p p -. N a 'F Page Eight -W THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 19, 1970 a/ a 7 Friday, June 19, 1970 -k THE MICHIGAN DAILY For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone 764-0557 12 Noon Deadline Monday through Friday, 10:00 to 3:00 12 Nen Deaiine Am mricans all PETS AND SUPPLIES ADOPTABLE, ADORABLE kittens, 21 months old, housebroken. Call -662- 8603 or 665-8375. 10T35 KITTENS $1; eight weeks old, litter- trained females make good pets, two grey tigers, one black and white. Call 971-4762. 9T32 FREE 2 friendly kittens. Call 761-4914. 8T32 ROOMMATES WANTED OLDER MALE for comfortable 3 bdrm. duplex, on West side. $75/mo. includ- ing utilities and phone. 665-3330 and 764-9454. 3Y32 ROOMMATE WANTED for 2-bdrm., bt- level, modern apt. For Summer half only. Call V.J., 761-6091 persistently. 1Y32 NEED ROOMMATE till Aug., own room, on campus. 761-9766 after 7. 2Y35 FOR YOU $40/mo. Female, own room, on campus. Now thru August. Maybe fall option. 761-5896. 48Y35 3RD MALE GRAD for 3-4 man house beg. Sept., partly furn.. near cam-, pus, own bdrm. $65/mo. and util. 665- 8047 after 6 p.m. 49Y35 IS THIS WHAT YOU WANT? Huge 4-man with A/C, dishwasher, parking, hi-fi, etc. 2 or 3 needed now or summer. It'll make you happy. 663-7178. Y32 GIRL GRAD seeks room, apt., or room- mates for Fall. Will pay or work. Call 668-6095. 46Y35 MALE GRAD. needs roommates for fall. Call 761-3674. 47Y33 BIKES AND SCOOTERS 1970 HONDA GB 350. $650 or best offer. 761-1916. 12Z35 SUZUKI 250 cc, X-6- Hustler Road- machine. FAST. $439 or offer. 769- 4488. 11Z35 HONDA 300 Scrambler. 769-3952. 323 John St. Best offer. 10Z35 MOTORCYCLE tune-ups, 1 day service. Call 665-3114 for appointment. 9Z35 HONDA 125 Scrambler - 3,500 miles. Great shape. 1036 Oakland, No. 2. 4Z32 BIKES AND SCOOTERS DESPERATE-I want a small motor- cycle that's in good used condition. Call Sara, 769-3215. DZ35 USED CARS CLASSIC CAR-Triumph TR-3. Good condition. Hard and soft tops. $895 or offer. 769-4488. 48N35 1964 OLDS, Jetstar I, excellent condi- tion, 49,000 miles, best offer. 769- 2396. r46N(34 1962 SUNBEAN Alpine. Ray Lewis, 761- 6867. Good trans., rebuilt eng. 47N33 '67 OLDS 442-New engine, almost en- tirely rebuilt. Excellent condition. 769-4289. NDd 1969 KARMANN GHIA. In excellent condition. Call 663-4821. 44N33 CHEVY IMPALA, 1967 4 door, auto- matic, power steering, V-8, radio, good condition. 769-3341 after 5. 45N32 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS STEREO-FM system, KL and H. Gar- rard, and Hardon-Kardon compon- ents, negot. 761-3273, Barbara. X35 HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO Instruments and accessories, new and used. Lessons, repairs. 209 State. 665-8001. 10 a.m.-7 p.m. X RADIO, TV, Hi-Fl repair. House calls- Very Reasonable! Very Cheap!! 769- 6250. DX35 PR. SONY SS-23 speakers, 1 yr. old, still in factory container-never used. 769-0894 after 6:30 p.m. 3X32 AM/FM STEREO 35 watt receiver. Best offer. Must sell. 761-9593. 2X33 HELP WANTED BELL TOWER INN needs male student (accounting studies desirable)- for re- lief night auditor. Fri. and Sat, night. Apply at desk. H35 BABYSITTER WANTED, room and board, $20/wk. salary, in country. Call after 7 p.m., 461-1008. 43H35 WANTED-Young attractive woman for front office, full time. For inquiry phone 662-2576. 40H34 EARN $25 by donating cerebrospinal fluid. Need 21-40 yr. old males-fe- males. 764-0298. 25H27 KNOW WHO'S making all the money this summer? The dealers!! The Big Steel Ballroom needs dealers, make yourself as much (legal) cash as you need all summer . , . Call Steve at 769-0245 for details. 39H33 EARN $25 by donating cerebrospinel fluid. Need 21-40 yr. old males-fe- males. 764-0298. 25H27 PHOTO SUPPLIES CAMERA, Kanon FX plus lens, must sell. 483-3372 after 6. 28D31 UIVITAR 200 mm. preset lens. Call Ron, 761-7209. 29033 CHEAP, CHEAP, Cheap-1 or 2 girls needed to help divide $90 Aho. furn- ished 2 bdrm. apt. close to campus. Call Margi or Peggy at 483-4683. X33 ALTO SAX and CLARINET and trom, and drum set. Must sell. Best offer. Call 662-4058. 1X33 FOR SALE-SPINET PIANO Wanted, responsible party to take over low monthly payments on a spinet piano. Can be seen locally. Write Credit Manager, P.O. Box 276, Shelby- viller, Indiana. 48X32 AT CENTURY The Best in Good Used Cameras WE BUY, SELL, TRADE Everything Photographic DARKROOM SUPPLIES LUMINOUS PAPER Repairs on all makes Century Camera (At our new location) 4254 N. Woodward; Royal Oak 'Between 13 and 14 Mile Rd. LI 9-6355 Take 1-94 to Southfield Expr. North to 13 Mile Road-then East to Woodward and North (Michigan Bank, Security and Diner Charges accepted) lDti FOR SALE 12x60 STAR MOBILE HOME, 1 yr. old, furn. Call 483-1297. 1B35 SUNFISH sailboat, $400. Fine Flamingo guitar, $160. 665-3330. 2B32 YORK automobile air-conditioner, used 2 hours. Complete $90. 665-3993. 3B34 SELL YOURSELF on Daily classifieds 764-0557, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., 764-0557 SONY T.V. w/cabinet, excellent condi- tion, good value, $90. Call 769-1041. 46B32 15-FT. TRAVEL TRAILER, couble di- nette, brakes, propane. Sleeps 7. Anti Sway Bar. $1000 of best offer. 665-5017. 41B29 TRANSPORTATION RIDER NEEDED to Syracuse, N.Y., leaving Saturday the 20th. 761-1354. 32032 SHARE rented VAN to N.Y.C. area. Riders too. Lv. June 25 or 26. 769- 4591, Bob. 33G35 FOR SALE-Round trip ticket to Eur., Windsor to London, June 26-Aug. 6, very inexpensive, avail, immediately. Call anytime (preferably after 4), 761- 2240. 30035 RIDER NEEDED to California, leaving end of June. 663-7371. 28G32 RIDER(S) WANTED for round trip (anywhere). Dep. 6-27, Ret. 7-23. 663-0174. 29G32 BUSINESS SERVICES SUEDE vests, belts, etc., half the store price, tailor-made. Call Steve, 769- 1468. 23J33 SUPER-QUICK service, cheap. Call Candy for TYPING at 665-4830. DJ35 FOR PAINTING, carpet, and wall clean- ing, call 769-7694. Professional Job. 21J34 EXPERIENCED SECRETARY desires work in her home. Thesis, technical typing, stuffing etc. IBM selectric. Call Jeanette, 971-2463. 12Jtc EXPERIENCED EDITOR Skilled in organizing and presenting special projects. Write Mich. Daily Box 68 or phone 971-6445. J35 THESES, PAPERS (incl. technical) typ- ed. - Experienced, professional; IBM Selectric. Quick service. 663-6291. 42Jtc NOW ON CAMPUS Campus MultiService TYPING PRINTING THESIS SERVICE Fast, Dependable, Low-Priced 214 Nickels Arcade 662-4222 Summer hours: 10-4 Mon.-Fri. 3Jtc MULTI PLE TYPING SERVICE Thesis Service Papers Dissertations general Office and Secretarial Work' Pick-Up and Delivery Available Prompt Servtoe CALL 971-2446 PERSONAL NEED FIGURE MODELS, tall, mature. $5.00/hr. 761-4687 eves. 9F35 THE ONLY PLACE in Ann Arbor to buy her diamond engagement ring. CHECK IT. AUSTIN DIAMOND 1209 S. University 663-7151 F A NEW EXPERIMENT 'in capitalistic pig culture-SBS will try it in the EVENINGS, 7:00-10:30. 42F33 SANDER LEVIN has immediate open- ings for the summer. Pay is terrible, often non-existent, however respon- sibility and challenge are great. Con- tact Peter Elliott, Levin for Gov., 400 Mich. Bldg., Bagley Ave., Detroit. 10F35 SUMMER HEBREW classes organizing, beginners, intermediates. 761-6784. 4F32 FREE CRAFT FAIR Artists-sell your handicrafts- FREE U. CRAFT FAIR JULY 17-18 DIAG (concurrent with South U. Street fair, open to everyone). Please register now: 763-2130 or 663-2709. 3F32 PAINTING - Student desires painting jobs, inside and outside. Four years experience. Call 662-4736. FD GIRLS: A Summer Law Club Dating Service will professionally match you up exclusively with law students at no cost. Send the following information which must include name, address, phone number, height, and interests; which may include a picture, age, year in school, and anything else. All information wI* remain confidential. Mail to Law Club Social Committee, c/o Lawyer's Club, 551 S. State Street. 2185 BLOOD IS RED, bruises are blue, come to SBS and we'lr comfort you (come EVENINGS 7:00 to 10;30) 41F33. SOVIET UNION. Driving and Camping 10 weeks, $1350. Includes air and all expenses. A. Lipson, 2 Garden Terr., Cambridge, Mass. 02138 or call (col- lect) 617-547-1127. 40F36 DESIRED-A fair to poor tennis player for a few quick sets every now and then. Call Bill Alterman at The Daily, 764-0552 anytime. DF35 AS -A PSYCH 171 (experiments, SBS will now be open EVENINGS only- 7:00 to 10:30. (2 hrs. credit). 34F33 DON'T YOU hate to type in the hot weather? Don't you hate to type any- time? Let Candy do it. Cheap, pro- fessional. Call 665-4830. DF34 ANDREW! We'll have 7 almond toasties, 1 carmel. 3 combination apricot and banana- one with ketchup, and 37 blurbs which you can write in your time off. DF32 Creative Wedding and Portrait Photog- raphy by a top professional need not be expensive, if done by RICHARD LEE. Call 761-9452 before noon, DJtc Women's Liberation ____ _ ... NEW VOICES IN AMER- ICAN STUDIES, edited by Ray B. Browne, Donald M. Winkel- man, and Allen Hayman, Pur- due University Press, $4.75. By ROBERT CONROW When a publisher sends out a book to be reviewed which has been off the press for four years, a reviewer's initial re- sponse may be to see if it was written by some previously un- discovered author. A second re- sponse, if the reviewer is an- pulsive, might well be to chuck it out the -window. In receiving a copy, then, of New Voices in American Studies, published in 1966 by Browne,. Winkenan and Hayman, and more.recent- ly by Purdue Univ. Press, I must admit that the second alterna- tive would have seemed appro- priate had it not been that my circumstances at the time (rid- ing on a Boeing 707) made the necessary action virtually im- possible. So entrapped, I soon discovered that the publishers in this case knew what they were doing. Much of what the "new voices" were saying a few years ago seem equally, if not more valid today as a result of our increasing awareness of the necessary convergence of vari- ous academic disciplines. Editor Browne, in the intro- duction to ,this collection of es- says, suggests the guiding im- pulse. According to Browne, folklore "must chin itself on the cultures above it," the ob- vious implication being that scholars in American Studies have too long overlooked the significant achievements made in folk arts, crafts, and liter- ature. Instead, they have pre- ferred the more traditional task of interpreting and reinterpret- ing the works of key figures in American life with what is gen- erally less insight than mere in- version of what has gone before. An examination, then, of the 12 essays included in this vol- ume, which admittedly vary widely in scope and intent, would seem to convey one nain point: those academicians bound to the traditional disciplines of American literature and history had best either adjust their vis- ion to a new level or else b prepared to do a few of the chinning exercices themselves. For in spite of the fact that many of these "new voices" have a n unfortunate brusqueness about them, they must, none- theless, be given credit for dar- ing to seek new directions while their colleagues have remained ensconded in more comfortably- funded easy chairs. Ten of the twelve essays in nis collection are the product ' the first Midwest Conference on Literature, H i s t o r y, Popular Culture and Folklore, held at Purdue in 1965. The purpose of that conference, as the title might indicate, was to demon- strate the need for a closer, but broader, alliance among the dis- ciplines comprising American Studies. Since then there have been other conferences, each with the same goal in mind and each with the same rather di- versified result. The topics cov- ered in 1965 ranged from Mark Twain as art patron to John Hersey as war correspondent, and from the origin of the ballad of "Thomas Rhymer" to the in- fluence of Western Civilization on North American Indian mus- ic. Although a prefatory .ote advises that the "book as a whole shows the interrelation and mutual necessity of the dif- ferent disciplines," the conjoin- ing link is at best tenuous and perhaps impossible to find. Per- haps it would have been bet- ter, or at least more honest, if the editors for the time being had disregarded the pretense of unity and rather had stated forthrightly, "we see the urgency of our task and although our talents may still be underdevel- oped, we shall, nonetheless, take the liberty of sticking a few pins in the britches of our colleagues. in the hopes of uncovering new Ad hit erto forbidden areas of scholarship." An example of one such pin, brilliantly conceived yet some- what without significant conse-- quence, is illustrated in Browne's own essay on ")Popular Theater in Moby Dick." Browne shows how Melville combined tradi- tional Shakespearean theater forms with the "nonlegitimate" forms of burlesque, farce, and Negro minstrel. To Browne's way of thinking, "Mellville must have known the popular theater well. It was everywhere around him." To confirm his point, Browne shows how Pip, often associated with Lear's fool, may be seen also as the embodiment of pop- ular theater humor. In the doubloon chapter, Pip is heard saying, "'Here's the ship's navel, this doubloon here, and they are on fire to unscrew it. But, un- screw your navel, and what's the consequence? Cook! ho, cook! and cook us!'" Although, Browne acknowledges that there may-be some merit to critics who see this symbolic ;navel as the center of life and being, he sees further significance. Using Melville's own Temarks to sup- serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills . ." Cady wisely admits that his list of great American chest- pounders is "neither exhaustive nor intended to be anything but suggestive," yet the value for American Culture scholars is obvious. By means of his hit and run approach, Cady has in- terwoven both literary and polit- ical events in a pilot study which offers fertile ground for any number of further case studies. Why, for example, to paraphrase the title of a popular novel, are we so much more'than political- ly, or even militarily, in Viet- nam? Another pilot study, somewhat more tightly developed, can be found in Russel B. Nye's "The Juvenile Approach to American Culture, 870-1930." By tracing the careers of such turn-of-the century boyhood heroes as Deadwood Dick, Rattlesnake Ned and, later, Horatio Alger's Harry Walton and Dick Whit- tington, Nye uncovers a liter- ature which in many respects is more reflective of the age than the exploits of, say, an Isabel Archer or Huck Finn. r Jewish Joshua Trachtenberg, JEW- ISH MAGIC AND SUPER- STITION, Atheneum paper- back edition, $3.25 By RABBI SAMUEL M. STAHL There is an anecdote about an actress who, when, asked by a reporter what her favorite sup- erstition was, answered, "Thank God, I have none," - a n d "knocked wood" as she spoke. Her action illustrates so amus- ingly the human tendency-even am ong the most urbane and sophisticated-to respond to ex- pressions of praise with magical devices, as if to frighten away evil spirits. Joshua Trachtenberg, in his Jewish Magic and Superstition avers that fear of the super- natural has produced myriads of protective magical devices. Magic has been woven into the fabric of social usage and has influenced not only folk habits but also innumerable religious rites and ceremonies. The tradition of Judaism has not effectively resisted the mighty impact of superstition. During the past two millenia, we witnessed a steady expansion and development of the inner core of Judaism. Old religious concepts were re-interpreted and new ones were ultimately integrated in the spiritual life of the Jew. Outside of this for- mal evolution' of Jewish belief and practice, a "folk religious expression" was emerging - a composite of doctrines and rit- uals concerning demons and an- gels. Although this folk religious expression never met with the enthusiastic approval of rab- binic leaders, its wide-spread popularity was overwhelming. Trachtenberg limits the pur- view of his examination to the unique elements of Jewish magic as they unfolded during the M i d d l e Ages (1000-1600) in Northern Europe. The distinc- tive feature of Jewish magic was the prohibition against recog- nizing and employing the occult forces in nature. It depended in large measure for its success on invoking the proper spirits and names. An interesting observation of Trachtenberg is the medieval Jewish preoccupation with the "evil eye." The eye was thought to possess certain baneful po- tencies as natural properties. In addition, it is a pagan conviction that that the spirits and gods, basically man's enemies, envy his joys and triumphs and ha- rass him for the felicities they do not share. Thus to the me- dieval mind the evil eye repre- sented the attention of the spirit world to the least word or ges- ture of commendation. In order to counteract the adverse influ- ence of the evil eye, it became a fixed custom in Jewish circles to conclude every laudatory re- mark with, "May the Lord pro- tect Thee," or "no evil eye." Any act which might have aroused the envy of the evil eye was executed with caution and trepi- dation: taking a census or esti- . . . . , ..E Following up their publica- tion in paperback of the com- plete novels of Hermann Hesse, Farrar, Straus and Giroux have just brought out the first edi- tion in English of a wide selec- tion of Hesse's poetry. (Noon- day paperback, $1.75) Editor and translator James Wright, an acclaimed poet in his own right, has slected 79 poems from some 480 pages of poetry in the seven-volume German edition of Hesse's works. The chosen poems are lyrical and romantic and may disappoint readers seeking a poetic counterpart to, the intellectual discipline of Magister Ludi or the mystic searching of Siddhartha. Indeed, these poems seem to second George Steiner's verdict of Hes-' se: "This is not mysticism, it's incense." Ah, but of a lovely fragrance. Penquin has added to their paperback poetry series two ti- tles that have been cherished, .... M ma age din; ing day wer the whi W evil Mass Meeting 8 P.M. Sunday Newman Center 331 THOMPSON 6F32 BARGAIN CORNER Sam's Store NEED LEVIS? VISIT FOR SALE Printed Sheared Terry Kitchen Towels A4for $3 Regularly 1.25 each. . colorful selection of generous-size kitchen towels, sheared to a velvety softness on 'one side and terry-looped on the other. L intfree and a bsorbent, they make kitchen chores a bree e. Assorted patterns, 16"x30" size. Shops for the Home-Lower Level Jcob S JAc PERSONAL FOR SALE: Keith Jarret's first Jazz album, Dion's Sit Down old friend, and Biff Rose's Thorn album. All only playedonce: I've overspent this month. $2.50 each or if your tastes are this desperate, $7.00 for all (big deal). 764-7622. DFtc ONCE AGAIN! Light or heavy house- keeping: rates depend on what you have me do. 764-7622. DFtc D6NT THROW away money and time on an amateur. when. you can have your thing photographed by a pro- fessional at a reasonable price. Call Richard Lee at 761-9452 before noon. PAPERS written and typed, cheap, very fast. Esp. Eng. 662-6485. 7F35 U-M MALE professional student, emo- tionally stable, rationally liberal, in- tested in many things and life in general-wants to meet mature stable girl. This ad is placed in' order to meet new faces, not because I am hurting! Reply to Mich. Daily, Box 50. 5F33 EXOTIC RECIPES! GOURMET COOK- ING! and fun to boot-Call ,685-3369 early morning and eve. to sign up for cooking lessons. DF35 2, 3, AND 4 FOOT black lights w/fiX- ture, under $16, 18, and $20. 769-208 :or 662-6550. 8F35 port his contention, Browne notes that earlier in the book Melville had said "There are certain queer times and oc- casions in this strange mixed, affair we call life when a man takes his whole universe for a vast practical joke, though the wit thereof he but dimly dis- cerns, and more than suspects that the joke is at nobody's ex- pense but his own." This joke, according to Browne, was a no- tion Melville had picked up from common popular theater, name- ly that if you unscrew your navel, your rear end will fall off. So, nice footwork, we may say, but where does this lead us in uncovering new areas for ad- vanced scholarship? Of greater importance for Americanists are the essays which deliberately mark themselves as pilot studies. In this line, Edwin H. Cady's "The Strenuous Life as a Them~e in American Culture," is an ex- cellent specimen. Cady takes his title from Theodore Roose- velt's stated desire 'to "preach not the doctrine of ignoble ease, but the doctrine of the strenuous life, the life of toil and effort, of labor and strife; to .,reach that highest form of success which comes ... to the man who does not shrink from danger, hardship, or from bitter toil. . This theme, according to Cady, runs the gamut of Amer- ican culture. It begins with Pil- grim's journals, is reinforced by Revolutionary War heroes, is echoed later by both Emersonian Transcendentalists and Jack- sonian Democrats, and ulti- mately spirals itself into the "New Frontier" of President Kenedy. Speaking at Rice Uni- versity in Texas, President Ken- nedy declared, in the oft-quoted phrase, "We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do them other things not because they. are so easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will' Nye notes that as the Indian- killing, and train-robbing vio- lence of the dime novels began in the Eighties to lose their relevance, a new sort of story began to emerge much more dir- ectly related to the ideals and aspirations of a changing Amer- ican society. In spite of the false promises they held, Nye sees the Alger stories as providing American youth with something the dime novels could not offer. In Nye's words, they provided "an anchor to tie to in the era of Darwin, Sumner, Coxey, Donnelly, Spen- cer, and the other movers and shakers of contemporary so- ciety." And today, whether or not we agree with the rags-to- riches" philosophy behind these stories, such motives are, none- theless a vital aspect of Amer- ican life which deserves to be reckoned with on a serious level. Other essays in this collection concern themselves with an- thropological and ethnomusic- olbgical approaches to American culture. Bruno Nettl's "Influ- ences of Western Civilization on North American Indian Music" explores the effects of the merg- ing of Indian and Western vul- tures on the musical culture of the Indians, while Americo Par- edes' "The Anglo-American in Mexican Folklore" offers itself as a socio-political analysis of the North American "gringo" as subject for Mexican humor. These essays, taken together, serve then less as a unifier than as a springboard for American studies. For if we acknowledge the different levels and fre- quencies at which they are working, we may see a fresh kind of energy emerging, which, if adequately contained, prom- ises to remove from the cup- board vital aspects of Americaa culture previously considered too "embarrassing" for schol- arly endeavor. , of tio bat Ma ed cia: ron alli sou onl niv tor cou rest Jev ger wh the pur for' was Jev tivi ma mo , is t sub less ag Tri the ma tex mu thi any seq aut en] and edi art by Ces lon fes not Fra Pos and osz err for plig an sys BLUE DENIM: Super Slims..... Sutton-Fly. Trditiona1 Bells . .... BLUE CHAMBRAY SHIRTS ..... MORE LEVI'S "White" Levi's. 14 Colors) -Sta-Prest "White" Levi's........ 6.50 6.50 6.98 7.50 2.49 5.50 6.98 Nuv's ... . , 8:50 Over 7000 Pairs in Stock! Sam's Store the ves is Am ver: 1 :. 122 E, Washington ___ . Mr r , ws urw r w' " lowy r ' in .. w r.s s r r w s r r r r rr s r' s f r af. 0 rr , a's". .r. ' w &-f r-0,4 0. * '.0 - lk - I *kl