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July 11, 1973 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-07-11

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Page Two

THE SUMMER DAILY

Wednesday, July 11, 1973

Page Two THE SUMMER DAILY Wednesday, Jitly 11, 1973

t.v.
tonight
6:00 2 4 7 11 13 News
9 Courtship of Eddie's Father
20 Land of the Giants
24 ABC News--Smith/Reasoner
5t Flintstones
56 Taking Better Pictures
6:30 2 11 CBS News--Roger SMudd
4 13 NBC News-John Chancellor
7 ABC News--Smith/Reasoner
9 I Dream of Jeannie
24 Dick Van Dyke
50 Gilligan's Island
56 Guten Tag Wei Geht's
6:45 56 German Film
7:00 2 Truth or Consequences
4 News
7 To Tell the Truth
9 Beverly Hillbillies
It To Tell the Troth
13 What's My Line?
20 Nanny and the Professor
24 Bowling for Dollars
50 1ILove Lucy
56 Zoom
7:30 2 What's My Line?
4 Festival of Family Classics
7 Wild Kingdom
9 Irish Rovers
11 Police Surgeon
13 Truth or Consequences
20 Rifleman .
24 Let's Make a Deal
50 Hogan's Heroes
56 Consumer Game
8:00 2 11 Snny and Cher Comedy
4 13 Adam-12
7 24 Thicker than Water
9Woods and Wheels
20 Bluche's Law
50 Dragnet
56 Philadelphia Orchestra in
Rehearsal
8:30 4 13 Cool Milion-Crime Irama
7 24 Movie--Drama
k 0 ') ~c0 :1Gifin
'9.00 2 11 Dan Antgust
9 International World Series
20 tOczie and lHarrjet
56 To Be Announced
9:30 20 Seven Hundred Club
56 Man Builds, Man Destroys
10:00 2 11 Cannon
413 Seacht
2 24 a ten Marshall
50 PerryMason
56 Iomewood
11:00 2 4 7 11 24 News
9 CISC News
50 One Step Beyond
11:30 2 11 Movie-Musical
4 13 Johnny Carson
7 24 Dick Cavett
9 News
20 Camp Meeting Hour--Religion
50 Movie--Musical
12:00 9 Movie
1:00 4 13 News
7 Reading Dynamics
1:05 2 Movie-Adventure
11 News
2:35 2 News
1:15 7 News

Mariposa, musical delight

By JOHN McKAY
Special To The Daily
TORONTO - Folk music lov-
ers from the U. S. and Canada,
including over 100 from Ann Ar-
bor, swarmed to Toronto Island
this weekend for three days of
song and dance at the 13th An-,
nual Mariposa Folk Festival.
Performers from the Arctic
Circle, and as far away as West
Africa, joined the large troop of
Canadian and American artists.
They fiddled, danced, sang the
blues or told bawdy folk tales
at six sites simultaneously -
which is twice as frustrating as
a three-ring circus - while chil-
ddren watched puppet shows and
craftsmen dyed yarn in vats of
vegetables or hand dripped can-
dles beneath the trees.
The variety of talent at Mafi-
posa makes it easy to forget

you're sitting on a breeze-swept
island off metropolitan Toronto.
You could as easily be listen-
ing to Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup
under the 39th Street "El" in
Chicago, where he lived in a
packing crate after coming
north from Mississippi in the mid
30's.
The grey-haired Crudup still
delights audiences with the
blues songs he wrote and sang
or hand-outs long before bigger
named artists made them popu-
lar - like his "That's All Right,
Mama" - Elvis Presley's first
single.
Or you could easily be on an
Appalachian foothill with Sara
Grey whose ballads range from
tender melancholy to blushing
bawdiness.
Only 8,000 tickets were sold
this year, although thousands
more were in demand, in order to
keep the festival's more intimate
atmosphere - a big difference
from rock festivals of the Wood-
stock, Goose Lake syndrome
where thousands crash the gates,
pack in and rock on.
The crowds who come only for
big names occasionally cause
problems, like last year when
Neil Young made an appear-
ance. Festival directors say they
are not purposely staying away
f r o m the better promoted
"stars," but that they only use

them where they fit in to provide
the best cross-section of folk mu-
sic.
Well - known performers of-
ten wander through the grounds
unexpectedly. You may see Joni
Mitchell sitting on a picnic table
playing her guitar for a dozen
people, or Gordon Lightfoot rest-
ing under a tree. Many perform-
ers, especially well-known Cana-
dians like Mitchell, Lightfoot,
or tan and Sylvia, have their
roots in Mariposa.
And roots, after all, is what
folk music is all about. Whether

your roots are in the Mississippi
Delta, the Arctic Circle, Ireland
or Detroit, the ethnic richness of
this folk festival will bring them
out.
There are musical tales at
lovers forsaken -- as told by
Owen McBride, ballads of the
sea or of westbound freight
trains, tunes full wonderlust, and
songs from shanty town bars.
Festivals come .and go, but as
long as there are people in love
with life, they will record their
moods in music and pass their
traditions to new minstrels.

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Lip , F:s~
Owen McBride
THE SUMMER DAILY, summer edi-
tion of The Michigan Daily
Vol. LXXXIII, No. 37-S
Wednesday, July 11, 1073
is editedwandanaged y students at
the University of Michigan. News phone
764-0562. Second class postage paid at
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published
daily Tuesday through Sunday morning
during the University year at 420 May-
nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104.
Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam-
pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and
Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states
aond foreign). /
Sumeo r session published Tuesday
through Satuirday morning. Subscrip-
tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus
area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and
Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail (other
states and foreign).

SPECIAL! HOT CHOCOLATE
Everyone Welcome!
GRAD
COFFEE
HOUR
IFtG. A WEDNESDAY
8-10 p.m.
West Conference
Room, 4th Floor
RACKHAM
LOTS OF PEOPLE LOTS OF FOOD
NOW SHOWING
k-,tn 761-9700 7 &9:15

J

A

TUES., WED., TH UR., July 10, 11, 12
7:30 and 9:45
Feature 40 miutes later
THE CLASSIC COMEDIANS
Charlie Chaplin in
THE VAGABOND
W. C. Fields in
THE FATAL GLASS OF BEER
The Marx Brothers in
ROOM SERVICE
The Broadway play delightfully destroyed
by the Brothers Marx.
TUES., July 17
Alfred Hitchcock's
FRENZY
WED., July 18
7:00., 8:45, & 10:30pm.
Woody Allen's
BANANAS
THUR., July 19
Ken Russell's
WOMEN IN LOVE
Acodemy Award foe
Glenda Jackson's octino.
TUES., July 24
6:30 & 9:30 p.m.
George Cukor's
MY FAIR LADY
EIGHT Academy Awards!
WED., July 25
Mike Nichols'
THE GRADUATE
Starring Dustin Hoffman
THUR., July 26
William Friedkin's film of
Maet Crowley's play.
THE BOYS IN THE BAND
A "gay," but bitchy birthday party.
Witty and incisive.
TUES., July 31
7:00, 8:45, & 10:30 p.m.
Ralph Bakshi's
FRITZ, THE CAT
X-orted and Animated
WED., August 1
7:15 & 9:30 p.m.
Federico Fellini's
FELLINI SATYRICON
Pagan picturesque hippies
in pre-Christian Rome.
THUR., August 2
7. 8:45 and 10:30 p.m.
ingmar Bergman's
PERSONA
Two personalities merge.

TUES., August 7
7:00, 8:45, & 10:30 p.m.
Francis Truffaut's
THE WILD CHILD
The true story of the attempt to
"civilize" a wolf-boy.
WED., August 8
SACCO AND VANZETTI
Were they convicted of a crime they
didn't commit or because of their
idealistic political beliefs?
TH UR., August 9
Arthur Hiller's
THE HOSPITAL .w
George C. Scott in a satire on
bureaucratic confusion,
TUES., August 14
Michelanelo Antonioni's
BLOW-UP
Vanessa Redgrave, David Hemmings.
A cinematic milestone.
WED., August 15
Luis Bunuel's
THE DISCREET CHARM OF
THE BOURGEOISIE
This year's Academy Award
for Best Foreign Film!
THURS., August 16
Canimell and Roeg's
PERFORMANCE
Mick Jogger, James Fox.
-ood-on-the-lam meets real life rock-
-star, magic, and ritual-at least!
TUES., August 21
7, 8:45, 10:30 p.m.
Woody Allen's
EVERYTHING YOU WANTED
TO KNOW ABOUT SEX5
* But were afraid to ask. Funnier--and
at least as true as the ridiculous book-
to which it bears no resemblance.
WED., August 22
William Friedkin's
THE FRENCH CONNECTION
THREE Academy Awards.
THUR., August 23
Philippe de Broca's
THE KING OF HEART'S
Wild, raffish comedy!

a a a a- a - a
SUMMER SCHEDULE- 1973 -TUES., WED., THURS.
All showings in Auditorium "A", Angell Hall -Admission $1
Shows at 7:30 and 9:10 p.m. unless otherwise noted

,I

I

Tickets for all of each evening's performances on sole outside the suditorium at 6:30 p.m.
For a copy of the annotated, jointly published by Ann Arbor Film Cooperative/Cinema II
schedule, write P.O. Box 8, Ann Arbor, Mich. 48107

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