0. 0 0 In a circle of friends in a circle of soundl all our voices will blend when we touch common ground - Paul Winter Consortium, "Common Ground" It was 1971 when Annette Martin, a theater professor at Eastern Michigan University, was told that women could not direct. It was also in 1971 that Meeting on Common Ground Martin set out to prove her critics wrong, and Common Ground Theatre Ensemble was born. The ensemble's first venture, which stemmed from a discussion among troupe members during a brainstorming PSYCHOLOGY MAJORS PSI CHI The National Honor Society in Psychology is now accepting applications Requirements include: -12 graded credits in Psychology beyond intro level - Major or Minor in Psychology - 3.3 Overall GPA - 3.5 GPA in Psychology (including stats) DEADLINE IS FEBRUARY 9,1990 Pick up Applications in K-106 West Quad LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO CALL HOME? CALL ANN ARBOR REALTY. We Offer You Campus:m " Apartments -efficiencies -1, 2, or 3 bedrooms " HousesW session, focused on the day-to- day occurrences in women's lives and featured af Mousketeer- style song titled "On the Rag," written by ensemble- member Elise Bryant. While Bryant says the performers' mothers were less than impressed with the show, it was well-received by the general public and Common Ground has been producing theater with a pulse on real people's lives ever since. The show was a career- booster for Martin as well, and she was welcomed back to Eastern's theater department with open arms. Bryant then became Common Ground's artistic director and, in filling this position, maintained the groups' unique approach to theater, utilizing the stage and the streets as paths toward social change. Not only does the ensemble stage dramatic works with political relevance, it is also the parent company which spawned Barrier-Free Theatre (now Diversibility Theatre), a troupe comprised of wheelchair- users, and Workers' Lives/ Workers' Stories, a theater group that allows labor union members to perform and address working- world issues. The core members of Workers' Lives/Workers' Stories travel to conferences and other work environments to perform their pieces. J Recently Natasna naym Common an African gos Ground, in the Common G collaboration Celebration of with University Health Services, took to the streets of. Ann Arbor to stage a community awareness rally for December's World Wins Day which featured songs and poetry readings. Another move toward social change was sparked last summer when Bryant met up with University graduate student Natasha Raymond at a women of color poetry reading sponsored by Common Ground. According to Raymond, the two began talking after the reading and discovered they shared many similar interests and goals. "We had these incredible jam sessions," Raymond said. "We started talking about how we wanted to have peace in the world and how could we have it and we just really jammed." As a result of lo r p these collaborations, Raymond joined the theater troupe's .,, student affiliate, U-M Friends of Common Ground Theatre, and the groups' next move for change was launched. In the Name of Love: A Multi-cultural Celebration of OSE JUAREZ/Weekend Peacemakers is, nd rehearses according to el song for Raymond, a ound conglomeration eacemakers of many past Common Ground events. The troupe has drawn on its past connections with groups like Health Services to produce a two-day event consisting of a multi-media performance Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. in Mendelssohn Theatre and workshops all day Saturday in the Michigan League.. "We're bringing in conservative elements and liberal elements. We're building on the foundation we've been building up all along," Raymond explained. Groups such as sAPAc, The Interfaith Council for Peace and Justice, and UCAR will hold teach- ins during the day addressing a wide range of topics including Third World women, Nicaragua, and racism and war propaganda. There will also be a large canvas on which anyone can paint his or her vision of peace. -3, 4, 5, or 6 bedrooms Special Accomodations for LARGE GROUPS Wait List Anxiety Syndrome Remember your senior year in high school when you were getting literature from every college on Earth, from Princeton to Nashville Auto-Diesel College? Remember all the interesting facts they gave you, like the ratio of men to women, or the ratio of students to faculty? Most of us were much more concerned with the former statistic than the latter. Don't ask me what made me pass up Central Michigan University, where the female-male ratio is 8:1, for this university, where it's more like 2:3, but it sure wasn't the faculty-student ratio. Anyone who's not securely registered in a class is bound to suffer from something called Type wL (wait-list) Anxiety Syndrome. This disease initially manifests itself in professors who get a wait-list that's three times the size of the maximum size of the class. Knowing that everyone on that list is going to be a "senior concentrator" who "needs that class to graduate" causes even the most liberal faculty member to cringe in fear and, not knowing were to turn, blame the university for not hiring enough TAs. The anxiety is passed, as is proper, to the students. Professors have a variety of ingenious methods for scaring off students in vain attempts at bringing classes down to a manageable size. In one course, the professor effort they put into getting a job, getting good grades, analyzing whether or not Rumeal is playing his best ball, ragging on people, and thinking they can save the world; and put it into to having a good time I think we'd notice a marked improvement. I had this epiphantic realization last weekend when I traveled to the University of Wisconsin in Madison. Michigan and Wisconsin are strikingly similar in many ways. They're big state schools that draw a similar mix of students. We Piave similar problems with racism, politics. Another political science professor lays it right on the line: don't take this class if you're trying to get into law school. If that won't scare two- thirds of the political science concentrators on this campus away, nothing will. A certain English professor, known to his friends as "Napalm Bill," first complained 1 * 24 Hour Maintenance Rob Earli tries to fend you off with the size of the reading list and writes ominously in the syllabus that "this class is intended for serious students of international politics" and that anyone who is not should drop the class. Two weeks later, he gives you a map quiz that most seventh-graders I know could pass, although few of them are serious students of international Listings available at the office or at the Off-Campus Housing Office. 663-7444 616 Church St. (across from Rick's) Mon-Fri 9-5 .BATAB HOTEL $399 *MARGARITA $435 .TERRAMAR $480 -AQUAMARINA $520 .INTER-CONTINENTAL $559 Complete Fiesta Break Vacation Includes: Round-Trip Air: Airport Transfers in Cancun: 7 Nites Choice Hotel: Complete Sport & Social Activity Program; Discounts for Shopping. Dining, Entertainment. Water Sports: Free Cover to Popular Clubs: Hotel Taxes; Many More Extras!! TRAVEL FREE * TRAVEL FREE * TRAVEL FREE FORM YOUR OWN GROUP & GET 1 FREE TRIP FOR EACH 20 PAID " CALL NOW FOR THE BEST VALUE IN SPRING BREAK VACATIONSM- ADAM SMITH at 769-5719 I that the class size was five times what it should be, making it impossible to check whether you had done the daily written assignments. After the usual horror stories about how hard the class was, you were afraid not to drop the class, for fear that enough other people would, making the daily inspection practical. A brilliant bit of psychological warfare on Napalm Bill's part, one that almost worked. tuition, trends, hang-ups, and views. Walk down State Street at either school and you pass similar stores, they even have their own Discount Records, Wazoo Records and Cat's Meow. Our schools are different in one major way: we study more, they seem to have more fun. Now, I've been more than willing to sacrifice some fun for a Michigan diploma, but no mas. We got into Michigan over Wisconsin presumedly because we could solve problems better, so instead of turning our attention to econ problem sets, why not better manage our time so This overcrowding problem peaks with the senior seminars where, as one professor put it, "you sit around a table with ten or fifteen of your colleagues and enjoy an intellectual exchange afforded so rarely to undergraduates at the University of Michigan." Actually, you sit in a huge classroom in East Engineering with fifty or sixty of your colleagues and have a class much like any other 400- level class. One of the more controversial profs around here tried to get his seminar down to manageable size by forcing all the prospective students to follow him on a chase from East Engin to the North Campus bus, through G.G. Brown and EECS, to collapse exhausted somewhere in the Dow building. Presumably, the requirements for the class included athletic prowess (much as Rhodes Scholars must demonstrate) and problem solving ability, which you proved by finding your way home and back to class again the following week. The university is doing what it can to alleviate the problem. You get helpful hints about the wait- we can go out and still maintain those sparkling GPAS. Wisconsin is.in Wisconsin, while Michigan is in Michigan. This truism has more profound implications than those that meet the eye. Since its inception Wisconsinites have held tight to the idea that all activities merit having a beer. Go to their Union, instead of students sitting at dimly lit tables in a smoky pit eating greasy burgers, students sit in a tavern like atmosphere with books open and beers at their side. Outside the Union is a huge lake were the list right in the course guide now. For instance, wL:1 means only those with a genuine interest in doing yard work at the professor's house will be given overrides. wL:2 means be prepared for swimsuit, evening gown, and talent competitions at the first class meeting. And wL:3 means cash only. Of course, if the university weren't trying to set a record by doubling the number of students admitted every year, this wouldn't be a problem. But I guess we need the extra tuition money. Not that I know where it goes, except that it's obviously not to hire more TAs and faculty to deal with the increasing class sizes. Perhaps if profs and TAs were stricter about how many people they'll let into a class, this problem would solve itself. After all, if every class were kept down to its ideal size, many of us would have no classes at all. I guess we'd have to pass the time watching soaps at Duderstadt's house. And hanging out at regents meetings. And getting full tuition refunds. And explaining to our alumni parents why we weren't in class that day. I wonder if they have this problem at Nashville Auto-Diesel College? T _ i 4 4 1 -- - 4 - - _e - Let tnem fOW now You te Weekend Magazine is conducting a survey of Ann Arbor landlords for the February 23 tenants' issues issue, and we would like to find out what you think about your rental experiences. So send us a letter telling us if you love your landlord, or want to wring his neck. The following categories will be especially helpful in tallying results: el. I rent 1 repairs I general condition I respect for privacy I total performance please send us your comments at: Weekendl Aifazinie teneni's issu'e s-tvdevrt pu.blication btdld in , 120 /aqrnard. A2 /ichi car. 18109 sunsets are spectacular. The closest body of water to our campus is the toxic Huron River. Again this doesn't necessarily mean you have to drink beer to have fun, you have to look under the surface. By thinking that every occasion is a reason to have beer available, they in fact are saying that every situation has the potential to be fun. My logic may be skewed, but the simple fact remains that everywhere around you at Madison is having fun. It's like a big polka party... and when was the last time you saw a dour and ma Ari Litt abo see wo thi: del ozc doi forg sen say hav 12 WEEKEND February 2, 1990