THE MICHIGAN DAILY .qATirlRnA'V VAVVMUVIO T .E MICH ._AN ..Ia__ tT11~A~ 1Vti'LMt3 K State Street Glistens Artist Transcends Life To Create' PRO MUSICA ANTIQUA: Greenberg Says Concert Enlightening By CAROL LEVENTEN '5 art in life with a complete ab- sence of a sense of humor which, I feel, is a weakness in the novel," Prof. Felheim said. Although he called the book a "magnificent document on the history of man's growth as a responsible creative force," it is not "a magnificent novel." "The Horse's Mouth" expresses what life is, not what it should be, Prof. Felheim criticized. With complete indifference to any no- tion of values, the artist exhibits a marvelous courage with com- plete free spirit. Basic Similarities Prof. Felheim saw basic simi- larities in the books. Both artists put faith in the capacity of man to be inspired and thus to trans- cend society. Implicit in both books is the whole idea that life is short and the artist must make it everlast- ing. "Neither author says, "Go out and be an artist, but rather keep one portion of one's mind alive to the people who did," Prof. Felheim said. "Dr. Zhivago" as a document reads 'like, a sermon, while "The Horse's Mouth" draws the picture of the creative artist at work with a comic, enjoyable spirit, he con- cluded. 'U Professor BLANKET OF SNOW-State Street glistens with light and snow brightness after the unexpected snowfall Thursday night.,The lights of Angell Hall and Burton Tower contrast vividly with the black starkness of trees not yet covered with snow. COOLEY LECTURE: Force Settles Few Disputes Sees Inerease In Abundance Increasing abundance will re- sult in more Americans retreating from work to the narrow circle of close relatives, friends and the television set, Prof. Harold L. Wi-- lensky of the sociology depart- ment, predicted Thursday at a' conference on family life in Mil- waukee, Wisconsin.. "We seem headed toward an organization of work in which a small group of executives, mer- chants, professional experts and politicians labor hard and long to control and service the masses, while the masses will "take it easy" on a progressively shorter work week," he said. "More people in both middle- class and working-class will find themselves in large organizations, paid more for fewer hours, lead- ing a more secure existence," Prof. Wilensky continued. The abundance in the free West has been accompanied by wider freedom, literacy, culture, more chance for self-expression In personal relationships and pluralism in organizational life, he explained. But this abundance brings burdens, including the in- difference to poverty. "With economic advance, the remaining poor, the disorganized lower tenth, tend to be ignored," the sociologist said. Abundance also brings the bur- den of the "goodies" - the en- thusiastic consumption of private goods accompanied by the starva- tion of education and welfare services. "Mass entertainment and pro- motion bring their burden too," he continued. "Although there is much in television, radio, movies and the press that is good, few would deny that these media have some potential for destruction, and like our newdrugs, must be used with caution." lie analogized his analysis with the tax crisis: A growing popula- tion demanding more public serv- ices; irresponsibility of some lead- ers reflecting their short term interests and their constituents' complacency. Force and violence have played a relatively small part in settling disputes in this country, Prof. Willard Hurst of the University of Wisconsin said Thursday at the law school. In the fourth of five .Thomas M. Cooley lectures, Prof. Hurst noted Americans are "daily in- doctrinated in habits of negotia- tion, bargaining, and adjust- ment" of their differences. The dispersion of political power and the operation of the free market place have' contributed to this tradition. The result, he said, is a deep- rooted faith that adjustments could be reached - that on the whole, no group need fear that another sought its total destruc- tion or subjugation. Therefore, Tom Lehrer To Perform Tom Lehrer, social critic, bal- ladeer, and former H a r v a r d mathematician, will appear at 8:30 p.m. today at the Ann Ar- bor High School. The Ann Arbor Folk and Jazz Society will present the Harvard graduate, who holds a master's degree and is presently working on his doctorate at Harvard. But Lehrer ridicules his alma mater and other cherished American in- stitutions during concert pro- grams in his deadpan stage style. His program pokes fun at such subjects as Boy Scouts, intellec- tual folk song faddery, atom bombs, patriotism, the old South, the old West, and Christmas. When employed in Los Alamos, N. M., Lehrer was inspired to write his song "The Wild West Is Where I Want To Be." He also sings such numbers as "We'll All Go Together When We Go" and "Fight Fiercely, Harvard." Lehrer has been compared to other rugged originalists and critics of the present, such as H. L. Mencken, W. C. Fields, and Charles Schulz. Saturday Review called Lehrer "a wandering min- strel -with no place to wander." Tickets to tonight's concert can be purchased at campus book' stores or at the box office. Prof. Hurst continued, there was no need to adopt violence as a creed or program. Irreconcilable Interests "Most occasions when law op- posed its violence to that of pri- vate groups did not reflect the presence of irreconcilable prin- ciples or interests," he said. "Rather they reflected failures of legal order to make timely ac- commodation to demands of farmers or workers to be treated, as sharers in the community of mid'dle class values. "This is why, measured by the aftermath, these occasions typ- ically proved to be episodes and not parts of a pattern of con- tinued force," Prof. Hurst said. While law has held a "legitimate monopoly of violence" in Ameri- can society, it has only rarely re- sorted to naked force in achieving. its objectives, he continued. Law was not an end in itself, he explained, but existed to serve purposes which emerged out of private individual and group ex- perience. On the whole, law shared its ends with other social institu- tions. More Effective Means "As we entered the second half of the 20th Century, it, appeared possible that men would learn more effective means of compel- ling the will than by violence," Prof. Hurst said. "Possibly law might find neces- sity to regulate private use of more subtle techniques of com- pelling the will to the ends of the manipulators; likewise it -might become necessary to enlarge the categories of compulsion forbid- den to government," the Wiscon- sin professor concluded. "This remains for the future, however," he added. League Edits 'Stud Buddy' A "Study Buddy" has been compiled for University freshmen. The'booklet gives hints on how to study effectively and success- fully. It was compiled and edited by the League to assist freshmen who are having academic difficul- "It's a revelation to most con- cert-goers," Noah Greenberg said of the medieval, Renaissance and baroque music performed by his Pro Musica Antiqua which gave a special University Musical Society concert here this week. Calling to mind the highly de- veloped forms of literature and art of the Renaissance, "I don't know why, but most people expect. Ren- aissance music to be primitive," he said. "For some reason, music seems to have been a step-child all these years. Today, perhaps, there is "a con- fusion of liking with recognition" in that an audience will become so accustomed to hearing the same works that they reach the point of presupposing a like of them. "But how many 'times would you have heard the same piece in Bach's day, when it was unthink- able to play printed material,'' and composers were expected to improvise on the spot? he argued. Opens Inner Ears Music from earlier periods tends to open the "inner ears" of its au- dience, he explained, and, be- cause of the immediate nature of a musical experience, "they are moved to react to it right then." He said this was important in explaining the current demand for pre-Bach works, with which the audience, after hearing them for the first time, is "surprised and delighted." Although the performing group is its most well-known'aspect, the New York Pro Musica which Greenberg directs is active in other areas. It maintains a series of classes and study groups, a li- brary and an information service. One 16-voice vocal group, Greenberg explained, meets week- ly with three different conductors, each of whom emphasizes one par- ticular problem or composer. "The only requirement is that the sing- er be a crackerjack reader. "When we feel they're prepared, we invite them to perform with us," he said. Maintains Library To solve one problem of per- forming early works-scarcity of manuscripts - the Pro Musica maintains its library of multiple copies, including instrumental parts, for students, conductors and composers. There is no way of knowing the original scoring of Pre-Renais- sance works, Greenberg related, because the composer, who was attached to the court, "was not the specialized person he is to- day." Rather, because he was in- timately involved with the per- formance, he could decide on the spot what the scoring should be and, since the tradition was a free one, his musical judgment and taste determined the scoring. Use Instruments "We try to duplicate the musi- cal situation, -using instruments of the period," he explained. The decision of which to use is made after -the instruments are as- sembled and "in the last analy- (is, it is made on musical grounds. "But strange things occur." Ex- HOLIDAY WHIRL NOV. 17 and 19 7 :30 ample: in the 12 and 13th cen- turies. the psaltery was asacred instrument. According to a 13th century theologian, its triangular shape was said to represent the Trinity and the ten strings were equated with the ten command- ments. This was symbolic of the unification of the old and the new faiths and in painting, the psal- tery was always seen in the hands of IPavid. But in the Pro Musica produc- tion of a Daniel play, each time Daniel. appeared, he was followed by an attendant carrying the psal- tery, Greenberg commented. Replicas Used He said that few original in- struments are used by the Pro Mu- sica. Most are replicas made by craftsmen from museum models. Their psaltery was made in SEn- gland, and a little minstrel's harp was made in California from a replica of a Scottish original. And the wooden, Bach-type'flute used VgDTAL NO 8-6416 CONTINUOUS SHOWS TODAY FROM 1 O'CLOCK PRO MUSICA-Directed by Noah Greenberg, the New York Pro Musica performed medieval, Renaissance and baroque music at a special University Musical Society concert this week. The musie of these periods was played on replicas of the original Instru- ments. i , in the Ann Arbor concert "we found in a junk yard in New York," he recalled. The counter-tenor voice, which was used in the Renaissance, Is still used because "I feel there is a gap when one uses a female alto voice," The counter-tenor, which was needed by the men and boys' choirs singing in churches, is a high sound whereas the female al- to is low, Greenberg explained. The group plays music from as early as the eighth century to that of Purcell, covering. an almost 900 year span. There is a tendency to think of the period before Bach as unified, "but if one knows this period intimately, they are aware of a changein style approximately every 25 years. There is as much difference between Palestrina and Isaac as there is between Mozart and Brahms," Greenberg con- cluded. VDIAL NO 5-6290 n ENDS TONIGHT * PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS CALE AROLL LUt!LI. m PLMIER x CAO RI~-o 'I. , . < z .t- ..>. .., Y "DO NOT MISS 'MARCELINO' WHEN HE COMES YOUR WAY, WHICH HE IS BOUND TO DO "-Nw yrke., Magazin I I i rAlge English Dialogue I ~ " BUT r FOR COOTASamME"' wRrrn., nhutsa wd.. 4 34*AW Sm I " ebtvI u rrftl WRYsva EWWVMO V i I - loom lm f NOW! Late Show Tonight 11 P.M. SEETHE COLOSSAL ADVENTURESOF THE MI C o ssWmoEmERIe TICKETS COMPLIMENTARY JACOBSON'S CEMIL&B.DAMLLE'S"SASO"K "IA~ LAMARR.MATURE.SA DRS- LAt4SBURYWLCOX0N-TECHNICOL.W, sdY~ al .c o byf~5 a k u. rw*~ NS, rmt.usaw- b m -ram ~, i. in twtrk a b dof "Wr " a ftw rbdMsw t *ot a Reserved Seat Tickets on sale Monday for Combined UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN OHIO STATE UNIVERSTY 0 Saturday, November 21 . #oil It- ties. I-(- If- 11 Organization Notices Hillel Fdn., Sabbath Services, 9 a.m. tomorrow: Israeli folk dance group, 2 p.m. Supper club, 6 p.m., 1429 Hill. Mich. Christian Fellowship, Nov. 15, 4 p.m., Lane Halle. Speaker: Rev. D. Buteyn, First Fer. Church, Kalamazoo, "Jesus Christ ws a Personal Friend." Congregational Disciples E & R Stu- dent Guild, Nov. 15 at 5:30 p.m. Sup- per an ddiscussion, "Neglect or Serve?" at the Guild House at 524 Thompson. Nov. 15 at 9:30 a.m. at the Guild House a seminar "Symbol" with J. Edgar Ed- wards. MICHMIG AN vs. I NDI AN A Play-by-play with Bill Bishop-2:15 P.M. presented by L&M Cigarettes 650 on your Dormitory Dial I I Sociedad Hispanica, Nov. tulia, 3050 FB. 3-5 p.m. 16, Ter- WORLD'S ,1 A R VARIETY SHOWS 8 and 10 OLYMPIC GAMES FILMS FREE INTERNATIONAL RECIPE BOOKLETS 3ft f m DISPLAYS BY I