Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 21, 1969 f iog e T wi o T H E M I C H I G A N D A I L Y S u n d a y, S e pte mb"er 2 1, 1 9 69!!1 I' l1' Jl'- ---- --.- - " m"sic cinema- Tops tops as Greeks freak out By LITTLE SUZY FUNN Concert Aficionado Just to start off with, I ought to let you know that I'm not really too fond of concerts in the Events Barn. I mean, the whole concept sort of stinks. It's too big, and too far away from my house, and too expen- sive and generally they have schlemiels like Johnny Carson or Bob Hope there. But the Four Tops were Out of Sight last night. Headlines for this review are spinning in my mind: "Tops tops" or "Greeks go wild for Tops" or "Frat freaks frolic.. The crowd was not what you'd expect at your everyday rock concert, but I guess that has to be expected. The Rotary Connection, who footed the bill, have never been what you'd call an underground smash, and the Four Tops have sort of a repu- tation as being among the most Pchlocky of the whole Motown Shuck Stable. Which is not altogether un- deserved. I mean, Smokey has class, and the Temptations have style, and the Supremes got Diana Ross but what have the Four Tops got? Nothing, you a t1 s w c r in chorus. Nothing except Super- Shuck Motown arrangements and dance routines, suitable to get them billing for life at the Sands Hotel. Well, I discovered last night that they got something. They got charisma and they got rhythm. And they got the straightest looking bunch of Greeks I ever saw assembled under one roof to stand up and dance in the aisles and clap and sing along. Woof. They even got this chick sit- ting next to me to call a San- ford Security cop a fascist for trying to clear the aisles. They did all their big HITS. of course, knocking the crowd on its collective heels with a little help from the fine orches- tra of Jimmy Wilkins as well as the usual quota of shoobie- doo-wa Motown arrangements of easy listening classics like "By the Time I Get to Phoenix." The Rotary Connection, on the other hand, was something else altogether. As a snaggle- toothed Sanford Security Rent- a-Cop commented to my date. "Them Four Tops are sure bet- ter than that first band, eh?'. Right on, pig. The Rotarians hit their high point when the spade chick singer asked the audience if Panther was there because her old man said to give him his regards. I got a laugh about it anyway. Catch Panther at a Rotary Connection Concert and I'll sign over my collection of valuable Golden Goodies to you. They're a real weird group. They're sort of a psychedelic funk group, to coin a cliche, sort of like the Airplane at their worst, only with an R&B tinge. I mean, I kept expecting them to start singing "Funky Funky Acid" or something. Of course, they did their big HIT. "Ruby Tuesday," of Stones fame, and it isn't any better live than it is on the record. In fact, it's worse, if you can image that. Actually, again, I'm being un- fair to them. They averaged about 6 plus on a scale of 10 for their songs and if they just kept the chick away from the mike and let the guy singer and the rhythm guitarist do the singing, and if they got some- body to cut all the crap out of their arrangements, they'd be just fine. I'm afraid that's sort of a big order though, and un- til I hear otherwise, I don't plan on walking around the block to hear them play. Back on the bright side, did I tell you the Four Tops were Out of Sight? Five encores worth? And that it's a rotten shame that the balance on the mikes was lousy? I didn't? Well, forget it, then. OI)scure gospel of 'Teoreina' By GORMAN BEAUCHAMP As a story Pier Paolo Pasolini's Teorema is absurd, or insane, or inspired. Maybe all three. It's easy to ridicule this film, because it's ridiculous. Imagine a script resulting from a collaboration of Jacqueline Susann and Kahlil Gilbran a sexual fantasy of stud as saint or saint as stud--and you have some idea of the plot. A sudden unexplained telegram is brought by a messenger inamed -ah, ahl- Angelino a to a prosperous, proper bourgeois family: "Ar- iriving tomorrow." The arrival is a young man (Terence Stamp) who is never known as anything other than "just a boy." He takes up residence with the family and in short order is laid by all of them- maid, son, (dog?), mother, daughter, and father, in that order. "Just a boy,' you see, cannot help helping those in need, and they are all in need. Everyone blossoms at the touch of his magic phallus (a D. H. Lawrence type touch). Never in film history, I imagine, has so much footage been shot of one crotch, for Pasolini obviously shares his characters' fascination with the bulge in Mr. Stamp's crotch. Having fed a little life to these dried tubors, "just a boy" receives another message (same kooky Angelino) that he must depart. He does, and desolation follows. Daughter goes into cataonic trance; maid be- comes a pop artist, pissing on blue canvases: mother turns to nym- phomania; and father strips in the Milan train station and wanders off into a desert. Pasolini is obviously trying tor a religious parable. Biblical quota- tions are read while a camera tracks a desolate wasteland. The "theme" music is the "Domine" from Mozart's D Minor Requiem, The father and "just a body" act out the Ivan-Gerasim relationship from Tolstoi's The Death of Ivan Illych tsymbolism totally lost, I fear on this illiterate age.) But what this allegorical melange is supposed to suggest I am at a loss to say. And yet the film is infused with a demonic kind of genius, As pure film apart from its story and confused erotic-religious sym- bolism-it is striking. In Pasolini's hands, the camera becomes a vehicle for an intense, compelling lyriesm. Images cling to one's memory. The calm beauty of Stamp's eyes. Or Anna Wiazemski skip- png aimlessly across a golden pebbled terrace. Or Silvana Mangano's desperate anmal cry as she stops to pick up two street boys. Teorema lacks any meaningful synthesis of its often brilliant frag- ments. Yet there is an integrity of vision behind it-as in the works of Blake. It is the kind of failure that affects one more deeply than do many more unified and "reasonable" works. Madness has its re- vards as well as its limitations. MONDAY, SEPT. 29 8:00 P.M. PIONEER HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM, ANN ARBOR TICKETS: AVAILABLE: $3.00 -DISCOUNT 30 RECORDS Advance W Adc Ann Arbor $3.2 GRINNELL at BROTHERS Door Ypsilanti Join The Daily CIRCULATION DEPT. Come in any afternoon 420 Maynard YOUNG DEMOCRATS MASS MEETING Tues., Sept. 23, 8:00 P.M. 3rd floor UGLI MULTI PURPOSE ROOM SANDER LEVIN "STUDENTS AND THE LEGISLATURE" DISCUSS: ROTC; Anti-War Activity, etc. Work in the Detroit and New York City elections. Anotlier potential tragedy in SE Asia By the Dipatch News Service While all eyes are turned to the war in Vietnam and its spill-over into Laos, Cambodia and Thailand, another potential tragedy is shaping up in Asia. That is the threat of open civil war between the Chinese and Malay's in Malaysia. The May 13 riots left an esti- mated 2,000 people, almost all Chinese, dead. Since then, the situation in Kuala Lumpur, at least on the surface, seems to I a v e improved. Government sources claim peace has been re- stored. while other observers mark the lull as just the calm before the storm. Though there has been racial enmity here since the British irst imported large numbers of Chinese in the late 1800s, there has also been, until recently, at working arrangement between the Chinese and the Malay. By working in cooperation with each other both were able to prosper in his separate sphere The Chinese as urban busi- nessman has controlled the economy; the Malay living in the rural village (kampong) has become the richest peasant in Southeast Asia. So long as the Chinese brought high prices for the crops, and the Malay was con- tent in his kampong, both pros- pered. But as Malaysia has be- come more modernized, these separate spheres have begun to overlap, leading to the friction that exploded last May in bloody race riots. The Japanese, during their occupation of Malaysia first pitted the Malay against the Chinese. Forced to fight fierce Chinese resistence, the Japanese accused the Chinese of stealing the Malay wealth, of being a colonial power controlling even the market place. The Japanese used this racial warfare to build a Malay nationalism throughout the country. Nationalist stirrings were ain- plified after the war as young people, better educated and more widely travelled, began to look beond their kampongs to see Malaysia as their country. Inevitably the Chinese were seen as foreigners, speaking a different language, having dif- ferent customs and most im- portant to a Muslim, worship- ping a different God. Yet these people who were so different from the Malay were still in control of the economy. The Chinese businessman's way of life with its modern conven- iences and luxuries was very tempting to many young Ma- lays, whose resentment soared when they found they were un- able to get the jobs necessary to support such a standard of living. The collective sense of trus- tration against the Chinese control of business led to Ar- tile 153 of the Independence constitution (1957 which al- lows special Malay privileges, including civil service priorities. educational advantages as well as business incentives, loans The Michigan Daily, edited and man- +ged by students at the University of lchgan. News phone: 764-0552. Second ass postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- gan, 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Published daily Tues- Jay through Sunday morning Umver- ity year. Subscription rates: $10 by arrier, $10 by mail. Summer ession pubhished Tunesday through Saturday morning. subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail -------..COUPON - -- : jTHOMPSON'S I PIZZA and land grants. All of these advantages were aimed at in- tergrating the -Malay into his economy. However, these measures have been unsuccessful because few of these privileges have filtered down to the kampong. The Chi- nese have doled out advantages to members of royal families and to wealthy Malays as well as to Malays who have sold them to wealthy Chinese. This situation has not only further embittered the kampong Malays against the Chinese, but has angered young Chinese who feel that Malay priorities have directly penalized them. "I have been sweeping floors in a health clinic for two years because there are no staff vac- ancies for non-Malays," says a young college trained Chinese from Ipoh. "All this time there have beei three vacancies for Malays, with even less training than I have," he says. "Yet they cannot fill them. For this I must sweep floors." Tungku Rahman's moderate government stands between the Chinese and Malaysian fac- tions, but it has hastened the deterioration of the racial situ- ation by its singular refusal to admit that there were racial tensions here before the May 13th xiots. Whatssteps Tungku could have taken previously are moot; what action is available to him now is doubtful. Some observers feel that anti-Chinese hostility is so deeply rooted that "an In- donesian solution" could. erupt in Malaysia anytime. In 1962 the "Indonesian solution"-mas- sacre-left over 500,000 of the Chinese in Indonesia dead. Other observers feel that the May riots were led by only a small but powerful faction of intellectuals, military leaders and right wing politicians, though the majority of Malays are hostile to the Chinese. If Tungku attempts to come down on this faction, he is likely to anger the silent right and erode even more of his dwin- dling power. If, however. he allows this faction to continue it could bring about a racial holocaust. Most Malays are already in favor of compulsory Malay as a national language, and Islam as the compulsory national re- ligion as prerequisite for citi- zenship. How far the Malays will go to gain these ends re- mains a major question. Also unclear is what actions the Chinese might take. Both Malays and Chinese are pre- vented by emergency ordinances ieetings. However, Malays are still allowed their Friday mos- que meetings where, to the dis- may of the Chinese, they discuss their country's future. Most Chinese, unable and un- willing to plan ahead, continue their alienated existence. As one Chinese girl says, "I live in daily fear of my world col- lapsing on me, but until that happens it is the' best world I have.'' More than that, for most Chinese in Malaysia it is the only world. Singapore is already overcrowded. China repatriates only those compatible with her ideology, Chinese w ith lprofs- sions have already started the exodus to Australia and Canada. A name being mentioned throughout Malaysia these days is Chin Ping, a Communist guerrilla who has fought all comers in the.jungle for almost 30 years without any real sup- port from the Malaysian Cli- nese. During the Second World War he was famous for protect,- ing Chinese in Johore (South Malaysia) against attacks by both Japanese and Malays. Whether he would be willing or even able to fight now is conjecture, but he has been waiting a long time for grass roots support. His underground and his knowledge of Malaysia's jungles are both respected and feared. The T u n g k u government counts on continued Chinese support. A shift of Chinese al- legience would undoubtedly lead to a right wing government, something the Chinese wish to avoid at any cost. Because of this the govern- ment has done little to appease the Chinese since the riot. The major step taken has been the founding of goodwill commit- tees, low pressure Chamber of Commerce style groups that are little more than a band-aid on a hemorrhage. Since the major threat to the present govern- ment is the right wing, Tungku has given conservatives within his party greater freedon than ever before. Their most Ilamboyant move so fari has been the announce- mnent. in September, non-Malay medium schools began to be phased out, in favor of an all- Malay system with other lan- guages taught only as foreign languages. In a country where 48 per cent of the population does not regard Malay as its mother tongue, this was hardly an action calculated to promote "good will." Long range forecasts for Ma- laysia are not very bright. Tung- ku is already running the coun- try without majority support. A right wing anti-Chinese govern- ment would most probably turn Malaysia into a country at war with herself. This tropical par- adise could within five years lose her position of leadership in Southeast Asia and become economically disembowelled, un- less the Malays and Chinese learn to live together once more in peace. BILDB Tuesday, Sept. 23 The Gospel According to St. Matthew ,dir. Pier Poole Posolini A blend of Marxist his- torical conscious and Christian Passion. SKIP DINNER FOR THIS ONE BUFFY SAINTE MARIE October 4! LEN CHANDLER MUSIC AT 9 P.M. TONIGHT "An informed source close to the Filthmobile has hinted on several occasions that somebody stole his watch. That's pretty obscure, huh?" "You bet! The doors open at 8 P.M." 665-0606 IN THE ALLEY 330 MAYNARD 7 & 9 662-8871 ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM with the DOCTORS SCHEARER Scpcmbc } 7 P.M. 'f ) cc of Student Aftairs e Ed1 ucation Co nmnit tee Join The Daily Sports saff LIMITED ENGAGEMENT! W EONLY! ACADEMY AWARD WINNER!' "BEST FOREIGN FILM" 2 PERFORMANCES (2:30 & 8:00) WHOLE ARMIES CLASH IN FIEI BATTLE BEFORE YOUR VERY EYES! (; PART if "-NATASHA AND PIERRE' THE BURNING OF MOSCOW" ( + THE PASSIONATE LOVE OF NATASHA AND ANDREI-TRAPPED IN THE OUT- RAGFS OF WARI Sept. 16-Sept. 2 b, 1969 "The Eeriest Macbeth OfThe Centiyi'!" SHAKESPEARE'S RICHARD EASTON THE TWO PART PRODUcTIoN of LEO TOLSTOY'S 4 WARandPEACE PRESENTED BY THE WALTER READE ORGANIZATION AND SATRA' IN COLOR - RELEASED BY CONTINENTAL 1 BREATH-TAKING GR ANDEUR OtF TH PALACE BALL AS THOUSANDS DANCE THE NIGHT AWAY! THE ENTIRE FROOUCTION OF VAR AND PEACE- I u n ' II (AflA U ~ SK wH NIEPOUTONO WRAOPAE