Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, July 21, 1983 Union ice cream shop opens for fair crowds By KAREN TENSA other Ann Arbor parlors. The first of six new fast food places in Seating for approximately four hun- the Michiganfirt o nnewafod esrday dred customers has also been coin- the Michigan Union opened yesterday pleted in the basement, which is - just in time for the art fair crowds, paneled in Union's original architec- The ice cream parlor in the Union's tural style. The area is air-conditioned, basement, part of a soon-to-be- a welcome relief for patrons sweating completed shopping mall, joined The out the July heat. Emblem Shop as the first of the new The other five shops, including a stores to open on the building's lower delicatessen, a hamburger shop, a level. vegetable and salad bar, a pizzeria, and THE NEW, stores are part of a $4.6 an ethnic food store featuring Greek million project to renovate the Union. food, are scheduled to open in Septem- "The renovated building and the new ber when the rush of students return to stores will receive more exposure campus. through the art fair," said John "Once the students find out about the Christodoulou, food service manager of changes, they'll come to- the Union," the Michigan Union. said one recent University graduate, The Stroh's ice cream served in the who was very enthusiastic about the new shop is priced competitively with addition of the ice cream parlor. Dolls sell fast at art fair- (Continued from Page i) range from $28 to $800 depending on the size and material. Dolls come in all shapes and sizes. The heads, hands and feet are made of papier-mache and the soft bodies are stuffed with polyester. ONE DOLL came equipped with a stuffedsilver fish. She was clad in white silk and her dress was covered with the words: "Circumstantial evidence is very strong - as when you find a trout in the milk. - Thoreau." Khanna's last customer shelled out $800 for the profound doll after which Khanna quietly dismantled her booth and turned over the street space to another South University artist. While some customers described Khanna's works as "cute" and "adorable" the artist says critics have called her dolls "haunting" and "other- worldly." "I STRIVE for ambiguity in my work, especially in their faces," she says. Khanna explained that from a distance a doll appears to be smiling, a little closer the face seems to look serious, and holding the doll close up it was clear the creation was in pain. "My customers will find after they get home that the dolls look different each time they look at them," Khanna says. Despite Khanna's intimate work creating the dolls, she says she feels no attachment to them. "THEY'RE NOT people to me," she says. "Customers will tell me they have named their dolls, but they're only ob- jects to me." There was one doll left when the ar- tist packed up her booth which Khanna says is reserved for a friend. "After (the dolls have) been in the fair, I kind of feel that they belong to the fair," she says, adding that she does not even own one of her dolls. Khanna, an Ann Arbor resident, exhibits exclusively at the summer art fair. She has never worked at any of the bigger fairs on the east coast which at- tract many city art galleries - although she says if she went they would "eat her work up." But Khanna displays her work at local museums such as the Peaceable Kingdom on East Liberty and the Hill Gallery in Birmingham. Many of Khanna's "fans" who lined up early this morning had seen her work from these galleries, but other patrons remembers her work from prevous art fairs, she says. TODAY High-flying cows IF YOU THOUGHT you saw some cows acting strangly in Ypsilanti lately, you might not have been dreaming. An elderly Ypsilanti farmer facing drug charges said he fed marijuana to his five cows to give them "the mun- chies" and make them lay down, police said. Clinton Farr was arrested by two state troopers as he was harvesting pot from a field behind his house, police said. According to police records, Farr said he mixed marijuana in the cows' feed since he once read that it will make them either lay down after eating or make them get the munchies and eat more, "making them more beautiful." Police confiscated 1,150 plants between 2 and 4 feet high, along with two 6-gallon containers and five grocery bags full of dried and processed marijuana, Sgt. Greg Ahoe said. Farr is scheduled to appear in Circuit Court Aug. 2 on charges of growing marijuana with intent to deliver. If he is convicted, he faces a maximum four-year prison term and a $2,000 fine. HAPPENINGS THURSDAY Highlight The Student Theater Arts Complex and the Michigan Union present the comedy "Chapter Two" by Neil Simon in the Union Ballroom tonight. Din- ner begins at 6:30 p.m., and the show starts at 7:30 p.m. Films CFT - The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, 7:30 p.m., The Seven Per-Cent Solution, 9:10 p.m., Michigan Theater. Performances , School of Music - Organ recital, Mary Ida Yost, 8 p.m., Alexander Music Bldg., EMU: Union Arts-, Music at Mid Day, selections from Ann Arbor's Comic Opera Guild with Tom Petiet, Pat Petiet, Marilyn Kennedy, 12:15 p.m., Pendleton Rm., Union. Speakers acromolecular Research Center - Toshimi Nishiyama, "Synthetic Polymer Membranes Used for Oxygen Concentration from Air for Medical Purposes," 4 p.m., 3005 Chem. Meetings Sailing Club- Brief meeting followed by sailing lecture, 7:45 p.m., 311 W. Engin. Med. Center Bible Study - 12:30 p.m., Rm. F2230 Mott Children's Hospital. Ann Arbor Libertarian League - 7 p.m., Dominick's basement, 812 Monroe. Miscellaneous Art Fair - 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Scottish Country Dancers - Beginning class, 7 p.m., intermediate class, 8 p.m., Forest Hills Community Center, 2351 Shadowood. League.- American Heritage Night, Stephen Foster, 5-7:15 p.m., Cafeteria. FRIDAY Films CFT - Caddyshack, 7 & 10:40 p.m., Meatballs, 9 p.m., Michigan Theater. Performances Performance Network - "Cabaret," 81p.m., 408 W. Washington. Student Theater Arts Complex - Summer Dinner Theater in the Union, "Chapter Two" by Neil Simon, dinner at 6:30 p.m., show at 7:30 p.m., Union Ballroom. Canterbury Loft - "The Bombs," 7 p.m., outdoors, Campus Chapel, cor- ner of S. Forest and Washtenaw. Speakers Reading and Learning Skills Center - Geraldine Markel, "The ABC's of the SAT: What Parents & Teenagers Want to Know About College Admission Tests," 12-1 p.m., 1610 Washtenaw. Meetings Duplicate Bridge Club - Open game, 7:15 p.m.; League. Ann Arbor Chinese Bible Class - 7:30 p.m., University Reformed Church. Korean Christian Fellowship - Bible study meeting, 9 p.m., Campus Chapel. Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice, 6-8 p.m., outside behind IM Bldg. Miscellaneous Art Fair - 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. I m si dt M $1 se The Michigan Daily Vol. XCIII, No. 25-S Thursday, July 21, 1983 (ISSN 0745-967X) News Room (313) 764-0552, 76- The Michigan Daily is edited ano DAILY. Sports Desk, 763-0376; Cir- anaged by students at the Univer- culation, 764-0558; Classified Adver- ty of Michigan. Published daily tising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. uesday through Sunday mornings uring the University year at 420 Editor in Chief ..................BARBARA MISLE aynard Street, Ann Arbor, Mnagi"Editor,....... .BETH AEN ichigan, 48109. Subscription rates; Opinion Page Editor ......... BILL HANSON .3 September through April (2 Arts Editors .......................MARE HODGES .mesters); $14 by mail outside Ann Sports Editor .....JIMOWOBMAN Arbor. Summer session published tri-weekly Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $3.50 in Ann Arbor; $5 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI. 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and sub- scribes to United Press Inter- national, Pacific News Service, Los Angles Times Syndicate, and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. 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