THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, Jonuary 12, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 12, 1969 'he strange sensation of a new Kweskin By JOHN GRAY 1969 is a tired year. Too much energy has been expended' re- cently, too much has happened too fast. And this is going to be the year when the old people, the people who've marched and sung and tried too hard, when the old people sit back and discover they don't want to do that any more. And the new people, looking for the energy, will discover that it isn't there. Jim Kweskin has shaved his moustache off. He's at Canterbury House tonight, singing by hirmself (with one friend) but he's not singing the songs you know him for, and he's not going to entertain you the way he used to. So if you're lpoking for nostalgia, if you want him to take you back to the Jug Band days when you could listen to him and feel happy and good all over, you miight as well stay home and listen to an old record. It's because Kweskin is offering a different kind of nostalgia now, a kind more appropriate to the year. He's back before the Jug Band, back doing Woody Guthrie songs and "Pack Up Your Sorrows" real quiet and asking the people to sing with him on the choruses. It takes you back to the last days before the input of energy and events of this decade, back to the folk-music revival and the coffee houses in Cambridge and Greenwich Village. The moustache symbolized the Kweskin he was, for him land for the audience. He came on stage 10 minutes before the show began on Friday night and no one recognized him. People were there who had seen him in concert and in coffee houses 10 or 15 times before but no one had ever looked past the moustache, it seems. He shaved it oft on stage the last time the Jug Band played together and everyone yelled "No, don't do it," and like that. And since then he hasn't played as much, and when he has it's differ- ' ent. "I can't sing those ragtime songs no more. It isn't in me any more," he said Friday night. Kweskin has always been a little ahead of the time, a sort of bellwether of the mood of the young, and he was ahead of the audience on Friday. There was a tension there between him ahd the people. They kept yelling for "Ukulele Lady" and "Sadie Green" and he kept singing "Pack Up Your Sorrows." And it wasn't until he told them that the songs weren't there any more that they a could accept the mood and the style that was there. d But the surprising thing was that they did accept it once they r knew what to expect. They wanted the good-time music' but when it wasn't there they didn't fight. They listened to Kweskin, their I friend, as he sang with his warm, gravplly voice and drew them into his depression and his weariness. And it was nice. --TONIGHT- JIM KWE SKIN in person at NEXTBRWY iOUSEK Doors open Delicious food NEXT WEEK: 8:00 P.M. is free, yes Doc W atson Admission: $2.00 at the door ($1.75 after 2nd set) (unreal) 11 0 JANUARY 25 TO FEBRUARY 8 LSD damage held unconvincing LEXINGTON, Ky. CPS)--One Kentucky Medical School in a of the world's -leading authoritiesrare public appearance (he grants on hallucinogenic drugs, Dr. Har- no interviews because he claims ris Isbell,. said recently evidence he was once misquoted by the New indicating use of LSD causes chro-T York Times), Dr. Isbell noted that mosome damage was "unconvin- the Food and Drug Administration cing." might not appreciate his saying Dr. Isbell, the first American that the evidence was unconvinc- scientist to experimentally admin- ing, beacuse the FDA had noted a ister LSD when he gave it to opi- marked decrease in LSD use after ate addicts'in 1948, said LSD announcements that LSD . dam- chromosome daimage evidence was aged chromosomes. derived from experiments in which ' The UK professor of medicine tissue cultures were incubated and pharmacology also said that With LSD. when he first began experimenting "The same thing will happen if with LSD in the late 1940's, he tissue cultures are incubated with "never dreamed" LSD would pre- aspirin," he said. "Any chemical ; sent a drug abuse problem. He substance incubated with tissue said he did not think it would will cause sonle charges in ever be readily obtainable. chromosomes:" - . "I didn't know a (Tim) Leary Spaking at the University oi would come along," he said in claiming that Leary, formerly a professor at Harvard, introduced acid to the intellectual commun- ity. Production of LSD began after that introduction, he said. Of drug laws Dr. Isbell said, " would not look for any legaliza- tion of marijuana . . . not in my lifetime." (Dr. Isbell is, in his owi words-"nearly twice thirty.") "I would look for more rationa penalties." He called the five-year y '7 tE Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. loin 1 , i , , rr Z TODAY AT 1, 3, 5,7,9. P.M c4mm Dial 86416 $10,000 penalty for possession of Published daily Tuesday through Sun- _ flIJ(LIL4 marijuana too harsh. day mornirg University year. Subscrip-I "Marijuana should not be sub- tion rates: $9.00 by carrier, $10.00 by jected to special corrols because mail.saports alcohol is worse," he said. THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GILBERT SULLI"AN SOCIETY MASS MEETING for the production of "JOLANTHE" Tuesday, January 14 7:30 P.M. Union. KoomsR vw I "A memorable, completely fascinating film." RichardSchickel,' Life The Creative Arts Festival provides for the University community an opportunity to exper- ience a spectrum of the Arts one rarely finds gathered together in one place. This year the Creative Arts Festival Committee has decided to expand the horizons of the Festival in order to. make it the most exciting two-weeks in the history of the University. In order to achieve this end we have brought together some of Broadway's most successful and controversial theatre and dance, personalities from Expo '67, artists whose works have been exhibited all over the world, literary figures who are at the head of some of the newest movements, and musicians who are constantly redefining the meaning of music. The theme of this year's Festival is "Experiment in the Arts." Not only has the Festival provided a forum for artists who are innovators in their fields but it has given us at the University a chance to "experiment" with forms of art we have rarely seen before. Some of the artist's names you have heard before, while others are loss familiar, but we of the Creative Arts Committee assure you that each event you attend will give you an increasing sense of enioyment and satisfaction.AA HARRY STUART WINER Committee Chairman ,' The Balloons a Carlo Ponti production starring nimle Entruann tCu rInfe Spouk nroduced by Carlo Ponti - directed by Marco Ferrari " ituted by=XSigmjM a Filmways company a + NATIONAL GENFERAI. CORPORATION HELD OVER FOX EASTERN TATRES 4TH LD FOX VILLGE 375 No.MAPLE RD.-"769-1300 MON.-FRL. 7:00-9:20 SAT.-SUN. 2:00-4:20- 6:45-9- 10 good grief it candy! M N 106d %2NglggPwZord A vfirEi g Production~ ! John Huston -Warr thav ZgoStgyZ E~ AuMn. ce~ns npdv16wM Candy Technicolor* M~ mmmmmmi The Ark Monday Movie MARLENE DIETRICH . rj ::"!: I