PAGE TWO i THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE.TWO THE...C I.... .I.. TUESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1968 music M ' Others, 'Mediocre' Havana Produces 'U.S. Imperial By MICHAEL BEEBIE Sergio Mendes and Brasil '66 presented an excellent concert at Hill Auditorium Saturday night. The appreciative audience was unpleasantly surprised, however, when, a classical guitarist and a mediocre comedian were given the first half of the concert. The words "And now the Ser- gio Mendes Show presents" in- troduced guitarist Vince Maca- luso. He gave a mysteriously un- magical tour of guitar music from the 16th to the 20th century. His performance was highlighted by technical dexterity and lack of in- spiration. Two flamenco pieces were espe-. cially obnoxious. Instead of con- centrating on the music, Macaluso employed facial mannerisms and r e h e a r s e d foot-tapping and guitar-thumping which ruined the integrity of the compositions. Another "And now the Sergio Mendes Show presents" produced comedian Frank Welker. At his best Welker reminded me of an entertainer at a stag party. His poor imitations and bawdy skits brought him a few guffaws and stridently polite applause. The last "And now the Sergio Mendes Show presents" finally in- troduced Brasil '66 and the main man Sergio Mendes on piano. All bowed, Mendes sat at the piano, and everyone exploded into "The Constant Rain". Mendes was PT'P's Play To Feature A lbergheuti The Professional Theatre Pro- gram announced today that Jean Pierre Aumont and Carla Alber- ghetti will star in "On a Clear Day You Can See Forever" to be presented March 4-5 in Hill Aud. for the "Play of the Month" series. Aumont, internationally ac- claimed for his many varied stage and screen roles, displayed his continental charm and savoir faire opposite. the late Vivien Leigh in the Broadway musical "Tovarich." Aumont is perhaps best known in Hollywood for his screen roles with Leslie Caron in "Lill," and he has appeared in motion pic- tures opposite many of Holly- wood's glamorous stars, including his late wife, Maria Montez. Auiont will portray the role for which John Raitt was origin- ally scheduled in this musical ex- ploration of extrasensory percep- tion. Miss Alberghett scored a per- sonal trum~ph in her touching portrayal of Lili in the national company of the musical "Car- nival," a role which her sister Anna Maria created on Broadway. She later took over the role in the Broadway production. Miss Alberghetti has appeared in the nation's. most famous supper clubs, and theatre audiences throughout the country have thrilled to her performances in such musicals as "West Side Story" and "The Student Prince." HI-Fl STUDIO TVSTEREO RENTALS STUDENT RATES 121 West Washington Downtown-Across from the Old German 761-0342 pushing beautiful sounds out of the piano with his whole body and the audience was finally hav- ing the splendid time that was guaranteed for all. Most of the program was de- voted to the music on Mendes's two albums - "One Note Samba", "The Joker" - all' were excellent- ly performed. The highpoint of the concert, however, was a medley of the songs from the film "Black Or- pheus". It began innocuously enough. Mendes gave the singers percussion instruments: He played a simple ryhthm on his percussion instrument. But then another performer played another rhythm and the wild cacophony of the carnival music was electrifying the audience. Maybe the electricity was only from Mendes. His superb solos and Brazilian "soul-shouts" cre- ated an intensity felt by the audi- ence and not only by the two singers, drummer, and bass play- er who comprise the remainder of Brasil '66. In the two years Brasil '66 has been in existence, Mendes has made numerous personnel changes to achieve an excellently balanced and unified group. He has synthesized Brasilian bossa nova, blues, and even corny Tiajuana Brass (much in the same way Beatles have synthe- sized rock, blues, and folk) to produce an expressive and per- sonal music. I only wish Mendes' agent would allow Brasil '66 its own Sergio Mendes Show. Without guitarist Vince Macaluso and "comedian" Frank Welker, Sergio Mendes and Brasil '66 wouldn't! need to be associated with the neo-vaudvillian g i i i i c k s of mediocre performers.1 By JUAN ONIS (C) New York Times reprintect by permission HAVANA - A "cultural" exhi- bition was opened to the public today, presenting a violently "anti-imperialist" view of the United States through pop art psychedelic effects and other modern audio-visual techniques The exhibition was dedicated to the "third world" of underdevel- oped countries as part of the In- ternational Culture Congress un- der way here. The exhibition at the Galeria Havana runs the length of a city block off Ha- vana's 23rd Street. Its manipula- tion of symbols identified with the United States, such as comic strips, brand advertising, and Tarzan films, produces the effect of a grotesquely "anti-capitalist' Coney Island. There is even the equivalent of a Tunnel of Horrors in which skeletal figures and baneful howls symbolize the hungry of the world and the victims of war. The final part of the exhibition is a United States combat film showing a soldier of the Green Berets, or Special Forces, wildly firing a submachine-gun and throwing hand grenades into~ a peasant's shack. The pictures CBS To Show Smoking Test CBS News will telecast "The National Smoking Test" over the CBS Television Network tonight from 10-11 p.m. The hour broadcast will test the smoking and nonsmoking public with regard to their knowl- edge and attitudes concerning cigarette, pipe and cigar smoking. Among the questions to be dealt with are questions related to the dangers of tobacco, reasons smok- ers do smoke, the dangers of smoking in different ways, and diseases attributed to smoking. ENDS WEDNESDAY rig CAMPU" DIAL 8-6416 flashing a spastic stop and go se- Hundreds of delegates to the S quence to the recorded sounds of cultural congress and official F bombs, machine-gun fire and guests filed through the exhibi- A - drums. A montage of 36 identical tion last night to see this example i faces of Ernesto Che Guevara of "revolutionary" mass commun- d y slowly turns over a quotation from ication. It made an impact. The e the late guerilla leader's writings viewers alternately laughed and i takes the place of the pictures: shuddered as they took the 15- K r " minute walk through the gallery. s "And what role are we, the e-, The exhibition was the work of S ploited of the earth, to play?"' ru fyug rit.so- a group of young artists. spon- Then the answer appears. It is sored by the National Council of a a picture of a Vietcong brandish- Culture and Ministry of Educa- a ing a rifle and a sign that says: tion. a t "Vietnam - many, many, many, The first sequence in the exhi- a many." bition is a pop art cartoon of ' e eit Writer-In-Residence Howe, Praises Dying Modernismm (continued from Page 1) modern period confines itself to But Howe insisted "that behind questions. After a certain point, i s this extreme subjectivity there is the essence of modernism reveals c to be found an equally extreme itself in the persuasion that the M sense of historical crisis." He true question cannot and need not t pointed to what he saw as an un- be answered; it need only be wv precedented assumption that there asked over and over again, for- v - is something unique in the experi- ever in new ways."''o ence of our age. "The modernist Howe said that "in a modern- c i sensibility posists a blockage, if is culture the problematic as a t not an end, of history. style of inquiry and existence be- Howe noted as a consequence that "the problematic is adhered - of this a "bitter impatience with comes dominant." He pointed out the whole aparatus of cognition to, not merely because we live and the assumption of ration- in a time of uncertainty when ality. And there is a hunger to traditional beliefs and absolute break past the bourgeois propr- standards, having.disintegrated, iety and self containment of tra- give way to the makeshifts of ditional culture, toward a form of relativism, but also because it is absolute personal speech, a liter- considered good, proper, and even ature deprived of ceremony and beautiful that men should live in stripped to revelation." The writer psychic discomfort." takes on "the enormous ambition In these circumstances "sincer- not to remake the world, which ity becomes the last ditch defense r is seen as utterly recalcitrant, but i for men without belief, and in its rather to reinvent reality." name absolutes can be toppled, Howe contended that "modern- morality dispersed, and intellec- ism despairs of human history, tual systems dissolved." abandons the idea of historicity, He concluded that "heroically falls back upon notions of uni- the modern sensibility struggles versal human condition or a rhy- with its passion for eternal re- f thm of eternal recurrence, yet newal, even- as it keeps searching within its own realm is committed for ways to secure its own end." to change, turmoil, ceaseless rec- But he pointed out that the fate reation H o w e described his awaiting 'modernism' is "publicity dynamism as one of "asking and and sensation, the kind of savage learning not reply." He said the parody which may indeed be the past was devoted to answers, the only fate worse than death." AMERICAN PREMIERE ! CINEMA II PRESENTS: ALAIN RESNAIS' CODINE The third film by the producer-director-editor team I who made LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD and HIROSHIMA MON AMOUR. Directed by Henri Colpi.1 GRAND PRIZE, CANNES FILM FESTIVAL BEST SCREENPLAY, BEST COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY, CANNES FILM FESTIVAL SHORT: CHAPTER 3, FLASH GORDON Friday and Saturday 75c 7 and 9:15 P.M.-Aud. A, Angell Hall THIS WEEK WEDNESDAY, JAN. 17 EXPERIMENTAL FILMS: PROGRAM NO. 1, with Kenneth Anger, Maya Deren, Sidney Peterson, George Kuchar, and Jack Smith. THURSDAY & FRIDAY, JAN. 18 & 19 BROTHER ORCHID with Humphrey Bogart, Edward G. Robinson, and Ann Southern. SATURDAY & SUNDAY, JAN. 20 & 21 { A1 NfTTF Ist' Show Superman, Donald Duck, and Foxy Fox, representing three Lmerican oil companies compet- ng for petroleum rights in an un- erdeveloped country. "I better go see what's happen- ng in the third world," says Clark rent with Esso written across his shirtfront. "That's a job for uperman." Then there are sequences from Tarzan film that run forward nd backward and are edited so s to satirize the "white suprem- cy" of Johnny Weissmuller in elation of African tribesmen. The "tunnel of horrors" was at is center a cave in which Amer- can brand names are displayed rhile jukeboxes play dissonant angles and television sets alteo- ately display luxury advertise- nents and faces of emaciated [hildren. Then follow huge figuers evok- ng race disturbances in American ities. There is also a helmeted detro-Goldwyn-Mayer lion that urns into President Johnson 'earing a helmet and carrying a talkie-talkie. Then comes a ,mbling group of cadaverous,I Lildlike bodies, reminiscent of he Buchenwald or Auschwitz ex- ermination camps. - DISCUSSION WITH RETURN VOLUNTEERS TUES., JAN. 16-7:30 P.M.-3G-UNION OPEN MEETING--EVERYONE INVITED' DELTA PHI EPSILON (Men's Professional Fraternity) PEACE CORPS DIAL 5-6290 a ltd= Ai m"IM1,91 J SHOWS AT 1,3,5, 7, 9 P.M. "The Tension Is Terrific!" -N.Y. TIMES "Keeps You Glued To Your Seat !" -MICHIGAN DAILY WAIT UNTILDARK WEDNESDAY IS LADIES' DAY I LAST DAY! STEADY WORK and POLITICS and the NOVEL by IRVING HOV IE H BOWL J. 15-28 ROUND TAE ON SALE IN THE FISI READ HOWE N( IRVING HOWE WRITER-IN-RESIDENCE JAN .4 3LE: I Vth Forum 210 S. F IFTH AVE.-761-9700 Between Washington and Liberty Thursday Peppercorn--Wormser Festival 1 r MONDAY TUESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY 7:00-9:00 .. 3 3DialWA34-178 WEDNESDAY SAT RDAY SUN DAY 1-3-5-7-9 NEW SHOW TIME POLICY: CONVENIENT MATINEES Every Day-LATE SHOWS at 11:00 Every Fri. & Sat. MON. thru THUR. Shows, 2:30, 7:00, 9:00. F RI., SAT. & SUN. continuous from 1:00 FRI. & SAT. 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00, 11 :00-SUN. 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00 ENDS TODAY-VITTORIO GASSMAN, MASTER OF IMPERSONATION in "LOVE AND LARCENY" STARTS TOMORROW-2 DAYS ONLY-WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY THE MAKERS OF "BONNIE AND CLYDE" PRESENT WARREN BEATTY He's a crook, an embezzler, a con man, a forger... * wY. MRISCH CORPORATIONin presentso, s: as A WALTER MIRISCH PRODUCTION " D COLORbyDeLuxe PANAVISION Arnsamericaa SOON! "THE HAPPIEST MILLIONAIRE" -.4 "'SUPERB! Stunningly put to- gether and uncommonly well played! Arthur Penn has put extraordinary scenes on film! Warren Beatty's performance is original and brilliant!"! -NEWSWEEK ''Arthur Penn has made an American film that raised the N.Y. Film Festival I DOORS OPEN 6:30 NATIONAL' eENERAL CORPORATION q FOX EASTERN TRATRES1 i FOH VILLGE 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769-1300 STARTS' leave the childrenI VERY LAST DAY Jungle Book 7:00-9:45 Charlie Cougar 8:20 Only TOMORROW home. to rare heights, a brilliant screen work, visually exciting and intellectually satisfying. "'Mickey One' is told in stark, fast-mov- ing nightmare terms that sparkle with cinematic excitement and is marked by total artistry. "A rich film, and its rewards are equally rich! MOVIE-MAKING AT ITS BST!!! -JU6iTCR/ST -4 ; =:i ' f ELI TAYLOR BRANDO IN THE JOHN HUSTON-RAY STARK PRODUCTION REFLECTIONS INA GOLDEN EYE fnlfl i Ir TiI i11 r*i a nnin "'THE MOST EXCITING FILM OF THE NEW YORK FILM FESTI- VAL! Arthur Penn's most brilliant movie...his most daring! Warren Beatty gives the best perfor- mance of his career!" E/ -JOSEPH GEMS. Long Island Ne wsday~ f U WITH SPECIAL GUEST STARS FRI DAY, JANUARY 26 8:30 P.M. COBO ARENA- Columbia Pictures presents W~ARE Bmnr mR ATTY I I I : < I