p PELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE: 24 hour service. $24/month. 9-6 service: $15/month. 761-2022. 0230325 TOMMOROW'S JOBS know what is and will be available through this indispensable booklet of current Government studies covering all industries And states inc. Alaska and Hawaii. $8.75 LYNTEL RESEARCH dept. TA2225 P.O. Box 99405 Cleve. Ohio 44199 Satis. Guaranteed. 4030405 TYPING BY SANDI - 426-5217 Fast, Accurate, Reasonable. Papers, briefs, letters, .dissertations (electronically), 11 years experience. cJtc 'TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE: 24 hour. service. $24/month. 9-6 service: $15/month. 761-2022. 02J0325 TYPIST, 75t per page. IBM 2 type styles, professional, accurate, affordable, Sally 663-7253 5130326 SINGING TELEGRAMS: BY THE U-M MES'S GLEE CLUB; QUARTETS $20 plus; CALL 764-1448. 95J0216 TYPING - all kinds. Very professional. Reasonable rotes and quick service. Call Lauri at 662-1678. 'Term papers, resumes, dissertations. Quality typing, reasonable rates, fast service. Maggie 973- "745 persistently. cJtc SUMMER STORAGE: Clean, private units, from $18/mo. 11 miles from UM stadium. StowAway Self Storage, I-94 and Ann Arbor-Saline Rd. 769-0119 80J0416 TYPING - Fast, quality work, campus pickup and delivery. 665-0337 1530331 TOMORROW'S JOBS know what is and will be available through this indispensible booklet of ,current government studies covering all industries and states including Alaska and Hawaii. $8.75 LYN- TEL RESEARCH dept. TA2225 P.O. Box 99405 Cleveland, OH 44199. Satis. Guaranteed. 40J0405 MASSAGE - A good massage gently stretches muscle fibre, relaxes muscle tissue, promotes good circulation and enhances movement. Massage also may provide relief from muscular aches and pains. And it is a pleasant way to reduce stress and anxiety because massage is very relaxing. Swedish, oriental & myomassology techniques employed by Vince Luschas, professionally trained masseur. 665-4524. cJtc Typing all kinds plus transcriptions. IBM Selectric, low rates. Cindy 662-9948. cJtc TYPING, IBM WORD PROCESSING, PROFESSIONAL, ALL TYPES. Call Noelle any time, 971-2364. cJtc MOVIE POSTER GALLERY 665-3151 62J0320 TYPING, 751 per page. Call evenings 663-0980.27J0322 ARTS The Michigan Daily Saturday, March 19, 1983 Page 7 Expect: Dynami cdac By Kathryn Glasgow F YOU'RE LOOKINyG for weekend entertainment, "The University Dance Company in Concert" is a per- formance you shouldn't miss. If you appreciate dance already, tonight and tomorrow night's shows will more than satisfy. If you're not yet into dance, the Dance Company could greatly exceed your expectations and leave you wanting more. Expect: A curtain rising on a darkened stage. The dancers pose in place against an artistic screen which provides an abstract, subtle setting. The silk dresses and leotards are sim- ple. The music is haunting, slow, inten- se. Focus on the dancers. Their moves are graceful, their timing is perfect. Expect: The choreography of guest choreographer Alvin McDuffie, a 1973 University Dance graduate. McDuffie has performed, choreographed and taught dance extensively, both in this country and in Europe. His professionalism and eclectic jazz style bring a distinct flavor to the show. Expect: An impressive mixture of moods and styles from the other choreographers, Vera L. Embree, Willie Feuer and Susan Matheke. The profound exhibit of ballet, modern dan- ce and jazz succeeds, due not only to the expert choreography. The dancers, in an extraordinary display of talent, bring depth and vivaciousness to the choreographers' diversity. They really shine in the souful, intense pieces when they dance to mysterious music of the Ann Arbor Art Ensemble. The live music combines with the abstract backdrops and quiet costumes to create an unobtrusively dynamic atmosphere. McDuffie's number, "Night Passages ... Beyond," uses a collage tape featuring the voices of Brian Eno, Chick Corea and others. The unusual recitation provides a compelling con- trast to the silent language of dance and a change from the expected or- chestration. The background chanting sounds vaguely like Pink Floyd, adding another element to dance which is or- dinarily visual and spiritual. A break from the intensity in "Night Passages" comes in a light, jazzy in- terlude. The dancers come alive again- St an upbeat background of jazz music. Suddenly, they are sexy, flirty, energetic. This is the most entertaining part of the concert. Expect to tap your feet and move to the rhythm. You will have a burning desire to "shake it," to dance, to be up on stage with the University Dancers. At the very least, expect to smile. Great expectations? Keep them. You won't be disappointed. The performan- ce plays at the Power Center, Satur- day evening at 8 p.m. and Sunday af- ternoon at 3 p.m. Tickets are on sale for $5.50-$6.50 at the Michigan Union. Lyman Woodard smiles his way through tonight's concert at the U-Club. Lyman Woodard'Os "j'azz ain't no lemo Limbs fly at this weekend's University Dance Concert performances in the Power Center. PROFESSIONAL RESUMES ON WORD PROCESSOR 996-4572 cJtc ACCURACY, INC. Editing/proofreading/typing Papers, articles, reports 971-4139 -cJtc TYPING - Experienced. Dissertation, thesis, manuscript, business. Fast and reasonable. 662-9948. cJ0417 WORD PROCESSING Ideal for resume/multiple cover letters, theses, reasonable rates. Call 663-7158 cJtc WRITE ON... Editorial and typing service Freelance writing, research 996-0566 cJtc WE HAVE THE ANSWER TO SMALL COMPUTERS KAYPRO II - $1795 64K -191K Disc -9 programs -261bs -ONE YEAR WARRANTY- ATTACHE - $3995 64K - 360K Disc -5 programs -18 lbs HIGH RESOLUTION GRAPHICS Call for a personal demonstration RMS ELECTRONICS INC. SALES 973-2440 SERVICE -L N ,VINTAGE CLOTHING - Now open - men's and women's, large selection. 120 West Huron at Ashley. 4 Open everyday but Wednesday. 78M032' JEEPS, CARS, TRUCKS under $100 available at local gov't sales in your area. Call (refundable) 1- -619-569-0241 ext. 8422 for your 1983 directory. 24 hrs. 84No319 Records The Collins Kids (Epic) Meet the Collins Kids, Lawrencine May and Lawrence Albert; Lorrie and Larry for short. The album was recor- ded in 1958, when Lorrie was 15 and Larry 13. It has been re-issued this year. S Aw,ain't that cute. Little rock/coun- try kids from the fifties, all be-fringed and be-sequined and glitter-cowboyed up in western swing tradition. Yup, and making music as legitimate today as 16-year-old Annabella Lwin or Musical Youth. The Collins Kids do some fairly serious rockin'. Lorrie sings most of the songs, and she is wonderful. All of the sexual sup- pression put on a 15-year-old girlchild singer of the '50s (especially one chaperoned by her 13-year-old buzz-cut brother) comes growling, screaming, crying, moaning out of her mouth in dripping vocals. And the lyrics that she is singing aren't any soft touches, either. The words are at least as sexy as anything Elvis was doing at the time. "Ummm- mMMeeeercy! What my baby does to me, me, me" doesn't leave much doubt as to what is being done. (That song was written by the Collins family, too). Lorrie slows it down a bit with "Rock Boppin Baby," but the sexiness is still there. Neither of the Collins Kids have any trouble making it rock. "Hoy Hoy Hoy" really moves; starting the whole thing with a true finger-popper. While Lawrencine May is yowlin', Lawrence Albert is doing some pretty heayy pickin'. (And dhy would we want to doubt that it really is him?) He sure has the right equipment-a monstrous double-necked guitar bigger than he is. The top neck says "Larry" and the bot- tom neck says "Collins." Larry's Big Moment comes with the first cut on side two, with the vocals on "Whistle Bait," another family-written tune. The guitar intro sounds pretty normal, but when the vocals start you think the record is on the wrong speed. Larry lays into it with a rabid, vermin- like screech. It's Alvin the Chipmunk after he's injected POP into his eyeballs. Sad to say, Larry can't keep it up for the whole song. Larry also gets to do an instrumental duet, "Hurricane," in which he "frac- tures the frets in a frantic fingerpicking duet with guitar maestro Joe Maphis" (The too-good-to-be-ignored description came from the back of the album cover.) Surprisingly, the youth of the Collins Kids is only really accented twice on this album. "Soda Poppin' Around"-which starts out with poor Lorrie missing the sophomore prom, and ends with her drowning her sorrows in soda-is fairly tolerable in an Everly Brothers wimpy sort of way. But "Hot Rod," with lyrics like I'm only 14/but I'm going on 15/can't wait to be 16/so I can get me a hot rod is just too obvious pandering to a "cute kids" audience. Besides, it's too slow. Two questionable songs are a small price to pay for such a piece of wonder- ful camp,'50s Americana, though. -Joe Hoppe By James McGee TONIGHT, SOUNDSTAGE presents to some and introduces to others the Motown sound of the Lyman Woodard Organization. The perfor- mance runs from 9:30 p.m. until 2:00 a.m. at the University Club in the Michigan Union. Born outside of Detroit, Lyman Woodard was exposed to varied styles of music at an early age including the rock 'n' roll of Chuck Berry and Fats Domino. Woodard's exposure to jazz came while attending Oscar Peterson's School of contemporary music. It was here that he was introduced to the keyboard techniques of Jimmy Smith, the master of the Hammond organ. Woodard's professional experience began in the early 1960s as he worked dance halls and night clubs in Flint, Jackson, Lansing, and Detroit, Michigan. In 1964, Woodard moved to Detroit and formed the fabulous Lyman Woodard Organization. . Lyman Woodard, however, did not restrict himself solely to his "Organization." In the early '70s, Woodard accepted the position of musical director for Martha and the Vandellas. This was the starting point of the growth of his reputation as a diverse and adaptable musician. Later, he became involved with such popular Detroit artists as Ron English, Norma Bell and Marcus Belgrave. As time progressed, the reputation of the contemporary jazz sounds of the Woodard Organization grew and it soon gained recognition nationwide. The Organization has opened for such popular artists as Herbie Hancock, the Jazz Crusaders, Billy Paul and Mose Allison. One of the more notable achievements of the Woodard Organization was its participation in the Montreux Detroit International Jazz Festival in 1982. In the past couple of years, the Organization has produced two albums, the most recent entitled Don't Stop the Groove.So if you haven't been to the Club recently, treat yourself and your date(s) to a couple of hours of serious jazzy jams with no unpleasant sur- prises. r.- wm d Y" Z? t l- 9 ANN ARBOR INDIVIDUAL THEATRES L 5t h A at hbiey 761-9700 $2.00 WED" SAT " SUNDAY SHOWS BEFORE 6:00 PM "MAGNIFICENT" NBC-TV ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS INCL BEST ACTRESS MERYL STREEP SOPHIE'S CHOICE (R) FRI MON -.6:55 9:40 SAT SUN - 1:10 3:55 6:50 9:40 HAVE YOU done it? Have you ordered your 1983 Michigan Ensian? Stop by our office at 420 Maynard and order yours today! dP0320 BIKE EUROPE IN '83 For Details: BIKE EUROPE INC. 234-A Nickels Arcade; 668-0529 cPtc I YOUR OWN HOUSE! Small two bedroom. Ten minutes from campus. May-Sept. 761-5238. 87U0322 SUMMER SUBLET: House on Catherine & State- 2 bedroom, living room, dining room, basement with laundry, parking. $250 plus utilities, Call 996-9540. 47U0320 BRAND NEW APARTMENT for spring and/or summer sublet - 3 edrooms, great location, price negotiable. Call anytime (best time 5:30-6:30). 761- 6365. dU0325 -:V P'OO MA. OSCA Tootsue O SCA R DUSTI NOMS. ig r I N America's 10+00 5:00 hottest new 12:15 7:30 actress. E 2:30 10:00 A ECOLUMBIA P I C T U R E S R E L E A S E h M n f h The Man of the . U Century. The AWA R D Motion Picture N OMS. of a Lifetime. GANDHI SA COLUMBIA RPCTURES RELEASEa --P ASS E S 10:00, 12:00, 2:00, 4:00 7:00, 9:00, Fri & Sat- 10:45 1:00 DAS BOOT 4:00 plus Sneak Preview 7:00 Max Dougan - Sat. 7:15 THE MAN FWMII SNOWY RIVER 1:00 KIRK DOUGLAS300 NO wYRVWATETo5:00 TUALYOsR1 7:00 ^BOUT-__ 9:15 20th CENTURY.FOX FILMS r - - - 1:00 3:10 5:20 7:30 9:45 FUN AND ADVENTURE AT EVERY TURN! TOM SELLECK BESS ARMSTRONG MM4 ..th ltimate igihtmuare. 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