Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thi wrarlrnr ",onfimOnNor A 1 107 I. 1 I r*urbU(J/,,)e1.i emI LJr D, 1'7 t- .1 768030 ' Order Your Subscription Today 764-0558 Touring groups highlight local dance experience U NEW BOOKS BY U-M AUTHORS ERIC S. RABKIN Narrative Suspense "When Slim Turned Sideways . .. Using the insights afforded by structuralism, linguistics, and modern criticism, the author provides a seminal study of the function and importance of narrative suspense in great literature. Eric S. Rabkin is assistant professor of English at the University of Michigan. $7.95 By KATHLEEN RICKE Dance in Ann Arbor is a two- fold art. There are numerous op- portunities to see good dance companies perform and limited opportunities to dance yourself. The University Musical Society (UMS) is the principle sponsor of touring groups performing on campus. Last season UMS featur- ed a variety of styles in dance including folk, ballet and modern. UMS's 1973-74 series promises to be an interesting one, starting out in October with the Ballet Repertory Company of the Amer- ican Ballet Theatre from N e w York and moving on to the Bay- anihan Philippine Dance Com- pany. Ballet West, USA from Hopwood awards Thanks to the b e q u e s t of American dramatist Avery Hop- wood, University students each year are generously rewarded for their creative writing efforts. "The new, the unusual, and the radical shall be especially en- couraged," wrote Hopwood in his will. Thus, for over 40 years, stu- dents in University composition courses 'have been eligible to sub- mit manuscripts of drama, essay, fiction, and poetry. Manuscripts are r e a d by a panel of judges of national repu- tation. Recommendations a r e made to a University committee of judges who make the final decisions concerning awards. IF YOU ASPIRING writers care to check out past award- winning works, visit the Hopwood Room, established in conjunction with the Hopwood Awards unders the direction of the late Prof. Roy Cowden. In addition to displaying win- ning entries, the Hopwood Room, 1o06 Angell Hall, contains current books and periodicals. It has been described as an "oasis" in the University, conducive to conver- sation. Utah will perform, followed by the Claude Kipnis Mime Theatre. In December another'folk com- pany, the Krasnayarsk D a n c e Company of Siberia with 80 danc- ers and musicians is scheduled. After Christmas the Norwegian National Ballet and Roumanian Folk Ballet precede the Nikolais Dance Theatre from New York which wraps up the season. The Nikolais dancers are a well- trained group performing con- temporary dance. MANY STUDENTS are inter- ested in seeing companies come to Ann Arbor that perform con- temporary works. So, UMS has appropriately expanded its pre- viously primary folk agenda to include more modern ballet and modern-trained dance gr-ups. The Ann Arbor Civic Ballzt provides an unusual opportuni TV for students interested in study- ing classical ballet. Auditions are held in the fall for new company members, and classes are offer- ed at all technique levels from beginning to professional. The Civic Ballet will perform with the Ann Arbor Civic Orches- tra at Pioneer High School on Oct. 7. Their program will in- clude Lessylphides, choregraph- ed by Christine Ellis. The University dance dept. cf- fers a variety of classes open to students in all colleges. T h e schedule includes technique ses- sions concentrating on African dance, ballet, modern, jazz, Is- raeli, international folk, square and social dance, and dance con- position. MOST OF THE instructors in the department are University- trained dancers. Some of the more advanced students perform in University concerts as t h e University dance troupe. The University 'also sponsors international folk dancing every Friday evening at Barbour gym- nasium. The first hour is devot- ed to teaching new dances while the remainder is usually taken over by a few exhibitionists who seem concerned more with per- forming than having fun. They have been known to spoil the evening for those less knowledge- ,blQ in _dance than themselves, b'it this is a new year and per- haps there will be some new f i:.es to liven things up. Occas- ionally ethnic bands provide music to dance to, which makes for a more festive evening. The University Activities Cent- er and student radio station WCBN have been known to spice up dorm life with weekend 1950's- style sock hops. But with the graduation of some membersof lip-syncing favorites Jimmy and the Javelins and Chasity and the Belts; the events may prove to be less '"exciting." AND FINALLY, if you're into belly dancing (as a few Repub- licans on City Council apparent- ly are), try the Star Bar on Main St. - directly across the street from City Hall. Olga, the bar's owner had been having some trouble getting a li- cense for dancers due to a city ordinance prohibiting "cabaret" (topless or "girlie") entertain- ment, but with a little help from their friends, the belly dancers are back. I YEHESKEL HAS E NELD and RICHARD A. ENGLISH, Editors Human Service Organizations A Book of Readings Foreword by WILBUR J. COHEN This comprehensive collection brings together for the first time the essential literature on the structure and functioning of organizations providing services to people: schools, employment agencies, mental health clinics, correctional institutions, welfare agencies, and hos- pitals. Yeheskel Hasenfeld is assistant professor of social work, Richard A. English is associate professor and assistant dean of the School of Social Work, and Wilbur J. Cohen is dean of the School of Education, all at the University of Michigan. - $15.00 paperbound $7.95 ABRAHAM KAPLAN Love*... and Death Talks on Contemporary and Perennial Themes In these eleven talks-originally presented as the highly acclaimed television series "The Worlds of Abraham Kaplan"-a great teacher discusses the most important questions of traditional and contem- porary human experience. Dr. Kaplan, for many years a professor of philosophy at the University of Michigan, now lives, and teaches in Israel. Illustrated. $5.95 ,. MATTHEW ARNOLD English Literature and Irish Politics Edited by R. H. SUPER (The Completq Prose Works of Matthew Arnold, Vol. IX) The latest volume in R. H. Super's highly praised edition includes Arnold's most popular essays in literary criticism (written 1 879-81) as well as his compassionate appeals on behalf of England's indus- trial poor and the Irish. R. H. Super is professor of English at the University of Michigan and author of The Time-Spirit of Matthew Arnold.5 $15.00 KAN CHEN, KARL F. LAGLER, and MARK R. BERG, E. DRANNON BUSKIRK, JR., DONALD H. GRAY, KARL HERPOLSHEIMER, T. JEFFREY JONES, GEORGE KRAL, J. C. MATHES, JOHN McGUIRE, DONALD N. MICHAEL, STEPHEN M. POLLOCK, and RUTH REHFUS Growth Policy Population, Environment, and Beyond In Growth Policy a team of experts presents a truly interdisci- plinary and original approach to the environmental crisis and what must be done about it. The resulting book is a very important con- tribution to the growing literature on "spaceship earth." The authors are all members of the University of Michigan faculty. $12.95 paperbound $2.95 CYNTHIA EARL KERMAN Creative Tension The Life and Thought of Kenneth Boulding The first intellectual biography of one of America's keenest and wittiestsocial philosophers, who for many years taught at the Uni- versity of Michigan. Illustrated with photographs. Cynthia Earl Kerman, who did much of the research for this book while a graduate student in American Culture at the University of Michigan, is now assistant professor of English at Villa Julie College in Maryland. $12.50 { irrrnmrrrrrir CLIP AND SAVE r inininmmmmwdrrr 1 - r I U r U r FLLD FILM. I I r Ir I I ..NEF WOLD FIM O-P ********************- PR ESENTs r******************* 'K * 'K * 'K 1 SEPTEMBER * /K i K r 'K~Myra Breckinridge * A Man Called Horse 0 Tell * 'K Them Willie Boy Was Here 0 Cool Hand Luke * rK * 0 Strawberry Statement * Knock On Any Door * 'K (Bogart) 0 Journey Through Rosebud 0 Andro- * 'Kmeda Strain 0 Metropolis (Fritz Lang) * 'K * rK * OCTOBER * The Time Machine A Separate Pee0ace If K * Silent Running " I Am Curious (Yellow) I I . Am Curious (B I u e) 0 Ned Kelly (Mick Jagger) * ! Satyricon 0 Waiting for Godot 0 Klute 0 * Magic Christian * The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter 'K * NOVEMBER Night of the Living Dead 0 Sounder 0 Burn ' Sometimes a G r e a t Notion 0 Cartouche!0* THX 1138 and The Illustrated Man (Ray Bradbury) 'K * The Rain People * Diary of a Mad Housewife 0 Three Lives (Kate Millet) DECEMBER* * Billy Jack 0 Lady Sings the Blues M Slaughter- 'K house No. 5 JANUARY Zabriskie Point 0 Fortune and Mens Eyes 9 Mid- * night Cowboy 0 Sunday, Bloody Sunday S Dark- * ness, Darkness ! The Discreet Charm of the Bour- * geosie * Performance 0 Clowns * They Only Kill Their Masters * Marat-Sade S Joe Hill 'K FEBRUARY . Artists.' guild to sponsor art festivals in Union ballroom By DIANE LEVICK supplement co-editor Mushroom "art," ornate ma- crame wall hangings, glass-blow- ing demonstrations. . . and much more can be found at the art fairs in the Michigan Union ball- room. M i c h i g a n professional and amateur artists come to theball- room to display and sell their handicraf.ts, creating a festive yet diversified atmosphere for the thousands who throng to it. Three such fairs are schei uled for this coming year, i September, December, a n March, by a newly-formed o ganizing group, the Universit of Michigan Artists and Craft men Guild. In addition to sponsoring th ballroom fairs, the Guild, an a sociation of'- amateur and prc fessional artists, in conjunctio with the University Activitie Center now holds the Summe Free Arts Festival. d- in d 1r- y :s- le The Free Arts Festival, set up on E. University, adjoins Ann Arbor's annual, nationally known street art fair. This main fair, however, juries its applicants because of space limitations, ac- cepting several hundred out of perhaps 4,000 applications. FRESHMEN!3 ENJOY SINGING? The U-M Arts Chorale meets Tuesdays and Thursdays in Auditorium C, Angell Hall, 3 to 5 p.m. Classical and Contemporary MUSIC COME IN AND TRY OUT! s- AS A RESULT of this proce- dure and of high registration s costs, artists have in past years S setup their FreeArts Festival r alongside the main one. The Guild has accepted sponsorship of the free fair in hopes of pro- viding more services to the en- trants. Guild co-ordinator Victor tut- man sees the group as more than a festival-sponsoring organiza- tion, however: "It's a co-oper- ative venture - its members will decide what it will do, like buy supplies together, for ex- ample. We want to foster some kind of community spirit with people from all parts of Michi- gan. Gutman hopes the Guild will be able to secure discounts for members at art shows and sup- ply stores as well as compile a list of art fairs and other art- related events around Michigan. The Guild will also start a bi- monthly newsletter relevant to artists and craftsmen. RECYCLED- { JACOB M. PRICE France and the Chesapeake A History of the French Tobacco Monopoly, 1674-1791, and of Its Relationship to the British and American Tobacco Trades Price's monumental and definitive work is at once a representative study in the interrelations of statecraft, finance, commerce, and society in the ancien regime and a remarkable account of the func- tioning of a particular monopoly. Jacob M. Price is professor of history at rhe University of Michigan. 2 vols. boxed set-$35.00 FOR PEOPLE WHO WALK ON THIS EARTH:.. u S. Patent No 335941 The specially engineered sole imitates walking on sand barefoot, and forces you to walk with good posture-reduces fatigue and the aches and pains caused by our hard-surfaced city. For men and women in shoes, sandals, sabots and boots, imrUK Iwt CLOTHING " 40 s Jackets " Hawaiian r' ~Sh irts t, "Velvet & Antique Dresses JaDenits Jackets, 0 Jeas LYNN EDEN Crisis in Watertown The Polarization of an American Community Nominated for the 1972 National Book Award in Contemporary Affairs In the participants' own words, this remarkable book provides a granhic nortrait of a small town in middle America. and of the crisis Cord Coats i I 0