>:: "':' .i:',':_ : :rG:X:"::: ,.,:4::r;}:: }:4' :ti; : _c:}'Yr .Y.I .}}Y *********'**'***** /i r'"K: The persistence of Vivan te 's memories By CAROL WIERZBICKI .. v...... r.. 4 ' fig}. C{{. : ' i vf' if } ti;? ""v The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 29, 1 979--Page fA RECORD When Arturo Vivante reads his stories, it is as if he is simply recalling his experiences off the top of his head rather than having written them down before- hand. Such straightforwardness, warmth, and spontenaity pervaded Vivante's fic- tion reading at East Quad's Benzinger Library Tuesday night. Reading in his soft Italian accent, Vivante went through three of his short stories and left the im- pression that he is one who cherishes and is moved by his memories. The first story, "Game of Light and Shade," came from his recently published collection, Run to the Waterfall. In it, Vivante describes his visit to a bell tower in Sienna, Italy. He begins by describing in detail the stairs, the small, tomblike compartments with thick wallsand the view; but the startling observation is that there is a blind man purchasing a ticket to go to the top of the tower. What value could a blind man place upon a bell tower, the main interest of which is the view? As both men reach the' top, the blind man reveals his motive: The bell tower, he explains, is to him the best place in all of Sienna: It is at the top, with the sun shining sharply through the windows, that he can most clearly experience light and darkness. His enjoyment comes from the knowledge that he is standing either in sun or shade, and feeling the shadows move as the sun moves. Through an imagery that is at once serene and energetic, Vivante gives a moving portrait of a man who has accepted his fate with both patience and inventiveness. A HEIGHTENING AND SHARPENING of the senses, one of the themes of Games, is also something that Vivante himself is capable of achieving. Blind people's canes, he says in that same story, "seem alive, as sharp and delicate as a cat's whisker." In his second story of the evening, "Of Love and Friendship," Vivante told of a lichen-collector whom his family befriends, and who becomes one of their many visitors. The man, who has made a career of collecting lichen off the bark of trees, soon gets the whole family interested in his trade. The author goes on to describe the lichen with an almost photographic clarity, in all its varietal reds and yellows, lacy and filigreed splendor. The effect of all this imagery is to reflect vividly the man's character. He is meticulous, amiable, and unromantic. Vivante's third story, "Berta," was a witty and touching piece about a military officer who encounters sev'eral prostitutes on a street. The prostitutes begin bickering over the man-who wants nothing to do with them to begin with-but soon Berta wins his affections. The two agree to go on a holiday together, but as the vacation progresses, a troubling discrepancy arises between what the man wants Berta to be (the frivolous, alluring girl of the bars and streets)i and what Berta ,wants for herself (to "play the wife" in her plain tweed suitl and suddenly demure manner). The story leaves a feeling of irreconcilable misunderstanding and enduring sad- ness. the Pow( I Jana'or anL, L£aszlo J5onovf s 1 4 . Songs from the Heartland Gemini Solid Sound Records smilin', singin' twins aren't all that lively in concert. They're nice enough fellows, and, oh sure, very talented in- strumentally and vocally, but there is precious'little showmanship in their act. When artists decide to cut a live disc, there is presumably some good reason. The listener is to feel part of some ex- citing "event," or, in the case of, say, the Kingston Trio, everyone is treated to the whimsical little chit-chat bet- ween numbers. With Gemini's Songs from the Heartland, recorded live at the Residential College auditorium earlier this fall, there is no humor, and no sense of spontenaity. The tunes are all very low key and "folkie," and, who knows why, puntuated by applause and feeble sing-alongs. REALLY, GEMINI ought to shine when it comes to record albums, and in their first effort they have fallen short. Sandor and Laszlo sing very well PUBLIC HEALTH STUDENT ASSOCIATION Presents Sen. Edward Pierce - Ann Arbor Chairprson of House Committee on Health & Social Services "A Freshperson Looks at Health Issues inthe Mich- igan Legislature" FRIDAY, NOV. 30-NOON SPH I Auditorium free of charge and open to the public together, but they only attempt a few good harmony songs here, and even these are uniformly "mellow" to the point of being funeral. Those who have seen the duo in concert or busking during the Art Fair know that they are also capable of some very nice upbeat material, and to deny themselves a variety in, expression seems only to cheat a public deserving a wider tast of the Gemini talent. Precision, though, is what the boys dq best, and that precision comes oat in their lengthy instrumental cuts o)- Songs from the Heartland. These half' classical, half-folk duets are nothing short of fascinating to hear: They display the imagination and energy that the rest of the album lacks, and redeem the effort to an extent. Still, there is no excuse for Gemini to put out a live, yet soporific recording,, They are better than that, and they. know it, for their extrordinary and various ability and repertoire promise nothing less. By ERIC ZORN What could have driven the Gemini brothers, Sandor and Laszlo Slomovits, to record a "live" album? And, once the Ann Arbor folksingers decided to go live, why did they choose such a reposeful, melancholy set of tunes? When it comes right dawn to it, the opens at, er Center forward undisguised Devil. Slyness is left wanting. The difference between a good and bad Richard is almost inevitably its Richard. Still, despite the basic conceptual problems, there is substantial pleasure to be had in Pennell's in- terpretation of the role. Excepting a few painfully weak links the supporting cast is stur- dy. Complete review tomorrow. -Joshua Peck PITCHER NIGHT FROM THESE STORIES of post- WWII England and Italy, it seems that Vivante is a person who's deeply affec- ted by place and time assthey live in his memory. His recurring themes are those of innocence and growing up; of the wonder of discovery and the pain of disillusionment. Indeed, many of his stories are written in a prose that is almost childlike in mood, butthat also possesses mature precision and sub- tlety. In addition, Vivante has an im- pressionistic feel for atmosphere. When he is describing, for example, his first glimpse of an English restaurant after his family has left fascist Italy, he writes: ". . I remember the feel of it. It was a leather-covered door, fat and cushiony. It swung open as we pressed it, and it disclosed light. Light refracted by crystal chon- deliers. Light' broken up and shining. Rivulents of light. it lit us up. It bathed us. We looked at each other and felt we were really seeing each .other now..." In just a few words, Vivante creates mood, attitude, season, place, and time of day. Similarly, his often highly autobiographical stories are peopled with characters whose pleasures and pains we can all relate to, characters we feel we've known at some time or other in our lives. The effect of reading a Vivante book of short-stories, then, is that of reading a diary rich in images. VIVANTE STARTED writing poems at age 11, and these poems later grew into short stories. He studied medicine, and practiced it for five years, until he decided that "writing was the only thing I could do well and with proficien- cy." In addition to publishing poetry and two novels, his short stories have been appearing regularly in The New Yorker since 1958. Join the Daily Edit Staf f 7p.m. to Closing LIVE MUSIC BY: Blue Front Zm crl Persuaders 611 Church One Block South of South U. The Professional Theatre Program, (PTP) Richard III opened last night at the Power Center with Stratford actor Nicholas Pennell in the title role. Both the production and Pen- nell's treatment of the lead are of mixed blessings and blunders. This Richard is a bluntly evil one. He speaks to the audience, not as the subtle schemer that those familiar with the play might expect, but as a straight- a LSA INTERNSHIP PROGRAM Now Accepting Applications for Summer Internships 1980 Liberal Arts Students who will be ,Seniors Fall Term 1980, are encouraged to apply. NOV. 29-APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN 1223 ANGELL HALL DEC. 12-SELECTION PROCESS BEGINS AND APPLICATIONS ARE DUE DEC. 20-FINAL DEADLINE FOR APPLYING Applications and information available in 1223 AngelI Hall JUNIOR YEAR AT SMITH Northampton, Massachusetts A private liberal arts college for women Where you can find - a small undergraduate college with the diversity of a large uhtiversity - courses and resources of exceptional range and quality, all accessible to undergraduates - lifein closely knit college houses and involvement in communities beyond the campus A student body of 2500, a faculty of 250, in a city of 35,000. Located in the Connecticut River Valley. Smith, Amherst, Hampshire, Mt. Holyoke Colleges and the University of Massachusetts make up the Five Colleges, Inc., community. COLLEGE 4 4 A Q w 4 ,rTOM. M'yyt For brochure and application forms, write: junior Year at Sntith College Hall 23 Smith College Northampton, MA 01063 Smith College does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, creed, handicap, or national origin. 1979-1980 EE GRADUATES .-I NCR/Wichita /o/ In I 11 MOS circuit OpportUn es; ) )t Worried about where you'll be 5-10 years from now? We'll tell you about ground floor opportunities in VLSI MOS circuit design. Worried about too narrow specialization? We'll tell you how we form project teams consisting of VLSI MOS circuit designers, systems architects, CAD specialists for the design of next generation computer systems-and how you would be working with NCR's microelectronics process engineers on the latest technologies. Worried about high-stress living? We'll give you a look at a lifestyle that's affordable unhurried, uncrowded, smog-free. 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