0 0 0 0 0 .. State college comedy champion Tom Franck hosts r . r$ UAC's weekl Laughtrack . 4 :4: ivF:F " . >a mater comedy contest Ginsberg howls through meditative works The powerful strains of the Star Wars theme echo throughout the Michigan Union ballroom, as students watch white words scroll up a blackened television screen. A resonant voice on the videotape proclaims, "This is uAc." This promotional video was introducing the University Activities Center, one of the most used and least understood organizations on campus, to students attending uAc's winter mass meeting. The references to the 1977 megahit seem particularly appropriate, for UAC encompasses the University galaxy, be it through stand-up. comedy at the University Club, mini-courses, films, and countless other offerings. "We try to hit masses of people," said UAC President Lowell Cantor, an LsA senior. "uAc is never geared toward one specific audience." Created in 1965 to oversee the many projects of the Michigan League and Michigan Union, uAc became the primary student programming organization in order to "augment and enhance the educational and social atmosphere of the University," according to a 1964 report on the Union-League merger. And most would agree that it has done exactly that. Initially, UAc sponsored Homecoming, Winter Weekend, and Michigras (the University's version of Mardi Gras). Since UACc group that brings bands to the U- Club each Thursday, bring in professionals, the emphasis is always on the student. "My philosophy is that Laughtrack is for the students," movers spectrum stu denRt then, it has expanded and now Birmingham add( sponsors popular committees like them as much tir Laughtrack, Soundstage, want... and if a si Mediatrics, and Mini-courses. stand-up, we will "We've sold out every show develop a routin this year," said Laughtrack constructive criti Committee Chair Kerry Mini-courses, i Birmingham, an tsA senior. "We approximately 1,4 are expanding to weekly shows subjects ranging and pulling in comedians from to ballroom danci Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, not usually thoug and Canada." activities. Mediat Although committees like film co-op on car Laughtrack and Soundstage, a recent and classic of Ruth LittmannlWeekend irganizations ed. "We give me as they tudent wants to help them e and offer cism." ntroducing 000 students in from bartending ing each year, are ght of as uAc trics, the largest mpus, offers c films every weekend during the academic year. "We present a variety of genres and even show sneak previews," said LsA sophomore Kevin Sandler, Mediatrics chair. UAc does not rely solely on the popularity of its current committees. It tries to respond to students' needs and requests. Amaizin' Blue, a 12-member a capella co-ed singing group, proved it had such an appeal. "Amaizin' Blue wrote a proposal three years ago," said Engineering senior and Business Manager Sarah Jackson. "We were given a probationary membership and deemed a special project." The group was accepted as a committee last fall. "We are willing to do other things and are always open to enterprising students," said Cantor. "We try to fill a void and look out for the benefit of students." "We are not trying to compete with the Dance Department," said LSA senior Lindsey Yeager, Impact Dance chair. "We attract people who like dance and also who want to be entertained." Currently made up of 17' committees, UAc is one of three student organizations directly recognized by the Regents, the others being the Michigan Student Assembly and the Campus Broadcasting Network. Cantor, five vice-presidents, and the advisors comprise the executive committee that is responsible for allocating funds, selecting and overseeing committee chairs, and forming major policies. But name recognition remains UAC's biggest challenge. Vice presidents of publicity and promotions attempt to inform the campus of UAc's existence. The promotional Star Wars video is one way of getting uAc's name out; buttons and Union banners are more standard methods. "We've been trying to bring UAc more into the '80s, and now '90s, with promotions," said LsA senior Jeff Lerner, vice president of promotions. "I'm still working on this video that we'd like to show in residence halls at the beginning of each term." "I have no idea what uAC is," offered random LsA first-year student Matt Ciaravino. "I've heard of mini-courses but I don't know what they are." Cantor said, "Everyone knows the individual committees but not UAc as a whole. Everyone loved the Rolling Stone exhibit (a collection of photographs, celebrating Rolling Stone's 20th anniversary, brought to the Carrying the beacon of lyric poetry in the musical tradition of Sappho and William Blake, Allen Ginsberg, the most persevering Beat poet, will read and sing at Rackham Auditorium Friday night at 8 p.m., in an awareness booster for Jewel Heart, a Tibetan Buddhist meditation center in Ann Arbor. Ginsberg was first introduced to Buddhism by Jack Kerouac in 1950. He became more involved when he visited India for a year and a half in the early 1960s. Ginsberg's teacher since 1971, Ch6gyam Trungpa Rinpoche, is friends with Gelek Rinpoche, the lama who runs Jewel Heart. For Ginsberg, meditation helps to catch himself thinking. He explained, "I've always been interested in the mind, and poetry as a kind of probe into the mind itself, and consciousness." There are other techniques that Ginsberg sees as awareness- expanding, too. "Just as I was always interested in meditation, I was always interested in psychedelics and interested in art as a way of expanding awareness, he said. Ginsberg views his poems and his performances as "a way to introduce people to meditative poetry and meditation practice, and to that whole atmosphere of contemplative poetics." Ginsberg will read poetry expanding throughout his career, from the "Howl" period to contemporary material. Some new poems include "May Day (1988 to the Present)," which Ginsberg describes as "meditations on life and death." He also has some post-Panamanian material that he has added to an older poem. "I just keep adding stanza after stanza to it as the saga of this phony drug war goes on," he explained. Like William S. Burroughs, his fellow veteran of globetrotting, mind expanding, censorship evasion, and avant-garde existence in general, Allen Ginsberg sees the drug war in a different light than, say, nicotine .ddict drug czar William Bennett and the goons that allowed him to assume said position. "What we need here is glasnost, I think. More meditation, more calm, more glasnost, and less government hysteria and less government police state," Ginsberg said. He hypothesizes that one of the secret agenda items in the drug war is an extension of army and police surveillance over the civilian population. He also commented on the Michigan bill that would allow universities to create their own armed police forces: "Just as universities are getting liberated from police intervention in Eastern Europe, we're getting all the worst habits of the Stalinists." Saturday afternoon Ginsberg will conduct a workshop on the relationship between mind, meditation, and poetry. Ginsberg cites his and Kerouac's spontaneous verse as coming from the tradition of arts which utilize the "condition of silent appreciation." This is a method which is utilized in such diverse artistic expressions as Japanese haiku, calligraphy, the spontaneous songs of Tibetan yogis, and the swift, gnostic aphorisms of pre- Socratic writers like Heraclitus. Ginsberg stops in Ann Arbor on his way to the Naropa Institute in Boulder, Colorado. Naropa is the first accredited Buddhist college in the West. Ginsberg teaches there at the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics, which he and Anne Waldman founded in 1975. Last November, Ginsberg and composer Philip Glass performed at the Michigan Theater in another benefit for Jewel Heart. Ginsberg does benefits for other Buddhist organizations, as well as for gay organizations. After teaching at Naropa, Ginsberg will go to San Francisco to do a benefit for a Zen Buddhist AIDS hospice. Summarizing his plans for this weekend in Ann Arbor, Ginsberg said, "I'll read a lot of poetry, sing a lot of songs, do a lot of meditation, and hang around with a lot of Buddhists." Not wanting to exclude the non-Buddhists, he quickly added, "And whoever else is around that wants to hang around." Call 764-8572 for more info. by Greg Baise Allen Ginsberg contemplates and meditates as usual. This highter state of being is vividly apparent in his poetry and his I choice of charities Feel ik " . ' ;, '' " ,ii'rxf l out of' Call us to f frFl for Fal P rime .Hou 761-l ! I BEFORE Hours: Tues., Wed., Fri. 9-7 Thurs. 9-9 Sat. 9-5 Update Your Image EFRE IC1HAEL OWE BEAUTYSPA 2 A Place to Refresh and Renew An 996-5585 ne In addition to thousands of students,: the annual Homecoming parade attracts local celebrities including guitar legend Shakey Jake I 14 WEEKEND OmIa56, 1990