r Wednesday,, November 19, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, November 19, 19Th THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three AGREEMENT REACHED U, I an ar*. fim~O era * S FRI.-SAT. $2.50 Econ summit WASHINGTON ()-The eco- nomic summit in France ended in an agreement to stop erratic fluctuations in monetary ex- change rates, but it may take months to determine whether anything more was accomplish- ed. President Ford and leaders of five other industrialized nations issued an impressive-sounding document that pledged to keep the world from slipping back into recession, and they seemed also to be saying what is good for their countries is good for the rest of the world as well. "THE GROWTH and stability of our economies will help the entire industrial world and de- veloping countries to prosper," they said in a communique is- sued after the talks ended Mon- day at the secluded Chateau de Rambouillet outside Paris. President Ford returned to Wasington immediately after the summit. U.S. officials appeared pleased at the compromise reached with the French to control exchange rates and to establish a new in- ternational group of officials, in- cluding central bankers, to per- iodically consult on how and when to influence the rates. SECRETARY of State Henry Kissinger called the agreement "perhaps the single most sig- nificant" of the summit. Ford Artist mimics masterpieces ends eI Secretary of the Treasury! William Simon said the agree- ment, which will be formally adopted at the International} Monetary Fund meetings in Ja- maica in January, should bring about more orderly and stable exchange rates. "This instability that we've had contributed to, as well as resulted from, tremendous in- stitutional financial strains," in- cluding erratic movements in prices of goods within countr:es, he said. THERE were agreements on a great deal else at the summit, according to the Declaration of Rambouillet, but little detail was given on how the six coun- tries-the United States, France, West Germany, Italy, Japan and Great Britain-would carry them out. They agreed to keep *he re- covery from recession going; they agreed to prevent a new recession; they agreed to reduce unemployment, and they agreed to prevent another outburst of inflation in the world. "We will not allow the re- covery to falter. We will not acceptanother outburst of in- flation," said the declartion. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVI, No. 66 Wednesday, November 19, 1975 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562, Second class postage pod at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106.1 Published d a i1] y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Ar- bor Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. . . ALAIN RESNAIS FESTIVAL TONIGHT-WED., NOV. 19 Last Year At Marienbad (Alain Resnais, 1962) AUD. A, 7 only Resnais' subjective surrealistic portrait of a woman who meets a man at a resort hotel. He insists they've met before ("perhaps at Marien- bad") . In an attempt to probe the characters, Resnais ignores conventional time and concen- trates on a many faceted look at the two. French with English subtitles. AUD. A, ANGELL HALL $1.25 single show $2.00 double feature THURS.: LAGUERRE EST FINIE, STAVISKY FRI.: COMEDY DOUBLE FEATURE IN MLB Nw, . Cr ?Regardedby authorities and oficianados of the subject as one of the best performers of British songs and ballads alive today. "A Master of the tradi- tional English ballad of the shanty, of the Irish song . A master, in fact, of almost any kind of fine singing. A superb performer with an extraordinary repertoire."-N.Y. Times 1421 H I LL 761-1451 THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM GUEST ARTIST SERIES PRESENTS Il LOU & SALLY KILLEN 8:30 / neriaG ia GEO Membership Meeting By PHIL FOLEY Art lovers traveling north along US-23 near Hartland may take a second look at the paint- ing on the side of a barn. In- stead of a chewing tobacco ad- vertisement, the face of Bal- dassare Castiglione silently watches traffic pass. The original wasdone by Ra- phael Sanzio in 1514 and was copied in black and white on the barn of Robert Wakeman this past summer by a young artist who prefers to be known as Ziggy Grabowski. A FEW miles further north on the expressway, on the barn of Cornell Dexter, his giant copy of John Singleton Copley's "Paul Revere" gazes thought- fully towards Flint. Besides these Ziggy has two other barn paintings near Hart- land, both original- composi- tions. One is a self-portrait on the Crouse Centennial farm on Crouse Rd., the other an un- titled work on the old Will Cul- len farm at the corner of Crouse and Cullen Rds. Ziggy isn't the artist's real name. But as he sees it, "No one ever knew who did the Mail Pouch paintings so why should they know who I am?" ALONG with his dislike for publicity, Ziggy has one other trait that-is unusual for some- one who paints barns - he's afraid of heights. FBI harassed King - Senate WASHINGTON WP)-The staff of a Senate committee said yes- terday the FBI waged a cam- paign against the late Rev. Mar- tin Luther King Jr., including sending a letter which King in- terpreted as a suggestion he commit suicide. The campaign to destroy King's influence also included the planting of 16 electronic bugs and eight wiretaps and an effort to hand pick and promote a successor to him as the na- tion's most influential black leader, committee lawyers said. The successor's name was not revealed. THE DISCLOSURES came as the top lawyers of the Senate Intelligence Committee detailed FBI efforts to investigate, in- filtrate and discredit thousands of persons in groups ranging from the Ku Klux Klan and the Communist party to the wo- men's liberation movement. In the case of King, Smothers testified that a draft of the anonymous letter his wife re- ceivedrwas found at FBI head- quarters in the file of deputy director William Sullivan. They said Sullivan maintains the draft letter was planted in his files by persons attempting to discredit him. .But they added the FBI does not dispute its authorship of the letter or thefact it was de- livered to King. MOONCHILDREN OPENS TOMORROW at COUZEN'S THEATRE So he does his painting, "very, ZIGGY'S biggest problem in very carefully." I his barn painting career has While attending Michigan been getting people to let him State University, Ziggy got his work on their barns. His easiest start in large art by doing Rem- barn to get was the Novi one. brandt's "Syndics of the Cloth "But that's because the owner Guild" on a basement wall. La- was Italian," says Ziggy. ter, along with a friend, Tom The four barns near Hartland Winberry, he painted the "Mona and the six more he plans to do Lisa" and "American Gothic" next summer were paid for by under the Farm Lane bridge - a grant from the National En- an MSU landmark - as a joke. dowment For The Arts.j Wednesday-Nov. 8:00 p.m.-Rackham 19 by William Shakespeare Directed by Nicholas Pennell Guest Artist-in-Residence NOVEMBER 26-30 WED-SAT 8PM SUNDAY 3PM with WILLIAM LEACH 1 Amp. AFTER graduating from State in 1970 Ziggy did his first barn. It was another "Mona Lisa" and at the time sort of a political statement. "I know it sounds corny now," says Zig- gy, "but remember the times. Big Brother is watching and all that." In the summer of 1972, after finishing grad school at MSU, Ziggy did two more barns. One' was a copy of a Japanese print of an 18th century courtesan, done on a barn near the MSU campus which has since been destroyed. The other was a copy of "The Duke of Urbino" by Piero della Francesca on a barn in Novi. At the end of that summer Ziggy got a job teaching art history at Madison College in Virginia. Each painting takes about two or three days to plan and then about 10 hours to draw a pre- liminary outline with chalk. The actual painting, which is done with Latex house paint, takes roughly 36 hours. Ziggy works from a gridded photograph and usually expands a small area of the original painting. HE HOPES that his paintings will last about five years. Ziggy's biggest obstacle to. completing the six barns he plans to do next summer is coming up with enough money to continue his graduate stu- dies in print making at Cran- brook. But, says Ziggy, "If peo- ple see the stuff and get a lit- tle pleasure from it, then I'm happy." 4 affiliation e constitution " next contract Subscribe to The Daily-Phone 764-0558 Guest Artist-in-Residence Tickets available through PTP Ticket Office-Located in Mendelssohn Theatre Lobby Monday-Friday 10 a.m.--1 p.m., 2-5 p.m. For more information, Call (313) 764-0450 ia MAST'S SHOES YOUR FRYE BOOT CONNECTION !5AMKAMERICARD master charge w 619 E. LIBERTY 662-0266 217 S. MAIN 662-6326 ___BIG OX Prset Jim Stafford Barbi Benton HOLIDAY FUN TIME Friday, Nov. 28- THE DAY AFTER THANKSGIVING Saginaw Civic Center -8 P.M. ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY TICKETS: $3.50-$4.50-$5.50 at the Saginaw Civic Center Box Office, 303 Johnson-Sagi- now, Michigan. 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