ION. IN viewv * People did fly African Americans have experi- enced an enduring struggle, and, throughout their history in this country, progress has been difficult. However, beyond the obvious op- pressive conditions imposed on African Americans, there has been a spirit that originated in Africa. This embodiment of pride and freedom is S the theme of The People Could Fly, which was performed at the Mendelssohn Theatre over the week- end. Proceeding in chronological order, the show conveys events that occured in African-American history with song, dance and descriptive nar- rative. Beginning with traditional African spirituals and progressing through a present-day rap song, the performance takes an enlightened view of a culture that is often mis- represented in annals of American history. Act one begins with "The Bird Dance," a free floating dance repre- senting the peace and harmony exist- ing in Africa before these people were drawn into slavery. "Sarah- song" is an expressive number de- picting the fate of a young black mother. The dancers move in sym- bolic form to represent the pain felt during this time. The effect is highly visual, and continual movement en- hances the piece. "Camptown Ra- ces," an act representing the Amos 'n' Andy era of African-American society, makes use of stereotypical depictions perpetuated during this pe- riod. A humorous number with a clowning group of Black musicians stumbling all over each other, "Camptown Races" uplifts the pre- vious acts of somber song and brings flavor to the perfomance. Act two begins with the mourn- ful "Swing Low." With an eruption of song at the rear of the theater, the performers emerge into the aisles, clapping and singing fervently. The group rises onto the stage and begins to speak of civil rights. The final act begins with a rap song accompanied by a slew of dancers and flows into the grand finale, which involves the entire company. "We Can Fly" pro- vides the finale with a colorful and optimistic message but does not re- ally end the musical as powerfully as it could have. The overall perfor- mance holds the attention of the au- dience, but fails to get one moti- vated. With the energy of some of The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 26, 1990 - Page 7 Tracy Mishkin, Daily's own Jay Pinka to read at Guild by Mark Swartz TRACY Mishkin has found that minding her own business has gotten harder since she moved to Ann Arbor. Tonight at Guild House, Mishkin will read from Minding My Business, her recent book of poems which chronicles her social and political awakening that has come about since she began her graduate studies at the University and became involved in pro- choice activities and The Ann Arbor Food Co-op. "It's something I came to late in life," Mishkin explains, referring to her incipient awareness. "My last book of poems, In a Strange Country, was full of nature and being alone in nature." The new work, in challenging contrast, takes on issues ranging from recycling ("The Recycling Deity") to her own experience visiting Dachau. The closing lines of "In Dachau" read, "I was glad to take the road back to Munich/ thinking about words, what they mean, thinking/ I could never live there, but people do, people do." Ann Arbor's unique atmosphere has also influenced Jay Pinka, the other poet reading at Guild tonight. She has learned, she says, "to try and communicate more, to work towards being accessible." The thriving poet's community here, including Guild House and The Yawp student literary magazine, has given her a critical audience sharp enough to tell her when her penchant for obtuseness has gotten out of hand. The lessons she has learned have helped her to produce playful lines like these from "Walking Into Where Rob Lies Half-Sleep Deep": Shriek-sleep could walk on/ your white, moist eyelids/ in freakish/ -fox trot-/ Of the unwary conscience. Today, the tables are turned on Pinka since on most Mondays her byline graces the Guild House poetry previews in the Daily. But Pinka is u poet in her own right, with a finely - if idiosyncratically - tuned ear for "the music of words crashing against one another." On a personal note, I have known Jay Pinka over a number of years and a number of hairstyles, even driven her cobalt-blue Yamaha scooter on Cross Street one afternoon, and can say hers is a richly imaginative young mind with a lot to say and an especially unique way of saying it. TRACY MISHKIN and JAY PINKA read from their work tonight at Guild Itouse, 802 Monroe, at 8:30 p.m. The People Could Fly, "a musical celebration of the African American. Spirit," was presented over the weekend by the University of Michigan Black Media Coalition and Access Productions. the pieces, it is surprising how pas- sive the audience response was. Aside from some audio problems and technical difficulties, The Peo- ple Could Fly is an energetic and in- teresting historical perspective of CLASSIFIED ADS HELP WANTED ROOMMATES ABOUT 1 BLOCK from UM. Tower Plaza, female to share for Fall/Winter. 482-1908. FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to share a bdrm. in 2 bdrm. at. $230/mo. Nonsmoker. *Fall/Winter 90-1. 668-8905. FEMALE TO SHARE 2 bdrm. apt. with 3 female undergrads. $248.75/mo. 769-6866. GREEK MALE doesn't want to live in frat house. Seeks single with 4 or 5 arty-minded guys or girls. Call Dave 761-8794 anytime. LOVE A LIFE OF LUXURY? Share fully rendered condo in Tower Plaza. $600/mo. Avail mid-May. Fern. pref. Nicole 485-8931. MALE RMTE to share beautiful 2 bdrm. apt. Own rm w/bath & walk-in closet. N. Cmps, Indy in apt, free unlim. 8kn2/patio/pool/hea th club/more! Alan 747- COMPUTER MERCHAN- DISE MACINTOSH 512K corputer for sale. $600. Call 995-0119. Best offer. GREEK GAB GREEK SOCIAL CHAIRS: Take advantage of our spring specials! Great Formal Ideas plus lots more! The Cloz Co. Call Jon 994-4045. PERSONAL * * ATTENTION: Supreme Course Tran- scripts, the LS&A lecture notetaking service, has following notes avail. at Alpha- rahics Printsho s at 715 N. Univ.: Anthro 6rBio 100, Bio 224, Bio 325, Class Arch 222, Comm 103, Econ 201, Econ 202, Econ 396, Econ 401 Geol 100 Geol 101, Geol 107, Geol 115, Geol 125, Dist 110, Hist 160, Hist 161, Hist 333, Hist 366, Hist Art 272, Physics 125, Physics 126, Physics 140, Physics 240, Physiol 101, Poli Sci 140, Poli Sct 353, Polt Sct 396, Psych 170, Psych 171 Psych 331, Soc 467, Soc 468. Call 3-681 for info. One stop for everything from the drugstore. Candy and pop, too. -illage Apothecary, 1112 S. University. RESERVE YOUR PASSOVER/Seder dinner now, Chabad House - warmth, joy. 995-3276. STRESSED?? Try a therapeutic massage!l Debra K Rosek, CRT 663-7547. LOST & FOUND LOST: 3/13 Gold necklace with two charms. Please call Liz 764-9770. LOST: GLASSES in black case on South U. near Uno's. Reward: 662-1474. LOST: GOLD WATCH. Between East Quad and Angell Hall. Tremendous sentimental value. Reward. No questions asked. Call Ali- cia 994-9197. African Americans. The African spirit prevails throughout the musi- cal and stresses the importance of cultural unity and the maintenance of this spirit in African-American soci- ety today. -Jennifer Rosen HELP WANTED FULL TIME KINDERGARTEN AIDE be- ginning Sept. '90 to June '91. 8:15 am to 3:30 m. Hebrew language exp. preferred. Send letter or resume to Hebrew Day School 2937 Birch Hollow Rd, Ann Arbor, 48108. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTORS WANTED. Part-time. Must be great with children. Previous gymnastics experience necessary. Call Gym America at 971-1667. JOBS FOR PEACE. Spring into a career in Social Justice Activism. Sane/Freeze is hiring for summer and beyond. Salary, paid vaca- tion, fun folks. Call 663-3913 for interview. 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Ca REGENCY TRAVEL, 665-6122, ask for Ann or David. $50 OFF any North West Airlines flights. Fly before Apr. 6. Call Dave 930-9788 CRUISE THROUGH THE SOVIET UNION this spring or summer. Program for interac- tion with Soviets. Low pnce. For more info, call Rachelle at 665-9436. EUROPE SPECIALS: Amsterdam fr. $449;Frankfurt fr. $449; Glasgow fr. $469. London fr. $379; Paris fr. $46 IntemationA Student/Faculty cards $10. Eurail Flexipass fr. $198. REGENCY TRAVEL 665-6122. Ask for Dan or Deb. FOR YOUR LOWEST OVERSEAS AIR- FARESask for Student Travel Network, 800-36 -1929. HEADING FOR EUROPE THIS SUM- MER? Jet there form DIT, ORD, or CLE for no more than $229, or from the East Coast for no more than $160 with AIRHITCH (r) (as reported in NY Times, Let's Go! & Con- sumer Rerts.) For info: AIRHITCH (r) 212-864-00. ORIENT SPECIALS: Bangkok fr. $967- Ilong Kong fr. $887; Osaka fr. $919; Seoul fr $865- Singapore fr $999- Taipei fr. $845. REGEN'CY TRAVEL 665'-6122. Ask for Dan or Deb. RIDE IN STYLE & PAY LESS than the De- troit Airport commuter van for groups of 3-7. $40 ea. way - door to door limo. REGENCY TRAVEL 665-6122. Ask for Vivian or David. ROUNDTRIP AIR - Anywhere in US. Cheap!! Call Jim at 973-7012 and make of- fer. SPRING FEVER? WINTER BLUES? Get away to a log cabin in the woods. Sleeps 2-4. Boats & canoes included. Outdoor hot tub option. $3 8-58 nightly. Reduced weekday rates. 616-276-9502. STUDENT TRAVEL BREAKS at STAMOS TRAVEL For best European/Greece airfares. We're at Kerrytown Mall. Call us *663-4400. ABLE PEOPLE to work outside clean upnite & day time work dependable hard working. Others need not apply. 677-1754. ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - Fisheries. Earn $600+/week in cannery, $8,000 - $12,000+ for two months on fishing vessel.Over 8,000 openings. No experience necessary. MALE OR FEMALE. F or 68- page employment booklet send $6.95 to M&L Research, Box 840b8, Seattle, WA 98124 - 30 day, 100% money back guamatee. A TTENTION: Excellent income for home assembly work. Info. call 504-646-1700 Dept. P2720. BABYSITTER WANTED TUE. & THURS. evenings. $3.50/hr. 8 y.o. boy. Non-smoker. Transportation needed. Call 971-1667. BE ON T.V. many needed for commercials. Now hiring all ages. For casting info. Call (615) 779-7111 Ext. T-797. BE YOUR OWN BOSS 10 Part-time postions avail. for aggressive, motivated people. If you have the courage - Call our 24 hr. recorded message.351-4462 Business-minded students, do not miss this opportunity! CAMP COUNSELORS M/F Outstanding slim-down camps: tennis, dance, slimnastics, WSI, athletics, nutrition/dietetics. Age 20+, 7 weeks. Camp Camelot on Univ. Cam- puses, Mass., Penn., Calif. Contact: Michele Friedman, 947 Hewlett, North Woodmere, NY 11581, 1-800-421-4321. CAR BILLER Full-time position for poised individual who works well with others in pressure situation with ever-changingdead- lines. The position requires accurate typing skills of 45-50 wpm; and ability to use a 10 key calculator accurately and an ability to work independtly. Hours are 9am-6pm Mon- Fri, full benefits included. Apy im person Mon-Fri at the cashier's office tween 2pm and 6pm. EOE Affirmative Action Em- r. 2448 Washtenaw, Ypsilanti MI 417. DO YOU HAVE WHAT IT takes to run your own business this summer? Student painters needs energetic college students to manage franchises across Michigan. Earn an average of $7500 and possibl' eam internship credits. Call Jeff at 1-800-54 -3792. EARN $300 to $500 / wk. by reading books at home. Call 615-473-7440 Ext. B587. EARN $9/HR: TA's grads and seniors needed as notetakers Ior university lecture notetaking service. Call Jeff at Supreme Course Transcripts 996-2386. EQUIPMENT MANAGERS NEEDED- Outdoor Recreation Rental Center. Dept. of Rec. Sports. May thru August. $4.60/hr. If interested call 763-4560. EXPERIENCED, ENERGETIC, CRE- ATIVE Babysitter for 18-month old. 25/hrs. wk. near North Campus. Own transportation. Satn idApri.$/hr5520 HELP WANTED ORGANIZER WANTED- the Graduate Em- ployees Organization (GEO) seeks to hire an organizer to organize & lead shop dpartmental) meetings, attend Steering ommittee & Membership mtgs., educate membership on GEO contract & history & recruit stewards & leaders. Position requires communication & organizational skills & good working knowledge of U-M & p rob- lems faced by graduate students. Grad stu- dent preferred. a will be .40 fraction & candidacy tuition for Spr. or Summer '90 to winter'91. Call GEO at 995-0221. OVERSEAS JOBS. $900-2000/mo. Summer, yr. round. All countries all fields. Free info. Write IJC, P Box 51-M101, Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. PART TIME BABYSITTING afternoons be- ginning April 30. One child 6-mos old. Some experience required. Canton 459-3262. SEMEN DONORS NEEDED for a well es- tablished infertility clinic. If you are a male between 21-40 years of age and a graduate student or a professional, '10" or taller we need you. Donors are aid $50 dollars per ac- ceptable specimen. For further information, please call 434-4766. SITTER FOR TODDLER, May-Aug.: Weds. 9-3 & Fri. 8-1; own car; 665-4719. STUCCHI'S- Needs responsible students to work evenings & lunch shifts at Washtenaw Ave. location (need vehicle). Apply at Washtenaw Ave. location. STUDENT NEEDED TO WORK part-time in Molecular Biology Lab at the Medical School. Call 747-2964. SUMMER JOBS All Land/Water Sports Prestige Children's Camps Adirondack Mountains near Lake Placid Call 1-800-343-8373 THE MICHIGAN THEATRE House Manager: Responsible for evening op- erations and staff supervision. Management experience preferred, 30 hrs/wk. Work study accepted. Send resume or apply in person 603 E. Liberty Ann Arbor, 48104. 668-8397. eoe THE PRINCETON REVIEW --the nation's #1 test prep service - seeks SAT instructors for sprin gsummer. 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DONT GAMBLE WITH YOUR FUTURE Find the perfect place to sublet for the sum ner in the The Michigan Daiy's SUMMER SUBLET issue. Deadline: March 28 $29 per ad 4 I I I I. STUDENT SHIPPING AND STORAGE " safe, convenient and inexpensive shipping to New York and New Jersey " summer storage in Ann Arbor JOIN THE MET MOVERS TRADITION ! CALL DAVID 663-3151 OR ADAM 663-2191 ADVERTISER PHONE ADDRESS STUDENT I.D. NUMBER INVOICE We Can Help DEADLINE: MARCH 28 You Can Help Publication: April S TO PLACE A SUMMER SUBLET AD: eMail in or bring in person e"Help the Homeless: to the Student Publications For every 3 cans of Building, 420 Maynard, Ann food you bring in, Arbor, MI 48109 receive $1 off the " Cash, money orders, orjn- price of your ad tawn checks only! (Limit 9 cans, $3) oNo refunda a "Anet S20 ArTATCT71