Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY SatudayApri 17,197 Saturday. Aoril 17.1971 Contemporary Directions' closes with local composers HELP YOUR BROTHERI Draft I Killer Sale mmmmwit I SWhite $4ne4ca presented by Ann Arbor Civic Theater 0 By JOE PEHRSON The final concert of the Con- temporary Directions Series, presented last night in H ill Auditorium, was a program of generally good quality, with a variety of works presented. This is the same program which will be presented in New York city under the direction of Sidney Hodkinson who conduct- ed this performance. The first work on the pro- gram was a piece by George *Cacioppo, "Time on Time in Miracles." Cacioppo has a re- cording of this piece, but this, recorded during one of the Once group festivals in Ann Arbor, makes it difficult to dis- tinguish between the verytsubtle sounds and almost inaudible combinations of Cacioppo's style. Cacioppo has not w r i t t e n much, and the attention is ap- but on the extremely cautious propriately not on- quantity but on the extremely cautious selection of each element used. There is a general impression that Cacioppo has placed as much -attention of each parti- cular as on combinations so that the result is a piece which may be heard in many different ways, each producing the same possibilities for attention a n d quiet pleasure. Cacioppo's use of some of the lower register piano sounds (clusteral) in combination with higher sounds of les amplitude (and a soprano solo) lends an immediate depth that keeps extending and extending as ele- ments of the same character are added. The second piece on the pro- gram was a work by Roberto Gerhard. "Hymnody". Gerhard's music is interesting, but it seems this interest is not as immed- iate as it might be. Gerhard must bring back elementsin re- petition again and again until something that makes sense is created. In other words, t h e sounds produced in an immed- iate context are not enough and it is only when Gerhard brings each one of these insufficient combinations back again and again that a sensible part of speech is made. Peter Griffith, a young com- poser from Ann Arbor, has an orchestral piece that seems to work fairly well. At the begin- ning, there is a sense.. that sounds are present which are not heard as well as they might be. It seems, then, that some of these are too theoretical and not musical enough, - but a greater familiarity with t h e orchestra will provide Griffith with the amount of sound ex- perience that he needs. Near the conclusion there is a fan- tastic tremolo, begining in the violin section and leading, by its inherent nature, to a cre- scendo. There should be more music using eiements similar to this one, and I was rather disappointed that Griffith did not use this further. The final piece on the pro- gram was by another young composer from this area, and was another orchestral piece. This was Kurt Carpenter's "Ab- raxas". Carpenter seems to have a greater sense of unity and sequence than Griffith but the individual sounds are some- times not as interesting. lydia mendelssohn 8 p.m., aprilr 21-24 668-6300 box opens mon. 19th Interview': Filming five, men who served I V By L. A. FRISCO The Academy Award winner in the documentary class, Inter- view with My Lai Veterans, will be shown tonight in Aud. A at 7 and 9. The film, one of the most moving tales of the war in Southeast Asia, is an inter- view with five men who served with Lt. William Calley. It un- veils their rationalizations for what happened at My Lai, and reveals their lack of questioning of the results. The story it tells is of men who do not question orders, even if it means killing women and children. As one of the veter- ans explains it, "It was a search and destroy mission. That means search and destroy everything in the area." At a time when veterans and soldiers are becoming m o r e and more outspoken on their criticism of the war, Inter- view with My Lai ' Veterans shows those who believe Calley alone responsible for what hap- pened at My Lai that there are others serving in Viet Nam who could have done the same thing. The comment of one of the interviewees was "it's gone on before and it will happen again." Interview with My Lai Veter- ans is a must for those who are considering going to Washington for the April 24 march. It is a clarification of what has gone wrong in Vietnam. Each of the interviewees is asked the best way to stop in- cidents like the massacre at My Lai, and every reply is essentially "get out." ___.. SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY Starts 0 'cinem "AVERY FUNNY, VERY INTELLIGENT VERY AFFECTING MOVIE!"' -VINCENT CANBY, N.Y. TIMES "A MAD, MAD MOVIE. DEVASTATINGLY FUNNY. AND COMICALLY DEVASTATING" -JUDITH CRIST.NBC-TV 7 Cody, Pork at Hill 1- By FRED ROBINSON Tonight marks the return to Ann Arbor of one of its favorite groups as Commander Cody and the Lbst Planet Airmen return to Hill Auditorium. On the program with Cody is Pork, a multi-media electronic music group which has been giv- ing concerts m Ann Arbor and the Midwest. The group was founded in 1970 by three com- posers, Robert fBoury, Kurt Car- penter and Russel Peck. PORK's program will consist of five new pieces combining a variety of media. The first piece, Florescent Wax Lips, by the West Coast composer Lloyd Rodgers, is a monolithic electronic extrava- ganza featuring the Ann Arbor Mime Troupe, directed by Greg Jarboe. Through a series of en- gagements in Detroit and Ann Arbor, the Troupe has perfected a unique integration of music and theatre. The Cats Meow, by Russell Peck, is the Detroit Sound at supersonic speed. Overwhelming- ly amplified, the'work challenges the blistering four-hand finger technique of pianists Peck and Carpenter. Bo Bo Bolinski, R. Crumb's No. 1 Human Zero, makes his trans- figured silver screen debut in David Andrew's Crosscountry. At the climax of the piece, the Ann Arbor Mime Troupe ex- plodes into a game of unmusical chairs. HONK, by Robert Boury, was composed in memory of Jimi Hendrix. Boury's manic pop piano phantasy provides the ba- sis for the color kinescope pro- duced in collaboration with Rob- ert Whitney and Reynold Lowe. Kurt Carpenter's Lone Wolf transforms the auditorium ipto an electric chamber of gothic hor- rors. The work employs a full range of electronic techniques a n d manipulation, including Moog equipment and sonic mod- ulation inspired by the sound of the full moon. PORK's presentation marks the initial thrust of a unique experi- ment in offering rock audiences unusual, sophisticated multi- media productions. A- 20th Century-Fmx presents AcmEL~nIT O l AN mMARN J.U'LLSFEFFER'S L E w~rcU MRQA ROOD ft w,", W$CNT GARDENIA EUZO&TH N Jlt 0KOKES bw~s M ALAN ARKt rIN 'M JNKBROOSKY csw~qs,1ULES FEIFFER MUnECOOB esernxodiouoacn K WITH MAX SHULMAN (Br Woa Sxor of Rally Round the Flag, Boys... Do*Gilis...et-.) CREST PRELTRAL CONCENTRATE The Preening of America X-Ige 5 oz. Fi An Original Musical by Jerry Bilik THE BRASS & GRASS, FORE VER AT LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE! MAY 5-8 and 12-15 TICKET PRICES: Wed. and Thurs.-$2 and $3 Fri. and Sat.-$2.50 and $3.50 l Recent polls taken on American campuses by Time and News- week have revealed unexpected, and most welcome, results. Both mag- azines found that today's undergraduates, far from boiling with revo- lutionary fervor, are just as torpid as everyone else. Joyous tidings, of course, but I must say that I was never worried. Sure, life-styles are a little different on campus these days; neverthe- less, I've always felt that down deep this generation clings to the same solid values that sustained all their predecessors. In my own college days, for example, the most popular aid to socia- bility on campus was precisely what it is today: Miller High Life Beer. And, mind you, my college days were a good long time ago. I got my B.A. way back in 1908. (My alma mater, incidentally, was a school I'm sure you all know-the Wyoming College of Belles Lettres and Commercial Baking, from whence, as you are undoubtedly aware, came a veritable host of graduates who later achieved stardom in the breadstuffs game-men like Darrell J. Inskip who invented rye bread with caraway seeds; Irving T. Whitsun who invented the toothpick, thus making it possible to eat rye bread with caraway seeds; Sol Bagel who invented the permanent doughnut which bears his name; and many, many others. Indeed, the list would be far longer if the college had stayed in business but, alas, it was killed by mold in 1921.) But I digress. Even in 1908, I say, Miller High Life was a campus favorite. In fact, it was popular even before 1908, for Miller has been delivering flavor to discriminating Americans for over 115 years! And today it is more widely appreciated than ever! And why wouldn't it be? In 115 years no other brewer has ever duplicated Miller's flavor. Oh, they've tried to copy Miller, you can bet, but a fat lot of good it did them. Since the very beginning Miller's superb brewing formula has been one of the best kept secrets on earth. It has never been known to more than one man-Miller's chief brewmaster-and he has always been kept inside a hollow mountain in downtown Milwaukee. But I digress. The polls, I say, have proved that today's college student, though he dresses in a homespun robe and wears chicken bones in his ears, cherishes the same dreams and drives that students have always held dear. NOW NOW reg. 69c Lge. 3 oz. Reg. 89c C IC ammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmwwwwmwwwmwmmmwmwwmwwwwmwwwmwwmwmmwwmmmwwmwmwsmwmw I I LIQUID PRELL* V SCOPE I NOW NOW Send checks and self-addressed envelope to Ann Arbor Civic Theater, P.O. Box 1993, Ann Arbor 48106. Or call 662-7282. HEY KIDS! COMMANDER CODY AND HIS LOST PLANET AIRMEN ARE READY TO DO IT AGAIN. (with cactus props and dump trucks) Saturday night-8:30 P.M.-HiII Aud. -PLUS- PORK a new multi-media classic -A N D- SUMMER-ANN ARBOR 1970 a 20 min. documentary on the Blues Festival and Sunday Concerts 7 oz. reg. 99c 9c 17 oz. family size reg. $1.19 IC, "mu-m--mmmmmmm m---m--mm--mm---m-mm--- mmmmmmm-mmmmmmmmmmm m-mmmmm mmmmmm m-m. -m 4 * Carters Yellow Hi liters 29c Bic Pens loc . Xerox copies (we do offset too) 4c Canvas 6 ydsx53" unprimed Cotton Duck $5.95 mm- - -- --- - - - -- - - - - - - - ---- - -- - --mm m. mmmum mm m- -.-m- -"-m-r.:r- --m- -"-- - - ---"mmmmm.mummmmmmmmmmI To illustrate, I recently visited a student commune at a prominent Southern university (Michigan State). Now, I'll admit it didn't look much like one of your old-fashioned fraternity or sorority houses. First of all, there was no house. Everyone slept in trees, except for one girl who made a hammock out of a discarded bra. In the second place, meals were not served; they were trapped. And in the third place, the kids didn't talk about the usual things like life, sex, truth and beauty. In fact, they didn't talk. They just sang "Om," holding the note till they hyperventilated and toppled over in a faint. But appearances are only appearances, as I discovered when I started to interview these people. "What are you studying?" I asked one young man. "My navel," he said, and I was vastly reassured, for we all know the crying need for new doctors. "What do you want to be when you finish school?" I asked another young man. "A druid," he said, and again I was reassured, for as anyone on Wall Street can tell you, forest ecology is the coming thing. "Do you believe in women's liberation?" I asked a girl. "No," was the answer. "Why not?" I asked. I Waterbed s KING-SIZE $25.00 U I I U I I I I I I I I U Summer rentals TV, stereo, refrigerator starting May1 POSTERS 15% off list price Eatons Bond Corrasable 99c mm mm. mm mm mmu mm mm ................................... ................................... CHEAP RECORD SALE i YARN SALE (We have knitting, cro-; u cheting, macrame books : too)1 BOOK SALE (all paper, some hardcover) E I I i s KITES and FRISBEES all sizes and styles m-m--m-m-------------m-mmm----..mm--m-mmmmm------m-mm-m---------m-mm--------.----------- 1: 1