The Michigan Daily-Thursday, February 23, 1978-Page 5 ARTS ARCADE .. . a weekly roundup Oscar Hopefuls LOS ANGELES - The Academy of. Motion Picture Arts and Sciences an- nounced their nominations on Tuesday for the 1978 Academy Awards, to be held on April 3. Nominatigns for best picture:, " Annie Hall " The Turning Point * The Goodbye Girl * Julia " Star Wars Nominees for best actress:- " Diane Keaton, for Annie Hall ,Jane Fonda, for Julia * Anne Bancroft, for The Turning Point * Shirley MacLaine, for The Turning Point " Marsha Mason, for The Goodbye Girl Nominees for best actor: " Woody Allen, for Annie Hall " John Travolta, for Sturday Night Fevei The art of selling crafts ALBUQUERQUE - Mantled in blankets, the Indian woman sits silently as tourists examine the hand-mpde jewelry she displays for sale on/the sidewalk of Old Town Plaza. Tourists come and go, with or without a purchase, against a backdrop of adobe buildings and towering moun- tains. The patient Pueblo woman re- mains, motionless, speaking only when spoken to, answering questions in a few soft words. The stoic round-faced woman is one of many selling their wares in similar fashion nearly year-round in Albuquer- que and Santa Fe, N.M. Other vendors are seen at regularly scheduled Indian fairs in New Mexico's 19 pueblos and in such communities as Gallup and Shiprock, N.M., Casa Gran- de, Flagstaff and Window Rock, Ariz. The solitary woman, a scene memor- able to tourists, symbolizes what has become an international industry - the underwent plastic surgery in Orlando Jan. 31 to make him look like the late Elvis Presley, will make his first public appearance on ABC Television's "Good Morning America" program. "He looks like Elvis," proclaimed his manager, Danny O'Day, who said Wise underwent additional surgery Monday to correct his lower lip. "We took off some of the bandages and everything looked good," O'Day said Friday. "His nose was good, his chin was perfect, but his bottom lip was drawn in. Now it looks great, he's got that pouty look that Presley had." Wise, originally from Joplin, Mo., will go on the road with an Elvis imita- tion act and says he will use money he makes to establish an Elvis museum. O'Day said Wise's guture bookings "are looking good. But we've held off until we show the kid. We've really had a strong response from Vegas." Don 'tthey grow grapes there? SALINAS, Calif. - John Steinbeck's hometown, which shunned him during his lifetime because of his writings about his neighbors and community, finally has decided to honor him nearly a decade after his death. The world-famous novelist, winner of both the Nobel and Pulitzer prizes and' author of The Grapes Of Wrath, Tortilla Flat, Of Mice And Men and East Of Eden, was luried in a family plot in Salinas in 1969. A cemetery attendant said at the time: "There was hardly anyone here." But times have changed and many of the oldtimers, w1jo resented his work and sympathetic views toward migrant workers in this agricultural area, have died. And on Feb. 27 the Steinbeck Foundation and radio station KDON are sponsoring events to honor the author's76th birthday. "For years and years, some locals hated his guts because he told stories they didn't want spread around the world, and apparently a lot of it was the truth," Dick Mason, assistant news director of KDON, said Wednesday. "But younger people don't look at it so much as skeletons being exposed as the fact that their ancestors are inter- nationally known. You go all over the world and mention Salinas and people know wheresyou're from." Public lines up as Haldeman "tells all" beNEW YORK - The public's thirst for behind-the-scenes goings-on at the White House during the Watergate scandal apparently hasn't been quen- ched, despite the publication of nearly 60 books. The latest, by former White House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman, has set off ripples in publishing ponds. start Monday. On Thursday, The Washington Post published material from the final two- thirds of the book. Editor Benjamin C. Bradlee would not say where the paper obtained the partial manuscript, other than, "We got itfrom someone whose name you don't know, whose affiliation you don't know." Hours later, Newsweek released some of its 30,000 words of excerpts, which will appear in two installments beginning in Monday's issue. Newsweek officials confirmed that the magazine had contracted to pay $125,000 for rights to the material. The Arts Arcade was compiled from the wires of AP and UPI and by Arts staffers Pat Fabrizio, Owen Gleiberman, Mark Johansson, Peter Manis, Jeff Selbst and Tim Yagle. Diamond jubilee AP Photo Edgar Bergen, famed ventriloquist, celebrated his 75th birthday Wednesday night with his "family." From left: Charlie McCarthy, Bergen's radio side- kick, son Kris, wife Frances, and daughter, actress Candace. The Ends of Power was released to bookstores Friday - 10 days ahead of Times Books' scheduled publication date - because parts of the closely guarded book had been leaked to the press. Among other things, Haldeman says in the book that he believes President Nixon set the wheels in motion for the Watergate break-in, that Nixon was in- volved in the coverup "from Day One," and that the Soviets once proposed a nuclear strike on China's atomic facilities. One New York bookstore, Brentano's, ordered 2,000 copies for its Fifth, Avenue store, compared with an average order of about 75 volumes for a non-fiction book. A clerk described sales Friday as "steady." In Washing- ton "people were lined up as soon as the book hit the dock," said Jose Gonzales of District News Co., the only local distributor. Before half of his 10,000- book shipment was gone, Gonzales had called the publisher to order more. The book was expected to reach stores in other cities today, with the delay blamel on problems related to shipping some 275,000 copies on short notice. A number of factors are expected to spur sales of the 352-page, $12.95 book, which is Haldeman's account of the Richard Nixon presidency and the Watergate affair: " Nixon has kept much to himself sin- ce his August 1974 resignation. In fact, callers to his home in San Clemente, Calif., seeking reaction to the Haldeman book were greeted with a tape recording that said only, "Nixon's book will come out in May." , Haldeman, who worked on Nixon's behalf for some 17 years,'was closer, than most to the nation's 37th president. * There was extensive media coverage of the leak and subsequent worries by newspapers and magazines that had contracted for excerpts to MENDELSSOHN THEATRE SUN., FEB. 26, . 2&B8pm GuestArtit Series 'I'1).eFeaturing JAMES H.HAWTHORNE Guest Artist-in-Residence Wt1 e IAWed--Sat. March1-4.8pm Power Center A Play by Howard Sackler Pulitzer Prize Winner Tony Award - Best Play NYK Drama Critics'Award i 9 E, e I n t aySnydeOr I POE TAUT HOR: The Old Ways, EarthI Household, Regarding Wave, Turtle Island Gary Snyder writes in his introductory note that Turtle Island is "the old/new name for the con- tinent, based on many creation myths of the ? people who have been here for millennia, and reapplied by some of them to 'North America' in recent years." The nearly five dozen poems in the book range from the lucid, lyrical, almost mystical to the mytho-biotic, while a few are frankly political. All, however, share a common vision: a rediscovery of this land and the ways by which we might become natives of the place, ceasing to think and act (after all these centuries) as newcomers and invaders. A tentative cross-fertilization of ecological thought with Buddhist ideas of interpenetration is also suggested, reflecting the poet's own life with his family and comrades in the foothills of the California Sierras. i A break in the day AP Photo Pope Paul VI's audience this week included members of Italy's Medrano Cir- cus. Behind this juggler is artist Pericle Fazzini's recently-installed sculpture of Christ. " Marcello Mastrianni, for A Special Day " Richard Dreyfuss, for The Goodbye Girl + Richard Burton, for Equus Nominees for best director: * Woody Allen, for Annie Hall " Steven Spielberg, for Close Encoun- ters of the Third Kind " George Lucas, for Star Wars " Herbert Ross, for The Turning Point " Fred Zinnemann, for Julia Nominees for best supporting actor: " Alec Guiness, for Star Wars Mikhail Baryshnikov, for The Turn- ing Point " Maximilian Schell, for Julia " Peter Firth, for Equus *-Jason Robards, for Julia Nominees for best supporting ac- tress: " Quinn Cummings, for The Goodbye Girl " Melinda Dillon, for Close Encoun- ters of the Third Kind " Tuesday Weld, for Looking For Mr. Goodbar " Vanessa Redgrave, for Julia " Leslie Browne, for The Turning Point Woody Allen, who received nomina- tions for best actor, best original screenplay, and best director, is the only person to have received nomina- tions for all three since Orson Welles staged his legendary one-man show, Citizen Kane, in 1941. Among the top nomination-getters were Star Wars, with 10, and Close Encounters, which ended up with eight nominations despite its conspicuous absence from the "best picture" category. I rr wr TL.Aww.L.. ..wrL making and marketing of Indian and Indian-style arts and crafts. Once functional, ceremonial and or-' namental, often traded or bartered for supplies and foodstuffs, Indian handi- crafts today are marketed nearly the world over from drug stores to some of the nation's highest prices specialty shops. Its dollar value is difficult to assess, The state attorney general's office said a manufacturer of Indian-style costume jewelry estimated $700 million worth of authentic and non-authentic Indian jew- elry was sold in 1976. Another source estimated the worth of authentic jewel- ry sold in the peak year of 1974 to be $750 million. It's a living OCALA, Fla. - Dennis Wise, 24, who Enjoy THE GOOD COMPANY of Susan Sneider, Gabe Kaimowitz, perhaps Meg Gilbert, even Charles Stallmqn reading The Lady Is The Tiger and other works by hgk after 8 p.m., Thursday, Feb. 23, at the GUILD HOUSE, 802 Monroe. RELATIVELY SPEAKING-hgk Two trains tunnel through my darkness thoughts, in opposite directions. They would end the world between them excapt they move on different nights. POETRY READING with DIANNA SABBATH, GABE KAIMOWITZ, CHARLES STALLMAN, and SUSAN SN EIDER readings from their work Thursday, Feb. 23-7:30 p.m. at GUILD HOUSE Refreshments 802 MON ROE(corner of Oakland) - - ********** aaarnrnearnm*a C I a a earn a a a agape a ***** ~ READING-Friday 8 p.m., February 24 Rackham Auditorium Ethics & Religion, G-513 Union, 764-7442 Changes in Chile: From Allende to Pinochet A series of lectures and discussions on education and public health in Chile. Thursday, February 23 "THE UNIVERSIYBEFORE AND AFTER THE COUP" 7:30 PM, Michigan Union Ballroom SPEAKERS: ENRIQUE KIRKBERG, former Rector of the State Technical University in Santiago. CLAUDIO GROSSMAN, former member of the executive council of the University of Chile and President of the Law Students Federation there. A discussion of the university reforms instituted before and during the Allende years, the state of the siege the universities suffered after the 1973 coup, and the institutionalization of fascist education in Chile today. Friday, February 24 "SCIENCE AND IMPERIALISM: THE POLITICS OF NUTRITION RESEARCH IN CHILE AND THE THIRD WORLD" 12:00-2:00 PM, 1035 Angell Hall SPEAKERS: GIORGIO SOLIMANO, eminent nutritionist and former director of Allende's free milk distribution program. MICHAEL TAUSSIG, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, University of Michigan. A discussion of how U.S.-funded scientific research helps perpetuate social inequities and the social basis of hunger and starvation in Third World countries, taking as one example among others the research and consulting work of the Community Systems Foundation (CSF), headquartered in Ann Arbor. CSF consists of University of Michigan faculty and graduate students from Natural Resources, Engineering, Education, Geography, Urban Planning and Public Health and has worked in Colombia, Chile and Thailand with funds from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). i; MEET THE AUTHOR One of America's best contemporary poets, Gary Snyder has been central to the development of the West Coast poetry movement, originating with the City Lights group in the 1950's. He is the author of numerous books of poetry and essays, including Turtle Island, Back Country, Regarding Wave, and most re- cently, The Old. Ways. AT ~VA~ ~. .. . -nib _ i I 1 ~40% . _ xrv% Y Aw Y