The Michigan Daily-Friday, July 21 1978--Page 3 Artist turns out sellable By MITCH CANTOR If you're among the art enthusiasts who search for junk, don't waste your time browsing through thousan- ds of items lining Ann Arbor's streets today and tomorrow, just head straight for Bill Heise's Art Fair booth on North University near State Street. Heise, who creates figures by welding together pieces of discarded metal, calls his art Found Metal Sculpture. "IT'S ACTUALLY junk sculpture," Heise said. "Most of the stuff I find in junkyards, in scrapyards." IHeise's sculpturesinclude such items as old rakes, shovels, tractor seats and hoes. Though he gets almost all his material from refuse areas, Heise said he sometimes buys antiques to embellish his works. Supplied with a hoe, a shovel, and a few other scraps, Heise might turn the worthless cache of metal into a valuable sculpture, like his butterfly which sells for $1,200. HEISE'S EXHIBIT is one of the more unusual atihis year's Art Fair. "I'd say there are five to ten people here incorporating found objects in their work," he said. All of the found objects used in Heise's works are relatively unchanged by the artist. "I try not to distort the original piece of metal too much. I may cut it, but I won't shape it or bend it," the 36-year-old artist said. Heise added that all of his metal is treated with boiled linseed oil. HEISE REPORTED he doesn't like to work too long on any one piece. "The more I work on a piece the less successful it is. The key to a successful piece of work is knowing when to stop," according to Heise. Most of his sculptures are over two feet tall since the sculptor feels restricted with smaller figures. "The smaller the piece-I'm more limited in the shapes (of the metal) I find," he said. "I can use smaller shapes in a large piece, but I can't use large shapes on smaller pieces." HEISE SAID HIS first Found Object Sculpture was simply the product of some welding he'd done. Soon he was creating one sculpture after another. "You start one and get another idea for another," Heise said. Though he taught high school art for ten years he gave it up because he didn't consider it worth the effort involved. "It's too exhausting; overworked and under- paid." THE STATE University of New York graduate has been concentrating fully on found object sculptures for several years. Heise, who says he sells nearly everything he creates, peddles most of his works at art fairs like Ann Arbor's annual event. Thirty per cent of his sculptures are sold by galleries, and the rest is unloaded from his studio in Vermont. -today-- r \ Wine for-all tastes Come next month University students will no longer be able to boast about drinking an exclusive wine names after their school. John Coleman, who earlier this summer brought us "M Go Blue Wine", plans to introduce four more brands aimed at spirited college drinkers. The new wines will be Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX THIS ANIMAL SCULPTURE, on display at the Art Fair yesterday, was made using a variety of scrap metal. Inset: Bill Heise, artist who created the animal and other "Found Metal Sculptures." INT ELLIGENCE CHARTER HEARINGS: Harvard head slams CIA By JEFFREY WOLFF Special to The Daily WASHINGTON - In testimony before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Activities yesterday, Harvard University President Derek Bok asked Congress to put a stop to Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) "operational activities" on college campuses which include "covert recruiting." Bok's request came as a result of CIA refusal to abide by those provisions in the Harvard guidelines concerning university relationships with intelligence- agencies. BOK OFFERED the Select Committee several let- ters from CIA Director Stansfield Turner which state that the Agency cannot abide by Harvard's restrictions on CIA covert recruiting and other operational ac- tivities at the prestigious university. "The relationship between U.S foreign intelligence agencies and universities must be structured in ways that protect the integrity of universities and the academic profession and safeguard the freedom and objectivity of scholarship," said Bok. The Select Committee solicited Bok's testimony as part of its hearings dealing with the Senate's proposed intelligence charter (S. 2525) which seeks, for the first time since the National Security Act of 1947, to define and control the activities of U.S. intelligence agencies. This was the time the Select Committee has invited academics to-testify on CIA campus activities. HARVARD AND several other universities adopted guidelines after recent revelations that the CIA has used professors to recruit and gather information about students attending American universities. It has been revealed that this often entails a summary of the See HARVARD, Page 7 called "Fighting Irish," "Rose Bowl Red," "Spar- tan Magic," and "Go Bucks." Coleman says he's sold 7,000 bottles of M Go Blue since June 15. Now we're waiting for Coleman to market "Pasadena Pick Me Up," a wine to sootite the post-Rose Bowl blues suffered so often by University football fans. Pursell meets dissident's wife Ann Arbor congressman Carl Pursell met Mon- day with Avital Shcharansky, wife of Soviet dissident Anatoly Shcharansky, at a press con- ference. She recounted her thoughts on the convic- tion of her husband and asked for Congressional help in pressuring Russia to honor human rights commitments. Republican Pursell is co- sponosoring legislation to move the 1980 Olympic games from Moscow in protest of Soviet treatment of dissidents. Hannenings - conjunction with the Art Fair, courtesy'of Eclipse Jazz ... State Senator John Otterbacher will speak on "Politics of Mental Health: Informal Colloquium" from 2-4 in the East Conference Room on the fourth floor of the Rackham building .. . pack upa sack dinner and head for the International Center (603 E. Madison) where a group will leave for a picnic at the Waterloo Recreation Area at 3. Bring a car if you can, otherwise transportation will be provided ... the Twilight in the Park Program is sponsoring entertainment in the Liberty/Division Street Park from 6:30-9 . . . take a trip back to childhood and drop by the Ann Arbor Public Library on S. Fifth, where bedtime stories will be read from 7:30-8. The readings are geared to ages three through seven, but anyone can attend . . . The University Chamber Orchestra, with Paul Makano- witzky conducting, will perform at 8 in the Rackham auditorium ... and, finally, dance to the live music of Dick Siegel and his amazing Ministers of Melody from 9 til 1:30 in the Michigan Union ballroom. continue to be dominated by art as the Art Fair enters its third day. Exhibitors will display On the outside. their works through Saturday on South University, The weather so fas hasn't been too hard on the Art East University, North University, Liberty, Fair. Yes, its been hot, but not unbearable. And today Maynard, and Main Streets ... the Earthworks Jaz- this adequate weather should continue, with highs ztet and Don Savoie will provide musical enter- in the upper 80s. The skies will be partly sunny and ainmen+from 2-5 at Main and WilliamS t+rets in nn'theasunriseadif nmarainfalls-