The Michigan Daily-Thursday, February 9, 1978-Page 5 AR TS ARCADE ... a weekly roundup I And what are YOUR Wordsworth? LONDON - British collectors are making an eleventh-hour appeal for cash to keep a bundle of passionate love letters and other writings by the English poet William Wordsworth from being sent to America. The deadline was Sunday. Jona- than Wordsworth, the poet's great- great-great-nephew, said his group was close to agreement with Cornell University but the deal is "not all signed, sealed and delivered." "We're extremely close to having raised the money," Wordsworth said in a telephone interview from his Warborough village home. "We have in fact made an offer to Cornell of 42,000 pounds (about $81,900). We have reason to believe they are.going to accept that figure." Robson after the awards ceremony at the Savoy Hotel Wednesday. "But working on the cart I get a good line for a play every day." Global celebration HONG KONG - At midnight Monday, the Year of the Horse replaced the Year of the Snake and millions began lunar New Year cele- brations in Hong Kong, China, Viet- nam, Thailand, Korea, Burma and Taiwan. Tens of thousands of last minute shoppers swarmed Hong Kong streets into the night, while markets, stores, and beauty shops extended business hours to cope with the rush. Most were fighting for time to round up all the necessary Chinese New Year goodies - candles, lotus seeds, fruits and nuts, as well as new hair- street dancers and other minor parades lasted until Ash Wednesday when the last weary and hungover "Carnavalescos" staggered into the lenten season. NEW ORLEANS - Fourteen pa- rades -rolled through the streets of New Orleans last weekend culminat- ing in Mardi Gras, or "Fat Tues- day." The carnival festival was highlighted by the four-hour Bacchus Parade, named after the Greek god of wine and revelry. It featured floats two stories high and television per- sonality Ed McMahon as Bacchus X, saluting the thousands of carnival- goers with a can of beer. This year's festival got off to a slow start due to unusually cold tempera- tures, but the crowds improved with the weather, and Tuesday's throng exceeded the usual million-plus. for a number of years, and I want to make this my home. "What attracted me was the air, some people I know, and the general atmosphere. I have a house with a 180-degree view of the water. "And I'm going to make films the way I used to. I have taken over a Boeing airplane hangar I will use f'or a couple of films I plan to make. I have the financing from Mel Simon. So'I can make the pictures the way I want to." "Yes, this is a departure for me. But I've got two young kids with my second marriage, and it's a good time to get away from Hollywood and find a set of values. Where does everything fit? I want to get a line on my life." The Arts Arcade was compiled from the wires of AP and UPI, and by Arts staffers Owen Glieberman, Mark Johannson, Peter Manis, Steve Pickover, Jeff Selbst, Mike Taylor and Tim Yagle. AP Photo Chinese saddle up to a New Year A The year of the Horse was celebrated in Peking February 6 in a splashy gala given by the Peking Opera. Actress Yang Chiu-ling is shown center, with other members of her troupe, all fancifully dressed, ushering in the New Year with a bang. Gone with the match' One of Atlanta's greatest structures was destroyed by fire Monday. Loew's Grand Theatre had the honor of hosting the world premier of the classic motion picture GONE WITH THE WIND in 1939. Arson is suspected as the cause of the fire, but the incident is still under investigation. Damage is estimated at $2 billion, and only several firemen were reported injured. The historic building has been used recently for office space as well as apartments. Reportedly, the only real inhabitants were derelicts. The theatre had a long, illustrious history dating back to 1893. Many a great star has perfomed in the hall, which was used in later years for vaudeville. Close Encounters of the Third Kind helped pull Columbia Pictures from the brink of bankruptcy, has lost his job for the second time because of a financial scandal that has shaken the movie business. Columbia chairman Leo Jaffe announced Monday that Begelman had resigned effective immediately because of continuing "rumors and speculation" about the way he handled corporate funds and stars' money. Columbia executives declined com- ment Monday aboutrthe controversy, refusing to elaborate on Jaffe's statement or discuss whether Begel- man had been forced out. "That, my darling, you'll never know!" said Jean Vagpini, Colum- bia's public relations director. Roman Polanski's judge says a prison psychiatric report on the director is "a complete whitewash" and that Polanski should have been imprisoned and deported for having had sexual intercourse with a 13- year-old girl. Superior Court Judge Laurence Rittenbamd said Monday that Polanski knew a harsh penalty was in store when he fled the country to avoid sentencing. The'judge disclosed that he had told Polanski's lawyer in advance that he planned to send the director back to the state prison in Chino for 48 days, then seek his voluntary deportation from the United States. If Polanski refuses to return, Ritten- band said he would sentence him in absentia. Hooray, for Seattle! HOLLYWOOD - One of the town's best known filmmakers, Stanley Kramer, is pulling up stakes to start his own movie colony in Seattle. Born in New York City, Kramer has been an Angeleno for over 40 years. After he filmed Home of the Brave on a shoestring in 1948, he became famous for producing sound, economically made films, often on social themes. Champion, The Men, Cyrano de Bergerac, High Noon, Death of a Salesman, and The Caine Mutiny. Since Not as a Stranger, he has also directed his films, not always on an economical scale: The Pride and the Passion, TherDefiantOnes, On the Beach, Inherit the Wind, Judgement at Nuremberg, It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World. His last big winner was the Hepburn-Tracy-Poitier Guess Who's Coming to Dinner? in 1967. After months of preparing Raise the Titanic for Sir Lew Grade, Kramer departed over the usual "artistic differences." Recently Hollywood was surprised by reports that he was leaving town. "It's true," Kramer said over the telephone from Seattle. "I sold my house to Neil Diamond, and I'm closing my office at Sunset-Gower studio. I've owned property up here HIGH VOLTAGE ENTERTAINMENT!" -William Glover, Associated Press Rssel ame Lme, eYar !roadway's smash hit comedy IAL?411H1 &luu MENDELSSOHN THEATRE SUN., FEB., 26, 2 & 8pm AP Photo Cornell bought the collection last July 7 at a Sotheby auction in London for about $81,000, including Sotheby's commission and an agent's fee. The school planned to send the works to its Ithaca, N.Y., campus where scholars are editing a series of Wordsworth volumes. The collection, including 35 love letters which Wordsworth wrote to his wife, Mary, is considered aca- demically valuable since it sheds new- light on the couple's relation- ship. The material came to light only last year when a carpet-fitter came across them in his storage shed. * * * No comment LONDON - A 33-year-old garbage collector has won a theater award as the most promising playwright of 1977. Jim Robson, a sanitation work- er in Kirby Moorside, Yorkshire, won the annual Evening Standard Drama Award for his play Factory Birds, which has been running at the Royal Shakespeare Company's Warehouse Theater. "My mates at work think my writing's a bit of a laugh," said cuts, clothes and shoes. The three-day Asian holiday called Tet "is somewhat like Christmas and Western New Year rolled into one," the Vietnam News Agency said as the Vietnamese heralded the new year despite food shortages and a boarder war with Cambodia. RIO DE JANIERO, Brazil - About 20,000 dampish but undaunted samba dancers shimmied their way through the 1978 Rio Carnival grand parade Sunday, despite a drenching summer rainstorm. The world-famous march of Rio's 10 greatest samba schools, the high point of the four-day carnival, start- el an hour late because of a storm that deposited more than an inch of rain on the city in 90 minutes. But by the early hours, Rio's brand-new, 800-yard-long "Samba- drome" was dry except for a few shallow puddles, and the 70,000 spectators, who paid $60 apiece to sit in the rickety wooden grandstand along the route, had seen thousands of wriggling hips and heard hundreds of high-powered percussionists. The parade, a 16-hour marathon competition, ended before noon, but Crime in the arts Movie producer David Begelnani, whose talent for putting together box-office hits like Shampoo and POETRY READING with Richard McMullen, David Fox, and David Oleshenski -readings from their work- Thursday, Feb. 9-7:30 p.m. at GUILD HOUSE Refreshments 802 Monroe (corner of Oakland) TONIGHT Open AMediinCas Taught by STERN MORGAN, Psychic Healer A different method of meditation covered each week. People are welcome to attend regularly or occasionally. Begins each Thursday at 8 p.m. Canterb Dsouse 218 North Div Sion Street YOUR COLLEGE RING FOR NOW AND THE FUTURE... :' I