Thursday, Jcnur ry 23, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Ronstadt and friends winover By CHRIS KOCHMANSKI "Linda Rcnstadt is the best damn female vo- calist today," claimed Michigan freshperson Pique Rockwell in anticipation of the country- rock performer's near sell-out concert at Hill Auditorium Tuesday night. And as Ronstadt's strong, clear voice alter- natingly belted out old rock favorites and sen- suously crooned quiet love songs, by perform- ance's end, many more in the audience were convinced of her supremacy in the field of fe- male singers. The concert began on a less optimistic note, however. An anonymous ,master of ceremonies proclaimed the.urgency of student cooperation with Hill Auditorium's smoking regulations. The announcement drew polite response from an au- dience which generally maintained orderly con- cert behavior throughout. The opening act, Leon Redbone, was intro- duced as "a helluva nce guy," and the local favorite amused his audience with offbeat dress, a distinctive apathetic style, and lyrics that defy definition. Reputedly "a rumor in his own time," Redbone pleasantly plucked a series of pseudo-folk numbers that mystified, yet en- tertained. Dressed in a tattered, non-matching suit and a felt hat, Redbone physically and vocally re- sembled a cross between Groucho Marx and Jim Croce. His proficiency at yodeling, a mo- tif common to all the night's acts, highlighted his performance. Redbone was followed by a set from Paul Siebel and David Bromberg, a collaboration that proved limited in its appeal. Throughout his performance, Siebel projected little stage pres- ence and had to contend with an unreceptive, fidgeting audience. Bromberg's work on the dobro outshined Siebel's monotonous melodies, evidenced by the fact that the audience also called for Brom- Congress- 1-m r s s Iill crow berg when Siebel returned to the stage for a gratuitous encore. Though often obscured by his wailing voice, Siebel's lyrics (particularly in Women Won't Make No Fool Out of Me) are the center of his work. When Ronstadt at last took the stage, the impatient audience was quite ready for a more identifiable type of music. She began with her specialty, a slow country melody that proved her voice was truly clear as a bell. She followed that with a rocking version of Buddy Holly's That'll Be the Day, in which at no time did her talented band drown out the vocals. Her set consisted mainly of cuts from her new hit album Heart Like A Wheel (including the favorite Willing), and in part of old personal favorites like Long Long Time. Throughout, Ron- stadt's vocals expressively fluctuated between strong, emotional passages and soft, loving in- terludes. Between songs, she spoke of management problems and being "ripped off in Cleveland," but referred to An Arbor with affection. Dres- sed casually, the attractive Ronstadt received on stage numerous bouquets of flowers from adoring male fans. Her current Top 40 smash, You're No Good, received powerful treatment from the hyped- up band, and at its close brought the crowd to its feet. For an encore, Ronstadt belted Heat Wave and a moving final number, accompanied only by a lilting piano melody. Outside the Auditorium, resnonse was unani- mously appreciative. The Ronstadt concert brought a much-needed change to live music in the area. As Susan Ziel, a nurse at Univer- sity Hospital succinctly summed it up, "I real- ly appreciate this type of music." Or more expressively put by a museum tech- niques student: "Linda Ronstadt is like an audio-visual climax." mayVote to Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS David Bromtberg (left) and Paul Siebet Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Belting it out Country-rock vocalist Linda Ronstadt performs during her UAC-sponsored concert at Hill Auditorium Tuesday night. 'Harold and Maude': Fantasucally popular By JAMES VALK ' RETURNING TO THE campus film showings for the second time in as many weeks, hal Ashby's Harold and Maude at- tempts to secure its place as perhaps the most popularily sus- tained film at the Big U. The phenomenon of the movie is a mystery. Hardly to be classified as a trend, Harold and Maude is simply a film that has been ardently received by a relatively small band of cinema enthusiasts. Its viewers are not exclusively nomads of Ingmar Bergman, nor are they among those that thrive vicariously on the Sound of Music. Harold and Maude viewers are a cross-section of loyalists: wide in diversity but narrow in numbers - the lat- ter being a negated statement in Ann Arbor. The film, if you don't already know, concerns an odd rela- tioriship between a 20 year old youth preoccupied with death and an 80 year old woman preoccupied with life. Meeting at a funeral, the two form a bizzare liaison that surpasses anything Happy Rockefeller's niece could ever dream of. REAL FLOW of Harold and Maude can be attributed to Hal Ashby's direction of Colin Higgins' screenplay. Ashby, a director brought up through the ranks has only recently come in standing with The Last Detail and the yet-to-be-released Sham- po. Nevertheless, in Harold and Maude Ashby created his most memorable film. Combining a comical sense of the absurd with a genuine feel for his material, Ashby, along with the talent of Ruth Gordon and the presence of Bud Cort, has created a derivation of a great film. Issuing restraint to a movie that would be doomed without it, Ashby comes off with no pretensions. Harold's almost mania- cl fascination with death is beyond any definition of the scope of reality. His bizzare "suicides", designed to shock his socially elevated mother, are merely vehicles employed to enhance the premise: Harold is living a fictitious life in a claustrophobic en- vironment With the emergence of Maude into Harold's personality, the slow circular process begins to proceed. While issuing a leery curiosity toward this ageless woman, Harold continues to dwell into his gruesome escapades, staging elaborate vignettes to ward off computer matched dates set up by his mother. And by the last third of the film, Harold's preoccupance with death has become all but extinct, replaced by Maude's simple appreciation of life. BUT AS THE circle is completed, the continuity of natural pro- gression runs its course. Just as Harold takes on the ex- hilaration of youth, Maude falls to the vestiges of time. As Har- old philosophically becomes Maude, Maude physically becomes Harold; not in the sence of fascination from alienation, but as the end result of the closing of the circle: death into life - life into death. In the span of the film, Ashbv creates a grand paradox of attitudes - only one -which is ultimately resolved in the end. While Harold has literally gained life, Maude has reached a pinnacle of personal satisfaction, and quietly steps aside to allow her newly-sponsored ode to life his chance to exist as she did, free in both spirit and commitment. And with the merging of Harold into Maude, one senses a newly founded union; the passage of life from one body in order to yield to another. It is a rebirth, and the final shot of Harold on the mountain cliff, strumming Maude's vibrancy into himself, reminds me of Arthur C. Clarke's Star-Child in the final sentences of 2001: A Space Odyssey. With this "mystical" significance, Harold as the trans- formed and Maude as transformer, perhaps there is more to this film than we could ever imagine. s Y Y :" P ,-: DR. PAUL USLAN Optometrist Full Contact Lens Service Visual Examinations 548 Church 663-2476 SHORT or LONG HAIRSTYLES TO PLEASE DASCOLA BARBERS ARBORLAND-971 -9975 MAPLE VILLAGE---761 -2733 E. LIBERTY-668-9329 E. UNIVERSITY-662-0354 lock, EFord's] By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - Chairman Al Ullman of the House Ways and Means Committee predict- ed Wednesday that Congress will vote to block President Ford's proposed oil import tar- iffs, which Ullman said would impose "a hardship on the American people." He also said he though there were enough votes against the plan to override a presidential veto, should Ford veto the leg- islation. Ullman, D-Ore., said he will hold special committee hear- ings Thursday or Friday on legislation to force a 90-day de- lay in the tariffs to give the Congress time to come up with its own energy program. "Time is really critical," he told newsmen. Battle lines thus appeared to be drawn for a showdown be- tween the President and the Democratic - controlled Con- gress on the issue of how to reduce the country's imports of oil - by means of the higher taxes proposed by Ford or by rationing of gasoline, a course which the Democrats appear to favor. The oil import tariff repre- sents a major portion of the President's new economic pro- gram. Ford said the combined effect of the tariff and other proposed energy taxes would cause a drop in domestic oil con- sumption and reduce foreign oil imports by one million barrels a day this year. Under the plan, Ford plans to impose a $1-a-barrel tariff on imported oil beginning Feb. 1, rising to $2 on March 1 and $3 proposed oi ipor ttax NOON LUNCHEON HOMEMADE SOUP AND SANDWICH-50c FRI., JAN. 24 Prof. James E. Crowfoot School of Natural Resources: "ETHICS: THE RATIONALIZATION OF SPECIAL INTEREST" (series :"Ethics and Values in Higher Education") GUILD HOUSE-802 Monroe . . , PRESENTS PONTECORVO'S THE BATTLE OF ALGIERS The moving drama of the Algerian revolution TODAY! Thurs., Jon..23 Aud.A Angel Hall 7:00-9:15 $1.25 Next Tuesday see YELLOW SUBMARINE AUD. A 7, 8:45 & 9:30 on April 1. Administration economists expect the $3 tariff will increase prices of gaso- line and home heating oil by about 3 cents a gallon. Treasury Secretary William E. Simon told the committee during testimony Wednesday that Ford's over-all energy package, including a $2 domes- tic excise tax, would increase prices of gasoline and home heating oil by about 10 to 11 cents a gallon. Ford's latest expression of determination to push ahead with his tax on oil imports with- out waiting for Congressional approval came in a telephone call to Ullman. The committee chairman and his colleagues had been told earlier by Simon that the Presi- dent was thinking, in answer to the protests they and others had made, about postponing the con- troversial oil import fee pro- gram. But Ford did not allow any time.for the impression to gain ground that he was backing away from his plan in any way. He called Ullman to say, ac- cording to the chairman, that "lie must go forward with the schedule of import fees." At the same time, Ullman told the committee he had let Ford know he himself would take swift action by convening the group to approve legislation which would delay' new oil im- port fees for 90 days while Congress reviewed the situation. Strong efforts went ahead in the Senate as well as the House to try to balk the President's plan. Democratic leader Senator Mike Mansfield and Senator Lowell Weicker, a liberal Re- publican, introduced legisla- tion to make gasoline rationing compulsory. Senator Frank Church, chair- man of a Senate subcommittee on multinational corporations, said he was drafting legislation to set up a Federal Govern- ment purchasing agency to buy oil from other countries. This, he explained, would be part of a proposal by the subcommittee to reduce oil imports by 15 per cent in an effort to break the oil producers' price cartel. Representative Henry Reuss, newly elected chairman of the Banking Committee, flatly pre- dicted Congress would approve rationing of fuel. Meanwhile, T r e a s u r y officials said they will need to borrow an estimated $28 billion over the next six months to fi- nance the administration's anti- recession program. That figure amounts to seven times the maximum borrowing during comparable periods over the last five years and repre- sents the federal government's heaviest financing operation >ince World War 11, officials srsid. Jack -. Bennett, assistant secretary of the Treasury for Monetary affairs, said the bor- rowing will require "a sub- stantial increase in the debt ceiling." But he declined to specify how much the ceiling woUld have to be raised. The ceiling is temporarily set at 5195 billion and the nation's debt is only $1.3 billion shy of that limit. Simon also said the Ford ad- ministration believes permanent; changes in individual income tax rates can be justified inde- pendently from the energy tax proposal. Hove a flair for If yu are interest-k ed in reviewing piet ry. and nu or writing feature stories a b o u t the drama, dance. fitm Sart.: Contact Arts Editor. c/o The I,-, Michigan IDaily. Indochina Peace Campaign PRESENTS The RF1) Boys i Finest in Bluegrass Join The Daily Center for the Coordination of Ancient & Modern Studies, Professional Theatre Proarom, & The Residential Crilleqe PRESENT THE Marionette Theatre OF PETER ARNOTT TONIGHT! Sophicles' OEDIPUS REX TOMORROW: Something at dhe NEW IS IN THE AIR r W103 FM every Thurs., Fri. & Sat. SOON! SACHA GUITRY'S 1937 PEARLS OF THE CROWN (at 7) This French film traces the fate of four pearls as they change hands through the centuries from Pope Clement VII to Mary, Queen of Scots to Napoleon. By Guitry, kingpin of the modern French popular theatre and master improvisor. MARIA CALLAS in her first dramatic role as