100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

April 01, 1976 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1976-04-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Page Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Thii

inur

rsday, April 1, 1976

Dr. Paul C. Uslan
OPTOMETRIST
Visual Examinations
Full Contact Lens Service
Optical Lab
545 CHURCH, 769-1222
Midwest's Largest Selection of
European Charters
Canadian and U.S.
from $259
CALL 769-1776
Great Ploces L
216 S. 4th Ave, Ann Arbor

S

COOPERATIVE HOUSE
OPEN TO
TUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF, AND
PEOPLE NOT ASSOCIATED
WITH THE UNIVERSITY
SINGLE PEOPLE AND FAMILIES
We would like to meet with other people interested
in discussina the possibility of formir'n a cooperative
house open to students, faculty, and stof' -s well as people
not associated with the University-both ngle people and
families.
We hope to have a place to live, eat, and share
recreational activities with friends.
FOR TIME AND PLACE OF MEETING
PLEASE CALL PERSISTENTLY
DURING THE DAY OR IN THE EVENING UNTIL MIDNIGHT
09ROR

i

(7

~mfttI . IE~lIIfl~ T ;I,

.-

ENJOY THE FINEST CIII NESE FOOD
WEST OF NEW YORK AND
EAST OF SAN FRANCISCO
IN A QU I ET ELEGANT SETTING III
LUNCH " DINNER SNACKS 0 COCKTAILSI
FOUR .-_______
SEAS I I

II

I IIIGI i
lu~II

INK N®----o--osoo m r1

I
I
I

WERE

D A FUFY *

Bring this coupon for:
IBUNCH DAFFODILS FREE
With Purchase of
F DOZEN ROSES
For Only $3.49

r-i
I
I
I
t

5Y-28f98
- "_ _ ->->
Rutgers Review Center, Inc.
Not affiliated with Rutgers, The State University
CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
MICH. 0 N.Y. N.J.
Classes limited to 20 students
40 hr. and 24. CoursesI
No material charges. AM -
Your future depends on a 3% hourN
exam. Don't leave it to chance!
MCAT NOW FORMING
50 HR. COURSE-$240
30 HR. COURSE--$170
Courses developed by:
ARCO PUBLISHING CALL 24 HOURS
Test Preparation7
Specialists for 40 7 Days 313/557-3158
years, with
Candrill and Slawsky Call now for Spring
343 Van Houten Ave. and Summer coursesj
Passaic, N.J 07055
GOING-OUT-OF-BUSINESS SALE
DAVID'S BOOKS
52s E. LIBERTY 4
Prints & Posters ......... .. 40% Off
New Books...............40% off
j Used Hardcovers........... 40% off
Used Paperbacks .......... 60% off
Calendars ................ 70% off
Shelving, etc.
A ALBERT'S COPYING
Will Continue in Business at the SAME
LOCATION for Years into the future.
6:30 A.M.-10:00 P.M. 994-4028
T THURS., APRIL 1-AUD. B, ANGELL HALL
CARL OGLESBY
U of M 1962, SDS President 1965
4 p.m.: DALLAS I: "The Whole Bay of Pigs
Things"
Conflict within JFK administration around Cuba-Viet-
nam questions and departures from ex-VP Nixon's j
Cuban Invasion Plans. Indifference of Yankees and
hostility of Cowboys.
November 22,.1963 as a Coup d'Etat?

Reagan blasts Kissinger's
policies in TV address

Uf nion
goes out
4e
on stri~ke
(Continued from Page 1)
had "reached an impasse."
"THE STRIKE has been au-
thorized by the national nego-
tiating committee, and each lo-
cal calls its own strike. It's been
called for, and the locals are
jmaking plans to picket. The
strike is on" Barbee said.
Other pickets were posted in
Ohio and Arkansas.
Yesterday afternoon, local
Teamsters officials started
sounding out individual trucking
firms on the possibility of in-
terim agreements to keep op-
erating in case of a strike. One
union source that was a stra-
tegy designed to "break up the
employers.'"
UNDER THE interim agree-
ments which Teamsters were
pressing companies to accept or
face a strike, drivers would be
paid an additional $1.75 hourly'
and another $17 week in pension
and health-welfare benefits from
12:01 a.m. Thursday until a na-
tionwide agreement is reached.
A union source said there is
"indication that lots of com-
panies are signing up" in an 11-
state area of the West, includ-
ing larger firms. i

(Continued from Page 1)
In his role as an itinerant1
fool, Feit says he, "verbally
and non-verbally tells stories,
celebrates life, heals the power-
less, and is alive with a unique
sense of wonder, mystery and1
paradox."1
According to Feit, "I 'have
been holding these rituals for1
four years. I,try and help bring!
out peoples' hidden fantasies-a
aman's desire to be a woman, for
instance."
THE "RITUALS" in fact con-<
sist largely of mime. Facial ex-
pressions along with visual aids
provide the basis for Feit's mes-
sage. Feit satirized the bicen-
tennial in one act by innocently
putting a miniature flag on a
sparkler and lighting it. Then,
after the sparkler burned out,
he looked at it as if to say-"so
what?" The audience reacted.
with mild laughter.
A u d i e n c e participation in
Feit's skits is essential. "I re-i
ceive the energy to continue myc
rituals from the people watch-c
ing. I could not sustain myself
physically without the feedback
of the audience. My rituals
bring people together. I'm de-1
lighted by the audience reac-
tion, the sense of tribalism."
While Feit's ritual seems a!
bit unorthodox, he claims a

Itinerant fool' uses
mime during ritual

great amount of positive results
in his performances all over
the United States and Canada.
"I'M LIKE a renaissance art-
ist; universities,-churches, and
communities all pay for: me to
perform," he chuckled. Feit has
also worked in such places as
prisons, mental institutions, and
Native American Reservations.
It was only after' obtaining a
masters degree in history, and
spending eight years in the
Jesuit order that Felt's person-
ality started-to evolve into what
he. calls the "itinerant fool."
In 1968, while living in St.
Louis ard working extensively
with black juveniles in creative
dramatics, Feit became in-
volved in what he calls "sound
poetry, a creative exploration
combining movement, music,
poetry, and story.
He then expanded his experi-
mental study by trying to'. di-
rectly relate the worlds of the
child, artist, primitive man,
dreamer, mystic, and madman.
RECORD HEALTH BENEFITS
NEW YORK (AP)-The Health
Insurance Institute estimates a
record $32.9 billion in benefits
was paid out in 1975 by private
health insurers in the United
States.

(Continued from Page 1)
In his speech, Reagan said
peace does not come from weak-
ness or retreat, "it comes from
the restoration of American
military superiority."
Hie said that Americans
should ask the people of East-
ern Europe "what it's like to
live in a world where the So-
viet Union is No. 1.
"I DON'T WANT to live in
that kind of world and I don't
think you do eithei," Reagan
said.
The statement Reagan attrib-
uted to Kissinger is similar to

one reported by Adm. Elmo He states that his job is to per-
Zumwalt in his book, "On suade the Russians to give us
Watch," which is to be pub- the best deal we can get, recog-
lished in May. nizing that the historical forces
Zumwalt recounted what he favor them.
said were notes he wrote more Kissinger was not secretary
than five years ago after a con- of state in 1970. He was national

versation with Kiss
Nov. 28, 1970, aboar
to Philadelphia fort
Navy football game.
T H E PASSAGE
reads:
"K. feels that U. S.
ed its historic high
so many earlier civiliz
believes U. S. in on do

(CASH & CARRY)

Noon Luncheon

LONDON FLOWERS ,
109 E. Liberty
-~~ m.mu...- -- --
-I ______

L TDI
665-4491
m m -

Home-mode soup and sandwich 50c
GEORGE ABBOTT WHITE
Visiting Lecturer MIT

singer on security adviser to then Presi-
d a train dent Richard Nixon.
the Army- In Dallas last week, Kissinger
was asked about the Zumwalt
involved account.
"I DO NOT BELIEVE that
has pass- the United States will be de-
point like feated," he said. "I do not be-
zations. He lieve that the United States is
wnhill. on the decline."
In the half-hour address,
" " which cost $80,000 for air time
and another $15,000 to $20,000
to produce, the former Califor-
nia. governor covered familiar
ground but, sought to take the
offensive against President Ford
2in a national forum.
mHe asked rhetorially W'iethir
yD "someone is giving away our
own freedom" and said, "The
evidence mounts that we are
No. 2 in a world Where 'it is
dangerous,, if not fatal, to. be
e second best."
__'The televised speech, taped
Tuesday during a 6%-hour ses-
sion in a Hollywood film studio,
was Reagan's solution to frus-
tration he expressed at "not
getting the message to enough
people."

8 p.m.: DALLAS 1": An effort
truth of the killing of JFK (and
and others),. A Cowboy Coup?

to get at the
King and RFK

SHOWING ZAPRUDER FILM
AND A.I.B.S. SLIDE SHOW

"SIMON WEIL'S'THE GREAT BEAST' As
THE AMERICAN BICENTENNIAL"
Friday, April 2
GUILD HOUSE-802 Monro

i

An

Investme

in

a

New

II

I

Student

I

MAW~R-A
TO ATTEND
COMMENCEMENT YOU
M ST ORDERA CAP A VD
GOWN BY
APRIL 4 1976
ROMTH mULCUjL A)
79-940

Ill

I

Government

ote

I

SITAIRA

Automatic Funding
for MSA, 15c/term

in Kathak: North Indian Dance

I

I

(Proposal I)

TUESDAY, April 6 at 8:30, in RACKHAM AUDITORIUM
Sitara, whose name means "star," will show Ann Arbor concertgoers next week why she is
known as the greatest female Kathak dancer. She has delighted Indian and European audiences for 20
years with her flawless technique and dazzling footwork, with as many as 100 bells attached to each
ankle in this flamenco-type dance-now Western audiences are privileged to experience her art for
the first time.

Want to:
. Accompany group
singing?
" Play in any key?
. Transpose?
These are some of the
things you'll learnin
our Class Piano Pro-
gram. (Yes, you'll also
learn how to play the
piano.) For 4-year-olds
and uo.

I

I

I

U, - m

I

COINCERT TICKETS ARE AVAI[LABLE AT $2.50, $4, AND $5.

E

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan