Wednesday, October 30, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Wednesday, October 30, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five 4''" : 'r"F;it t,:;;;.;..,:i;; " : "?:":tGrd ::":$:;$:: ; Kr?.t;'rj.Y., " y;..Ir .:".t ,:t 4 a{+,",.r. t', tiif ! .:.. . r..., flri.,,i. k:9Fc.. ..... :.:::. 1. :y1]¢ x Recor 4s a n review pops on French inegute' JOHN LENNON has had his up and downs since the Beatles, keeping himself busy all the time. lie's found time for another album, Walls and Bridges (Apple SW-3416). It lacks the classicism evolved by the Beatles, but stands amply on its own merits. The music ranges over a lot of styles, centering on rock, blues, and soul, with a nice subtlety of construction that would be missing in the music of a lesser talent. Lennon has always been a fine lyricist, and he remains so here. The standout is "Whatever Gets You Through the Night," an energetic rocker which features Elton John on piano and har- mony vocals, and a nice tenor solo from Bobby Keys. n n d f ti !a t' U d ti t+ i0 r 4 d There are also sharp, intriguing protests in "Going Love" and "Scared." Finally, "Nobody Loves You" is look at society, but also a clever parody of the blues, Knows You." Down on a cynical "Nobody In this age of music without craft or intelligence, it's com- forting to know that people like Lennon are still in there fighting. -Harry Hammitt The MJQ (Modern Jazz Quartet - not the Milt Jackson Quin- tet) has finally disbanded. After some 20 years of making music together, Milt Jackson calls his association with the group "just a u gig." It's sometimes overlooked that Jackson still found time to record a lot of music outside the confines of the MJQ. A recent , ABC-Impulse resissue documents his career with such band leaders as Ray Brown and Quincy Jones. Jackson describes his , playing now as "my own kind of music - plain, straight, swingin' jazz or bebop." Even if it's his own kind of music, Bags still owes much to other jazz greats. Dizzy Gillespie plucked him away from De- troit in 1945 to present him to the jazz world. It's no coincidence that Jackson opens his latest album Olinga (CTI 6046S1) with a 1 pulsating Gillespie number of the same name. Dizzy's present. drummer, Micky Roker, solos and rhythmically leads the familiar u "Olinga." c "The Metal Melter's" title indicates best what's happening with Jackson's mallets. His steaming on vibes is full-ahead, fluid and powerful. The members of this all-star group, completed by Cedar Walton, Jimmy Heath and Ron Carter, respect and I complement each other well, and the result is certainly within '3 "Bag's Groove." -Larry Fricke DORY PREVIN'S new album Dory Previn, (Warner BS 2811), b like much of her previous work, is laced with heady ironies s and her own inimitable musical ambiguities that pry into the brain case and tickle the lower ribs. Included in this sampler of her songs from 1974 are a stan- dard insomniac's lullaby, innie and outie relationships on toast, paranoia in our lifetime, snippets of imaginative history, and true confessions. The best of the record: "Brando" ("Of course' I'm liberated now . . . you know how women get/I'll bet I could have/handled him/if only we had met") and "Did Jesus have a Baby Sister?" As usual, Previn's arrangements are impeccable, and the musicians she collaborates with crackle with talent. The only thing left to wish for it that Previn will keep on and scout new style horizons in her future work. -Marnie Heyn The Rolling Stones are back. The reputed kings of rock 'n' roll have released a new album, aptly titled, It's Only Rock 'N' Roll (Rolling Stones COC 79101). The Stones have ended their flirtation with glamour rock and returned to the past, to the music they know and play best. This music is pure rock 'n' roll, and there is no better band than the Stones to play it. With the rhythm section of Watts and Wyman, the Stones have a solid, simple bottom. Keith Richard can do more with rhythm guitar than many musicians could do with an orchestra. Mick Taylor, an guitar, can say so much with so little. And Jagger still slides and moans with the best of them. They plunge into the Temptations' "Ain't Too Proud to Beg," almost a parody of J. Geils. There is a new topicality in songs like "Fingerprint File" and "Luxury." And some fine slow numbers, particularly "If You Really Want to be My Friend," a great, soul-tinged ballad. But the heart is solid rock 'n' roll; the title song, "If You Can't Rock Me," "Short and Curlies," and especially "Dance Little Sister." The Stones are back to their old tricks, and they are past masters. As they say in the title song, "I know it's only rock 'n' roll . . but I like it." -Harry Hammitt By AP and Reuter to win trust, credibility and BORDEAUX, France - Inter- loyalty." national wine distributors ad- mited yesterday at the Bor- The prosecution case, involv- deaux "Winegate" trial that ing over 750,000 gallons of ar- they sometimes could not tell tificially upgraded wine, is the difference between cheap based on a weighty 55-page re- and quality wine. port by four Finance Ministry The once spotless image of fraud inspectors who made the French wine industry came three charges: under further scrutiny when the ® Cheap red wine from the distributors gave evidence on Riviera region was transported the second day of the trial of here and, along with inferior 18 wine traders, accused of doc- local wine,tbottled as Bordeaux toring or mislabeling over 750,-! red with the appellation con- 000 gallons of wine. trolee label, the guarantee of a The distributors, called by the wine's origin. defense, backed up the claim by . Huge stocks of poor wine star defendants, Lionel and "unfit for human consumption" Yvan Cruse that they had were chemically doctored to bought doctored wine without change their color, taste and knowing it was an illegal mix- smell. ture. The trial began dramatically 9 Documents essential to the Monday when wine broker investigators inquiry were de- Pierre Bert told a packed liberately destroyed. courtroom, "I am guilty, but it Only a year ago, when news was not I who invented fraud. of a major scandal was first There are thousands as guilty breaking, Baron Philippe de as me." Rothschild, head of the exclu- Attacking the rigid quality sive Chateau Mouton Rothschild. controls on Bordeaux wine, he vineyard here, hailed the Cruse said, "It is extremely difficult Company for its moral leader- for growers, as well as mer- ship. chants, to keep in line with the "This house tolerates no com-{ law." promise, no accommodation and He added that during 30 years no complacency," he said in a in the wine trade, "I have seen speech to the Bordeaux Acad- frauds everywhere." . emy. "Less still does it toler- When ' he admitted mixing ate falsehood, disguise, artifice, white wines with red wine the dilution, mixing or adultera- court president told him: "It's ,. Pierre Bert AP Photos Pie rreBert Lioniel Cruse loon would go away. After the investigation got underway in mid-1973, the in- spectors said they also uncov- ered evidence of wholesale de- struction of documents essen- tial to their inquiry. It still is unclear whether any of the doctored wine discovered by the fraud inspectors ever reached the export market. The Bordeaux area exported a yrecord 60 million bottles of quality wine last year, with Bri- tain its top customer and the, United States, Belgium and Ja- pan next in line. Apart from the criminal pro- ceedings, the Cruse family and the other defendants face a civil charge for a nominal one franc in damages from the Bordeaux Wine Association-for the harm the case has done to the wine- making profession. "tineon speeaks louder f ; ~than words .. F0JTeK COMMISSIONER I Nov. 5 DemocratDist. 14 Paid for by Fojtik for Commissioner Committee Eastern Michigan University Office of Student Life PRESENTS Classical Guitarist . Pease Auditorium 8 P.M November 7 General Admission $1 .50 TICKETS ON SALE AT McKENNY UNION This event is made possible with the support of the Mich- ioon Council for the Arts, National Endowment for the Arts. ond Michicaon Orchestra Association not legal." "No, but it's good," Bert re- plied. Bert, who claimed 30 years of experience as a broker, said that out of the 11 million hecto-' liters of wine produced in the Bordeaux region, "700,000 to. 800,000 hectoliters are magnifi- cent wines and the rest is poor. quality that cannot be offered: to a foreign clientele. There must be a mixture . . . and they sometimes make a good mix- ture". Although only 0.5 per cent of Bordeaux's annual production is involved in the alleged scan- dal, shockwaves from the trial have spread worldwide - the Cruse cousins are major ex- porters and among the leaders of the wine aristocracy here. Never has the old saying in vino veritas (in wine is truth) been more open to question. For it is not only the three eminently respectablevCruse Brothers - Lionel, Yvan and Herman-and 15 other Bordeaux wine trade personalities who are on trial, but, by extension, the once irreproachable image of French wine itself. The brothers deny any part in the scandal. Lionel once scathingly referred to it as "Winegate" and comparedthim-' self to former President Nixon facing the Watergate affair. But he drew the comparisonj at a time when many people in this wine capital thought the fraud inquiry would blow over, in the same way that Nixon 1 supporters thought Watergate. - -- --- - -- - Ord er Your Subscription Today. 764-0558 As one leading wine chant said yesterday, deaux must start a new mer- "Bor- battle -I- .4 ON NOVEMBER 5th REMEMBER THE ONLY CANDIDATE WITH OVER 20 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE. SMORGASBORD WEDNESDAYS 6-9 p.m. AND SATURDAYS 6-9 p.m. $3.95 1. cold vichysoisse 2. coq au in 3. potatoes anna 4. shrimp newburgh 5. boeuf burguingnone 6. rice swedish meat balls 8. vermicelli 9. breaded veal cutlet 10. fresh garden green 11. tarragon peas 12. eggplant parmesan 13. beef oriental 14. veal hearts 15. chicken giblets 16. cheese casserole 17. sliced beef 18. fried chicken 19. barbecued ribs 20. fried cod fish 21. black olives 22. greek olives 23. green olives 24. diil pickles 25 celery 26. carrots 27. green onions 28. crab apples 29. red peppers 30. radishes 31. corn salad 32. sliced cucumbers with sour cream 33. sliced tomatoes with fresh dill 34. red bean salad 35. greek bean salad 36. Italian green peppers 37. greek stuffed eggplants 38. sliced beets 39. garlic sauce 40. herring 41. portuguese sardines 42. anchovies 43. cod fish caviar mousse 44. cod fish red caviar 45. liver pate 46 sliced Jambon 47 sliced salami 48. sliced cold turkey 49. chicken salad 50. russian fish salad 51. tuna fish salad 52. sliced mushroom In dill sauce 54. eggrolls 55. hot mustard sauce 56. stuffed eggs bonnefemme 57. cole slaw 58. cold salmon 59, fresh tuna in soyu sauce 60. butter 61, home made bread 62. sliced tongue 63. horse radish sauce 64. chicken wings japanese 65. fried squid 66. smoked pork chops 67. potato salad 68. russian salad 69. macaroni salad 70. jellied fruit salad 71, tossed green salad 72. chef's dressing 73. french dressing 74. 1000 island dressing 75. russian dressing 76. tartar sauce 77. hot sauce 78. bacon crumbs 79. croutons 80. parmesan cheese 81. sliced onions 82. eggplant salad 83. hocktaI sausage 84. hors d'oeuvres 85. stuffed grapeleaves 86. greek feta cheese 87. swiss cheese 98. cheddar cheese 89. bread pudding 90. rice pudding 91. creme caramel 92. baked apples 93. house cake 94. peaches 95. mandarin organges HAROLD LLOYD'S 1920's THE FUNNY SIDE OF LIFE (at 7) This is a compilation of some of the best moments from the films of Lloyd who, along with Chaplin and Keaton, was one of the three recognized masters of silent comedy. PAUL MUNI 1937 A well-acted, even inspiring, biography of the famous French novelist ose biggest achievement was his fiery "accuse" defense of Dreyfur. It won three Academy Awards-including Best Picture. r O 0 for O'D CINEMA GUILD Both Films ARCHITECTURE AUD. 4 Sunday, January 19, at 2:30-Hill Auditorium wWe take great pleasure in announcing this very special concert by Mstislav Rostropovich, unquestionably one of the greatest cellists of all time. This will be his fourth Ann Arbor appear- ance since 1965. Tickets are available at our Burton Tower office, or by mail, at the following prices: MAIN FLOOR: $8.50 and $7.50 FIRST BALCONY: $7.50 and $7 SECOND BALCONY: $6, $5, and $3.50 Experience is what people depend on for competent, conscientious judicial leadership. Judge Nathan J. Kaufman has served as a judge for over 20 years. His unique experience includes duties as a former President of UAW Local 142, Assistant Prose- cuting Attorney, Common Pleas Judge, Probate Judge in charge of the Juvenile Division, and presently Wayne County Circuit Judge. In fact, Kaufman has sat on virtually every court in the State of Michigan! Endorsed by trial lawyers, Labor, business and professional men and women, Judge Nathan J. Kaufman is your best choice for 1st District Court of Appeals. Experience counts.