Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 8, 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 8, 1969 music DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor I NOW SHOWING SHOW TIMES Wed,, Sot., Sun. :00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20 Man., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 7:00-9:05 Filled with Magic The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent In TYPEWRITTEN form to 3528 LSA before 2 p.m. of the day , preceding publication and by 2 , p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sun- day. Items may appear only once. Student organization notices a r e not accepted for publication. For information, phone 764-9270. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8 - Day Calendar Contemporary Directions Concert: Sydney Hodkinson, Jack Fortner, con- ductors; Lynda Weston, soprano: Rack- ham Lecture Hall, 8:00 p.m. Placement Service Late Interview Announcement: Gateway Transportation Co., LaCrosse Wisc., Tues., Nov. 11, special opening for new grad., .Iourn./English, Corpor- ate Communications - Staff-Editor. Announcements of Special Programs, inquire at Career Planning Division, 764-6338, for further information: Experiment in International Living, Putney, Vt., offers leadership exper- ience in language camps, summers and terms in fall and spring. Also offers training leading to masters in Arts of Teaching Language, and other grad.. uate programs for those interested in preparing for careers in international service. Graduate School of Industrial Ad- ministration at Carnegie-Mellon Uni- versity, leading to Masters in Indust. Admin., and PhD programs in Econ., Operations Research, Organizations and Social Behavior, and Industrial Administration. Oberlin College Master of Arts in Teaching programs, a one-year pre- ORGANIZATION NOTICES _. jsmsea~ 2292%E %E Hear both sides of the story from native representatives of Biafra and Nigeria at a meeting of the Interna- tional Students Association, Nov. 10, 7:30 p.m. at the International Center tnext to the Union). 4JD paration for secondary school teach- ing, and a 2 year program for elemen- tary teaching. The 23rd Session of Publishing Pro- cedures Course, Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Mass., from June 17 to July 28, 1970, open to recent grads, men and women. Designed to introduce the student to the opportunities and requirements of the publishing pro- fession and to provide practical train- ing in basic techniques of publishing. Varb OGiadu TECHNICOLOR 169aito If you thought there was a monopoly on records in Ann Arbor TRY Marvin Oardens Record Shop 215S. STATE (in the Little Thinqs Shop) NOW IN STOCK New: Led Zeppelin Steve Miller Jefferson Airplane Joe Cocker Easy Rider Al Kooper MICHIGAN LAST 7 DAYS 1 :30 and 8 P.M. ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! BEST ACTRESSI BARBRA STREISAND COLUMBIA PICTURESand RASTAR PRODUCTIONSewt s BARBRA OMAR STREISAND SHARIF WILLIAM WYLER- RAY STARK PrOduCtion '. "rl- J,: Trrtts: n ,%p%,at f It- F II 11 r Yall come back, ya By DAVID SPURR Iet hinm sing me back home With a. song I used to hear, Make my old memories come alive. Take me away and turn back the years Sing me back home before I die. -Merle Haggard Commander Cody and the Lost Planet Airmen sung everglody down sweet home last night at Canterbury with a real rip- roarin' night of foot-stompin' feelgood music. Responding in right neighbor- ly style to one of the rowdiest audiences ever seen this side of the Great Divide, Cody led a talented and well-polished group through a rousing selec- tion of country swing, country blues, and old time Presley- style rock. The Lost Planet Airmen have a perfectly coordinated free and easy swing style which brings the entire house into the spirit of every song. They perform without the flashy gimmickry and gaudiness of many country groups today, showing a true appreciation and taste for what gives a country song real flavor. Lead singer Billy C. is a phe- nomenal deep-throated combi- nation of Presley and Cash. Straight from the fields of Ala- bama, he is not one of those commercial big-city folks who sing country because they see a certain quaintness in the style. He is instead a singer who lives and breathes country music in his movement, his speech, his dress, and his stage personality. Billy C. shoved off the night with a rendition of Truck- drivin,' revealing the band's polished ability to move quickly in a free-flowing smooth and even style. As he shifted gears into All My Friends Are Bop- pin' the Blues, the teeny-bop crowd in the back of the hall rose up in a primitive frenzy of hip loosening and doe-si-does. This band sticks together like molasses, tastes sweeter and flows easier. Their balance is remarkable-even with electric amplifiers for lead GEEtar, bass, and steel guitar, Cody's honky-tonk pianer and Billy C. 's down-home voice come through the big sound in all their glory. Billy C. is not the only great musician in the group. Bill Kirtchen on lead electric guitar ripples up and down tine twangy chords with a style of amazing dexterity and even grace, remi- niscent of the great Merle Tra- vis. Kirtchen led off the second set with a series of mneiiow olues and "wepr country songs as he took over the vocal lead. A brisk, toe-tapping run through Mama Tried brought the rau- cous audience screaming and whistling to its feet. The band then broke into a fast hard driving blues number spiced with country chords, strong and \eavy as a Mack rig barrelling south bn U.S. 1. Steve Davis, the "West Virginia Creper," probably should have been mentioned first nere. A funky-looking cowboy with a string of flip-top beercan tabs -Daily-Jerry Wechsier for a hatband around his Stet-= son, Creeper does Just that. On a "real easy melted down" song like Long Gone Daddy you can hear Davis' twangy steel guitar creeping into the big sound un- til they give it to him all alone and his solo makes the song. To leave the heavy-set cigar chompin' piano player Com- mander Cody out of this would be a crime. Late in the second set Cody came out, from behind the keys and roared his boom- ing voice into a hot-time bois- terous run of Smoke that Cigar- ette. Cody and the Airmen showed that they don't have to perform other people's stuff. One song wi itten by the group, ine Do Ter Stuff turned out to be a "real purty moody thang" which slowed the whole show down without bringing the audience out of its euphoria. I'm Lost in the Ozone Again, was another song written by Billy C. Y'all go hear this band. It'll nake you feel rilght nice. ' :::TECNICLOR"PAAVIJU w Origm g Sound Track Album on Columbia Records E JLP ______ t.16a (OMPUTA-DATE "Finds People for People" CALL 662-4401 Cycles sell in classifieds B YQtCOMMANDER -M 1 CODY and THE LOST PLANET AIRMEN YES, YES, YES, HOORAY STEEL GUITAR $1.50 for the night Billy C. Beatific Jams Staggered minds, ears and hearts raising the stage on high Truck-Drivin' No Jivin' Everybody happy 665-0606 TONIGHT AND* TOMORROW DOORS OPEN AT 8 P.M. Next Week Thursday and Friday: JOHN FAHEY ' C IIEMA H Saturday, Nov. 8 PLANET OF THE APES IN COLOR "IT COULD HAPPEN TOMORROW" Get out and vote against the few who under the assumption of saving the students of the University of Michigan 1% on core books will take over $175,000 out of their pockets. Vote November 10 and 11. Vote NO on the bookstore referendum. Sat. only 7&9 75c (cheap) HILLEL 1429 Hill St. VOGUE ENTERPRISES Presents Folletts, Overbecks, Slaters, Ulrichs, Wahrs STE-VE IVcUEEN AS TULLITT" Defective Lt. frank lEullitr-- some other hind of cop. DIAL 8-6416 Speokinq of Toqetherness .. . uM -C TECHNICOLOR FROM WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS W SAT. and SUN.--1:15-5:05-8:55 They're young... they're in love ..and they kill people. I 'W~rl7'c If-'WnvI W I U1U3 5E EE A ARM i lLlRWRIM : iM: i