Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 14; 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 14, 1970 music Moscow Trio: Not in cultural isolation Speakers ask physicians to start DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN elinie for le nino dvinq-- n-,/-JL.ILJLXJLn--/LJ -IL XYJL N ALJL %ALtn k--7 %AL k-,j V, -JL i k_7 By JOHN HARVITH (The first of two parts) Last night's presentation of the Moscow Trio by the Uni- versity Musical Society fulfill- ed a long-time ambition of mine which I have harbored since a concert given by the U.S.S.R. State Symphony in the Winter of 1969: To hear a live chamber ensemble of Russian musicians fresh from a life-long musical development in tne U.S.S.R., free from recent literalist Wes- tern performance-style tradi- tions. Reports from such reliable sources as Harold Schonberg in- dicate that students in Rus- sian conservatories still under- go a basically Nineteenth-cen- tury training routine: p i a n o students still develop their tech- nique on such romantic fin-de- siecle fare as Liszt operatic tran- scriptions and Rubinstein's (An- ton's, not Arthur's) Kalmen- noi Ostrow. It is only within the last few years that any pianist in the U.S. has dared to program such pieces 'in concert - prior to that time he might have been laughed off the stage. H o w- ever, in the wake of the cur- rent Romantic revival in t h e arts, enterprising musicians such as Raymond Lewenthal, E a r 1 Wild, and John Ogden have be- gun to tantalize staid U. S. concert stages with character pieces by such forgotten 1 a t e- romantics as Alkin and Schar- wenka. Concert repertoire is not the only change in store for the average concertgoer, however; the regimented, literalist inter- pretations of the late 50's and 60's (exemplified by such con- ductors as Szell, Steinberg, a n d Leinsdorf) are now giving way to a freer more "romantic" ap- proach. Tempi are "loosening up:" within the basic pulse of a (Continued from Page 1) ment, and that drugs seem a part of the rebellion. He said treatment of drug abuse should only concern itself with those who honestly wanted it. Meyers added that drug-help cen- ters should not be concerned with people using marijuana.as a Social drug, saying that these people do not really want to be changed. Meyers said patients of the cen- ters must have problems severe enough to warrant the effort to solve them, and that it is the doc- tors' duty to look for people who want help in the jails, hospitals, and ghettoes. Dr. J. Thomas Ungerleider of: the UCLA Medical Center listed a set of possible reasons for drug abuse. Among them were affluence and boredom, the emergence of the "friendly, local campus drug dealer" as a folk hero, peer group pressure and rebellion against parents. In addition, he said that drugs are "ideally suited for escape from problems." He said knowledge of the use of drugs is important in the treat- ment of any patient, and that a standard question in any physical examination should deal with drug use. He cited as an example the lack of reliable information about drugs in standard newspapers, adding that young people have should be lessened but not abol- had to rely on underground news- ished, 35 felt that the law was papers for factual information on adequate, and only one felt that drugs. the penalty was not severe enough. A survey was conducted of the l The results of the survey, how- doctors present on the new fed- ever, were inconclusive, since over eral law about to go into effect half of the doctors attending the decreasing the penalties for use of conference were not present wnen marijuana. The law provides for the poll was taken. up to one year imprisonment or Dr. Henry Brill from the Pil- probation for the first offense. grim State Hospital in Westj Of 294 doctors polled, 125 felt Brentwood, N.Y., concluded the that the law should be abolished, symposium with a brief summary 133 felt that it was too severe and of the week's proceedings. iltary coup toppes government in Syria The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 L. S. A. Bldg., before 2 p.m., of the day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items ap- pear once only. Student organiza- tion notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764 8270. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14 Day Calendar Football: U-M vs. Iowa, Michigaa Stadium, 1:30 p.m. * Bandorama: William D. Revelli, conductor. Hill Aud., 8 p.m. University Players and Engl. Dept. ; *Mankynde," yToronto Players, True- blood Theater, 8 p.m. 3200 S.A.B. Current Openings in.S.E. Area, others nationwide: Academic Dimensioi Syst., Inc., South- field, Dir. of Prog. Dev., IPhD in educ., and public school admin., Coord, teach- ing or, curriculum exper. Solar. Div. of Int'l. Harvester, Harper Woods; sales engineer, engrg.-degree and 2-4 yrs. in sales. Lafayette Clinic, Detroit, bio-chem- ist, med technologist or pharmocolo- gist, MA or 1 yr. closely related study. Dept. of Treasury, Detroit openings, special agents, intelligence, BA min. 12 hrs-acctg., or JD or MBA, 1 yr. prof. acctg. or investigative exper. qualifies BA for appt. at higher level; apply early, exam to be given, men only ap- proved by civil service, nature of work hazardous. Detrex Chem. Indust. Inc., Redford, Mi., research chemist, BS/MS, and 2 yrs. in dev. and fo rmulti in dev. and formulation of chemicals for metal cleaning or other c h e m. specialities. "d -Daily-Randy Edmonds BEIRUT, Lebanon (JP)-Defense Minister Hafez al Assad, fervid Arab nationalist and advocate of all-out war with Israel, staged a military coup in Syria last night, a spokesman for the ousted lead- ership said. Assad, 40-year-old air marshal, overthrew the Marxist leadership of the ruling Baath party and ar- rested President Noureddin Atassi and Maj. Gen. Salah Jadid, the party's assistant secretary-gen- eral, the spokesman told a news conference. movement different themes may receive a slower or a faster tempo. Unfortunately, my pet theory of "cultural isolation" in t h e U.S.S.R. harboring a burgeon- ing Nineteenth-century p e r- formance tradition just bit the dust yesterday afternoon a f t e r. discussing musical conditions in Russia with the members of the Moscow Trio (Dimitri Bashki- rov, piano; Igor Besrodny, v i o- lin; Michael Chomitzer, cello). The members assured me that they were entirely familiar with recordings of Szell, Schnabel et al. (formulators of recent musi- cal taste in Western musical SMankynde': People By MARCIA ABRAMSON Mankynde is not, as some might expect, a stuffy "moral- ity" play out of some textbook- it is a vibrant piece of the original guerrilla theatre, com- plete with rapid action, burles- que humor, clear-cut division between good and evil, and oc- casional polemic on the side of the good guys. The good guys are of course God and his representative on earth, Mercy, played as a bishop by the Poculi Ludique Societas of the University of Toronto in this unique production in True- blood Aud. The bad guys are the Devil, Myscheff and the Vices, and the battle is fierce. This is a play designed for the people, not the "audience," tnd go the Societas has elimi- nated the artificial distinction of cast and spectator. The orig- inal medieval players burst right out into the crowd with their travelling rigs, and the Societas brings the crowd right onto the stage. All must partici- pate in the drama of Mankynde. The play is brilliantly staged and executed. The bad guys made their entrances and exits through the mouth of a giant devil, and when the monster demon Titivillus appeared, he was accompanied by a firecrack- er and pouring smoke. The good guy was appropriately majestic; he seemed heads taller than the earthly vices, and his pure blondness emphasized his holi- ness. Titivillus was the clear hit of the evening-as he always must have been-with giant home-made genitals p a i n t e d bright pink hanging from strings around his waist and flopping as he menaced the audience. The vices seemed like a group of mischievous children, mak- ing dirty jokes and hitting each other. They were silly, greedy, and nasty, but alone they were not harmful. It took Myscheff, the mastermind, to make -hem into a .power. But to make the play work, their gaiety must be attractive. They appear very happy crea- tures, always singing and laugh- ing; mankind does not fall into an obvious pit, it is more a pit of ignorance, of slavish devo- tion to the', Great Evil - The Flesh. All three vices - New Gyse (David Lausner), Nowadays (Bruce Salvatore) and Nought (Magda Grosberg, a woman, of course) -were marvelous clowns who made full use of the called- for buffoonery. Their jokes were very elemental and very funny. The audience was fully in- volved, as when the vices took up a collection of "pennies for the devil." The interchange was very colloquial; a Vice would calmly ask a spectator to hold his cane. The plot and symbols were all as simple yet effective as the bawdy humor. The demon 'ame complete with a gilded net for Mankynde, who carried a spade which symbolized his need tc work the earth and be humble. When he succumbed, Mankynde took off (most of) his clothes to remind the audience that all are also Adam, fallen into evil. The stage consisted of the demon's mouth (on the left), an ominous gallows, a pulpit, and a figure of the Madonna and Child. The vices wore reds and oranges, Mankynde green and brown to symbolize his affilia- tion with the earth, as tiller and creature made only of soil. The priest wore first white and then red as Mankynde fell into sin. As Mankynde is tempted into death by hanging himself, the Priest (shades of Tony Rich- ardson and Tom Jones) bursts in to cut him down. There is still hope in Mercy-the bis- hop's name-if Mankynde will repent. There is much action in the play, dancing, singing, fight- ing, a quick kick in the rear, and even a very graphic elimi- nation episode performed by Nought. But it is also a forum for the sermons of Mercy, the bishop, which open and close the play' with its strong moral 'esson. "Doctrine shall be your defense," Program Information 662-6264 Due To The Showing Of "Mother Goose Birthday Party" Sat. & Sun. At 8 P.M. & 3 P.M., "2001: A Space Odys- sey" Will Show At 6:15 & 8:45 ONLY On Sot. & Sun. THE ULTIMATE TRIP! conservatories), so that "man- nerisms" such as portamento ("sliding" between tongs on string instruments) are only sparingly used, as a dash of salt, to suit one's taste. Indeed, the Trio, although in the U.S. for the first time, has concertized extensively in Europe, assimilat- ing performance styles there as well. The opening work on I a s t night's program, Tchaikovsky's Trio in A minor, Op. 50, is the most often performed of that Russian master's chamber works, the other two being a string quartet and a sextet. Composed in 1881 in memory of stheatre he tells Mankynde. And when Mankynde has fallen, God still forgives and gives him a chance to rise again. But he must learn, "Your body is your enemy." The con- flict of good and evil is that of flesh and soul; the priest and the pure Mankynde wear shape- less garments, but the Vices are lewd, complete with tricolor codpieces. Not enough can be said for Michael Erdman as the priest, who never became pedantic and seemed to gain power as he, like Christ, suffered for Mankynde. His voice was incredibly .strong; Mankynde was weak in com- parison, and occasionally hard to hear. But the rest of the cast were alive in their roles. They spoke their Midel Ynglishe perfectly, and it was not too hard to Uim, derstand for the most part. Very often the actual words did not matter; the burlesque would carry the play. This is probably the only full production of its kind. The So- cietas has performed several of these plays over the last few years, and this is their first trip to Ann Arbor. The production is a real gem; better to see ;t than wait in line for 2001 again. virtuoso pianist Nicholas Rub- enstein, this trio would have beenmore appropriately titled Concerto for violin, cello, and piano. The piano part is a knucklebreaker, an orchestral score piano reduction if there ever was one, with equal tech- nical fireworks required from the violin and cello. In keep- ing with the elegiac dedication of the work, the poignant y e t mournful opening theme of the first movement closes the work in a memorable fade-out at the end of an otherwise tumultuous finale. The work, taken as a whole, is a rambling affair. Tchaikovsky lingers lovingly over good tunes in the first movement, wreaking havoc with its sonata form structure. To counteract this basic structural weakness, performers are best advised to adopt, andrkeeptto, one tempo with little variation.. Unfortunately, the Moscow performers chose to exacerbate these inherent structural weak- nesses by succumbing to the ad- mittedly beautiful melodies and slowing down the already leis- urely pace with which the move- ment began. The cellist's hushed understatement of the "elegiac" opening theme was quite moving, and the violinist's rejoinder in the following phrase revealed the patrician style of the Auer- school - a firm, secure 1i n e, silken tone, tasteful phrasing. Remarkably enough, though the news releases refers to the trio as "three virtuoso soloists", no three musicians could have treated one another more defer- entially within the context of such an admittedly extroverted work as the Tchaikovsky Trio. In fact, the pianist played down the Herculean sound of his part a little too much for my taste. I kept feeling that his playing lacked the elan and dash that he could have gotten away with. The second (and last) move- ment, a set of variations, simi- larly degenerated into a series of episodes, so that the work as a whole simply didn't "jell." (To be concluded tomorrow) , | (Continued from Page 1) ed the organization had the right to use the mail service because the letters dealt with University busi- ness. The PROBE letter also asked women to indicate changes they would like to see the University implement which would benefit women. Among the changes PROBE sug- gested in the letter were tuition- free courses,tchild care facilities, published lists of job openings and, formation of a University em- aA ploye grievance committee com- posed of women rather than the present committee which consists of six men. "We have received about 75 re- sponses already," the spokes- woman said, "which is very heart- ening considering the letters were only sent out a few days ago." She said that many of the let-' ters came back unsigned, "because many women feel threatened that their jobs will be taken away from them." HEW REPLY: U' bias report due He said the coup took place one day after an emergency Baath congress adopted a resolution fir- ing Assad. The spokesman, a member of the party's international com- mand, said he drove to Lebanon to break the news of the coup. Leftist Premier Dr. Youssef Zay- yen also was arrested, the spokes- man said. Assad seized control of the state radio and television and two government newspapers in Damascus, he added. Assad, a moderate in the so- cialist Baath party, has blamed Jadid's Marxists for Syria's crush- ing defeat by Israel in the 1967 war. He also accused Jadid of pur- suing Marxist policies at the ex- pense of the economy and security of this nation of 6 million people. Reliable sources said agents of Syria's air force intelligence serv- ice rounded up Assad's opponents and set up a guard at key mili- tary and government buildings. They said there was no outward sign of tension in Damascus, capi- tal of Syria, and that Assad had not used tanks or heavy armor to stage the coup. Assad made his move after a month-long government crisis that grew from the power struggle be- tween Assad's military wing of the Baath party and Jadid's leftists 0 s IL) U. 0 } 0 -Q -O d Order Your Subscription Today 764-0558 SOLD OUT ! NOV. 15 2;30 and 8:30 I Good seats available Group Rate Information Call Carol High 836-3719 Join The Daily I 4% <.- CINEMA II "THE RED AND THE WHITE" (1l966 DIAL 5-6290 Shows 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:10 "'CATCH-22' says many things that need to be said again and again! Alan Ark- in's performance as Yossar- ian is great!" --Joseph Morgenstern, NEWSWEEK IS THE MOST MOVING1THE MOSTINTELLI- GENT THE MOST HUMANE - OHTO HELL WITH IT! IT'S THE BEST AMERICAN FILM I'VE SEEN THIS -VINCENT CANBY YEAR N.Y.TIMES A MIKE NICHOLS FILM MAN ARKIN N * n TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD "Possibly the most distinguished picture in the history of the cinema; it is the art of the moving picture matured, after years of se- rious effort." -The New Yorker SATURDAY, Nov. 14, 1970 7 and 9 p.m. UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 E. Huron (at Fletcher St., across Huron St. from Rackham, back of the League and the Student Health Service. 40 I Except for $2 REAR 2nd BAL. Reduced Seats on sale at 12:30 p.m. Sun. at Box Office HILL AUDITORIUM . :mwmw Sergei Eisenstein's David Bromberg played lead guitar Bob Dylan's last two rec- ords, all of Jerry Jeff Walker's, etc., etc. A fine songwriter and blues and country singer. 14m11 Kil nS T directed by MIKLOS JANSCO Hungary's foremost young director presents a brutal, realistic portrait of the Russian Revolution. / Friday and Saturday, Nov. 13, 14 Aud. A, Angell Hall 7:00, 9:30 COMING NEXT WEEK: RICHARD LESTER reveals "THE KNACK (and how toget it)" I i . . (correction from Nov. 6) I i The Music Center will be open FRIDAY EVENINGS instead of Monday Starting the week of Nov. 15 Our new store hours will be: m I "Prokofieff and Popcorn !" iklpi- (WELL ALMOST ...) THE HEBRAIC ARTS ENSEMBLE Mon-Thurs .........9:00 a.m.-5:30 FRIDAY ...........9:00 a.m.-8:30 Saturday ..........9:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. p.m. p.m. rn "w4irvdr . ":rrd":..{+ryl. --------------- +Y N f 1.1 ti ' .fYlMY s 11111 S f YYfih{ l .I M1 C.lr.l ..1 '... ' l N. .. rv.e . r nr rriw Ir r " ........... 11 i :}? 1i I I Ii I I I ! I