990 (Amateur and Commercial Photofinishing) HOUR Ektachrome SLIDE Processing On the Hour 10 to 3 Weekdays at 3120 Packard Only Regular Prices! 4 Hour Service at 691 So. Maple and 1315 So. University Dince On your toes By Colleen Egan Zagreb Grande Ballet Power Center 8 p.m. Saturday, October 23 T HE ZAGREB Grand Ballet, on their American debut-tour long-awaited by this country's connoisseurs and en- thusiasts of dance, performs this Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Power Center. Part of the University's Musical Society's Choice Series, this Yugoslavian troupe's repertory in- cludes works by the legendary Fokine, Petipa, Linchine and major choreographers who have followed them. Saturday's performance includes Graduation Ball set to music by Strauss, The Creatures of Prometheus (music from the overture by Beethoven), "Black Swan Pas De Deux" from Swan Lake(Tchaikovsky), and "Polovtzian Dances" from Borodin's opera Prince Igor. The troupe is a major wing of the Croatian National Theatre of Zagreb and has shared the stage with the I In by 9 or 1 Zagreb Grande Ballet: Swan Lake Croatian National Opera since it's founding in 1870. In 1876 the company established itself as a separate entity from the opera company and began of- fering their own dance presentations. As a state-supported institution, the company not only attracts major choreographers but also the most talen- ted dancers and designers that create ballets and a company of artistic ex- cellence. The Zagreb Company has toured L. Italy, Austria, Holland, Greece, Great Britain, France, Czechoslovakia, the Soviet Union and Japan. This season the ensemble graces the stages of the United States as other great foreign companies, such as the Bolshoi Ballet and The Royal Danish Ballet, have in the past. Those who hold tickets to Saturday's sold-out performance can look forward to an evening with a legendary com- pany of both beauty and excitement. I Cotane 4INN _ CARRY OUT AND FREE DELIVERY 927 Maiden Lane corner Broadway /Plymouth 995-9101 546 Packard corner Packard /Hill 665-6005 BEST PIZZA IN TOWN FRESH ALL NATURAL QUALITY INGREDIENTS CERTIFIED AS A REAL PIZZA MAKER BY THE AMERICAN DAIRY ASSOCIATION Body bnguage By Julie Winoker Dances for a New Space Graduate Thesis Concert Residential College Theater, East Quad Friday-Saturday, October 22-23 DANCES FOR a New Space, this year's premiere performance from the Dance Department, will im- press past supporters of University dance as well as newcomers to the local dance world. This Friday and Saturday night, the stage of the Residential College Theater, at East Quad, will spotlight the choreography of three Michigan graduate students: Laurice Hamp, Pamela Mundy,and Michael M- cStraw. The choreography spans a wide range of moods, themes, and techniques, all used to create a physical interpretation of an often intangible world. This weekend's program is composed of six separate dances. Each choreographer will present two works: one designed for a group and one solo. The dancers- include both un- dergraduate and graduate dance majors as well as nonmajors, making for a broad range of experience and ability. Michael McStraw manages to exploit his dancers' talents to their fullest. Mc- Straw performs in his piece, entitled Contours and Furrows, along with Cathy Kebbey and Jonathen Urla. Lou Grabowski will accompany the dancers with improvisational percussion which mcStraw says, "goes from order to breaking down of order to resuming or- der." The most theatrical piece of the con- cert is Laurice Hamp's Ridgeway. Dancers Michael Driscoll, Priscilla Loson, Kevin-Michael Moore, and Gor- don VanAmberg perform to a musical composition by Paul Horn. The theme deals with facades and basic roles and each dancer portrays a different character in a world of conflicting per- sonalities and stereotypes. The piece often looks like the performances of four solo dancers sharing a common stage, which is Hamp's technique for illustrating the world of intimate strangers. In contrast to attempts by McStraw and Hamp to cover broad, intangible sulijects, Pamela Mundy focuses on a visible, miniature world. Her group piece, entitled Under the Porch Light, recreates the night activities of insects on a magnified scale. By extending the dance past the limits of the stage, Mun- dy has cleverly authenticized the buggy night atmosphere. The choreography does not clearly distinguish one insect from another and therefore, the dance's beauty lies in each performer's per- sonal interpretation. Dances for a New Space is a collaboration of some of the Dance Department's finest talent.DThe choreography shows a well-developed knolwdge of space, movement, and theme development, and is a very good representation of the discipline and creativity of University dancers.' *COUPON I I1 WEEKDAY MIDTERM SPECIAL 1 Good Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday % TRAY DEEP DISH SICILIAN PIZZA 1 It 1 With 2 Items and TWO FREE PEPSIS 1 Cottage INN $5*95 EXPIRES NOVEMBER 30, 1982 M mmo mmorno mm mmo mmo - mmo mmo - 16/Weekend/October 22, 1982