°PAGE TWO° THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. FEBBRYTARV 25_ I RCII 5 _G TWOT - _M IC IGA__ i Y-S_ .SI__..J orals I I I °cDn ran za, lan. ui AT LANTERN GALLERY: EMU Staff Exhibit 1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 1 A-WT 1 By ANDREW LUGG1 Al Loving, David Tammany and Lyn Cortes are young staff mem-- bers at Eastern Michigan Uni- versity. Their works are currently being exhibited at the Lantern Gallery in Ann Arbor., Tammany, who comes closest to "what we already know," shows paintings which are both three- quarters pop. Particularly, in his drawings, he features many items from the pop reportoire, nudes with suntan marks and firm breasts, automobiles and ma- chinery. The shaped drawing, "Magic Box," while still retaining the pre- cision and design quality of pop, shows the "other quarter" of Tam-- many's work, a systematic investi- gation of space and more impor- tant the introduction of the sen- suous. What Warhol calls "the design of yesterday, the fine art of today" has been given an added dimension in which the colors and forms are sensual as well as+ functional. I Loving (as is Tammany) is con- cerned with cubes and the de- struction of their space. The draw- ings, pastel screens, are studies for the paintings. They lay out the problems; the breaking down of hard-edged lines with free abstract expressionistic forms.+ Along with these drawings, there are' a number of painted blocks, varying in size from three-' inch to 15-inch cubes, which also define the "problem" for the1 paintings. Studies, yet complete inl themselves, the cubes are in fact three dimensional paintings, each side being an attempt to structure the space in such a way as to deny the volume that the cubes occupy.' In the paintings, Loving uses' oils which gives a body or expres- sionistic quality to the work. These lop W orks The Daily Offlical Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- paitigshav aroghhevy sity of Michigan for which The paintings have a rough, heavy Michigan Dallygassumes no editor- quality which contrasts sharply ial responsibility. Notices should be with Tammany's "designs.' cent in TVPVwitIT 'F'rN form to Unlike Tammany, Loving makes Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- no effort to present efficient, prc- pbli po and theday prec rin fessional looking paintings. The , for Saturday and Sunday. General struggle to develop the work, the Notices may be published a maxi-I traces of the process of painting. mum of two times on request; Day are ot oncaled Alays we Calendar items appear once only. are not concealed. Always, we I Student organization notices are not are aware of the artist's presence accepted for publication. For more and 'this establishes Loving's main information call 764-9270. concern, namely the process of SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25 1 painting. _ If Tammany and Loving area concerned with conceptualizing Day . te a and process, then Wyn Cortes' University Dance Concert - Matinee, paintings seem in strange con- p.m., $1; evening performance, 8 p.m., pany. Her work is direct and sub- $1.25. Barbour Gym- jective. These are her own view of i things, female and honest. cxperimental Dance Films: Architecture "Double Mirror" is a self-por- Aud., 7 and 9:05 p.m. trait; "Alicia I" shows her chil- dren; "Oval Portrait," again, a School of Music Opera - Gounod's chil. Ech o thse prtritsset"Faust," Joseph Blatt, music director; child. Each of these portraits, set_ within a circle or oval, painted in acrylic and/or oil, has a quick, contemplative tone. Not only do these 'look like eN CINEM locket paintings, or the old paint- ings our grandparents display in the livihg rooms, but also they P r e s appear to have the idea associated with the memory of these. They JULIE C seem like the .old tokens that cer- tain cults use in their rituals. AndyQ e like these' tokens they suggest much more beyond actual designs.j. Ralph Herbert, stage director: Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, p.m. Hockey--U-M vs. North Dakota, Coli- seum, 8 p.m. General Notices TV Center Programs: On Sun., Feb. 26, the following programs produced by the rv Center will have their initial tele- cast on Detroit stations: 8:30 a.m., wXYZ-TV, Channel 7 - 'Understanding Our World. Meet the Masters: Paul Klee." Paul Klee's phil- :sophy of painting is analyzed by Prof. !Guy Palazzola. 12 noon, WWJ-TV, Channel 4-U-M: 150. "UM 150 . . . Visitors 0." Michi- ;an's famed All-American football .reat, Tom Harmon, tells the story of football at the UJ-M. University of Southern California Law School: Walter B. Connolly, Jr., available on Mon., Feb. 27, to talk with students interested in that law school. Appoint. ments arranged in 1223 Angell Hall. (Continued on Page 8) NOW! JIM JEAN MGM/Verve Folkways Recording Artist DANCE Original orsElenAnnual Dance Concert HA II c e n s IRISTIE'S y Award erformance Saturday and Sunday 8:00 P.M. 1 .50 per person 330 Maynard By ELLEN FRANK The University's Annual Dance Concert was performed last night before a full house at the Barbour Gymnasium Dance Studio. The originally choreographed . works were performed by students and faculty of the Dance Department. The guest performers this year were from the Ann Arbor Recre- ation Department, a children's dance group supervised by Mrs. Taya Bergman. They danced their own choreography in "Mordor" beautifully. There was a definite contrast in quality of perfor'mance between the first and second parts of the concert-undergraduate and grad- uate. It might have been ad- vantageous for..all the performers involved, if the more sophisticated. works of the second half had been intermingled with the not-so- sophisticated ones of the first half. Unfortunately the first eleven dances come across as mediocre. The concert was full of original and interesting ideas. Costumes varied from .colored leotards to elaborately draped cloths fastened on the dancers to accentuate the- matic movements. Accoipaniment ranged from Bach to poetry to percussion in- struments, and even the voice of the, performers set the pace of one "O f course I can get you a sailor's suit, He's still aslee f." ANYTHING GOES L dance. Variety and excitement were plentiful - quality lacked soinetimes. "Turnpike," the opening dance, perked up the audience as the dancers froze in a pose, winked their yes and hated the rush of zooming cars. The seven dancers in "Connections" moved to their own laughter and yelled out mis- pronounciations of their dance title. In the second half, three of the numbers stood out in excellence of composition, and performance. Two were masters theses--"The Separateness of Things" choreo- graphed by Barbara Berofsky and "Apogee" by Barbara Allison, which had its preview showing last night. A duet, also choreographed by Berofsky, was beautifully per- formed by Michelle Levine, Jack Perry and their chorus of five. DIAL 8-6416 Continuous Today from 1 P.M. OF 196601" National Society 'o ffilmCriics A oons Podcl Antonioni's ..;: . OW-UP Vuuessa Redgmave COLOR Recommended for mature audiences A Premier Productions Co., Inc. Reease Phone 482-2056 EnduxOn CARPENTER ROAD NOW SHOWING OPEN 6:30 p.m. ECHNiCOLORst{ ~e~ ~8fl~ mND3J fOmiRll8P jan FsOND gn v D uanjonfl - d6-Ofl~ m9RqMUPPH'( Shown at 7:05 & 11 P.M. ALSO- ONONE UT THE BRAVE" tFRNSNATRA TATSUYA MIHAS" H1I TAKESHI KATO NIwCOLOR® Shown at 9:10 Only PLUS-"RACING THRILLS" COLOR CARTOON Something To Swap? Try Daily Classifieds Winning P( DARLING Ii ___________ ________--. ---~. ~-~.------.------- -______________ Also Starring LAWRENCE HARVEY DIRK BOGARDE TONIGHT Auditorium A Angell Hall. THE DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH THE PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM and THE CENTRAL SESQUICENTENNIAL COMMITTEE present I.D. Required Read and Use Daily Classified Ads 5 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! 4 I ARTHUR MILLER SPEAKING ON THE CONTEMPORARY THEATRE RACKHAM LECTURE HALL TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28 4:10 P.M. i ART FILM INGMAR BERGMAN'S VIRGIN SPRING Sat., Feb. 25 ... 7 & 9 P.M. Newman Center-331 Thompson - 50c admission I (RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES) MICHAEL CAIMEAFE MILLICENT MARNJUUAFOSTERMJANEASHER " SHIRLEYANNE FIELD VMEN MERCHAKE ELEANOR BRON "WH SHELLEY WINTERS AS RUBY TECHNICOLOR'TECHNISCOPE* I I II - SEATS NO W! MICHIGAN DIAL 5-6290 Shows at 1,3, 5, 7 and 9 P.M. PTP TICKET OFFICE, MENDELSSOHN THEATRE .q vyti">:>i:"'"?":tx::}:.. "oa. :":x±}'fC4}"}:"?::,.., ."...X...S.:.. . t, ,. . .k ., }'t...: r..... t'.4:, 'S:.. . . . ....? . IN COOPERATION WITH ANN ARBOR DANCE THEATRE DANCE FILM FESTIVAL SATURDAY-7:00-9:05-1:05 EXPERIMENTAL DANCE FILM PROGRAM "STUDY IN CHOREOGRAPHY FOR CAMERA" "HORROR DREAM" "MEDITATION ON VIOLENCE" "CLINIC OF STUMBLE" "YOUNG GIRL IN A GARDEN" "MESHES IN THE AFTERNOON" (with MAYA DAREN) "TRANCE AND DANCE IN BALI" SUNDAY-SPECIAL MATINEE-2:30 EDUCATIONAL DANCE FILM PROGRAM "A'TIME TO DANCE" "CLASSICAL BALLET" "THE LANGUAGE OF DANCE" "GREAT PERFORMANCES IN DANCE" "SOUND AND MOVEMENT" SUNDAY.-7:00 & 9:05 DANCE FILM PERFORMANCES M1111111IM"11.11"W *17 MIN 117 1 7t b