I Wednesday, April 16, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Glee club sings s pirituals, spoofs Pasta prorides alternatives By CATHY REUTTER Rollicking parodies and ten- der spirituals characterized Willis Patterson's last concert with the Michigan Men's Glee Club. In presenting ansimpres- sive program, the sixty-five voice choir exhibited a wide. range in both their repertoire and membership. The highlight of the perform- ance was a series of short pieces sung and danced by the Friars. The eight voice group clowned their way through a couple of pieces with the aid of top hats, canes, and a rubber chicken. Al- though their singing was some- times lost in vast Hill Auditor- ium, their antics and the blend of their voices-combined for an-' other quality performance. In contrast to the boisterous antics of the Friars, the Club sang a number of religious and spiritual pieces. The concert opened with three pieces in Latin. Mozart's 'Adoramus Te, Christe' andl Scheutky - McKinney's 'Emitte" Spiritum Tuum' were well sung. Laudes Atque Carmina, by A. Stanley of the class of '91, is dear to the hearts of honors con-r vocation goers and nostalgic Michigan loyalists. 'Jesus and The Traders', by: Z. Kodajy, contained some fine contrapuntal sections, makingI the interplay of voices interest- ing. Three Villanellas and an Alto Rhapsody closed the first half of the program. Although well executed they did not evoke the same excitement that the open- ing numbers did. Nevertheless, Club member Rodney Brown, Associate Professor Rosemary Russell, and organist Herman Taylor performed well. The second half of the pro- gram was a mixture of spirit-1 uals, antics, and Michigan songs. Old King Cole, arranged by Okun, was a rollicking spoof of the army. The club presented it in excellent form, with a de- liberately off - balance accom- paniment by Chad Furman and Fred Weldy. , The remaining time was de- voted to folk music and Black Spirituals. Charles Brown sang an especially rich and powerful solo. S. Carver Davenport, Ri- chard Fracker, and Randy Lam-; bert each sang a tenor solo as well. During the program the Club presented awards to its mem- bers. The first annual Philip A. Duey awards went to Richard Fracker and Fred Weldy for their help with musical and supporting activities. Officers Patric Parker and Patrick Smith and Student Conductor Conrad Miller won the honorary LLangollen awards. Patterson even pronounced that Welsh name right. By ROBIN HERGOTT Pasta, served as a side dish, is often a welcome change from! potatoes. Noodles, a common form of pasta, are extremely versatile and are greatly en- hanced both in taste and nu- tritional value through the ad- to test for texture is to sim- ply taste the pasta.j The following recipes offer' very different ways to prepare' noodles. Apricot Noodle Mold1 is a sweet creation that is an excellent accompaniment to fish or chicken. Noodle Spinach -loan Cut thin slices from stem. Placz whole in double boiler, dot with butter and season. Steam 2b minutes. GREEN NOODLES ALFREDO 1 -pound package green firmly into brown sugar to form a pattern. Noodles: % pound broad noodles 2 eggs, slightly beaten % cup butter, melted % teaspoon cinnamon a (t l _. dition of other ingredients. Ring, which looks extremely at- Noodles are enriched, so even tractive on the table, goes well by themselves they area good with beef, veal, chicken oh fish.I sourec of thiamine, riboflavin, The spinach provides a good niacin, iron and protein. Of source of Vitamins A and K course, pasta is also a good and iron. Green Noodles Al- source of carbohydrate, which fredo, made with spinach nood- is an inexpensive source of en-cbhdtwi les, contains these same nu- is n iexpnsie surc ofen-trients and goes well with any ergy and an essential compon-ty e.syllw dhen ent of a proper diet. T h e gyype of meat. Crusy Noodle addition of various ingredients, Ring, a nutty, sweet dish, is al- such as eggs, milk, cheese and so a versatile accompaniment cottage cheese, make the pre-t pared dish a good source of cal- APRICOT NOODLE MOLD cium, phosphorus, potassium, 1 pound broad noodles Vitamins A and D and iron as 4 eggs, beaten well. dash salt Cook noodles according to the' package directions. Drain, add sugar to beaten eggs and add all ingredients to noodles. Put, in buttered deep casserole. PutI corn flake crumbs across top. Bake in 350-degree oven for 1' hour 15 minutes. NOODLE SPINACH RING , noodles 1.3 cup sugar 12 cup butter or margarine 1/2 teaspoon salt 1 cup grated Parmesian cheese Boil noodles; drain well and Cook noodles in salted water cup half and half cream combine with egges, butter, cin- until barely tender and drain; Cook noodles according to namon, sugar and salt. Spread mix noodles and spinach. Saute package directions. Drain, but in prepared mold over sugar-e- onion in butter until slightly do not rinse. Place on heated can mixture and bake in a pre- browned. Fold in eggs; add sour platter. Keep warm. Melt but- heated 350-degree over for 1 cream and salt and blend well.-ter or margarine in saucepan, hour. Unmold on platter. Pour into greased 6-cv.p ring stir in cheese and cream; sim--- - mold. Place mold in pan of hot mer, stirring constantly until water in a 350-degree over for ' cheese is melted and smootn. 15 minutes. Unmold. Se:ve on: Pour piping hot over drained heated platter with steamed noodles and toss gently. Serve Have a flair for mushrooms in the center. Serv- with extra Parmesan. artistic writing? If you are interest- es 8. ed in reviewing CRUSTY NOODLE RING poetry, and music emr1'T~ a nr '1,T'Vor writing featuie I Cook pasta in rapidly Doiling salted water, about 2 quarts per 1 pound of pasta. When done, drain it in a colander. Pasta is best cooked al dente - mean- ing it should be done firm, not soft, to the tooth. The best way' z/ cup sugar 1 pint small curd cottage 1 pint sour cream $ cup melted butter or margarine teaspoon vanilla cheese 1 8-ounce package broad noodles 2 10-ounce packages chopped, defrosted spinacn, drained well cup butter 1 medium onion, chopped 3 eggs, slightly Neaten 1 cup commercial sour cream STEAMED FJr ESH MUSHROOMS 1 pound fresh mushrooms 2 talespoons butter % teaspoon salt Wash and drain mushrooms. I/ Cup butter tres a b o u t the '/2 cup dark brown sugar ma, dance, film 1uppcnhalves at:Contact' Arts cup pecan hE d it or, /o The Melt butter in bottom of 6- Michigan Daily. cup ring mold. Add brown sug- ar, pressing into botton of C mold. Place unbroken pecans 1 12-ounce jar apricot preserves salt, to taste Records in review F ANYONE saw the London Symphony under Andre Previn at Hill auditorium last September, they will love this re- cording. Previn again demonstrates the virtuosity of this beauti- ful orchestra., This recording does not stress the large group sound but more of the individual and ensemble playing that the LSO does so well. The music on the album contrasts very nicely. The Shostako- vich symphony provides the heavy serious playing, while Proko- fiev Kije Suite is the more melodic side. Both are brought to life here with a concentrated intensity. Previn seems to favor these two composers and he conducts their works with. gusto. However, the album does present a problem. This is over 57 minutes of music. Most of it is the Shostakovich piece. Although there is plenty of wonderful playing, it requires no small effort on the part of the listener. This can become very difficult in our world of studying and constant commotion. But for sheer music- ianship, this record can't be beat. . ,. F , <. ,, ;, ; 1-STOP SHOPPING SAVES MONEY, TIME, ENERGY " r, f 1, -JAMES FIEBIG * # ~ CARL ORFF's Carmina Burana, a 20th-century setting of Medieval secular poetry, has just been recorded by Michael Tilson Thomas and the Cleveland Orchestra (Columbia MX 33172). This music, which is derivative of Stravinsky (specifically Les Noces) although written by a man with nowhere nearI Stravinsky's talent or imagination, is a pleasant enough piece which doesn't bear too many repeated listenings or too much careful attention. I wouldn't have thought it possible to ruin such an innocuous piece, but Tilson Thomas manages. He has always been a talent- ed musician, and is still an especially good pianist, but his conducting has been getting more erratic with every record. This performance is incredibly willful and distorted - every fast section is so fast that you can't hear anything and the beat gets lost, for the orchestra and singers as well as the listener.j -CHARLES SMITH, IT'S BEEN A long wait for their fans, but Led Zeppelin finally came through for the faithful. Physical Graffiti (Swan Song SS 2-200) is a double record set, and it offers a bit of everything Jimmy Page and his cohorts do: blues, rock, acoustics, and things in between. The highlights on the album are the acoustic guitar pieces that are reminiscent of the better cuts on Zeppelin's third album. In addition, John Paul Jones, featured bassist and keyboard player, offers interesting work both instrumentally (synthesizers) and compositionally ("Night Flight", "Kashmir"). -BOB TAUB HOT WAX by Turtle GLIDDEN SPRED EXTERIOR REDWOOD STAIN OYR REG. $U.36P 6 90 160 Point Dept. i - 0 Self shining car wax i 6'f L oz. bottle r A .n.J.. 7 _d1I "Mo ei 1-4 11. OUR REG. $1.96 $j37 Auto Supply Dept. DERBY FIELD LIMITED LOUISVILLE (AP)-There may never be another 23-horse field in the Kentucky Derby as was the case in 1974. Officials of the Churmhill Downs track are limit- ing future 3-year-old classics to no more than 20 horses, bases on money earned. Had the rule applied in 1974, horses such as Pat McGroder, with only $6,730 in earnings, Consiglioro ($10,905), and Lexico ($11,513) would not have gone to the post last May. Pat Mc- Groder finished 10th, Consig- liori 20th and Lexico 22nd. 1 r' v.. " ?' Mir Today at 1-3-5-7-9. Open at 12:45 Until 5 p.m. all seats $1.00 PG 4 y 1 S I1 t-.o wI-wu ani~r .v, cAA Puv c Swto ThW Avls.ng ,Cdrn ;OU!jfl Today at 1-3-5-7-9 p.m. Until 5 p.m. all seats $1.00 Would you 'hire you? l ;, t I . : .. o.. r .. - m .................... g.....m~mm - m - - iC II( I WITH COUPON a I WITH COUPON towardth. purchase of s5.00PURCHASE A o.IEPURCHAMEI N tSOPV0NAS CC *QmNmaN BETVY CROCKER 9 VARIETIES , OLD MEDAL HEINZ GENUINE -- - -Am m'- - _A. 1 ! !A _ l , A film , E Until 5 p.m. all seats $1.00 Today at 1-3-5-7pm Taum"" Of coursevon would.