The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 19, 1990 - Page 19 CLASSIFIED ADSSoyo w nn b aStar? UCinema TICKETS ROUNDTRIP TICKET Detroit Metro- Boston. Dep.: 10/25 6:50 pm. Ret.: 10/29 7:30 am. Best offer! Call now! 665-0050. WOW - 2 TICKETS ANYWHERE in U.S. between now & 10/31-neg. Also fly to NYC for Thanksgiving day. Leave 11/21 return 11 26 early. Only $150. Call today. Call now. 769-0173. Leave a message. WANTED: 4-6 Iowa tickets, any section! Call now 995-02731!! WANTED: 2 TICKETS TO MSU AND 2 TICKETS TO IOWA STATE. Same section. Will pay good $...Call Tanya @ 998- 1833. ANNOUNCEMENTS ICE HOCKEY TEAM NEEDED to fill Tuesday night spot in Intramural sports program. 5 game season. $275 per team fee. Call 763-3562 for information. / f, 9 K7 " I,6f1I 'x£ Household goods, new & used Vintage clthing, jewelry 610to...10.4.spmSaa S. 214 E tMdopn Pak. Dowtown YpdafU 487-5890 or 971-7676 ROOMMATES FEMALE ROOMMATE. SHARE 2 BDRM. APT. at Woodbury Gardens. $280/ mo. + Util. Washer & dryer incl. Call 665- 5446, Eves. GREAT HOUSE, ROOMMATES, LOCATION. 524B S. Forest. Call Yan at 998-0572. RENT BY THE ROOM: 1 bedroom in to- tally remodeled duplex by Zingermans. Washer, dryer, central air. Unfumished. $275 per bedroom. Call Sherri 761-9766. ROOMMATE NEEDED for 2 bdrm. apt. nowl Call Brad at 665-1077. WINTER TERM housing (avail. sooner): 4 hip Grad dudes need 5th to fill large room in newly-renovated house on S. 4th Ave. Darts afternoons, music evenings. Cable, VCR, dishwasher, microwave, laundry. $334/mo. cti: hed, water. Call 995-8928. by Jessica Bucholtz M any times musicians would love to cut a demo tape, but cannot break into the music business because of the high cost. A place on campus exists where people can go and actually record in an eight-track recording studio - part of the Halfway Inn in East Quad, sponsored by the East.Quad Music Co-op. The East Quad Music Co-op is an extremely small and loose organi- zation that provides this opportunity for University students and members of the Ann Arbor community. This group was established in the early 1980s as a reaction to the monopoly that local radio stations have over the music business. A number of students expressed a. desire to record or perform so they made a deal with East Quad. Phil Myers, a Residential College junior, is one of the three individuals currently responsible for the group. He concisely explained the situation: ...the residence hall provides the space for the studio, and the Co-op runs shows and provides equipment." Over the past three years Myers has been witness to the outstanding growth and expansion of this small organization. He explains, "It has been really exciting to see how as time passes more and more people find out about our facilities and more and more people keep coming to record or perform." The Co-op has two main objec- tives. The first is to provide to the students and people of the commu- nity the services of an eight-track recording studio and a PA system. They are able to do shows for every- thing from playing at clubs to Uni- versity functions. The studio is pro- vided for the students at much lower rates than in a professional studio. The Co-op also teaches people how to use all of the equipment in a recording studio. In addition there will be an open mike night every Tuesday in The Halfway Inn in East Quad. This format allows people to perform but is limited to acoustic acts of only two people or less. Groups can come to record their own music to make demo tapes. The price of renting the studio is much lower than it would be in a normal studio. Also, there is usually a show once a weekend for those who like to perform. The Co-op would also like to have a show about once a semester in which bands come and perform for benefits. This helps fledgling bands because it gives them more publicity and the use of equipment at lower prices. There are also advantages for those who don't even wish to record or perform. As Myers puts it, "One of the best things about the organization is that it enables you to meet " a tremendous range of people who have done really neat things, and who are interested in the same things you are." He claims that one of his favorite things about it over the years has been that he has been able to meet many interesting musicians. This is one place to go to when one wants to escape from the pressures of being a student. If you are interested in the East Quad Music Co-op, call 764-5962. Sam Peckinpah's controversial Straw Dogs may be one of the most influential films of the 197Qs. Dustin Hoffman plays a passive American mathematician who moves to England with his wife, performed by Susan George. When Hoffman hires various villagers to do repairs on his house, they jeer at him and get fresh with his wife. Despite George's encouragement, Hoffman remains meek, much to her disappointment. When George's character is raped by local villagers, she doesn't tell her husband. But, goaded by his loyalty to a mentally retarded man who he comes to protect, Hoffman becomes sadistic. Apparently, he realizes that violence offers a deeper, more primal pleasure than even sex. Along with John Boorman's De- liverance, Straw Dogs seems to justify revenge and excessive mas- culinity in film - a trend which still exists, albeit in the distorted cinematic form of ex-Vets, ex-cops, NRA proponents and reclusive steroid-cases whose lives are rudely interrupted by Satanic cults and or the Mafia. (These roles are especially good for those hulking stars for whom English is a second language - i.e. Stallone.) But Peckinpah de- serves more credit. His concern is not with simple derivations of good and evil but the potential and incli- nation for violence in every man. Still, his view of women is archaic: when George's character is raped, the insinuation is that she deserved it. Straw Dogs is an important, prob- lematic film. Straw Dogs is showing on Friday in Aud. A at 9:30 p.m. - Gregg Flaxman Save the LP! . Daily Arts I I Career Planning and Placement presents.... ANN AiboRl 5TH AVE. AT LIBERTY 761.9700 DAILY $2.75 SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM & ALL DAY TUESDAY" (EXCEPTIONS) GOODRICH QUALITY THEATERS, INC. -- - - I -0 *- Harrison Ford CLINT EASTWOOD PRESUMED WHITE Cinema INNOCENT HUNTER Some BLACK Pa ad so - :-, eoleVAPwould kilHEAR2 a , or love. "Two Thumbs Up -Siskel & Ebert ANN ARBOR CIVIC - THEATRE r Presents. - A MUSICAL REVUE -- ."T Featuring Music by Thomas "Fats" Waller Based on an idea by Murray Horowitz and Richard Maltby, Jr. Directed and Choreographed by Linda Spriggs - Musical Direction by Calvin McClinton_--- October 24-27, 1990 at 8:00 p.m. Saturday Matinee at 2:00 p.m. At the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre For Ticket information, call 662-7282 "Religious Issues of the 1990s" Lecture by: Richard N.Ostling Religion Editor of TIME magazine Sunday, 7:15 p.m. Campus Chapel 1236 Washtenaw Ct. 668-7421/662-2402 one block south of CCRB/parking in Uof M Church St. structure Jan Harold Brunvand The Scholar of Urban Legends Featured speaker at Career Expo 1990 Wednesday, October 24 5:00- 6:00 p.. Pendleton Room, Wchigan Union Bmunvand, a syndicated oohmmet and mth c C'ursaIBrorted alnThe Md.,,~ Pat and T7 Jr o " obeirrias wil jerat I + ,,r d pav r 00t AS seen Brown Bag with Brunvand Noon - 1 p.m. hotted by Amerima Cultu~re Department Masse Mall Booksigning 1:00 - 2:30 p.m. 'I hosned by Commnunity Newscunter 330 East Liberty All inaraeted stz enu, faculty and stiff ar welc owe to attewd I REIAX SOUTH OF THE BORDERFORJUST .$79 i r J c . r , . it U r r ' Come by Ruby Tuesday any day of WHEN YOU'RE the eek and enjoy a F aima and Margarita READY TO RELAX. Combo for only $799 Any non-alcoholic Ruhv I I MEN'S DENIM JEAN SALE ORIG. 3800TO46 O19.99* NOW. CHOOSE FROM HUNDREDS OF PAIRS OF FASHION DENIM SLACKS INCLUDING STONEWASH, WHITEWASH AND MORE. *14.99 IF YOU APPLY FOR A JC PENNEY CHARGE WE WILL TAKE AN ADDITIONAL $5.00 OFF YOUR JEAN PURCHASE GET THE CREDIT YOU DESERVEII IF YOU APPLY FOR YOUR JC PENNEY CHARGE CARD AT BRIARWOOD MALL WE WILL GIVE YOU YOUR CHOICE OF A $5.00 OFF ANY PURCHASE CERTIFICATE OR A FREE 320Z. MUG. I II