Page* Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY I hursday, September 7, 1977 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY thursday, 5eptember 7, 1972 Uff' msic . he a By LORIN LABARDEE Although camping out for two or three nights to buy tic- kets for a concert is a pheno- menon commonly associated with big city concerts, local con- cert enthusiasts are often equal- ly persistent. Witness, for ex- ample, last fall when it was announced that tickets for an upcoming Jefferson Airplane concert were to be sold in Ann Arbor box offices. By Saturday afternoon, al- most two days before tickets were to go on sale, the main lobby of the Michigan Union was jammed beyond capacity. As eager concert goers contin- ued to arrive, they overflowed down the front steps into the Union's basement. And when tickets finally did go on sale, the majority of those in the. basement were too far back in line to get tickets. Forty-eight hours wasted. Hoping to avoid a repetition of such disappointment, frus- tration and confusion, concert promoters decided to make tic- kets to the next concert, fea- turing the Grateful Dead, ob- tainable only by mail order. This time the frenzy was less noticeable, manifesting itself in hastily scrawled letters and hurried attempts to reach the post office before the rush but after the mail order deadline. The organization of most lo- cal concerts falls into the hands of Daystar Productions, a pro- motion agency contracted by the University Activities Center