Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 30, ' Page Two THE MICHiGAN DAILY Sunday, January 30, 'Johnny': An eloquent reminder Hickerson: Music and crowd together By BRUCE SHLAIN There were people in the 30's who op-L posed wars. Although Dalton Trumbo was not the first, his anti-war novel Johnny Got His Gun was published at a time- 1939-when it was not the most fashion- able thing in the world to cast moral as- persions upon the American soldier. Trumbo's conception of the fighting in- fantry soldier is remarkably simplistic- and dramatically effective. He leaves out any recognition of the obscure economic and political forces that move nations or the hateful nationalistic pride that burns inside young men weaned on historical horse manure. Instead he concentrates on one item, the one and only reality, that there's a chance someone can get killed in combat. The storyline is simple enough. Boy meets girl. Boy falls in love with girl. Boy goes off to war and gets arms and legs blown off and loses eyes, ears, nose and mouth. Doctors keep boy alive as experi- ment, thinking he has been "decere- brated," and can no longer think. But he can. The movie begins as he slowly dis- covers, in the dark, what he has become- a thinking lump of meat. It would be easy for such a gory tale to lose its emotional effect by simply laying it on too Aeavily. But Trumbo, who also adapted and directed the film, deftly avoids this pitfall with frequent interludes into the sparkling color (the hospital scenes are in black and white) of Joe's fantasies and remembrances. At times he thinks about his rambling childhood, of former sweet smells and sounds, and often he thinks of the girl he loved, now so untouchable. The girl is played by Kathy Fields, who follows in the grand syrupy tradition of Bambi, and does a creditable job with her soleful stares. Joe (Timothy Bottoms) also imagines surreal discussions with his de- tached father (Jason Robards) and Christ (Donald Sutherland). Robards turns in a fine performance, but in this movie acting is delegated to secondary importance in lieu of that all-encompassing image -,. the live upper trunk of a body lying band- aged on a table. What is created, in hearing the lonely, innermost nightmares of a young man locked inside himself, is a portrait of the soldier as individual, as capable of pain, love, and even regret. There is an implicit assumption in Trumbo's work that any being capable of such rushes of feeling should not be slogging through mud and dead bodies on a battlefield. Yet, this personalized conception of the soldier is surprisingly lacking in American folklore, despite the fact that this country has been through skirmish after skirmish, and even a World War here and there. It is not so much the case of the soldier being placed on a pedestal as much as it is perhaps a sheer blockage of reality through the end- less barrage of media stereotypes. When Joe finally gets through to the outside world, aided by a sensitive liasion with a nurse (Diane Varsi) his wish is to be put in a carnival-not because of any preverse sense of revenge or quest for pity-but a last chance to let people in on his "secret." Otherwise he would rather be killed. He wants to be a reminder, and reminders are important things to be zapped with once in a while, since it is hard to sustain the emotional pitch that originally brings a person out into the street to say "NO". In its own manner of shocking elo- quence, this movie is such a reminder. If hundreds of years of civilized intellectual foreplay have done little to abolish war- fare, then perhaps emotional warfare is worth a try. area-wide BLACK WOMEN'S meeting Mon., Jan. 31-7 p.m. Michigan Union Ballroom Black men-Black women relationships Topic: B'ack male recruitment at colleges and universities By PAULA THOMAS Of all the entertainers who currently perform at the Ark, Joe Hickerson is one of the few people I truly enjoy. Unfortun- ately, he is also one of the hardest performers to review. The entire evening is so full of choice material that to review it, is to pick it to pieces and de- stroy the whole mood of the evening. Unlike most performers, Hick- erson does not assert his per- sonality over his music. Every- thing about him blends so well with his songs that by the end of the first set Hickerson; his music and his audience are united. This feeling may not come across well in print, but when you are a part of it, you are totally engulfed. It is you. More than a competent musi- cian. Hickerson definitely has his own distinct style. His "cha- risma" is reflected not only in his rich voice, but also in his style of guitar playing. Instead of the standard thumb for rhythm and fingers for melody, he reverses this. His rhythms change, and his music sounds more like mellow banjo frailing. And he has an unusual ability to choose the exact chords to complete the mood of every song he sings. It would be an injustice for me to list even a few of the songs he sang this weekend. Hickerson -through his job in the folk music archives-can daily exca- vate obscure versions to enrich his already amazing repertoire. With Hickerson, the audience is a large part of the entire per- formance. He-along with too few others-is able to bring this feeling to life. I can only urge you to go hear him the next time he is in town. Let yourself become one with Joe Hickerson and his music. I think you'll be delightfully surprised. Israeli Folk Dancing Every Sunday 12:30 p.m. HILLEL 1429 HILL MONDAY NIGHTI THE COMPLETE 41V HOUR VERSION OF THE HOUR OF THE FURNACES dir. by Fernando Solonas 1967, Argentina A radically innovative film-essay on violence and liberation in Latin America. TREAT YOURSELF to a MID-WEEK BREAK F D 0 Come to the GRAD COFFEE HOUR Wed., Feb. 2 8-10 p.m. 4th Floor Rackham Hot chocolate and coke for all records Ragtime and old silent films A new natural foods restaurant: Naked Lunch food as natural as life inexpensive, carefully prepared. LUNCH SERVED FROM 11:00-2:30 P.M. MONDAY-FRIDAY l 4. SGC Tenants Committee Presents By DAVID SOSIN recent release from None- such features piano rags played by William Bolcom. The disc-. called "Heliotrope Bouquet,"-- contains examples of the finest work of Scott Joplin, several by Tom Turpin, Louis Cauvin and Joseph Lamb and a few by Bol- com himself. And without ex- ception, these are beautiful pieces. The title cut, a work of Joplin's, is slow and lyrical, not at all fitting the popular mis- conception of what ragtime is. There are honky-tonk moments, to be sure, but most of the rags here prove that the genre can be poignant and delicate. Bolcom's own compositions are fine additions to the rag tra- dition. Graceful Ghost especial- ly, grows on the listener, and is quite haunting (pun not intend-, ed). Its nostalgic quality con- trasts with the gaiety of Seabis- quits, and together the two make a fine pair. The last item on the record is a team effort by Williams Bolcom and Albright, entitled. "Brass Knuckles Rag." It is a complete antithesis to every- thing on the album. "Brutish," "Loutish", the score instructs, and that it is, with tongue-In- cheek nastiness that rounds out an altogether exceptional re- cording.' 7* Those who have seen the NET series, The Silent Years, featuring great silent films of Griffith, Chaplin, Keaton and others, may be' interested to know that the music for those films is now available on a re- cord called "Musical Highlights from films of The Silent Years." The music is composed and played by William Perry, who is the accompanist for films at the Museum of Modern Art in New, York. In preparing this record, he succeeds in distilling the qualities of a two-hour film into perhaps ten minutes of music, fitting in major themes and giving some kind of continuity. The musical excerpts come from Perry's scores for The Gold Rush, The General, Or- phans of the Storm, The Mark of Zorro, Beloved Rogue and Blood and Sand. Most of the music qualifies as real art, bear- ing no resemblance to the honky-tonk style that many as- sociate with silent film accom- paniment. The themes range from sentimental to whimsical to bold, and Perry displays in- genuity in his piano style, not to mention the skillful fitting of themes to the characters they suggest. Announcing a donference on WOMEN & RELIGION from the perspective of Women's Liberation Feb. 18-20 Jewish, Black, & Non-Western Women Participants Needed to help run Workshops ALL INVITED- if interested please call 764-7442 SUNDAY MATINEE ALL SEATS 75c 331 Thompson, 761-1154 FREE FILM FESTIVAL Rink--Chaplin Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde (Cruz) Great Moments from Phantom of the Opera Son of the Sheik-Valentino Great Train Robbery Round Trip to Mars (Cartoon) Food or Famine TONIGHT THE HOUR OF THE FURNACES Part II-Act of Liberation 7:00p.m.& 10:00 p.m oc c> ocnc) c)cs c;oeo0 Remember Her On 0 nn with Something Special The monogrammed x CIRCLE PIN .,.in a campus tradition ^ ^. many sizes and finishes to ,. choose from STERLING or GOLD FILLED ' No charge for engraving from $3.75 to $8.00 6 0aarcade jewelry shop+0 16 Nickels Arcade for beautiful jewelry STOP IN AND BROWSE. co e e o e e 10/ OVILI, Flight in White Parable Rival world 7:00 p.m. only 75c at ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM FRI., JAN. 28-7-11-U.G. Library SAT., JAN. 29-7-11-Mich. Union Assembly Hall SUN., JAN. 30-7-1 1-Michigan League .t U I "BLACK BEAUTY" I nnr ;-I A U of M Students Faculty and Staff GET LOST' I I BAHAMAS- Freeport 8 DAYS/7 NIGHTS March 5 to 12 $159.00 HAWAII-00 Waikiki Beach 8 DAYS/7 NIGHTS March 4 to 11 $269.00 ALL TRIPS INCLUDE: i Round trip non-stop let transportation * Open bar and meal service en route " Accommodations for seven (7) nights at: Freeport: Freeport Inn Hawaii: Hole Maki a ALSO WALT DISNEY CARTOON-FEST Shown-2:45 P.M. "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST !" -Bob Salaggi, WINS Radio -Archer Winsten, Pete Homill, N.Y. Post -Frances Taylor, L.I. Press "'johnny got his gun' hits squarely in the guts with the impact of a recoiling howitzer!" Newsweek TIMOTHY KATHY MARSHA JASON DONALD BOTTOM$ FIELDS HUNT ROBARDS SUTHERiAND Dalton Trumbo's ohnny Got7is Gun A BRUCE CAMPBELL PRODUCTION From the book that sold over a million copies' JERRY GROSS PRESENTS A CINEMATION INDUSTRIES RELEASE FPiTH POr'Ujvi SUNDAY 50 70 9 'I Part l l-Violence & Liberation 8:00 p:m. & 12:00 p.m. "The second part is an expose of nationalism and its function in the struggle for liberation in dependent countries, followed by.,a chronicle of Peronism and an account of the struggle sus- toined by the Argentine prole- tariat after the toppling of Person in 1955. The third port is a call to arms and a vision of the revolutionary future of the Third World."-K. Barsy only 75c at ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM O F'IFTH Fborum [~ PWTP AV NUN AT L IBvY COWNTOWAI ANN ARBOR% INFORMATION 76'f-9700 FIFTH4 AVENUE AT LIBERTY IONFOMTONA761.RB00 INFI OWNTONA761A8BO0 MON., TUES. 7 & 9 UAC - DAYSTAR presents For, Details Call: Owen Perlman-663 -244 Larry Kaufman-764-7692 Steven, Eder- 763 -2790 Carol Klav-663-8227 or Steven Zacks-Studentours 483-4850 "This film forces the audience to stop, to woke, up, to interrupt the hypnosis, and to regain consciousness, to question them - selves to think and to act." MONDAY NIGHT at 7 p.m. The Complete 4 hour version so "Gordon the great :::_: _: ,~Lightfoot, ffinest .:.: .:..... .,:.singer am ong, al the folk .troubadours.. A GREAT TRIP, he's euphoric." --San Franciscc Examiner "ightfoot invites ._.:4R: :::::.:: }}:r : w :the. audience to ..; listen to the picture flow." ::' .} ' f ".::..": : ,",-Chicago Sun iTimtes :' . . 'I TEACHING FELLOWS COUZENS HALL WILL BE OFFERING AN INNO- VATIVE TEACHING PROGRAM NEXT FALL. For further Information CALL.m764-2144 between 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. FEBRUARY ART FAIR WHEN: Sunday, February 6,12-5 P.M. WHERE: Michigan Union Ballroom r4 WHAT: Artists Displaying and Selling Their Crafts A __ I. - - - _ -