TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1967 music= French Orchestra: Listless, Thin, Timid INCLUDES USSR, NATO: Romania Calls for Withdrawal Of Foreign Troops in Europe * AERIAL VIEW OF PLAZA between the Clements Library (left) and the new addition to the general library shows use of shrubbery and open space contrasting to vertical development of 1977 campus. FutureCampus To Create New Look of Malls Parks Variations on a Theme by Haydn .........Brahms Concerto No. 4 for Piano ' and Orchestra ... Beethoven Pictures at an Exhibition .Moussorgsky-Ravel By JAMES SVEJDA In the last few years it has become almost axiomatic that it takes a good European orchestra! to make you realize how really good American orchestras are. I suppose by that same token, it takes a lousy European orchestra to make you realize that the Sandusky Philharmonic isn't real- ly so bad after all. The French National Orchestra gave a poor performance at Hill Auditorium Monday night. Although they weren't exactly lousy, there was a certain listless- ness about the French National Orchestra's playing. It was almost as if they were leafing through an old copy of "Business Week" in- stead of some of the most in- vigorating music in the reper- toire. Especially disappointing were the woodwinds. Consistent- .y thin and timid, they played with the enthusiasm and indi- viduality of a row of over-cooked string beans. But in all fairness, I think that the "National" business probably led many people to ex- pect too much, that "National" somehow meant they were the best that France has to offer. Anyone who has heard the La- moreux or the Paris Conservatory Orchestra knows that this sim- ply isn't the case. The Brahms "Variations on a Theme by Haydn" got them off on the wrong foot. Conductor Maurice Le Roux' sanely-con- (Continued from Page f) "It's hardest to get funds for the 'floor' of the campus-the planting and pavements," explained Hak- ken. "Alumni are usually more willing to donate funds for build- ings and federal grants are not available for grounds. Hopefully the situation will improve." Wilbur K. Pierpont, vice-presi- dent and chief financial officer, recently gave his faculty and stu- dent advisory boards a graphic example of choices the University faces. For the amount of money that would develop a plaza at the new general addition, he said, an- other floor could be placed on the addition. Forego Amenities "Our planning decisions often tend to try for the most from our money," commented Sinnott. "In the process some of the amenities like walkways and greenery may get shunted aside. "Those pleasant little plazas may cost only $250,000 each, but several of them really add up," he con- tinued. "The University could pay more attention to maintenance of present structures." The sub-campus will be linked by three major walkways that run like spokes of a wheel through the heart of the ceritral campus. As major University units like the A&D School and engineering col- lege begin gradual moves to North Campus and as new construction is approved, the sub-campuses will begin to take on their distinctive characteristics. To the northeast will be located primarily biological and health science buildings. To the south, the Law Quad, business adminis- tration and old A&D building will become the focus for older profes- sional students. Physical sciences will gravitate around the P&A and humanities will largely take over buildings around Angell Hall and the old Ad building. "The faculties don't like to be scattered all over the map," Sin- nott remarked. "They like to- getherness." Math Building' The mathematics department, for example, currently has offices in Angell Hall, East and West En- gineering and the computing cen- ter. Under the sub-campus plan, a single departmental building will be placed on the site of North Hall with computing equipment oc- cupying the first floor. The Math Building is already fourth on the list of construction of priorities. The evolution of self-contained' sub-campuses poses the advantages of small-scale organization against potential isolation of major seg- innts of the University commu- nity from each other. "It's difficult to have it both, ways," commented McKevitt. For- ty per cent of the students have already passed the liberal arts mixed and entered professional specialization. "It doesn't follow that if classes were scattered all over the map that students would mix any bet- ter. Actually it's up to each stu- dent to make the most use of the campus for himself," he added. ceived performance was resound- ingly sabotaged by the sole obo- ist, the gentleman I'm sure Danny Kaye had in mind when he defined the oboe as "an ii wind that nobody blows good." This sounds picayunish and hy- percritical, I know. But the poor man's wobbly, piercing tone was actually THAT irritating. Eugene Istomin settled nerves considerably in the Beethoven concerto. Large-scaled and dra- matic, his performance was first- rate. Here, too, the orchestra seemed to brighten a little, es- pecially in the second movement where the strings played with considerable finesse and convic-! tion. Even though the orchestra slumped silghtly in the finale, Istomin's gusto and superb sense of contrast made it an exciting and noteworthy performance. The "Pictures at an Exhibition" opened the second half of the concert in much the same way the Brahms had opened the first. The work begins with a charming "Promenade," the image of Mous- sorgsky himself walking from picture to picture in the gallery. If Le Roux was trying to give the impression of a leisurely stroll, the effect was almost entirely lost in the thickly-tongued legato that made it seem like the com- poser must have been wearing hip boots. But curiously enough, as things got better midway in the first half of the concert, they began to improve in the middle of the "Pictures." After having lost all faith in the woodwinds, the saxa- phonist surprised me with a beau- tiful. solo performance in the "Bydlo." And this was quickly followed by c r is p, chattering "Ballet of Chicks in Their Shells." In fact, of the last seven pictures only the "Catacombe" section did not quite come off (duelargely to a lack of tension and some shaggy brass attacks). Ravel's "Alborada del Grazio- so" was given as an encore. Istomin's performance aside, the concert seemed for the most part little more than a routine run-through of the music. I real- ize that after being exposed to the orchestras of New York, Cleveland and Philadelphia one might tend to be unduly harsh on routine. But the sorry truth is that routine is still routine. And this concert, a good exam- ple, was nothing to write home about. "PERFECT FROM TOP I BOTTO1M"l -JUDITH CRIST NBC-TV UNITED NATIONS ()-Com- munist Romania, a maverick in the Soviet bloc, called yesterday for withdrawal of all foreignl troops. from the countries of Eastern and Western Europe. The proposal, put forward in a speech to the UN General Assem- bly by Romanian Deputy Foreign Minister Mircea Malitza, would apply to Soviet forces in Eastern Europe as well as the troops of the North Atlantic Treaty Organ-I ization in Western Europe. Malitza told the assembly that "the process of full normalization of inter-European relations, based upon the equality of rights of all states, imperatively calls for the withdrawal of non - European troops from Europe." Union Fines Members For Violating TV Strike Draft Law Change Shrinks Peace Corps Doctor Supply WASHINQTON (P-The Peace "In the past, we had up to 400 Corps, cut'off from its'source of doctors who were completing doctors by the new draft law, has their internship and asked for begun an intensive nationwide this assignment," said Dr. Stan- campaign to recruit them to serve ley C. Scheyer, director of the two years overseas caring for the Peace Corps' Office of Medical corps' volunteers. Programs. In the first six years of its Too Much Time existence, the Peace Corps was "We've had over 400 inquiries assigned staff doctors by the U.S. this 'eadu owerh4t the drafs Public Health Service. ' year but now that the draft These doctors were able to ful- exemption is gone, we've been re- fill their two-year military obli- ceiving letters from applicants fillteirtho-sasiimtrynstead saying they can't take two years gation in this assignment instead out of their lives to serve in the of with the military or the Public Peace Corps and then another Health Servicestwo years for military service," End Assignments he said. But Congress, in passing the NEW YORK tIP)-Four of the American Broadcasting Co.'s on- camera personalities were fined by their performers union yester- day for crossing picket lines of a sister union of striking network technicians. The assessments run as high as $14,000. The four were among perform- ers who claim to hold individual contracts with ABC, which the network said supercede their ob- ligations to their union, the AFL- CIO American Federation of Tele- vision and Radio Artists. The union said disciplinary action is being considered against others for crossing picket lines of the striking AFL-CIO National Association of Broadcast Em- ployes and Technicians. NABET's 1,500 ABC employes struck Sept. 22. They supported an AFTRA strike last spring and the performers union sought to reciprocate. Those fined by AFTRA were Tex Antoine, an ABC weather- man in New York, $14,000; news- caster Bill Beutel, $12,000; and newscaster John Schubeck, $11,- 400. Also held guilty of violating the union mandate was commen- tator Jimmy Breslin, with the amount of his fine yet to be de- termined. All were convicted in union hearings Monday of "conduct pre- judicial to the welfare of the un- ion and its membership." SIDNEY POITIER in JAMES CLAVELV'S 'To S, WITH LOVE'9 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:07 It also requires, he said, "the withdrawal within their own boundaries of all troops now sta- tioned on the territory of other states, the dismantling of foreign miiltary bases and the dissolution of blocs." The best available estimates put the strength of Soviet forces in Poland, Hungary and East Germany at about 16 divisions, but some estimates range as high as 26 divisions. Most are in East Germany. Romanians say the last Russian troops left their country in 1957. The U.S. has about 300,000 militaa y personnel in Western Europe. Figures for other allied contingents in Western Europe were not available. France. not a participant i NATO military arrangements, has troops in West Germany under a bilateral agreement. Romania long has advocated the simultaneous dissolution of the Communist Warsaw Pact and NATO and upset the Soviet bloc last summer with complaints about Russian domination of the East European miiltary alliance. Lead Efforts The Romanians also have taken a leading role in efforts to im- prove East-West relations in Europe, efforts that reached a climax earlier this year with the establishment of diplomatic re- lations between Romania and West Germany. Romanian F o r e i g n Minister Corneliu Manescu, a key figure in his government's independent course in the Communist world, is president of the current session of the assembly and was presiding over the meeting when Malitza spoke. On the war in Vietnam, Maltiza declared that it was of "the ut- most necessity" that U.S. air at- tacks on NortheVietnam "be end- ed immediately and uncondition- ally." More Voices "Ever more numerous," he said, "are those who raise their voices stressing that it is impossible for the United States to continue bombing a sovereign state . . . without thereby nullifying the chances of any political solution." Malitza was the 32nd speaker in the assembly's general debate to urge an unconditional cessa- tion of the bombing. Foreign Minister Syed Shari- fuddin Pirzada of Pakistan, in a speech stressing the Middle East situation, told the assembly that the time had come for Security Council action to secure Israeli compliance with assembly resolu- tions on Jerusalem. 1 ABC said in a statement: "We believe this action by AFTRA is unlawful a n d unconscionable. ABC will support these employes in every way it can." The network said 122 AF~TRA members hold individual contracts with ABC, and that these must be honored regardless of union mandate. AFTRA's answer to this was a pledge to support contract em- ployes who honored NABET picket lines against any damage suits by the network. NABET's c o n t r a c t deadlock with ABC has failed to halt net- work operations, which have been maintained in part by supervis- ory employes. Among AFTRA performers who have refused to appear since the NABET strike began is Joey Bish- op, the network's late night star. Tapes of his previous shows have been substituted. a Phone 434-0130 The Area's finest Drive-In is easy to reach-2' miles south of Washtenaw Rd. on Carpenter BOX OFFICE OPEN 6:30 P.M. GREAT FUN! GREAT HEART Winner of Three *" Academy Awards! . ".Gockingbird OfeeFma"CLOR ":;GREGORY PECK I ONAL 3Fcar L CORPC,>;>O:r draft revision this year, barred such future assignments,,but per- mitted the farming out 'of doctors by the Public Health Service to several other =government agen- cies to continue. This means that Peace Corps doctors from now on are subject to the doctor draft. This is the first time since the Corps was created in 1961 that it has been forced to recruit volun- teer doctors. The first aim of the campaign is to find replacements for the doctors who will end their tour of service at the end of next June. FRIDAY NIGHT ONLY 3X EAS PLERN rHATRES - FOX VILLar6E 375 No. MAPLE RD.-'769.1300 Door Opens I1 IP.M. SHOW 12;00 MIDNIGHT A 4p V NATIONAL GENENAL CORPONATION ~ 4th WEEK NOW SHOWING FOX *EASTERN THEATRES FOX VILL8GE 375 No. MAPLE RD.-"769.1300 Feature Times: 2 :00-5 :10 8:30 i FRIDAY MIDNIGHT SHOW YOU A/N'T SEA NO TNN'E yE00~ PROBABLY V~i~l Ol I 1q CAMPUS MAP of 1977 shows system of sub-campuses ringing the central quad (square). Main thoroughfares linking five sub- campuses (dotted circles) con- verge on the central quad's li- brary complex. Clockwise from noon are sub-campuses cluster- ing around entertainment, health sciences, physical sciences, pro- fessions a n d administrative buildings. TONIGHT A FREE SHOWING OF NOSFERATU The classic telling of the Dracula story; GEORGE DEAN PEPPRRO MRRTIli 1:10-3:10-5 10-7:15-9:20 TOMORROW- TAIS IS ilE WILD,W& ., MHERE THE BAD G0971111 AND TME 60olleiw " 4 .a ALL THESE PRIZES FREE MAGNAVOX AM-FM TRANSISTOR RADIO A I I