** HOWARD HAWKS ................._ __ s I - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - --- - - - - - - - - - -- W-Wbe Israeli Folk Dancing with PZIPI TROPE Sunday, Oct. 28 12:30 p.m. at HILLEL, 1429 Hill St. DUE NOV. 24 * * Cosmic comet coming (Coptinued from Page 1) man relations going down, and life mer, Lubos Kohoutek, at the Ham- For eventr joicing Trad associa astrologers, however, the may not be a cause for re- itionally, comets have been ted with ill luck and dis- _, er FOR SOME local astrologers, things haven't changed. M ediatric Bhanuprasad Joshi claims, "Gen- erally, when a comet comes, it constitutes a bad sign." He sees the comet as accelerat- ing the current trend of "the world becoming more materialistic, hu- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Vol. LXXXIV, No. 45 {,..jis edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University yedr at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summersession published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail .(Michigan and + Ohio); $7.00 non-local mall !other states and foreign). NATURAL SCIENCE AUDITORIUM DRAGSTER KING Fri. & Sat. $1.00 7 & 9:00 SEFFNER, Fla (UPI) - Don Garlits, affectionately known as ____________ _ "Rith.zAA,"" 1.i"c '. - conditions becoming worse." burg Observatory in Germany. Like most comets, Kohoutek has NOT ALL astrologers, however, an extremely long, cigar-shaped have foreseen calamity. orbit around the sun, probably vis- Michael Erlewine predicts the iting the earth only once every comet will signal "a sign of a 10,000 to 80,000 years. massive centering a c r o s s the world, a time to lose our obsession THUS, THIS will be the first ' with the alienated individual and timeinrrecorded history Kohoutek find new purpose within the scope has ever been seen. of our own lives." Except for Halley's comet (a "It could mean new life for those rarer, short-term comet seen every who have been absorbed in their 75 years), no really bright comet own private business for so long has ever been seen before. that they had begun to assume the And Kouhoutek is expected to far future held no changes for them," outdistance in brightness Halley's, says Erlewine. which will probably never be more than.. barely detactable to the WHILE S T U D ,E N T S pursue naked eye come 1985. HIS GIRL FRIDAY Independent newspaper reporter finds herself torh between the prospect of mar- riage and her job which she Starrs. One of the fastest poced comedies ever made. Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell, Ralph Bellamy. cud a angell hall 7:00 and 9:00 Sat., Oct. 27 $1.00 Sunday French Cinema FARREBIQUE I- pleasure or metaphysics to cele- brate the comet's arrival, the Uni- versity's giant t e I e s c o p e (a Schmidt with a 24" aperture and 36" mirror at Mt. Tololo, Chile), will be photographing ,the comet for future study. Photographs f r o m the Inter- American Observatory, high in the Andes, will be sent back to the University where they will be studied by the University's "comet expert,"Astronomy Prof. Freeman Miller. "We don't know in detail what our program will be," says Miller, who has briefed November's Sky- lab crew on the comet, "we'll have to take what comes. That's the way this game is played." BUT THEN there's no guaran; tee yet that Kohoutek will be as spectacular as it's touted to be. That depends on how the tail of the comet develops within the next few weeks. Without a good-sized tail, Kohoutek will appear as little more than a misshapen star. Nevertheless, regardless of how the c o m e t develops, astrologers will doubtless continue to predict, astronomers will still migrate to South America, where sighting will be best, and students will find some other cause for celebration. BTTIF VOU1han't beenin- ' I Bernard has room for living I I