Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY MOVING nv * .Feminist Literary Magazine FICTION ARTICLES POETRY ARTWORK 50c Available at Local Book Stores For and by women FRIDAY & SATURDAY CAMILLE Directed by GEORGE CUKOR. To t h e pseudo - cinemaphile quasi-critical elite, Cukor is merely "a woman's director." But who needs o director who can't direct his actresses out of a paper bagy GRETA GARBO ROBERT TAYLOR LIONEL BARRYMORE What can you say about a film where Greta dies and dies while you cry and cry-for your own protection please bring Kleenex. 7:00 & 9:05 P.M. 75c A & D AUDITORIUM (on Monroe) We will continue showing dur- ing summer half term. DIAL 662-8871 FOR PROGRAM INFO. Stalking the By MERYL GORDON The city's most potent "stash" lies, not in that baggie in the drawer, but in the University's Botanical Gardens. There in a sheltered, half- moon shaped plot grow a large variety of exotic drugs ranging from a mind-bending variety of apples to the ingredients for an alcoholic brew so heady that it is outlawed throughout most of the world. It's all legal, though, accord- ing to botany student Audrey Delcourt. The medicinal gar- dens, she says, are strictly for educational purposes. "The gardens are here," she says, "to show the public what our ancestors used for drugs or cures and the ways they used them." Some of the plants are also harvested in the fall for use in botany labs, giving students practice in pharmaceutical tech- Wednesday, June 28, 1972 wild apple? niques. Many traditional spices, such as basil, spearmint and sage are grown in the garden. However, some uses of the plants are a little more sensational. Hyssop and wormwood are prime ingre- dients for absinthe, the highly alcoholic drink now outlawed. Safflower, which can make yellow food coloring, also speeds up measles by causing the blotches to erupt. According to Delcourt's notes, the thorn apple plant, "became widely known at America's first colony in Jamestown, Va. in 1607. It is said that men ate thorn apples with curious re- sults: Capt. John Smith's ac- count of their mad antics is very amusing." Delcourt said that poisonous plants, such as hemlock, are also grown in the garden to show the public which common plants are dangerous. Art Exhibition organized Try DaiyClassifieds 1> y ~ : ::.... .~ ::; .; j...., .!i'F '' ~i "y.: <"' ry R ' ti y{ r 55 R ffIFFFWGG . Shop Thursday and Friday 9 30 A.M. until 9 00 P.M. VERY IMPORTANT MID-SUMMER SAVINGS IN JACOBSON'S DRESSES S PO RTSW EA R COATS SUI TS ACCESSORIES Lbert at Mn E Sd Liberty at Maynard By NANCY ROSENBAUM Michigan artists will have an opportunity to display their work locally next month. Running concurrently with the Ann Arbor Street Fair, the Uni- versity will hold its 20th Annual Invitational Art Exhibition in the Rackham Bldg. galleries from July 20 to Aug. 4. The exhibition, which features 75 paintings of artists from over 60 different cities, is the only one of its kind which brings The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mats. Summer Sessin published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich.or Oho); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). together prize-winning artists from the entire state. Highlighting the exhibition will be the 20th Annual Art Conference on July 20 which will offer lecture-demonstrations of techniques in watercolor, oil, and sculpture. Guest artists will include Mustafa Naguib, an internation- ally known -Egyptian sculptor and nationally known water- color painter Fred Leach. Leach, along with Kegham Tazian from Oakland Commun- ity College, will present demon- strations in painting and collage techniques. Last year's conference at- tracted about 500 art enthusi- asts. Mike Church, Director for Cultural Activities at the Uni- versity, established the Annual Art Exhibition in 1952 in an effort to "give visibility to serious part-time painters." Everyone Welcome! GRAD COFFEE HOUR Wed., June 28 8-10 p.m. 4TH FLOOR, RACKHAM Fun, Food, People Today is the last day of Spring Term publication. WE WILL RESUME on JULY 7 Advertising Deadlines for the week of July 7-8 - DISPLAY - for Friday, Jyly 7 issue, deadline is Wednesday, July 5 at 3:30 p.m. for Saturday, July 8 issue, deadline is Thursday, July 6 ot 3:30 p.m. -CLASSIFIED - for Friday, July 7 issue, deadline is Thursday, July 6 at 12:00 noon for Saturday, July 8 issue, deadline is Friday, July 7 at 12:00 noon THE BUSINESS OFFICE WILL BE CLOSED FROM THURSDAY, JUNE 29 THROUGH JULY 4 ' i f f : i::: .,.: :j I H I":: 4; I ;. 1 : - { : :; j t'f I' -: 5 C Y i ''.- .:., . r..>i....,._