Tuuesday, March 16, 1971 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Black Liberation Week: Cultural excellence Tuesday, March 16 - Sympo- slum: Technological Needs of the Black World-Don Coleman (School of Engineering); Char- les Kidd (School -of Public Health) and others-A&D Aud., 9-11 a.m. (no charge). Amiri Baraka (Leroi Jones) and the Spirit 'House Movers and Olantunji-His "Drums of Passion" and His African Dance Troupe. Hill Aud., 8 p.m. $4.75; $3.75; $2.75; $1.75. Wednesday, March 17-Harold Cruse: "On . . . Black Culture" (Part I), 1017 Angell Hall, 12-2 p.m. (no charge). Poetry Reading: So. African Poet K. Kgositsile-plus Uni- versity's Dave Wesley and Cow- boy Walker, Multipurpose Room, UGLI,:3:30-5:30 (no charge). - Symposium: Black Education -Moderator: Harry Mial (Northside School, Howard Ful- ler (Malcolm X Liberation Uni- versity, Greensboro); J a m e s Garrett (Center for Black Edu- cation, D.C.)-Ann Arbor Com- nfunity Center, 7:30 p.m. (no charge). Thursday, March 18-Sympo- sium:, Black Art-Jon Lockard (Ann Arbdr), Charles McGee (Detroit), James Lee (Detroit), Al Hinton (Kalamazoo), Regi- nald Gammon (Kalamazoo), Mahler Ryder -(Providence, R.) -A&D Aud., 9-11 a.m. (no charge). Poet Robert Hayden - Rack- hani Amphitheater. 4-5:30 p.m. (no charge). Val Gray Ward and the Ku- uinba Workshop of Chicago- program of dance music and poetry plus University's Carol Washington and Co. In excerpts from Barry Pugh's Black Jewel, plus Bethel AME Church's Youth Choir directed by University's Van King - Union Ballroom, 8 p.m, '$2. Frday March 19-Day-long Symposium : The Black Move- ment: Ideologies and Issues - Robert Williams (formerly of RNA), James Turner (African Center, Cornell), P. Chike On- wuachi (African Studies, How- ard)-Schedule forthcoming (no charge). Contemporary Jazz Quintet- Union Ballroom (note change of -location), 8 p.m., $2. Saturday, March 20-National Black Theatre of Harlem, di- rected by Barbara Ann Teer, in their famous Black Ritual "Re- gain Our Strength and Reclaim Our Power"-plus University's Diane Borgus-Union Ballroom, 8 p.m., $3 (afternoon perform- ance to be announced). * Sundayr, March 21 - Black Film Festival-Films and discus- sions on "Black Perspectives on the Media"-Clff Frazier (Com- munity Film Workshop, N.Y.), Bill Greaves (Producer/Direc- tor), Gil Maddox ("Profiles in Black"), Lois Owens (Project BAIT's 'For My People')-Aud. A, Angell Hall, 1-3:30 p.m. and 7:30-10:30 p.m. (no charge). Ufamaa Dinner featuring Pio- neer High's Black Students in a program of music, poetry and dance-4-7 p.m. (location to be announced). Just as Black History Week heralds the accomplishments of peoples of African origin and descent, so Black Liberation Week highlights our struggle and our determination to reach our goals in the shortest time possible. The artists who will appear are those whose primary aim is to teach rather than to entertain.. TRAIN SiALE N gauge-HO 1.50 cars-88c 26.95 packs-$19.87 plus much more Bona fide sale-quality goods (We're not a discount house) Wayne Hobby 34816 Michigan WAYNE-721 -0700 COMPLETE HOBBY SHOP WORTH THE DRIVE 11 a.m.-9 p.m.; Sun. 1-5 See us for model planes from rubber p o w e r to twin engine radio con- trol. By JUANITA ANDERSON Black music is not merely a stylized use of rhythm. Rather it is a means of conveying a black message. It is the expres- sion of experience - of pain, suffering, joy and inspiration. The Harambee Singers of At- lanta Georgia exhibited this ex- pression Sunday night in a con- cert kicking off Black Libera- tion Week. Stemming from African ori- gins of voice inflection and the gospel tradition of employing the feet and hands as the base of rhythm ,their music is far from the Motown realm of mu- sic as a commercial venture. Instead, it is music of the black revolution, a giving of the total soul in expressing black goals and values, without regard to white concepts of what music: should be. "We talk to our people through music. We can't say it is en- tertainment because it's gotta be more than that. You can go to movies f o r entertainment," explained Mattie Casey, one of the five Harambee singers. She explained that many things one can find in a song are unattainable in anything else. Their music' tells of African history, explaining that black people are the oldest of man-, kind and the builders of the world. "My soul has run deep like the rivers/Older than the flow of human bloo d in a human vein/I built my hut on the Con- go/I looked upon the Nile and raised the pyramids/I've seen the Mississippi's muddy busom turn golden in the sunset," the Harambee singers explain in the song I've Known Rivers. Black people cannot be con- cerned with women's liberation because they are trying to be liberated as a whole, explained Jackie Howard, the lowest voice in the group. "We are talking in terms of building a nation, so we have to think in terms of building fam- ilies. Ain't no two of the same thing ever gonna build no na- tion," she explained. Hence the writing of a song dedicated to b 1 a c k men, the backbone of the black nation: "Joe Willie where you been so AAFF: By JOHN ALLEN By now, the Ninth Ann Ar- bor Film Festival seems like an- cient history. Saturday's pro- gramming was an improvement on Friday's, but the first three days of the week still seem, in retrospect, to h a v e been the best; this, despite the screenings on Friday and Saturday of four of the seven prizewinners. More on the winners in a moment. On Saturday's plus-side of the ledger was a brief but lovely film called Navajo Rain Chant that combined a soundtrack of a chant with metamorphosing im- agery of desert bluffs and light- ning flashes as well as the de- signs of Navajo crafts. There was a 1 s o the second Richard Myers film, Akbar - an interview with a young black man who sat in front of the camera and told his particular truth about America. Akbar took a prize, perhaps f o r its multiple levels of intimacy as its subject spoke alternately to the cameraman and filmmaker, to the camera, and ultimately to the invisible audience. Of note also were Blank and Gerson's film on the Cajun peo- ple of Louisiana, Spend it All, and an exercise in computer graphics by Lillian Schwartz, and Ken Kowlton called Pixilla- tion. During the afternoon there were two films of some dimen- sion - Two American Audienc- es by Mark Woodcock and News- reel of Dreams Parts I and II by Stan Vanderbeek. The Wood- cock film was a seminar with Godard with clips from La Chinoise, and t h e Vanderbeek film was a stunning evocation of the life and death forces at work in our culture - all fil- tered through a brilliant eye for color and pacing. The real excitement, of course, was attendant upon the Sunday night programs: repeat screen- ings of the winning films and others deemed of special inter- est by the judges. W i t h the three films that were granted top awards of $300 each there can be no quarrel (see box.) All of them were major undertak- ings and major accomplish- ments. For this reviewer, however - and for m a n y in the Sunday night audiences who booed the announcement of their being honored with prizes - the re- Winners of Ninth AAFF $300 each: Breathing Together: Revolu- tion of the Electric Family, by Morley Markson This is the Home of Mrs. Le- vant Graham, by New Thing Flick Co. Runs Good, by Pat O'Neill.... $200 each: Putting the Babies Back, Part II, by Neal White Bleu Shut, by Robert Nelson Selective Service System, by Warren Haack $100 Akbar, by Richard Myers maining four winners were choices not so easily under- stood. Putting the Babies Back, Part II, is a six-and-a-half minute film of a poor-looking man wandering about in a field be- hind which rise rather elegant. houses. The man barks, pants; and whines'in ways suggestive of various emotional states. In fairness one should mention that this won top honors at the Fifth National Student Film Festival in New York last fall as well as winning $200 here in Ann Arbor Sunday night. But it is still not clear to me what ad- vance, if any, the film repre- sents over other Theatre-of-the- Absurd works of a similar na- ture by Beckett and Ionesco which, in addition to having been done first, manage to work better - since the poignancy of perfectly well on stage, perhaps the man-as-animal image is not so telling on the screen where the blending of the human and non-human is more of an ev- eryday affair. Robert Nelson's Bleu Shut, which also took $200, was also found fit for, screening at a New York film festival last year - t h e Eighth Annual (non-stu- dent at Lincoln Center. Except for Nelson's reputation as a pro- lific and sometimes acute film- maker making jabs at cultural shibboleths, it is hard to under- stand this particular choice as a prizewinner. Mockprofound, as a genre, is interesting only as its mockeries are themselves tinged with a little profundity. Bleu Shut was a pleasant pasttime and audience-participation ven- ture, but surely there were more deserving films screened. Selective Service System by Warren Haack took $200 as well. While there was gut-churning authenticity to this film showing a young man shoot a hole in his foot with a rifle to avoid the draft, there was an unequal measure of gratuitous morbidity about the whole idea of filming the event which I, for one, found extremely distasteful. At the very least it seemed unfortunate to give the filmmaker $200 if Myers's Akbar was only to be What makes a winner? given $100 - since Akbar was greater in scope, and largely concerned with the same theme: those dysfunctions in our society and our selves which are pain- ful and a source of inexcusable waste. For what it is worth (whic is immensely little), my own choices for best-of-festival films would have been as follows: the three that took top prizes, plus Cosmos by Jordan Belson, Na- tural Habitat by Ralph Arlyck (whose film, Sean, was one of the charms of the 1968 AAFF)4 A Well-Spent Life by Les Blank and Skip Gerson, and probably Vanderbeek's N e w sr e e1 of Dreams. There are five or six more I wouldn't mind owning prints of, but I won't bore you with the details. The 9th AAFF was generall of a very high level. The bores were crashing bores, admittedly, but the good films were good enough to fill up all the avail- able space in one's storerooms of memory. It was a festival that suffered slightly from a falling- off of excitement after the first three days: but to say so is mostly to admit to some measure of saturation, not necessarily to make an objective judgment of the quality of the films or the curve of energy traced by the programming. A great many people worked longer hours than I, producing? screening, handling, and man- aging the films and the festival. I, for one, had a hell of a good time, and am already looking forward to the Tenth Ann Arbor Film Festival--which ought to -Daily-Tom Gottlieb DON L. LEE, speaking in the Union last night as a part of Black Liberation Week. long/Say I love you Joe Willie, come let's make a home." Never sparing their voices for the sake of peace and quiet, the Harambee Singers vocalized a strong attack against black op- pression in a song to the tune- of Battle Hymn of the Repub- lic: "Mine .eyes have seen injus- tice in each city town and state/ your jails are filled with black men and your courts are white with hate/It is you who are sub- versive and the killers of ourt dream/in your silent world of boundaries it is you who are extreme/youtnever takehyour earmuffs off or listen when we scream, but the movement's movin' on. "Move on over or we'll move on over you," they address them- selves to the white oppressors. One of the most moving songs presented was written for black children attending the Pan-Af- rican Work School in Atlanta, which the Harambee Singers founded as a means of giving black children a black educa- tion. The song is a means of instill- ing pride in black children who are constantly confronted with white standards of culture and beauty. "I am black and I have beau- ty/What a rare thing am I/To have curls like a larhb, to be black and beautiful. Parents check my history and you'll see lots of goodies that only you and I can claim. - -- "r Want to leave school for a couple years? Join the PEACE CORPS Representative speaking at School of Education 10-12, March 17 RAP ROOM NOTE: Now taking applications from students with only one or two years of college. Faculty invited too. Refreshments. NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDSN BST PICTURE BEST DIRECTOR BEST ACTRESS GP BEST ACTOR BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR, BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY BEST ORIGINAL MUSICAL SCORE Al MacGraw * Ryan O'Neal 603 E. Liberty AHOWARD 6 MINSKY-ARTHUR HILLER Production DIAL 5-6290 John Marley&Ray Milland Doors Open 2:45 Shows at 1,3,5,7,9 Free List Suspended DOUBLE FEATURE--STARTS TOMORROW They Clld them "I unhesitatingly recommend 'The Virgin Soldiers'! An eve- ning of rich, very real and compassionate entertainment! As much an anti-war film as M*A*S*H! I liked it very but not much." forlong. -Bernard Drew PpesenXDIE WMPIPTH Porum A OPEPN AvUNUU9 AT LIBERTY DOWNTOWN ANNJ ANEOR1 INFORMATION 769-9700 Double Feature Ends Tonight "The Adventurers"-6:40 dA aRE A"Tropic of Cancer"-9:30 PANAVISION'TECHNICOLOR , GH LAST NIGHT!, 1 a H.IIG NEST" -**** a DOORS OPEN 6.45 ad al.NwYRk AINGw SHOWS AT 7 AND 9- NEXT: TRUFFAUT'S "THE WILD CHILD MOVING INTO AN APT.? DON'T GET CHEATED LEARN YOUR RIGHTS LISTEN TO THE TENANTS UNION SHOW ONLY FOR THE MATURE ADULT WHO UNDER- STANDS I ON RADIO 650 WCBN TUESDAY 8:05 p.m. THE STUDENT BODY LIKELY TT ';....DID! AGAINANDAGAINANDAGAIN THE TALE OF THE WIE GRACE WALKER LEARNED ADAIT URD UNiD AMf' I MI ti4RS WORLD PREMIERE : ±u by ANTA and Hopwood Prizewinner ransom jeffrey in "THROBBING"' PAE AD 1 I I i. I