The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 5, 1982-Page 5 Anachronism society dons armor to bring medieval SPECTATORS were en BY SHARON MORIOKA try their hands at sword fi Swords clashed in the hot sun Sunday swords are actually hea as heavily armored knights battled for reeds and are not dangerou their honor on the Diag. David Hoornstra, Sleepy students on their way to the (president) of the Ann ai UGLI were not seeing the ghosts of said that fighters must tr King Arthur and his Round Table, but to become skilled enough the Society for Creative Anachronism seriously. staging a display of medieval dancing Hoornstra said the 17-yea and fighting. ;has an international mer The society is dedicated to the study about 7,000 people. The of medieval culture. Instead of merely chapters, or "cantons," inD reading literature, members try to The Ann Arbor group, c recreate the period through swor- nabar," meets twice wee dfights, dances, cooking, crafts and practice fighting and danc general "reveling." to "revel," or, to have a EACH MEMBER creates a ficticious "That's the whole point, t persona complete with name and in- Hoornstra said. terests from a time between 650 and THE FIGHTS are ama 1650 A.D. violent. I've been fightin The member then acts out whatever years," Hoornstra said. " his persona would have done, anything one injury." from calligraphy and music to juggling One audience participant and swordfights. Morris, said, "I don't knov The knights in the Diag Sunday wore they're striving for realisr about 80 pounds of armor. Curious, fun." passerbys gathered to watch the fights, ;, some looking perplexed by the whole affair., hi( Junior Tim Moshier was puzzled by the knights' antics at first, but 'I do 0 play 'Dungeons and Dragons', and it reminds me of that." Moshier con- -\I sidered the fights a means of escape J from everyday life. "If they can do it this way, I think it's great," he said. Ln d SSue Harrington, also a junior, said, LJ iG C "It's a typical Ann Arbor event, but it's kind of interesting." period couraged to The soc ighting. The as much a vily padded have adde as. sexual eq seneschal Women ar rbor society, may becor ain for years ability. to compete Men are the arts. ar-old society poetry, do c mbership of enough to k re are nine nstra. Michigan. Member called "Cyn- the group" kly, once to to be creat ing and once Ionia cant good time. because "i1 o have fun," the crowd.' azingly non- - ng for three S b and I've had Subs t, Junior Dan A/I MIc w how much m, but it was to life iety does strive for realism s possible, but the members d such modern aspects as *ualtiy, Hoornstra said. e allowed to be fighters and me knights if they have the encouraged to participate in "A knight can dance, write calligraphy, and cook. It's not be a sword jock," said Hoor-. Ellen Radding said she likes because it encouraes people ive." Phillip Greggo of the on said he likes the fights t's fun, you can show off for scribe to The higan Daily 764-0558 Daiy roto by tLhZA ET SCO T Missed the market These two girls amuse themselves yesterday at the site of the Farmer's Market, even though they are two days early for marketing hours. The girls attend Jack & Juill Nursery School. Dissident tells of Sovet control r rads By DAN GRANTHAM Russian authors and publishers are of- ten forced to add statements to their works to appease the government and clear the way for printing, according to a Russian dissident who visited campus yesterday. The Soviet government has a large degree of control over the publishing industry and can make demands of ublishers and authors, Raisa Orlova aid to 50 people at a conference spon- sored by the Center for Russian East European Studies and the Slavic Department. ORLOVA, WHO is a specialist in Armerican literature and culture, gave several examples of writers and publishers who were forced to appease the government and clear the way to publishing. One author whose science fiction work was published only after he added a preface to please the Soviet gover- nment, Orlova said. The preface labeled America as warlovers while calling the Soviets a peaceful people. A writer who wrote a preface for a translation of J.D. Salinger's Catcher in The Rye, had to include a statement about the bourgeois decadence of the language in the novel.; After the statement was included, the translation was published, Orlova said. ORLOVA ALSO told of an author who wrote of the difficulty involved in get- ting even the smallest thing from the Soviet government. The government demanded that he add an afterword stating that these difficulties were found only in previous Soviet gover- nments and not in the present system. Some authors such as Leta Tchaikov- ski, refuse to make these compromises, Orlova said. Tchaikovski would not let anyone delete even one line from any of her works. Orlova said that she appeased the government because she thought Russian culture was more important than her "clean hands." 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Box 7770 Shawnee Mission, KS 66207 friday ~~~~~-~ -October 9:00 p.m. 8 Lawyer's Club (Continued from Page 1) YPSILANTI police are currently searching for possible suspects, said Deputy Chief Dan Heliker. One suspect, David Brown, was previously senten- ed to Jackson State Prison for sexual assault robberies involving elderly women in Grand Rapids. He eluded security officials in Oc- tober 1981 when he was taken to University Hospital for treatment for a neurological disorder. He has not yet been apprehended, Heliker said. "We'd like to locate and talk to him. He had a history that may implicate him," he said. Washtenaw County Prosecutor illiam Delhey said that his office is "looking at other homicides in the state" in an attempt to locate possible suspects. Ann Arbor police are investigating "a usual group of suspects who have this (sexual assault robberies),in their past; history," Corbett said. THE ANN Arbor and Ypsilanti police departments are working closely with the prosecutor's office, the medical examiner s office, as well as other local and out-of-state police agencies and private agencies in the current in- vestigations, Corbett said. Florence Bell, 91, of Ypsilanti died of stab wounds January 8, Margorie Up- son, 85, also of Ypsilanti, was found strangled to death last Wednesday. The body of the latest victim, Louise' Kob- nick, 84, of 621 W. Jefferson in Ann Ar- bor, was found Friday. Heliker said the Ypsilanti police Department is attempting to locate all elderly white women in town in an at- tempt-to watch the residences. Ann Arbor police are currently thinking of conducting a similar census procedure, Corbett said. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 763-4186 MGU C JOSTEN'S GOLD RING S LE 15 QffIOKGolds3 o4~l [ II