Tuesday, February 4 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Tuesday, February 4, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1- Tigh t proves By DAVID BURHENN The Tokyo String Quartet cli- maxed an already superb series of string quartets in their Sun- day presentation of the Cham- ber Arts Series. Their pro- gram of Haydn, Bartok, and Debussey was a clear cut de- monstration of first-rate talent. The quartet, four young Jap- anese musicians trained in To- kyo and at the Julliard School in New York, consists of Koi- Tokyo quartet breathtaking they were by the Tokyo, the effect is breathtaking. The quartet sensed and lis- tened to each other with uncan- ny accuracy, sympathetic to the expression of the individual, yetI subordinating wills to the col- lective demands of the particu- lar work. Ensemble was aided by the nicely balanced set of Amatij instruments loaned to the quar- tet by the Corcoran gallery. The group's sound was rich and _t_ ___ TT___._..t_ __] TT!1_____ Tl..... ,.7 ... Hauenstein Music School mourns Hauenstein's death By DAVID WEINBERG and TONY CECERE Nelson M. Hauenstein, associate dean for academic affairs at the School of Music, died yesterday afternoon at the age of 54. Hauenstein, who had been ill for several weeks, had served as an instructor of flute at the University since 1947. He was appointed to a full professorship in 1963, and was designated associate dean in 1971. He was a charter member of the Music School's Wood- wind Quintet, and was the flautist in the Baroque Trio. He performed frequently in concert appearances with the Ann Arbor and Plymouth orchestras. Music School Dean Allen Britton called Hauenstein "one of the best flautists in the world." "He was the kind of person that everyone just loved," Britton said. "He was an outstanding teacher of flute. All of us are desolated by his death." Associate Dean Robert Warner termed Hauenstein "a superb musician, whose playing produced memorable ex- periences and whose teaching inspired hundreds of talented pupils." Hauenstein was a graduate of the Eastman School of Music. He received a master's degree from the University in 1947. Can earth survive a DoomsdayWh h? oo e chiro Harada and Kikuei Ikeda, violinists, Kazuhide Isomura, violist, and cellist Sadao Hara- da. The musicians may be young,; but their performance gave' little indication of any musical immaturity. What impressed this reviewer most was the abil- ity of the four to achieve pre- cise unity of attack and expres- sion. For example, the beginning of the Bartok Quartet No. S con- sists of a series of heavily ac- cented, almost barbaric unison chords. Played slightly out of synchronization, the effect is disasterous. Played together, as smooth, helped along by the acoustics of plushly carpeted Rackham Amphitheater. All at- tempts by the Musical Society, to move quartet concerts into the concrete Power Center, should be dissuaded. The program began withl Haydn - the Quartet in B-flat, 1 major, Op. 50 No. 1. The inter- ' pretation was lush, and the Vi-1 ' ennese grace of this delight-f ful work was deliniated by the Tokyo. The four movement work is essential Haydn - robust, hu- morous, and framed in eigh- teenth century elegance. The vivace finale was great fun. There was, however, a sore point to the usually smooth sound of the Tokyo. First vio- linist Harada often strained to achieve a predominance over, the rest of the quartet. The strain was really unnecessary- the rest of the quartet neverJ actually drowned Harada out, and the strain sometimes cracked the violinist's tone. The Bartok, performed sec- ond on the program, is a work that reflects stylistic trends from both the middle and late periods of the composer's life. In arch form, like the fourthj quartet, it also shares many of the tonal effects and devices of its predecessor. Harmonic- ally, however, the fifth quartet is linked to such later Bartok as the Concerto for Strings, Per- cussion, and Celeste. The Tokyo's precision was important in performing this thorny quartet, full of rhythmic pratfalls and technical deviltry. The four showed an understand- ing both for the folk music foundations and the sophisticat- ed compositional technique in- herent in the work. The Debussy Quartet in Gj Minor ended the program. The performance was tight, with clear definition of the multi- textured harmonies. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN THEATRE PROGRAM PRESENTS BREAD arnd ROSES a new play by Donald Hall Kosher is more'than a Name for a Dill Pickle! The Importance of Keeping Kosher for Modern Man The Why and How Tues., Feb. 4-8 p.m. Part of the living Jewish Catalog at ILLEL--420 Hill St. 663-33 36 !" 8. 1975 8 ;.. PRESENTS IVAN THE TERRIBLE PART I Directed by SERGEI EISENSTEIN, 1944 One of the few true film epics TODAY, TUESDAY, Feb. 4 AUD. A, ANGELL HALL 7:00, 8:45, 10:30 ADM. $1 .25 TOMORROW: Women in Love 7 & 9:30 THURS.: Woman in the Dunes 7 & 9:30 At AUD. A - Miniature Indian art provides cultural link 1: ~ -~ . . ._ f. . t . , . P ; 1_ : a . :.r 7 r~' ,1i' .- e ? By CHRIS K All this week through Feb. 23, Art is featuring ture Paintings fr collection, an ex at least as hist' cant as it is art The paintings product of the re hal rulers, dire of the Mongols, most of Indian i tury. Some of t traced to the n can region ofs show heavy Hin The exhibition Of the ndianU ; win Binney, a fc By DICK WEST with millions of cans of oven professor now m WASHINGTON UPI-Disaster cleaner, spot removers, bug in California. B movies are very big this season. killers, hair fixatives, paints to travel the Two in particular, "The Tower- and varnishes, air fresheners, search of Indian ing Inferno" and "Earthquake," cheese spreads, doggy deodo- i have been drawing huge crowds. rants, underarm ntii- and has, in the I wouldn't try to analyze why ants, and myriad other sprays seum curator, so many people enjoy films with too numerous to enumerate. "the largest an victims trapped in blazing sky- It doesn't take much imagina- "t laet n' scrapers or the ruins of shatter- ion to recognize that here w tares in the We howevers have the makings of a firsttusinheW e mabe ceanclass disaster and one helluva The works ar We may be certain, hoee'motion picture. Near Eastern (P that even now other producerstro- The visual effects should be kish) and ind phis with strong entertainment positively staggering. Entire schools. Since I values, neighborhoods engulfed in form- duced for books One idea occurred to me ing rust inhibitors . . . Subur- of Mughal ruler banites frantically fleeing be- are quite small passengers trapped in an ocean fore a tidal wave of depres- q"miniatures"), lifder that capsizes in a gigantic surized laundry starch . . . ibly detailed an wave. But I decided that type Socko! ed of disaster might be too un- Itrsigy realistic for the averagetmovie- Plus heroism and romance, a Interestingly, goer. Burt Reynolds rescuing Fanne a product of a So I'm betting the next smash Foxe from sudden mummifica- ishop.tOne art. calamity flick will be along the! tion in spray wax buildup. illustration, an( limes suggested in a letter I "Aerosal Deluge" should be and yet another received from Lester Shirley of box office dynamite, folks. And caligraphy tha Cromberg, Calif. apocalyptic, too. Watch for "Aerosol Deluge," How will the world end? Not coning soon to your neighbor- with a bang, and not with a' hood theater. .whimper, but with a mighty Acording to recently pub- whoosh. lished reports, pressurized cans found in most homes are po- PORTLand, Ore. (P) - tentially explosive under certain Thirty-five per cent of the na- 0 conditions.. . tion's epilepsy victims are "re- If The premise of this film is sistant" to treatment, says D. that some 4ay all the spray Richard Schmidt of New York cans in a large American city who spoke recently at a Port- WriteI will explode simultaneously. land epilepsy seminar. CN We know from watching He said many epileptics can- SERMATEO shaving cream commercials not experience the "maximum" E that the cans are capable of benefits of existing drugs. releasing immense gobs of He added that heavy re- er ordinary circumstances, search is being done to develop this potential is no threat to drugs to help those hard-to- life and limb because it is treat patients. never fully realized. Not every- one shaves at the same time, and one shaver only squirts out Free Exhibition 1 enough to cover his own beard. But suppose these caged coun- Pocket Billiards taunes of goop all emerged in 6ne big eruption. And suppose "PAUL GERN I" they were joined by the con- tents of thousands of cans of 'FEB. 20-4 & 8 p.m. instant non-dairy dessert top- Union Ballroom ping. Which were then combined OCHMANSKI each. Many miniatures have, and continuing throughout history, been trans- the Museum of posed from book to book, from Indian Mima- collection to collection, so that 'm the Binney todaythey are bordered by to- r:btion thati tally inappropriate caligraphy. Khibitinta s orically signifi- Furthermore, Indian rulers istically. have frequently offered the are mainly a paintings as gifts or used them ign of the Mug- as political ploys, particularly ct descendants in dealing with British govern- who controlled ments. As a result they had n the 16th cen- been dispersed all over the the miniatures, Eurasian continent, making on-Mughal Dec- Binney's accomplishment seem southern India, all the more significant. Au influence. The content of the paintings is only a part themselves prove of little inter- ollection of Ed- est to laymen art critics, as ormer Harvard they deal with such matters as aking his home "the beating of a slave," and inney is known "an elephant bearing a pris- world over in oner." Moreover they are pri- paintings that mitive in comparison with the n his collection, realistic painting of Western words of a Mu- civilization. Yet for local art accumulated historians, a full three weeks d most import- remains to satisfy their curios- f Indian minia- ity in Indian art. st." The Ann Arbor exhibition is re a blend of only one in a two-year series of! Persian and Tur- stops that will take the Binney digenous Indian collection across the United: they were pro- States. The Art Museum, locat- and portfolios ed on State St. opposite the' s, the paintings Union, is open to the public (hence the term from 9 to 5 daily, and from 2 yet are incred- t to 5 on Sundays. nd well-preserv-------.---- t - -___ ___ A R T S Have a flair for artistic writing? Ifyu ar~eieest- poetry, and music or writing feature stories a b o u t the drama, dance, film arts: Contact Arts MichiganjDally. -- - ADVANCE SALE AND INFORMATION: TICKET OFFICE ,MENDELSSOHN LOBBY, 764-0450 TICKETS NOW ON SALE Professional Theatre Program TOM MALLOW ~onight at 7 & 9 ONLY OPEN at 6 45 'A FILM OF EXHILARATING BEAUTY... EXTRAVAGANTLY FUNNY. Amarcord' may possibly be Federico Fellini's most marvelous film." -Vincent Canby, N. Y. Times FRANCOj CRISTALDIS fELNlN ( O R (1 REMEMBER") I '"Bob e2arro1" F7iidd ler on the Roof Based i on iom A* Ctems stor*S BY SCWc'Pemti~dof otArfOd Pert Rproducod by RICH ARALTMa toproducod ay DWM 8B the majority are a "royal work-! ist handled the pother painted, worked on the t accompanies The 6 Sonatas & Partitas FOR SOLO VIOLIN OF SAG-H TO BE PERFORMED BY M i HA POGACNIK one of the finest violinists of the younger qenertion."-Fronco Gulli, Josef Ginqold. B001by JOSEPH STEIN ' mVJERRY DOCK NOW Lynn y SHELDON HARNICK rgna New ok r ouwction "dand Cameagr*eO by JEROME ROBBINS ONE NIGHT ONLY! FRI., FEB. 21, 1975-8 P.M.-POWER CENTER Advance sales: PTP Ticke Office, Mendelssohn Lobby 764-0450 j IS THERE ' A PERSONAL GOD? HAS HE SPOKEN TO YOU? !',D ANSW' ERS-- 'tcorrespond~- tr- Torah, the h,:oks of Moes. Nev Testament in English and Yiddishalso availableth- c.it chrge. P.0: Box 1048 Rochester, N.Y. 14603 i i i i I I i s E I BACH'S COMPLETE CYCLE WILL BE PLAYED OVER TWO EVENINGS-THREE EACH EVENING Tues., Feb. 4th and Thurs., Feb. 6th At the First Congregational Church State &i William MINIMUM SUGGESTED DONATION: $2.00 Presented as a Benefit Concert for Sunfield Home for Mentally Handicopped Children IN LESS THAN A MONTH Ann Arbor will be rocking with - MIC THE A spar Williac Every Monday and Tuesday Nite BEER NITE Pitcher Beer-1A price No cover for Students WED.-FREE PINBALL NITE THURS.-TEQUILA NITE 341 S. MAIN HAEL CURTIZ FESTIVAL 1933 E KENNEL MURDER CASE rtsman is murdered and there are seven suspects to choose from- m Powell ("the thin man") as Philo Vance, S.S. Van Dine's fam- - ,, _ I t - _ . . _ I A . A -... .- 4 - :. L :- r v Spring Break-DAYTONA BEACH FL.ORIDA!. e FEB. 28-MARCH 9 e INCLUDES ALL TRANSPORTATION " INCLUDES ALL ACCOMMODATIONS * 8 DAYS-7 NIGHTS IN DAYTONA * FREE PARTIES WHILE TRAVELING * DISNEY WORLD OPTIONS * 2 FREE B-B-QUES TOTAL PRICE $1535o IN DAYTONA LIMITED ACCOMMODATIONS Sign up Early No Gas Worries f r-i 1 -. I I TI AANIMPHI