PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MAY 7, 1966 PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MAY 7, 1988 #12 12 1 T FILMS 'Great Race' Loses; Only Lemmon Wins California Group Hits 'Red Activity' at Berkeley, MUSIC Orchestra Offers Unfamiliar Works By JAMES SCHUTZE gets, cute devices, some good land- "The Great Race" is not another scape, some exercrable jokes, and common and inane movie. The a girl who runs around in her producers of this show have gone to great lengths, unheard of ex- underwear all day. Jack Lemmon keeps the theatre pense and incredible creative toil, I from emptying immediately after to invent a thoroughly new andi excitingly unique variety of mali- cious stupidity. Of course, many little people will object angrily that, "well, they intended this movie to be stupid, because they wanted it to enter- tain us." One does not ask that every movie be a fresh triumph for drama, photography, poetry, and mankind. One seeks humbly to avoid indigestion One avoids movies like "The Great Race." Tony Curtis is the hero. He wears white and speaks with the accent of an Italian fruitvender who has seen too many Cary Grant movies. He is opposed by Jack Lemmon, a villain. The rest of- the cast consists of funny gad- the movie's first line with the hilarious portrayal of one Profes- sor Fate, a scoundrel. Later in the show, he plays a prince whose ability to become King is limited by his talent for staying drunk most of the time. And then there is the rest of the show. Tony Curtis, Natalie Wood, Peter Falk, and Jack Lem- mon are stranded on a drifting iceberg along with two turn-of- the-century race cars. Natalie and Tony are sitting in one of the cars where Natalie is preparing dinner for the group. Natalie shouts, "come and get it." Peter winks slyly to Jack. "Maybe she doesn't mean us." One slaps the knee. (Continued from Page 1) Francisco bay area but said that it is a mistake to consider the campus "a center for sexual de- viation." The committee reported that campus dances with lewd themes and blatant promiscuity and the presentation of "disgusting, debas- ed spectacles," were taking place. Educational Leader Heyns, a former University vice- president, commenting on the charges at Kerr, said, "President Kerr is a recognized educational leader. I came here to work with him and I have faith in his lead- ership and commitment to the state and the nation. If there. is serious doubt among the respon- sible leaders of this state about his leadership or mine I suggest that they quickly resolve it. Mean- while, we here at the Berkeley campus intend to go about our business of building an even great- er university." Charges that Kerr was "hos- tile" to the committee and their aims were made. The members added that Kerr did not 'help in seeking out Communist activities on campus "but actually took steps that tended to prevent this from occurring." Student opinion of the report was reflected in the statement made by Jerry Goldstein, presi- dent of the student body. "As a student at Berkeley I was most disturbed to learn that the Burns Committee has chosen to issue a second biased report. Our campus has begun to gain its composure in dealing with its problems. It is time that the state gain its com- posure in living with the univer- sity. Cal is not a haven for Com- munism. Her students are hard working, dedicated, intelligent and patriotic. At the same time they question hypocrisy and critically analyze and modify such radical views as Communism and Fascism -the extremes of our world." Free University Kerr, in stating his aims for ad- ministering Berkeley, said, "a uni- versity, by its nature, is dedicated to freedom in a free society. It can become consequently an arena for dissent. It is also a great source of progress. The freedom and the progress go hand in hand. We support both. We also support the principle of fair play." By JEFFREY K. CHASE Program Kodaly-Concerto for Orchestra Kodaly-Te Deum Bartok-Concerto No. 1 for Piano and Orchestra What the two best known twentieth century Hungarian com- posers have been doing musically was the theme of last evening's May Festival concert in Hill Aud. Chances are that all three of these works were unfamiliar to many in the audience-and this is good. An audience can get tired of hearing the same music again and again, and appreciates an op- portunity to expand its repertoire of familiar themes and rhythms. Kodaly's "Concerto for Orches- tra," unlike the much more pro- found and searching same-named work by Bartok, has foot-tapping rhythms in the three allegro por- tions and sensuous tone coloring in the two intervening slower sec- tions. The Philadelphia Orchestra, conducted by Thor Johnson, gave a spirited reading which captured the essence of the thing. The vocal offering, Kodaly's "Te Deum," featuring the Univer- sity Choral Union Chorus and di- rected by Mr. Johnson, carried a certain power and sense of lined which fulfilled its opening phrase: "We praise Thee, O God, We acknowledge Thee to be the Lord."! Soloists Jennifer Vyvyan, Lili Chookasian, Waldie Anderson, and Sherrill Milnes sang their parts with ease and conviction. Gyorgy Sandor,.professor in the School of Music, played the Bar- tok Concerto with authority; and why not? Being a pupil and friend of both Kodaly and Bartok, he's I in the "in crowd" when it comes to music of these composers. And Sandor's digital devterity leaves one wondering how he played the first movement so cleanly long after he has begun the second. Eugene Ormandy conducted tle orchestral complement and, to- gether with Mr. Sandor, kept the rhythmic drive, the percussive attacks and the harmonic disson- ances lively to the end. Unrelating applause greeted Mr. Sandor's bows until he again sat at the piano and Ormandy mount- ed the conductor's podium. They repeated the final movement of the Bartok concerto with a certain taut excitement which was not present before. The audience thus experienced how it can affect a performer to do his best. Somehow when a performer senses that he is expected to be great he gets an extra burst of energy to be just that. Mr. San- dor's Ann Arbor neighbors were with him all the way, It seems that the orchestra has adapted once again to Ann Arbor's climate for their Ann Arbor mus- ical offering. ..,., ..... ......................................................................> DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor-, ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication, 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 are not accepted for publication. SATURDAY, MAY 7 Day Calendar No Events Scheduled. General Notices Doctoral Examination for Jerome James Donnelly, English Language & Literature; thesis: "The Concept of Night: Its Use and Metamorphosis in the Poetry of the Eighteenth Century," Sat., May 7, 1600 Haven Hall, at 2 p.m. Chairman, N. E. Nelson. Voice-Students for a Democratic So- ciety: Mon., May 9, 8 p.m., Room 30 Michigan Union, summer school, Twen- tieth Century Revolutions; Michael Zweig will be discussing the Chinese revolution. Voice-Students for a Democratic So- ciety: Tues., May 10, 8 p.m., Room 3G Michigan Union, general membership meeting, election of officers, discussion of summer plans. Placement ANNOUNCEMENTS: Attention June and August Graduates: Seniors and graduates with minimum of 12-15 semester hourstat U. of Michn are eligible to register for placement services. Come In and browse through current positions in variety of fields directories of schools, employers, gov- ernment opportunities and company literature. Hours: 8:30-12 and 1:30-4:30. U.S. Civil Service Commission: An- nounces exam for Anthropologist GS-11- 15 with the Smithsonian Institution and other agencies throughout the U.S., of particular interest to recent PhD graduates and currently enrolled PhD candidates. Complete infirmation avail- able at the Bureau Department of State--Aid for Inter- national Development: Announces op- portunities for graduates in the Jun- ior Officer Training Program. Prefer people with advanced degrees for ca- reers in the Foreign Service. Exten- sive 2-yr. trng. program leading to{ overseas assignment in a variety ofI fields. 6 mos. trng, in Wash., D.C. and 8 mos. on-the-Job trng. overseas. In- terested students or graduates should f submit applications (SF-57) available at Bureau. (Continued on Page 7)_ SUNDAY s p MAY 8 P MICHIGAN UNION MAIN DINING ROOM a Breakfast 8-10 A.M. Dinner 12:30-2:00 P.M. 5':45-7:30 P.M. Phone 662-4431 for reservations 4 , Academy Award Winner Best Supporting Actress P&H .DIAL 8-6416 Held Over for A 5th Rave Week "**** A film to be cherished!" -N. Y. Daily News "Tremendous emotional appeal!" -N. Y. Herald Tribune "Compelling drama!" - n. Y. Journ4l Amerion SHELLEY a W ITERS u I TAKE PART IN YOUR UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES BE A B.M.O.C. sarng SIDNEYR POITER ELIZABETH HARIMAN 4 .. MICHIGAN DIAL 5-6290 JOIN UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER MASS MEETING Please Note Schedule Tony Curtis-JackLeunuon Natalie Wood TAEhye Great aC*" ED E syARDS' y oatm The greatest comedy of all time!. AN EXPLOSIVE STORY OF TODAY! I~VJ )lI~III ~ 'TECHICOLOR' PANAVIStIOH' FROM WARN4ER BS#OL 4 Shows Daily at 1:00-3:30-6:15-9:00 - Mats. $1.00; Eves. & Sun. $1.25 ".w... mmmmmmmmmm inmmmmmmmmmmm mm mm mm mm m - m mum mm mm mm, " , r , I TONITE rI , r , rI r i MONKEY BUSINESS r (1931) * r r starring the Marx Brothers * r * r r " r , r , Short: "Lucky Star" " , r , r , .-A \ AM 0 U U a