Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Twc~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, May 28, 1969 records CONSPIRACY CHA RGED: The1 By R. A. PERRY Although there have been numerous weird musical experi- nients in the last twenty years, ranging from the chimerical percussions of Virgil Partch to the music concrete of Messers. Schafer and Henry, perhaps none have been as unusual as the compositions of Conlon Nancarrow. Nancarrow, born in 1912 and now an expatriot in Mexiso, writes for, thei player- piano. He has been doing so since around 1948, but it wasn't until choreographer Merce Cunning- ham devised a ballet around Nancarrow's Studies for Player Piano in 1960 that this arch-in- dividualist received a modibum of fame. Appropriately enough, the sets for that ballet were designed by Robert Rauschen- berg, the painter-sculptor now involved in trying to devise "art works" which will depend for their form, behavior, and effect solely upon the changes in the environment. That other- pro- found dabbler in the arts, John Cage, worked on Cunningham's ballet, and it is curious that these three would be interested in Nancarrow's music. Cage, after all espouses the intrusion of chance in music; Rauschen- berg seeks to withdraw as ar- biter of form and meaning; even Cuningham eschews any codi- fication of dance movements that would cut across the speci- fic exigencies of each ballet. Yet nothing could be more rigid, controlled, and formal than music for player-piano. Nancarrow not only punches his own piano ro Is directly 'with a special home-made machine, but he so constructs his music that only his .own Ampico play- er-pianos can reproduce the rolls. Moreover, his music itself can never escape either the in- flexible tempo of the machine or the fact of equal stress for all notes, futher complicated by the phenomenon of all high iotes automatically sounding louder than low notes. iossibilities of player piano Tenants Union files countersuit Continued from Page 1) is certain how much money is in- harpsichord compositions Evett's work, of sorts. and Nancarrow's for player-piano; too, is an oddity -Daily-R. A. Perry The ways in which Nancarrow solves, or better yet absorbs these problems, add interest and delight to his Studies, twelve of which may be heard, on a new Columbia relea se MS 7222. Rather than complain, as some critics have, that Nancarrow'sk music lacks depth because of the limitations of the - player-piano (how deep is a Beethoven bagatelle, anyway?), one can marvel at the richness of effect that the composer does achieve. (Furthermore, despite, our pro- pensities to (ight-track, non- stop tapestone does not have to listen to the entire record at one sitting.) From the early, raf time numbers to the more complex, recent exercises, there is much to admire in Nancar- row's Studies. Number 2 evokes the ragtime piano, but the stop-start tempo shows Your Father's Moustache through the warped prismus of Dr. Caligari's Cabinet. Study Number 10 attempts the "blues" and it' is as close to lyricism as Nancarrow ventures. A g a i n mechanism intrudes and Nan- carrow gives us no human blues but the tears of a Pinocchio. Study Number 7 is the longest exercise and the most involved, with provacative juxtapositions of demonic areggios and decep- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official .Bulletin is an official publication~ of the Univer-' sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN ft r m to Room 3528 L.S.A. B~ldg., before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publl- catioi and by, 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar \Items appear once only. Student organization notices a r e not accepted for publication, For more information, phone 764-9270. Da Calendar Wednesday, May 28 The Initial Management of the. Acute- ly Ill or Injured Patient Seminar - General Session, D o w Auditorium, Towsley Center for Continuing Medical Education, 8:30 a.m. Department of Anatomy Seminar - Whitney R. Powers, Ph.D., Associate' Professor, Boston University, "The Ef- fect of ' Handedness in the Conscious Isolation and Control of Single Motor Unit Action Potentials in Man": 2501 East Medical Bldg., 1:10 p.m. Ann Arbor Branch American Assocla- tion of University Women Lecture - Design in Our Lives - Our Time - Charles W. Cares, Jr., Professor of Land- scape Architecture, University of Mich- igan, "The Garden": Rackham Amphi- theftter, 7:30 p.m. GENERAL NOTICES Regents' Meeting: June 20. CoMmuni- cations for consideration at this meet- ing must be in the President's hands no later than June 5. Doctoral Exams Donald Joseph/ Nefske, Engineering Mechanics, Dissertation: "Some Velo- S NATIONAL. HENERA. CORPORATION I O EA TENHEATRES7U9130 1375 No. MAPLE RD. "769.1300 city and Temperature Distributions 'Tor1 Hamel Flow in Logarithmic Spirals," on Wednesday, May 28 at 1:00 p.m. in 3153 West Engineering Building, Chairman:s H. J, Smith.1 Ursula Ruth Brockert Dibner, History, Dissertation: "The History of the Na- tionalist Socialist German Student Lea-t gue," on Wednesday, May 28 at 1:301 p.m. in 3609 Haven Hall, Chairman: G.x L. Weinberg.< Arvel Lawrence Fincher, Education,3 Dissertation: "Job Mobility of Academic Psysicists in AnIerican Higher Educa- tion: A Preliminary Study," on Wednes- day, May 28 at 1:30 p.m. in West Coun-t cil Room, Rackham, Chairman: N. C. Harris. John Wallace Eaton, Anthropology, Dissertation: "The Human Red Cell: The Relationship of 2, 3-Diphospho- glycerate Metabolism a n d Oxygen Transport," on Wednesday, May 28 at 3:Q0 p.m. in Human Genetics Library of SPR Building, Chairman, F. B. Liv- ingstone., Douglas McClennen, Education and Psychology, Dissertation: "The Assess- ment of interpersonal Ou'tcomes inI Emotionally 1 Disturbed Children," on, Wednesday, May 28 at 3:30 p.m. at 332. South State Street, Chairman: Richard1 Mann. Placementx z GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Current position openings received b1 general division by mail and p h o n e, please call 764-7460 for coinpiete infor- mation and application procedures: State of Michigan - Civil Engineer, Community Planning Spec. at several levels, min. BA in urban planning, arch, or other related areas. State of Utah - Medical Doctor path- 6logist. State of Washington - Managemen ENDS TUESDAY MON.-THUR.-7:00-9:35 FRI.-SAT.-SUN.--1 :00- 3:45-6:30-9:15 Information Supervisor, bus. ad., psych., soc. Indust. engrg. degrees, BA plus 5 yrs, MA plus 3. Accounting Analyst, BA acctg. 1 yr. exper. Advisory Sanitarian, MPH or BA in related area with 4 years exper. Group Home Supervisor, soc. sci. area BA, 1 yr. Delinquency Prevention Consultant, Soc. Set. area degree, BA plus 4. and MA plus 2 yrs. exper. Com- munity Affairs Consultant, MPH, MBA,F or soc. sci. MA and 4 years, BA with 61 yrs, or PhD plus 2 yrs. Air Quality En-t gineer, BSE and 4, years, i'egistrationf pref. City of Minneapolis, Minn. - Elec-; trical Engineer. Consultant, active nurs-4 ing care. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Use of this column f o r announce- ments is available to officially recog- ,nized and registered student organiza- tions only. Forms are available in Room, 1011 SAB. UM Chess Club Meeting, May 28 atj 7:30 p.m. in room 3B in the Union. This is their weekly meeting. Rent your Roommate with a Classified Ad tive inactivity. In Number 15 I hear Sati-like drops of water on a pond, but Number 19 sug- gests little beyond the shatter- ing of glass. Most of the brief works are studies ir form, as in Number 21, entitled "Canon X." Here the bass voice begins slowly and accelerates while the upper voice, beginning at breakneck speed, undergoes entropic de- cline. Contrived? Perhaps, but the medium of the player-piano creates a precision that becomes strangely unnerving. Certain of the : studies which depend upon tight formulas, such as Number 33 where one tempo is related to the other by the proportion of two to the square root of two, seem less effective. Organiza- tion supercedes meaning there, but perhaps that is Nancarrow's message to the modern world. ** * It is no doubt unfair to Rob- ert Evett to include his Harp- sichord Sonata, released this week by Composers Recordings Irw., in a review with Nancar- row. Nevertheless, there are similarities between his work for The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students of the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michi- gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor,<. Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity, year. Subscription rates! $9 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. BACH CLUB presents a talk by RANDOLPH SMITH on Bach's Sonata I in G for Viola Do Gamba and Clavier plus an Election of Officers THURSDAY, MAY 29 Guild House-802 Mnroe Jelly donuts and Fun!! Attendance at last meeting was 60! Everyone Welcome! No musical knowledge needed (even for officers). , For further information Call 761 8291, 769-2922, 769-1605. Evett, present Arts Editor of the Atlantic and previous holder of the same post at the New Republic, has crafted a fas- cinating harpsichord sonata that is both old-fashioned and mod- ern. On one hand, it is divided into three movements of Baro- que precedence-slow, fast, slow, and a concluding rondo. Basic- ally interested in rhythm and form', Evett establishes in each movement a rhythmic and melodic "theme" of short dura- tion and he then proceeds not so much to offer variations as to "work on" that motif. And although there are no dynamics, metronomic indications, or given registrations in the score, Evett oddly enough never strays very far from the original motif of each movement so that the com- poser's single-minded insistence binds the listener to the music. Yet, where the core of Nancar- row is maniacal rigidity, the es- sence of Evett is wit. A Casper Milquetoast of a man, Evett is almost as amusing in his music as he is in his conversation. Even the more sinister lower register chord clusters that oc- cur in the work only conjure up a fairy-tale boogy-man. That gentle ogre is the father of Theodore Roethke's poem, "My Papa's Waltz," upon which Evett1 bases the rondo of his sonata. In the rondo, the harpsichord sounds a clever "oom-pah-pah" theme and then, characteris- tically, plays with it as the in- ebriated father of the poem bumpily waltzes the son to bed.' If Evett's Harpsichord Sonata lacks extensive musical material, it lnakes up for it in subtlety and imagination that never slacken. The work is comic but never slapstick; the sense of humor is almost English in its dryness. Secure in his jobnas respected editor, Evett does not have to pander to musical fashions nor declare himself a disciple in any stylistic camp; he crafts music to please himself, and not the promoters of false posterity. Robert Parris, to whom the work was dedicated, plays the two-manual harpsichord with imagination and elan to match Evett's gifts, eppecially consider- ing the leeway that the cm- poser allows. Parris and Evett are best friends and one could ask for no more sympathetic a 'erformance. C.R.I. has pro- vided what is probably the best recorded harpsichord spund I have heard, even brighter than wlfat Mercury gives Raf~el P yana. grounds that state law allows volved."r withholding of rent only where Baren conditions constitute a health and four sta safety hazard not caused by the area inf occupants. tion. Barense contended that the pur- In his pose of the rent strike is to Barense "compel the landlords of Ann granted Arbor to negotiate with the Ann Councilt Arbor Tenants Union as the sole used by bargaining agent for its mem- that the' bers." free offi He also suggested that the court service b order an accounting of the funds "This being held in escrow "since no one "seemse Tle student' to a tuitio :rming them of his ac- Barense apparently did not sug- gest what should be done about letter to ,the legislators, this. The University has main- claimed that money tamed a neutral stance towards to Student Government the rent strike, although it has by the Regents has been been recognized as a student ac- the Tenants Union, and -tivity and supported by SGC. Tenants Union is granted The landlords' suit charges the ce space andtelephonesyrent strike with attacking the con- action," Barense said cept of private property. They ntirely Inappropriate In claim the strike involves conspir- e e n o t acy to violate existing and .future leases and conspiracy to obtain " libelous articles in The Daily. gu id e The landlords are asking for $10,000 in individual damages, $300,000 in exemplary damages, and recovery of more than h $100,000 held in escrow. se also sent letters to the ite legislators from the view of the fact that the Ann Arbor Tenants Union is attacking private owners of property in Ann Arbor. 'tov T ' t1001Wswiio V-AOILR_ in. 1 _The new countersuit asks that the strikers be allowed to present 3cntinued from Page iz 000. It will probably be somewhat their claims to a jury, and that joint Senate - House conference less this year, but still must fig- they be awarded: committee recommendation was ure into the final determination of approved in both chambers. level of tuition. th-actiual damages of $500,000 on At p1 sent, the size of the Uni- .An increase in funds for finan- e anti-trust charge; versity appropriation in the House cal aids of even half last year's -actual damages of $386,000 on bill - and the final compromise amount would still necessitate an the other charges; as- well - are still matters of across-th-board increase of an ad- -exemplary damages of .$100,- } gueswork.dltional 0.9 per c e n t in studentj 000; guesswor'k. es One reasonable guess puts the So after the Legislature h a d -$15,000 in legal fees. final appropriation at $66.3 mil- agreed on a final appropriation If The countersuit charges that lion - $1 million above the Sen- the University still needed an ad- the landlords' have "continuously ate bill and $1 million less than ditional $1 million in non-finan- violated" the Ann Arbor building the governor's recommendation. cial aids operating funds, the out- and housing codes and other ap- This $1 million would then have of-state undergraduate would pay plicable city, county and state to be regained throughan increase about a $14 increase for financial codes in that they have not main- in student fees. aitds in addition to t h e $54 in- taIned facilities properly, Includ- The next problem, also partially crease already projected. His total g plumbing, electrical wiring and a matter of guesswork, is how the annual tuition would then be garbage disposal. administration will choose to di- about $1610. Annual in-state tui- The landlords involved in the vide this increase among various tion would be about $500. )suits are Apartments Limited, Ar- groups of students. Other factors might drive the bor Forest Apartments, Cbarter At present there are eight dif- increase still higher - even with Realty, Brady Anderson, Charlotte ferent tuition levels, varying with the same , state appropriation. Van Curler, William Van Fossen school or college and in-state or Smith says he is trying to come up .and Robert L. Shipman. out-of-state status. with a budget that would work The \landlords' conspiracy suit But very likely, the University with funds recommended by the names 91 strikers, "all' organiza- will maintain the same percentage governor. But, he adds, "Frankly, tions" representing or belonging to differentials in student fees that I haven's Ibalanced the budget the Tenants' Union, and all co- presently exist. This would be ac- quite yet." conspirators "whether named or complished with across-the-board Smith says that if the Legisla- not." percentage increases in all eight ture passes the $65.3 million ap- -- categories. propriation suggested Monday by Smith says a committee of ad- t h e State Senate Appropriations ministrators is being formed to Committee, he would certainly study th6 long-range structure, make some cut in the budget so but that no report will be ready that it would balance with the for implementation this year. $8.7 million increase in total rev- With student fees presently enue suggested by the governor. bringing in about $29 million, a But, he adds, if the final appro- a ° 3.5r prcent across-the-board tui- priation is higher than the Senate tion'increase w o u 1 d produce $1 figure, he might leave in a few million in additional revenue. Ac- more hundreds of thousands of cording to t h i s formula, under- dollars and support this increase P O T graduate out - of - state tuition in expenditure with a small addi- would increase about $54 - given tIbn to the tuition hike. Such an a final $66.3 million appropriation. addition might amount to $5 for But there are other factors the out-of-state undergraduate. which complicate the equation and Thus, given a $66.3 million state in Dai tend to heighten the increase. appropriation, undergraduate out- Each t I m e the Regents raise of-state fees might jump to $1615 tuition, for example, they increase' and in-state to about $504.* ' the University's general fund bud- But, of course, no one is=quite get allocation to financial a i d s. sure about that $6$.3 million Last year this increase was $550,- figure just yet 10 It 4i 4, ,4.. Steve says advertising praises prices. / f ENDS TODAY !! 1, A WOMAN-6:30, 9:30 CARMEN, BABY-8:00 MGM Presents a STANLEY KUBRICK PRODUCTION 200 1 a space odyssey SUPER PANAVISION@ * METROCOLOR } RADLEY M METZGER PRESENM ORIGINAL ~ ONLY! 1. .8 t ;-r with ESSY PERSSON Star of "Therese and Isabelle" r I ujj'u M! ITe Total romaeArinial Rleased thmogh AUDUBON FILMS FEFA 44 But how come that color TV set his fraternity just bought costs $300 less than it used to? the mini ad 1965 SUPER HAWK. $300, well taken care of miles. Will sell to highest' offer by Nov. 1. Andy-761-5930. Z2 DOUBLE FEATURE-THURS. THRU SAT. ch$a Le: K. eWRMepresents *1 IIIIIIII I.. .. -'I r ss . Ten years ago, a typical 21-inch color TV set sold for $700. Today, you can get a comparable set for under $400. With a lot of improvements, to boot. Like automatic fine tuning. And less need for servicing. What brought the price down so dramatically? Many mil. lions of dollars of advertising, mainly. Weren't there a lot of technological improvements, too? Yes. But they might have actually added to the price-without the 1 1 I