Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 7, 1969 Page Twu THE MICHIGAN DAILY music r aue listenters only ire la_ i'ii e t Largso e Sata N. 7, ~. I U 3No.t, \Xi5 dii (':i i' lix 'uat Le- (L [ ' n "Pli II li:f0 a rid how 12CE ( ii5 1 i 10' IOU -' Volio li. 1: rO e in1(1 a ii)cd b i t n i. ed da i 'io of 11>T .IN~' stei, hi sI~An n, iiin t is muchol saceas ofi the niotes tipenev5 that''U itil isirii~Vi~ C , as itw r wit;hii d'' i iie )aces t ' 1'-ii h ir's 1 r u i iithe x;.,111t illS l t' '('it I N u 0 tou.,_ _itse alindrviL Cr lairiy the ' 1in of' in onfi be e t t s li e l it n e dIto b e1 filirrain Id~ at tewr ofat1t1nfntedp-. n haiey 10' r .is110 vii'of mieeriitn, si~. V I\ 0k' ri itpetertially 'oldxx tlirr Lnus iti at- i. . , xhriileti inid unl- e~ 'jriOritSiti~ctso that it do i c hutit 1ef illor', 'urn awe vI reun bam Va a 10111of darr' n' t vts ,ell-eing, The din' 0Kvis not how to under'- .i rid ant y,'"!t hoiw tobe aP 'is.''rt t'iC 5 f til' wilig o joi himand obi iot~y na rrypeople refuised 1( CCI tlecarshai iinds, or," -o hrr ;ited tire, attditoi'- it111 rro s' n ot litard since the oetf 'Kur'/ 1':32. 'li('_. er Xr.n o aa No. 7, Op. i), No :~ i; a slm per'- lw '"ii ( ok its tyric .ismiris less blt.mi' aidits st tic I reeless as r. ~, ii alithe IiloVC xveil- .: ri i 'ae' ~ hoveri sorerris Dim cs layngby rio ri ..rs ' ae lit ' wo1''slattiit DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7 1Day Calendar' Statistics Semrinar: Dr. V'aclav Fab- ian, Dept. Statistics anti Probability. Michigan State University. "On Weak jConvergence in Stochastic Processes";, 429 Mason Hall, 4:00 p.m. Department of English Poetry Read- ing: Gallway Kinnell: Mult ipurpose Room, Undergraduate Library, 4:10 SP.M. University IWoodwind Quintet: Nel- son Hauenstein, flute; Florian Mueller. oboe; John Mohler, clar'inet; Louis Stout, French horn; and Lewis Cooper. bassoon: Rackham Lecture Hail, 8:00 p m. General Notices' Open Hearing: Tuesday, October 7, 1969, 8:00 p.m., Auditorium A, Angell Hall. Open Hearing to discuss tihe Final Report of the Academic Affairs Comn- mittee on ROTC.. U31 Dearborn campus repi'esentativ'e will talk with interested students, Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1220 SAB, 9:30-3:30 p.m. The following Law Schools will have representatives on campus to discuss admission policies and generailinforii.a- tion for interested students .Appoinut- I ments must be made by calling Mrs. Towl~e at 40312 or coming to 1223 An- gell Hall, Appointments should be made in advance. Monday, October 13: Vanderbilt and Georgetown. Friday, October 17, Duke Uiniversity and Cornell. jWednesday, October 22: Indiana. Thursday, October 23, UniX'ersiiy of Illinois. Thursday, October 30, University of Chicago. Friday, October 31, Newv York Uni- versity. 1968 University of Nlichiga:n Biblio- graphy: Forms for bibliogra phic in- formation for the 19638 Unixersity or Michigan Bibliography wvere mauiled in April, 1969, to facuity and staff memn- bers at their home addresses; Any University employee who has publica- tions to report for the calendar y'ear 1968 and who did not receive the tormn should call the ORA Editorial Office, 761-4277. Foreign Visitors Thne following rinctividuals canl be reached through lie Foreigni Visitor Division of the Visitor and idGues Re- NATIONAL SCIEERi" CO'l, O ON FOX EASTERN THEI AlRE X~k FOR VILLI6E 375 No. MAPLE PD. 769.1300 MON.-FRI.-1:20-9:30 SAT.-SUN.-1 :00-3:05 5:10-7:20-9:30 lations Office. Rooms 22-24, Michigan Union. Telephone: 764-2148. Miss Treita R. Basco: Assistant Con- trolileran Budget Officer, De La Salle Colltcge, manila, Philippines Oct. 8-20. Mr. M. H. McKay; Professor of Mathe- miatics, University of Papua, New Guinea. October 10-12. Pla ceni ent Service 3?00 S.A.I3 G:ENEUAL. DIVISION Peace Corps, Test will be given in Ann Arbor on Oct. 18. Downtowin branch of Post Office, Main at Caitler- ine streets at I pin. P. C. Team will be on campurs for information week of Nov 17 Applicatio-,s are available at Placemient. Services Complete one and take to 'Test Cen:ter. October 9 is the deadline for na- tional secturity agency test, first test given on Oct. 18, another applic. due for Dec. 6 test on NoX'. 21 Only these 2 tests this year. Current Position openings received by General Division by mail arnd phone, niot interviews on campuis, call 764- 74601 for further informnation: anE3-gE f9ninj County of Way Nne: Library Aids for seX'erai communities, resident of Waynie or Southfield, degr:ee in any area. Veterans Administration, dept. of meed. and surgery: nationwide loca- tions - positions in audiol, speech, biol chemn, education, libr, all med areas, phiarmn, therapy, psychologists, and social workers. D~ept. of the Navy, civilian personnal office, Greiit LaesIl. - Laboratory technuicians in microbiology, BS, 48 hours in related sciences. Also re- ',earcii for Virology and bacteriol spec- iatc ith ES'MS PhD. Wa:yne County Circuit Law Library: Libra:rian., general reference in legal m aterial, MALS, new. Juvenile Court of Jackson County, Michi.: Probation Officer, degree ini social scences COMP VIA-DATE "Finds People for People" CALL 662-4401 Do Your Own Thing FOR YOUR MICHIGA'-N NIAN SENIOR PICTURES SIGN UP IN THE DIAG (Fishbowl-if Roin ) 10-4 MONDAY-FRIDAY THREE DAYS ONLY! OCTOBER 16E, 1 7, 18 Evenings at 8.:30-Matinee Sat. at 2 P.M. ICI isIwDie hter Ijowvel, however', and iin some wvays the pianist's understate - mnlt verged on pussy-footing, esp~ecially in the opening Presto mnovemeiit. Ini fact, Dichter seemed al- mlost consciously to deny the mlotival import of the first foul' descending nlotes of the move- merit, as wvell as the inotival imipor't of the opening triplet of the finale Allegro. By doing so, lie under'cut some of the special genius of Beethoven, wich is thte dynamic working-out. of for'm. In the Lai'go e inesto, he was, as indicated, gloriously poetic, with an iintenlse control of the tension betwxeen senrtiment and v'acuiumi. His touch was, inlnmy minid, perifectly' suited to his ap- pr'oachn: clean but rnot icy, smocoth bttnot glib. True, lie lacked the ultimate control of r'tbato that mnakes, for' instance, thr 'im of sixteenth nlotes ini the second bar' of the seconld sub- ject miore than just a runrr of sixteenth nlotes' in tihe hands of Schnabel, but even Schnabel did not effect that type of con- frontation with beauty that Sachs and IHtixley speak of. The ensuing br'ief Minuet, mindlessly easy to absorb after the coricentr'ationi demanded by the Largo, suffer'ed from under'- statr ,znent it r'eally needed to be leieutsd froml Dichrter's r'e- fined seisibility. Follovirig t hr e Beethov'en, Dicht er performed Six Br'ahmns pieces,: a Ballade, threec Capric- cios, rand two Intermezz'os. The Interme-zzos, espeically the No. 3 of' Op. 117, were p~layed beau- tif'ully, againt with the p~ianlist's penchant for' understatement. CHe did nrot seek to make the Xor'ks, even tire mor'e ebullient Capriccio No.1, Op. 116, overly dramatic statements, as mrost pianists do. By eschewing the dranma - which in Brahms can be as exciting as a butcher' hacking mneat-Dichter distilled all evanescent poetry, and it is not exagger'ation to say thlat he pr'oduced a diaphanous veil of sound that pulled the audience in and then released them to their own memor'ies. (For once, the coughing stopped.) Dichter accomplished such an effect not by magic, of course, but by a touch that never struck a dis- cordant elemenrt. In the begin- ining of the Op. 117, No. 1 Inter- mezzo, he had just the right weight in his left hand-the ef- t'ect was almost subliminal. After an intermission, Dichter performed Moussorgsky's great ar't museum ti'avelog, Pictures at an Exhibition. The music de- scnibes a memorial exhibition of the paintings of Victor' Har't- mnn, a fr'iend of the composer, occasionally interr'upted by a "pr'omenade" which car'ies the listener' fr'om one scene to the ntext. Sev'er'al of the scenes ar'e comical. sever'al are nostalgic, sev'er'al ar'e demonic. The work climaxes withl the "Great Gate of Kiev." and Moussorgsky mi- r'aculously captur'ed in sounid the hubbub of people passing under'tile gate and the clangor' of chur'ch bells in the city. It is a wxoi'k which challenges not on- ly tile pianist's technique but also his imaginative powers of conlceptualization. Ir'onically, because tile poetry of this music is more niarr'ative, more explicit, Dichter's color'- istic abilities wer'e less in de- nnlanld. Those scenes which ar'e miore impr'essionstic, such as5 "Tile Old Castle," fared best; more dramatically o b v i o u s scernes, such as "Ballet of the Unhatchedi Chicks,", came off in a more detached manner. Success of accomplishirng tile final scenes inevitably must be complar'ed with the gr'eat per- formances of the wor'k, that by Richter' and by Hor'owitz. Rich- ter' especially seemed to possess eighlt hands and he cr'eated an overwxhelming tumult of bells. Dichter's rendition was far snore controlled, unfrenzied, a nI d structurally clear', but it was rnot without a febrile excitement of its owvn. [xclusive Stainn ds artistireleased iby Warer Brios. Sevn Arts Rerdni fc. Subscribe to The Mlichigan Drily m4 3