[Thursday,, December 5, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five [TusaDcme ,17 TEMCIA AL aeFv Harrison By STEPHEN HERSH than has ever been. It wasn't Special To The Daily very fluid, but that isn't to be DETROIT - Siren-like, Billy expected from Harrison. Preston's synthesizer glissan- When he sang "Something",; doed upward loudly-more live- George all but did away with ly, it seemed, than could be en- the familiar melody and phras- dured comfortably. But when ing of the words. He sounded George Harrison and his band more than a little like Dylan joined in at Olympia last night, live, improvising the melody drowning out the wail, the thick' in a jazzy manner. sound of the music was any- His back-up band included a thing but hard to swallow. three-piece horn section (in- The concert began with a cluding Jim Horn), two percus- tune from the band's new al- sionists, a guitarist, two drum- bum, Dark Horse. Harrison, his ' mers (including Jim Keltner), guitar churning, bounced up and C and keyboardist Preston. The down on the stage, clad in , sound was well-mixed and rich, jeans, a T-shirt emblazoned with similar to that of the band his picture and covered by a which supported Harrison at his denim blouse, wearing tiny ear- Bangladesh concert. rings and a small necklace. Harrison sang such familiar As the music played, a huge tunes as "While My Guitar picture of a seven-headed black Gently Weeps," "Sue Me, Sue horse unfurled above the mu- You Blues", and "What is sicians' heads, and two Sans-I Life?". He also sang an old krit "Om" symbols lit up among! John Lennon song, "In My the batteries of speakers. Life," which he introduced by Harrison's voice sounded a saying, "This was written by little rough, no doubt due to the an old friend of us all. I just workout it has been getting on hope that we can keep him over tour. He had trouble hitting here." some of the high notes. Harrison several times turned His guitar playing, however, the spotlight over to others in- was more solid and precise j cluding Preston, who sang "Will five: A He Go Round in Circles?", and danced a jig across the stage at one point. Harrison also turned the stage over to Ravi Shankar's large band - which was ex- tremely handicapped by the ab- sence of Shankar himself. The sitar player is presently in Chi- cago being treated for a heart ailment, although he was or- iginally scheduled to appear. The ensemble played rhythmic, syncopated music, and was conducted by Shankar's wife Lakshmi. Members of Harri- son's band joined in at times with the violinists, percussion- ists, and singers of the Shan- kar group. Several of the Har- rison band members, including Preston, horn player Tom Scott, and Harrison himself, played solos. When Harrison returned to center stage, the crowd began to grow progressively more and more vocal. The audience response cli- maxed when Preston took his last vocal spot, singing "If You Want To Be With Me." As Preston had the audience re- peatedly chanting the word femorable "party", the house lights came on and a wave of excited bodies rushed the stage. Harrison then alighted the crest of the emo- tional wave, singing "What Is Life?" For his encore, George sang "My Sweet Lord." The song was performed much more rau- cously than Harrison has play- ed it in the past,- and it was played without the familiar slide guitar phrase. Such various stars as Sly Stone, David Bowie, and Ian Anderson, have joined Harrison on stage in other cities. John Lennon is expected to play with the band during its New York concert. The first show began two hours late because the band's flight from Chicago was de- layed. As a result, the later show was postponed an hour and a half. The streets outside Olympia were lined with unhappy people who had intended to scalp tick- ets but who were unable to find customers. Tickets which had cost $9.50 at the box office, and which had been sold at various college campuses in the state for upwards of $100, were be- ing offered for sale at $1. One unfortunate man who was offered 50 cents for a tick- et shouted, "To hell with it!", and gave the ticket to the pros- pective buyer. The average shower c o n- iumes 20 to 30 gallons of water while a bath tub uses aoout 35 gallons. Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN University Housing Council Fall Term Elections Dec. 11-20 DURING PRE-REGISTRATION At Waterman Gym Candidates may register in SGC Offices- 3909 Mich. Union until 5 p.m., Dec. 6. Questions? Call Greg Higby, 764-7663 George Harrison "LIFE' MAGAZINE SPECIAL: Photos capture American l estyle By IRVING DESFOR herself awake; a couple show-' AP Newsfeatures ering; people going to work and Like a visit from an old school; a mother giving birth, friend one never expected to and a sunrise mirrored on a see again, Life magazine is cur- candy machine signaling the rently back on the nation's news- end of a long night to a gas stands in a special issue pic- station attendant in California. torially recalling "One Day in The magazine's middle sec- the Life of America." tion, "All Day Long", looks The day selected, Thursday, candidly at a cross section of Sept. 5, 1974, was unspectacu- America's jobs, activities and lar in that no bold headlines scenes in its amazing diversity. were needed to chronicle its We are touched by an 88- events. But, as the special re- year-old widow in a home for port points out, days are like the aged, gently cradling a doll fingerprints and no one day is in her arms; reminded of in- exactly like another in its in-. flation's pinch by a housewives' dividual shadings and character- food co-op aptly named 'Pinch- istics. penny"; intrigued by two in- And so, on that day, 100 skil- mates sunbathing at a coed led photographers throughout prison, and sympathetic with the country were on assignment the plight of exhausted migrant recording the highlights and workers waiting to hop a trivia, people and activities, freight back to Mexico. landscapes and images which Several portfolios are also in- indelibly identify that date and cluded: Cornell Capa's day was day on our nation's calendar. re- a pilgrimage throughout INew cord. England to portray five dis- The result is a unique nation- tinguished authors; Co R e n - al family album of one day's tmeester accompanied t n r e e assorted moods and happenings shifts of Chicago policemen to, filtered down into 208 photo- record scenes of pathos, terror graphs. With space limited to and death, and a group of wild- 80 pages, there was an inevit- life specialists produced a able crowding of many good series of majestic wilderness pictures but the flavor and eye scenes. appeal are there to appreciate In retrospect, a very signifi- nevertheless. cant photographs of President The day starts with "Amer- Gerald Ford was taken by Da- ica Awakes," a section that ac- vid Kennedy on Sept. 5 and companies the sunrise as it published first in the Life spe-. spans the continent. It opens cial report. It shows the Preci- with the vista of a poetic pink 1 dent in conference with Philip dawn as a farmer's wife drives Buchen, White House counsel, on a deserted country ryid in Alexander Haig, Nixon's for- Illinois. It captures other re- mer chief of staff, and Benton flections on a wife stretching Becker, a little-known lawyer. That meeting, it later devel-: oped, was secretly ironing out the final details of the con- troversial pardon for Richard Nixon. A few hours later, Beck- er flew to San Clemente with the document. "After Dark," the concludingj section of the magazine, sam- ples America's night life. There's homework to do; bars, ballrooms, theaters and drive- ins to go to; TV to watch; thes last home-bound voyage of the liner France to wave to, and the last few moments before closing of a Kansas gas station on a slow night to yawn at. The basic premise of having America sit for its collective portrait during a single 24-hour period is exciting and ch ileng- ing. Managing Editor Philtip Kunhardt nurtured the idea for years and finally got it ap- proved by Time Inc., publishers. Its execution represents nt great achievement in photojournalism. "For our project," Kunhardt said, "we picked a day after' the Labor Day weekend be- cause with the reopening of l schools and people going back to work, Americans seem to get going again at a brisk tempo. "We weren't looking for a spectacular news event - it would have been .lated by the time we got nto print. We hoped to extract the pictorial flavor of a 'normal' day in the complex life of America from the collected visions of many skilled photojournalists. "They were paid $200 per day plus expenses and given the op- tion of shooting color or black- and-white. Some exper's photo- Disregarding the infinite nurn- graphed within their own spec- ber of unseen images, the re- ialties; others were given spe-I cord shows that all the pic- cific assignments and still oth-! tures submitted were processed ers were free-wheelers guided and edited the first weekend by inspiration Ind skill alone. after being shot and :he entire "Besides the 100 photograph- special report was dlosed in ers on asignment, about 25 0 three weeks. others submitted pictures on I No wonder "A Day in the Life their own. We looked at about of America" has been nailel as 60,000 images before selecting a major publishing feat and that the final 208. Our special re- the old LIFE logo maintains its port, therefore, is only a tiny special niche in photojour- fragment of the picture record nalism. of Sept. 5, 1974, but we think we chose wisely. We mignt men- tion also that more than 15 mil- lion pictures were taken that day throughout the country . . . images we didn't se:." , Map- A R T S ......... ...............................................: : :i : : : :% i RAVMIC. UNIONGH-2 CALIFORNIA SPECIAL DEC. 31-JAN. 7, 1975 3 CITIES ON LY $345..00O INCLUDES: Round trip airfare on American Airlines, 7 nights double accommodations as follows: 0 3 NIGHTS LOS ANGELES 0 1 NIGHT SANTA CRUZ 0 3 NIGHTS SAN FRANCISCO Round trip transfers between hotels and airport Bus transportation along the Pacific coast highway between L.A. and S.F. ( DEADLINE-DEC. 6 i~ .603,east bertyWednesday at 1-3-5-7-9 CAN until 5 p.m.-all seats $1.00 Thursday at 7 & 9 p.m. only -Theatre. Phone 66'-9 Starts Friday! "CHINATOWN" i~ Irate broadcaster' enrages MIAMI, Fla. WP) - Fed up with the bright lights and noisy intercom system of the car, dealer next door, Sigmund Schy is waging a battle of nerves and eardrums. Each morning before leaving for work, Schy turns on a re- peating 20-minute tape of Ha- waiian and rock music. The raucous music is punctuated by homemade commercials for Fords, Chevrolets and Pon- tiacs, designed to get the goat of the Oldsmobile dealer next door. Dealer Frank Crippen said he uses the bright lights to at- tract customers. The intercom system is used to commimicate with salesmen on the lot, he, said. Schy's counterattack appar- ently has had some effect. "One customer came all the way from Naples (Fla.) to buy a car from us," said salesman Bob Gallagher. "After a few minutes of listening to that rac- ket he said, 'I can't take any more of this. I have a head- ache.' He left and bought his car someplace else." "It is driving me up the creek," said another salesman, Ray Gonzalez. "I wish he'd change the music." Schy admits the music ema- nating from his high-powered rooftop speaker is awful. "Why do you think I spend the whole Association of Jewish Grads & Fcvlt invites you to day away from home?" Crippen says he has lawyers working on two court orders - one to have Schy cut out the all- day broadcast and another to collect $400 Crippen says Schy owes for auto repairs. North Miami Police Chief! James Devaney says Crippen has not made a complaint against Schy, and that the self- styled broadcaster is not mak- ing a public nuisance of him- self. Schy has initiated legal action to have Crippen shade the car lot's lights, which Schy says "could illuminate the Or- ange Bowl." for Enjoy it.in Daiquiris and Bacardi Cocktails. And use it like gin or ( ~vodka in Martinis, Screwdrivers, IBloody Marys, jtonic, bitter lemnon, gBACARDIrum. SThe mixable one. t 0 1 HA R 1ORO A Schy Bursley Hall Enterprises PRESENTS SOUNDER I I II