Thursday, January 9, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five thursday1 January 9, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Met tenor Richard Tucker dies of heart attack at 61 I By AP and Reuter KALAMAZOO, Mich. - Rich- ard Tucker, renowned tenor withrNew York's Metropolitan Opera, died of a heart attack yesterday in Kalamazoo where he was to appear in an evening concert, a hospital spokesman said. Tucker was 61. Robert Merrill, the baritone singer who was touring with Tucker, said Tucker collapsed in his hotel room Wednesday afternoon and died at Bronson Hospital soon after. "He was the greatest tenor in the world," Merrill said. Merrill said he was on an ex- tended tour with Tucker that had included a Feb. 6 engage- ment at Carnegie Hall in New York. He said the tour would be canceled and he planned to return to New York on Thurs- day after completing arrange- ments. He said Tucker apparently had a long history of heart trouble. Tucker came to stardom at the Met during the war years when the famed American At 20, he had established himself as an outstanding can- tor in Brooklyn. opera house found it impossible On Feb. 11, 1936, he married to import its usual number of the former Sara Perelmuth, the international stars. "We made sister of the noted tenor, Jan a virtue of necessity and Mr. Peerce. Tucker shot to stardom," a MetP . spokesman said. Tucker had little professional On Jan. 25, Tucker would operatic experience prior to his have celebrated the 30th anni- debut with the Metropolitan versary of his debut with the Opera in 1945. He was a con- Met. testant in the "Metropolitan Au- Tucker was born Reuben Tick- ditions of the Air," winning sec- er on Aug. 28, 1913, to Jewish ond place. It was at this time immigrant parents. He was one that he changed his name to of five children. Richard Tucker. i 1 i } l 3 At the age of 6, he began singing in the choir of the Al- len Street synagogue on Man- hattan's Lower East Side. In 1944, he obtained an au- dition with the Met's general manager, Edward Johnson. Te audition led to his engagement Sn lan din . t .nr fnr the nna ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S 1941 MR. AND MRS. SMITH Something very rare for Hitchcock-his only screwball comedy. A marriage breaks up but the couple (Carole Lombard and Robert Mont- gomery) keep bumping into each other for hilarious results. FRI.: Cary Grant in TOPPER SAT.: Clark Gable in IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT Cinema Guild TONIGHT ADM. ONLY $1 C VO UI AT 9:05 ARC . AUD. TONIGHT-TIFMurs., Jan. 9 8:00 p.m. Meet and talk with old and new friends Israeli Dancing FREE Felafel and Coke All at HILLEL, 1429 Hill St. 663-3336 After graduating from high a a auleIor1)1LIopera school, he worked days as a company. runner for a Wall Street broker- He made his debut at the Met age firm, and later as an errand on Jan. 25, 1945, as Enzo Gri- boy in New York's garment dis- maldo in La Giconda. A critic trict, while studying voice in for The New York Times said the evenings. He subsequently Tucker "sang with warmth opened his own garment dye and expressiveness and his act- shop, but continued his singing. ing was natural and easy." Tuer GLUING FLOWERS FOR CASH By DAVID BURHENN poser. They are monumental wnear capacity Musical So- wrks - sublime in their com- A ner cpaciy Msica So plexity, and verymuch unique. ciety audience at the Power The Guarneri's interpretation Center last night was treated to was somewhat understated, but a performance by some masters nevertheless showed insight into of their craft. the multi-leveled nuances in - The Guarneri Quartet rein- this lengthy work. The opening forced a widespread belief that chords of the first movementj they hold the greatest claim to were particularly breath-tak- the mythical title o f t h e ing, as if the four instruments "world's foremost string quar- had become one gigantic six- tet." teen-stringed unity. Of course, one cannot rate The tone throughout was con- quartets-like baseball teams or sistently beautiful, t h o u g h heavy-weight fighters, and it a certain dryness was present is absurd to try. in some passages. This aridity But the Guarneri, composed could perhaps be blamed on the: of violinists Arnold Steinhardt Power Center. The vast expanse aid John Dalley, violist Michael of concrete walls and floor can- Tree, and cellist David Soyer, not offer the mellow acoustics performed with a solid, and in- of the heavily upholstered and deed, almost uncanny grasp of carpeted Rackham Amphithe-i their art in a performance of ater, where most chamber con- Schubert, Beethoven, and Dvor- certs have been held. ak. The Dvorak with Graffman,I In the last work, concert provided a colorful lively end- ianist Gary Graffman added ing to the evening. The work is considerable talents in a was performed with consider- erformance of the Dvorak ably more gusto by the musi- uintet in A major, Op. 81. cians, who seemed to light into7 The first half of the program the folksy Eastern European as led off by the Schubert character of the quintet. uartettsatz in C Minor. As its A definite highlight was thej itle implies, the work is in second movement, based on a ne movement. It is a quartet Czechoslovak dance called a 11 of contrasts. It was per- dumnka. Cellist Soyer, and viol-l rned with brilliant clarity, ist Tree were especially de- nd almost perfect ensemble. lightful in their soulful interpre- here seemed to be a unani- tations of the slow theme. { ity of musical feeling be- Graffman handled his partt een the four that was trans- with authority and ensemble fitted into a unanimity of mu- between the strings and piano ical expression. was consistently good.1 The Guarneri performed the:.:.:.::::. f t ichubert and the Beethoven Op.1 27 quartet with amazing phy- ical nonchalance. There was one of the strenuous body Eng- 4 ish that many quartets employ n order to reach some expres-f ionistic bond. The Beethoven is the first of he late quartets of the com- SHABBAT SHALOM from HILLEL Friday, January 10 COME TO ONE, TWO OR ALL THREE MINYAN-5:00 p.m. SHABBAT DINNER-6:O0 p.m. SHABBAT CIRCLE-7:30 p.m. ONEG SHABBAT-8:15 p.m. "AN INTRODUCTION TO THE WORLD OF CHASSIDISM T H R O U G H TALK, SONG, AND DANCE. Dinner Reservations by 10 a.m. Fri. Students prep Rose Parade By SARAH POLAREK Special To The Daily PASADENA, Calif. - Whittier. Christian High School junior Jim Bliss nervously glanced at the clock as he carefully ap- plied another orange carnation petal to the model Golden Gate Bridge before him. With only 361 hours until parade time, there' were still thousands of onion, seeds needed to complete the plained. "That'll help us fi- nance this year's Junior-Senior banquet." The students are employed by one of six float-making cor- porations which handle the con- struction details for float spon- sors. Yet these companies are hardly begging for help each December. "We've been on a waiting list for nearly two years," Bliss said. "We were Transamerica and America buildings. Bank of finally contacted only in No- '' I r Bliss was one of 50 Whitti students working on the S Francisco float in preparati for the 46th Tournament Roses parade, Pasadena's a nual New Year's Day event. Starting on December2 Bliss and his friends spent ov 10 hours a day arranging a attaching several thousand y low roses, orange and whr carnation petals, yellow chry anthemums, evergreenbough onion seeds, ti leaves, ar ferns - and all for the e tremely small wage of $1.80 p hour. In all, hundreds of Pasaden area students give up four da of Christmas vacation each ye to work in drafty factory buil ings completing constructi work on the giant parade float And surprisingly enough, it, the paltry wage that attrac them to the job: working Rose Parade floats is simp one of the best ways for ar student groups to raise funds "Together, we'll make $4, for these four days," Bliss e er an on of an- 28, I er rnd el- itek Ys- hs, nd X.- vem er. But many groups have been working on the floats for years. Walt Thistlewaite, a freshman at the University of California- Irvine, w o r k e d on floats throughout his high school years for the youth group of a local Methodist church. "As long as we did good work," Thistlewaite said, "they kept calling us back." Floatsconstruction actually begins soon after the previous New Year's spectacle has end- ed and the thousands of flowers have been sent to nearby hos- pitals. The professional builders prepare extensive designs and finally construct rough frames atop stripped-down truck chas- sis. Students are brought in only for the last two steps of the process: painting the frame to match the design and the actual application of flowers. Petals of hardier blooms can be glued directly onto the chick- en wire surface, but roses, gar- denias, and orchids - with stems intact - must be placed in water - filled vials that are concealed within the frame. The great preponderance of flowers - some floats require as many as 350,000 blooms - make Rose Parade entries ex- tremely costly. "The Occidental Life Insurance float cost more than $40,000 this year," said one float construction company executive. "Ten years ago it only cost $20,000." But even though the working students receive only one per- cent of the total cost, none of them are complaining. "It's fun," said a member of Pasa- dena American Field Service organization. "And it's a great way to serve the club." I TEAC 160...The emphasis is on price, but not at the expense of performance. "May be the most passionately felt epic ever made in this country. It's an epic vision of the corruption of America!" Pauline Kael, The New Yorker Maqazine The Godfather Part I1 er nai TiCKETS JUST WENT ON SALE ysar GET GOOD SEATS NOW! on ts. IS Its on ly ea 150 . UAC CONCERT CO-OP presents JOHN PRUNE AND HIS BAND Thurs., Jan. 16, Power Center, 8 p.m. Reserved seats $4.00. Available at UM Union 11-5:30 doily (763-4553), Ann Arbor Music Mart on State St., Recordland at Briarwood, and Huckleberry Party Store in Ypsi. Sorry, no personal checks. Smoke not in concert hall -kee good music on comous. The Center for Cinese Studies and the Center for Russian and East European Studies PRESENT A LECTURE BY Dr. Roderick MacFarquhar ON I ~"7he C/thee Thursday, Jan. 9-8:00 p.m. West Conf. 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H IL L E L, 1429 Hill St. 663-3336 We are having our annual Midnight Madness SALE All Inventory presently priced 10-50% off *During Midnight Sale an additional 200/0 will be taken off Friday Night-Jan. 10 7 p.m.-] a.m. The Teac 3605. Following the leader. Two years ago TEAC introdnced the 450, a cassette deck so good a lot of reel-to-reel machines were suddenly out- perfiormed, never mind other typical cassette decks. The 360S is now following the leader. You still get the same advanceid transport drive system that produces an iiiredible lhk of wow and flutter (less than 0.07O W1I{S). A all the other engineering accomplishments that first miade ctasst te decks respectable in sophisticatedT - S stemsT 1 1 las a c4n Things like Dolby* circuitry, enhanced by a tone genei, ator and librati co trol,,,ieak indicator light, ta pC --ri'iiurriuijnuiiu n memory and automatic :shut-off. We'd be happy to give you a demonstratiorn of the 360'. The major difference between it and the 450 is price. Which makes it a leader in its own right. I $379.50 ' I),ylby i a trademark of 1)nlbtiLaharatorir<, InC. NN ARB R usIC . 4r s . k, f "k, . I ii I®