Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, May 13, 1972 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, May 13, 1972 TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 "A MASTERPI -PAUL D. ZIMMERMAN WINNER OF 2 ACADEM Plus Oscar-Winning Cart "The Crunch Bird" FEATU AT DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an (doubleheader), students admitted on official publication of the Univer- I.D. card, faculty on athletic card, sity of Michigan. -Notices should be Fisher Field, 1 pm. sent in TYF2WRITTEN FORM to SUMMER PLACEMENT 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m, of Environmental Protection Agency, the day preceding publication and Washington, D.C. Info on summer prog. by 2 p.m. Fridaytfor Saturday and covering various phases of environment- Sunday. Items appear once only. al investigation. Contact Mrs. Latack, Student organization notices are 3200 SAB, phone 764-7460 for further not acceptei for publication. For details and applications. Deadline May more information, phone 764-9270. 22. SATURDAY, MAY 13 Little Traverse Yacht Club, Harbor Baseball: Michigan vs. Indiana Springs, Mich. Opening for sailing in- -- -------- _- _structor; details, contact SPS 212 SAB, phone 763-4117. 1 SUNDAY, MAY 14 - ECE!" TV Center Film: "Worlds of Abra- ham Kaplan; Religion," WWJ-TV, ,Newsweek channel 4, noon. Y AWARDS! MONDAY, MAY 15 Stenate Assembly: Rackham Amph., carillonC oncert: carol Jickling, stu- RE 231 S. StateSt. dent carililonneur, Burton Memoriali STower, 7 pm. 'Ladies Day' bows out to iarg ain Day' & 9 P.M. Dial 662-6264 - (Continued from Page 1) their admission policy. Women, children under 14 and senior citizens can watch the Detroit Tigers at a reduced rate every Saturday that the team plays in Detroit. "It' popular and we have a lot of requests for it," com- mented the Stadium's public relations director. "It accommo- dates the public and we feel it is worthwhile." Regarding the legality of "La- dies Day", the spokesperson said, "Someone would have to challenge it by filing a com- plaint. If we were found guilty, we'd have to pay a penalty." The penalty set by the law is $100. In addition, establish- ments which hold state licenses risk having their licenses re- voked if found guilty of violat- ing the law. Women are no longer ad- mitted for free to the Tuesday night races at Wolverine Har- ness Raceway in Livonia. And with everyone paying the $1.50 general admission charge Race- way General Manager Richard Wilson estimated that Tuesday night attendance has dropped between 1200 to 1500 people. "We had to do it or we would have lost our racing license," Wilson said. "I don't see any reason for banning "Ladies Day" but obviously the legisla- ture does." Carl, however took a more philosophical a p p r o a ch. . "I guess we could have expected it with women's liberation and all," he said. "This way it's fair. Everyone can come." ALTERNATIVE E DUCATIO0N Teacher Training in Pre-School Open Education WRITE: Early Education Course/Chicago Ancona Montessori School 4770 S. Dorcester Chicago, Illinois 60615 (312) 924-2356 Read and Use Daily Classifieds Forest fires burn more than trees TEEA MwES T I E A .L 21W Home has been a lot of places for Christopher Kearney. He grew up in the rural village of Lindsay, Ontario and spent his musically formative years listening to Buddy Holly, The Everly Brothers and such now-legendary masters, and was moved to try his hand at playing the music. He began with the inevitable rusty-stringed, cast-off guitar and, not knowing to restring it to suit his left- handedness, he turned it upside down and learned all the chords backwards-a style he still uses, much to the dismay of jam-session musicians who try to follow him. At sixteen he left Lindsay, traveled a bit, finding his way to Columbus, Georgia, banjo-picking with blue- grass pro David Berg. California next, where he played every closet folk club in the Bay Area. Next came the U.S. Army, Vietnam and helicopters, but he doesn't talk about it. Finally, St. John's, Newfoundland, parents, food and rest. While attending Memorial University Christopher met Gordon Lightfoot, who provided the artistic attention and encouragement necessary at that stage of his career, and by 1968 Christopher was back in San Francisco, playing better clubs. The peripatetic Kearney returned to Toronto in 1969, signed with Lightfoot's Early Morning Productions, an association which introduced him to Dennis Murphy of Sundog Productions. Now Christopher lives in Toronto and this is his first, long- planned album, produced for.Sundog by Dennis. Together they've created something that gives focus to all those miles and all those years. Seven of the ten songs are by Chris- topher; the other three appear because he likes them. Christopher Kearney, the album and the man, inseparable- as is the case with all truly thoughtful and intuitive artists. He invites you into his music. For him, it is home. Capito THME ALDUMI s THME MAN CHRISTOPHER KEADNEY Capitol (ST-11043) Rings from $100 to $10,000 Trade Mark Reg. A. H. Pond Co. r---- -------- -------- HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING I oed ne20pg.cbooklet,"PlinningYourcEngageetaonlye2dding" pls 1 flal clorlafold ed44 pg. Bride'sioo i fo;taofeallfar only 25. S72 Namer I Address t City Co. I KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS, BOX 90 SYRAcUSE, N.Y. 13201 !_.__- -_--_- _----_---- _ Authorized Keepsake Dealer in Ann Arbor Main at Washington vsOni records Specially Discount Priced $5.98 List You Pay $3.97