Thursday, September 5, 1974 THEMIC.HIGAN DAILY Page I h ree, L thursday, September 5, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Dance-sensory stmulant By MARNIE HEYN Combining grace, free - flowing movement, and raw power, dance is one of the most stimulating art forms to be found anywhere. The University and surrounding community offer a wide range of pro- grams both for people who want to dance and for those who want to watch. Whatever turns you on-from belly to Balinese to ballet - can be found within walking distance of the campus. EACH YEAR the University Mu- sical Society includes in its calendar one or more dance events. Most of these fall under the heading of ballet, that is ,formal ,traditional dance, but the culture from which the ballet comes is delightfully varied. Other University groups, depart- ments, dorms and such occasionally sponsor special dance concerts. Al- vin Ailey's troupe has performed in Ann Arbor, several major films have been shown of the Peking Bal- let, the Theater department has held pantomime workshops, and East Quad/Residential College has spon- sored a Martha Graham weekend. In addition, there are lots of op- portunities for karate, t'ai ch'i, and judo buffs to learn, practice, and demonstrate their skills, for fun and for credit. Check out ads, leaflets, and diag boards for the time and place of meetings. On July 1 of this year, the Univer- sity's academic dance program mov- ed from the Physical Education de- partment in the School of Education to an autonomous department in the School of Music. EVERYONE concerned hopes that the move will give the academic dance program more room to grow. In the past five years, the program has grown from courses in Posture, Figure ,and Carriage and Folk Dance to include new composition, ballet, and African dance offerings. The quality of instruction is excellent. One note of caution: these classes are in- variable filled during Early Registra- tion, so plan ahead. Drawn from the ranks of depart- mental classes, University Dancers perform several concerts each year. Last year the presentations were pro- vocative an dstunning, and ranged from mind - tickling contemporary pieces to precisely - articulated for- mal ballets. Their autumn concert was well above average, and the group outdid itself in their spring concert series: three different programs in five con- certs given over three days. The high- lights of the spring series included the wide variety of styles, eight or- iginal s t u d e n t - choreographed pieces, and enough pageantry to sat- isfy any parade junkie. Prof. Vera Embree's Asaka: Cele- bration, an African dance, was espe- cially memorable. Fortunately for us, she is one of three full-time faculty members in dance, and the word is that her classes as as much fun to take as her dances are to watch. IN ADDITION to the regular con- cert schedule, small groups from University Dancers like the Wolver- ine Dancers sometimes offer irregu- larly scheduled concerts. These events are a good .opportunity for students of dance to watch the evo- lutionary process that compositions, See ANN ARBOR, Page 3 f, ...... Blues musicians flock to Blind Pig, Mr. Flood's By ANDREA LILLY Although there are few bars in Ann Arbor which provide live entertainment, the city is al- most overflowing with bands and musicians. The entertain- ment changes and varies from week to week. Musicians are constantly changing groups and new bands and new acts regu- larly come to town. Every weekend, the bars are packed with local music freaks who come to hear such groups as the Vipers, the Mojo Boogie Band, John, Nicholas and the Blue Flames, and the RFD Boys. Despite the abanudance of good local musichowever,there is -only one place in town to, dance-the Scene, a strobe light circus which features only taped music except on Sundays. ANN ARBOR seems to fav- or the blues - currently there are six blues bands playing in town and new ones are forming all the time. The Blind .Pig, which serves only beer and wine, regularly features the Vipers - one of only because of its entertain- ment but because of its "atmos- phere." Large stained glass windows, tiffany lamps, old photographs, a huge moose head and an oil painting of a , nude woman grace the interior of this heav- ily frequented bar. Leona Schlack, a local folk and blues singer with a good, Every weekend, the bars are packed with local music freaks who come to hear sch groups as the Vipers, the Mojo Boogie Band, John Nicholas and the Blue Flames and the -r n. .ocal film freaks can choose. rom raft of Oscar winners By DAVID BLOMQUIST o said that New York is only cultural Mecca of the ited States? On a recent eekend, four Academy Award inning movies were playing in anhattan theaters. But on a irly typical weekend last win- r, campus filmgoers could hoose from no fewer than five scar winners, plus several ther movies that won major rizes at international film fes- ivals. Between the nearby commer- ial : theaters and the major n-campus film student socie- ies, University film freaks face selection of between 12 and 5 fine motion pictures each eekend.. AND WHAT'S even better: a1 aturday night at the movies Ann Arbor is nowhere near s expensive as a similar trip a large city. Admission at he student film groups' show- ngs is generally only $1 or 1.25, and ticket prices at the ommercial theaters are usual- y not much more than $2.50. Naturally, most major re- eases - with the exception of a very few special films - remiere at the commercial ouses. Fortunately, however, -l but one of the eight thea- ers in the Ann Arbor area are easily accessible from campus. The three veteran campus for the State - Campus - Mich- movie houses - the State, the igan trio in perhaps twenty Michigan ,and the Campus - years by scooping the downtown are all, in fact, within walking chain on such blockbusters as distance of the Diag. The Mich- The Exorcist and Blazing Sad- igan, with its vaulted, ornate dies. ceilings and 50-year-old pipe or- gan, is perhaps the most im- THE CITY'S bus system pro-j pressive of the three. The Cam- vides transportation to and from pus, however, is the only one Briarwood, which is situated that has a Panavision - size a screen. about two miles south of cam- pus at the intersection of I-94 GENERALLY, the State and and State. Michigan show first-run Holly- The Fox Village, located wood pictures, usually about across the street from the Ma- two to three weeks behind the pie Village shopping center in Detroit theaters. The Campus the residential section of Ann features either reissued pic- Arbor is the most difficult the- tures or such special interest ater to reach from the Univer- films as Truffaut's Day for sity. But the serious film buff Uight and Bergman's Cries and should have no problem finding Whispers. a carpool on the nights the Also within walking distance, Village shows the outstanding but a few blocks west of cam- American Film Theater sub- pus on Fifth Ave., is the Fifth scription series. Forum. The Forum also shows On the other hand, the stu- special interest, "art" films,! dent film groups - while not but occasionally secures . a able to offer the overpriced "sleeper" first - run picture popcorn, glamorous stars, and that often turns out to be an wide screens of the regular the- excellent flick. aters - thrive on the literally, The city's newest shopping, hundreds of students interested center, Briarwood Mall, cony in cinema more as art than as tains no less than four film entertainment. theaters, all grouped together Cinema Guild, which uses the as simply The Movies. In just Architecture Auditorium as its their first ten months of oper- home base, is no doubt the Gen-' ation, the Briarwood Four have eral Motors of these non-profit already emerged as the first groups. The Guild's offerings solid commercial competition a r e, almost consistently, su- perbly cinema produced examples of art. RFD Boys. Ann Arbor's best blues bands. This group has two singles out on the Blind Pig label and draw huge crowds wherever they play. Other groups regularly found at the Blind Pig are John Ni- chols and the Blue Flames, the Mojo Boogie Band, Boogie Woogie Red, Rabbits and the Muskadine Blues Band. BECAUSE THERE are so few bars in Ann Arbor offering live music, they are generally overcrowded, stuffy and smoke- filled. However, the cover charges are generally pretty low and rarely run over $2.00. The Del Rio bar, which fea- tures live music only on Sun- day nights, regularly presents Mixed Bag and Ars Nova - two local jazz groups. Although country music is not as prevalent in Ann Arbor as blues and jazz, the RFD Boys, a popular bluegrass group plays regularly at the Pretzel Bell. FOLK MUSIC is also very popular locally and can usually be found at Mr. Flood's Party -a bar which is patronized not vibrant voice is frequently found at Flood's along with other reg- ulars Stonehouse and Tod and John. A N N MARIE SCHRAMM, who sings blues, jazz, rock and Billie Holliday tunes performs at both the Blind Pig and Flood's. Although classical music is not that prevalent in the bar district, the Blind Pig frequent- ly presents a classical group- Silk Purses on Sunday nights. And there is also one group that plays no music at all - The Friend's Roadshow. Us- ually found at the Blind Pig, the roadshow does mime, skits, slapstick comedy and old Elvis Presley era music. If the size of your wallet can't accommodate your appetitefor music, you can listen to good local folk music at the Ark coffeehouse where Wednesday night hoots cost only. 50 cents. The Ark -(see related story on this page) alsorfeatures well- known folk artists from across the country on weekends for a minimal fee (usually under $2.50). BUT PERHAPS the Guild's biggest contribution to city cinema is its annual film fes- tival, which presents during a week-long extravaganza each spring over 100 student-produc- ed movies. National judges dole out generous cash awards to the best of a usually fascinat- ing series. Cinema II, which shows its films in Angell Hall's Auditor- ium A, tends to concentrate more on lesser - known pic- tures than Cinema Guild, al- though it too brings in such fa- miliar films as Cabaret and War and Peace. Unfortunately, many of Cinema II's rarer films are often dull, boring, and ter- ribly obscure - especially its Sunday night offerings. Bursley Hall Enterprises is the name of that North Campus dormitory's filth operation, which provides an informal (bring your pillow) evening of film each Saturday in Bursley's West Cafeteria. Bursley's sched- ule is generally limited to some- what older commercial movies such as Dr. Zhivago and Ro- meo and Juliet. ALSO TREADING the Holly- wood movie mill is UAC - Me- diatrics, a popular group which See AWARD, Page 5 EUBIE BLAKE, a 91-year-old ragtime piano player performs before an audience in the School of Music last January at the presentation of the Eva Jessye Afro-American music collection to the University By GARY THOMAS. as Lou Killen, Norm Kennedy and Mal- Despite the proliferation of loud and, to vina Reynolds that draw only a limited some, obnoxious rock bands, folk music corps of folk devotees. is still flourishing in Ann Arbor for those "The people have made the atmosphere desiring somewhat less frenetic fare. there," Linda says. "That's why it's such The famous and not-so-famous come a nice place to go, for both .the audience to play traditional and modem folk at and the musicians." the Ark. Still in existence aften ten years with local church backing, the Ark has THE ARK ALSO sponsors Sunday after- struggled to bring folk music here under noon religious services as well as pot the able direction of Ann Arbor's first luck suppers The first and third Sunday family of folk, Dave and Linda Siglin. evenings of each month are devoted to the "Friends of Folk Music," an informal "THERE'S A LOT of igod music in gathering of local folk musicians and those walls," says Linda Siglin of the fans. house at 1421 Hill St. "It's still a mellow The Ark is the last bastion of folk in a place to go after 10 years.", community that once saw three or four Several local churches have backed the folk hangouts. One by one, they folded Ark since it was founded 10 years ago. It with the advent of rock music until only struggles along, never charging more the Ark remained. Rock fans seem to than $2.50 for its Friday and Saturday forget where their roots lie-Elvis Presley night shows that feature such folk head- used to play the Grand Old Opry in liners as Steve Goodman, Paul Siebel, Nashville before he achieved stardom. Norman Blake, Dave Broinberg and a The selection of music is wide at the host of others. That price includes free Ark. On any given night, you may hear coffee and tea, as well as overflowing Joe ieany of Owen McBride regale you baskets of popcorn. At that, it's one of with Irish songs and stories, or Norman the best bargains in town for those who Blake picking his homegrown country want to preserve their eardrums and tunes. Moder songwriters such as Steve listen to some fine music. Goodman of "City of New Orleans" fame But the sows are only part of the Ark. and John Pine have also graced the