Tuetd(y, October 9, 1975 A T HE MICHIGAN DAILY i V _______________________________________________________________________ I Page Five mromm4 U'Symphony: Viewing a the scenes Showcasing Shaw Dunois (Randall Forte) and Joan (Adele Ahronheim) rehearse for the University Players' production of G.B. Shaw's Saint Joan, which opens tomorrow night at Power Center. The production runs through Saturday. New local cultural magazine published concert By TONY CECERE Bac Friday night, Oct. 5, 7:15: bell a Backstage at Hill Aud. my fel- practi low members of the University Brah Symphony are preparing to play all I the group's first concert of ;he next t semester. audito rings, The air backstage is heavy the o with the scent of 75 perfumes and Sever after-shave lotions as well as the game noise of 75 instruments being Afte warmed up. move Everyone looks splendid in chestr concert dress -. long black dress- anoth: es, penguinesque tuxedos. We ment would be well dressed for d wed- indivi ding or a funeral, but I hope mouth that our first concert more close- iv resembles the former and not The the latter. even tI anne The programs are passed tress, down, and the concert order is silenc the Brahm's Third Symphony, oboef "Angelus Novus," a new work by tuning Tomas Marco, and Stravinsky's opens "Firebird Suite." cantar The broadcaster from WUOM dium. scribbles furiously the following plause information, knowing well that it smiles can fill up empty air space: The Tomas Marco is young, gifted, massi and Spanish. He is considered to credib be in the "avant" of the Madrid symphi avant-garde. "Anglus Novus" mosti was composed in homage to Mah- we ha ler (1970), using certain elements rehea 'that Mahler himself would have it i employed: tympani crashes, The m sleigh bells and harp sound ef- cosun fects. onstag 11:00 4 50 IKAV-1:30 2 4 :1 90 tonight 5 tunyn1:0095 6:00 2 4 7 News 1 56 zoom 10 50 Gilligan's Island 1 15 2 6:30 2 CBS News4 4 NBC News45 2 7ABC News 9 1 Dream of Jeannie 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Antiques 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4News To Tell the Truth 9Beverly Hillbillies 50 Sixth Sense 56 Church Alive 7:30 2 What's My Line? 4 Bd Schembecher SH 7 Price is Right 9 Bewitched 50 Pro Basketball 56 Yesterday's Headlines 8:00 2 Maude 4 America 7 Temperatures Rising 9 Strlost-Science Fiction 56 Black Composers special: 8:30 2 Hawaii Five-} 7 Movie "Shirts/Skins" 9:00 4 Magician 9:30 2 Shaft-Crime Drama Debut 9 Front Page Challenge 56 Roberta Flack 10:00 4 Police Story 7 Marcus Welby, M.. 9 United Way Kickoff 50 Perry Mason 56 To be announced k downstairs, Laura Camp- nd I with my French horn ce a duet we have in the ms, but it is to no avail- can hear is the tuba player o us. In a far alcove of Iec orium, the warning bell and almost lemming-like, rchestra trudges upstairs. al rainchecks on Pinochle, s are taken. r a proper amount of ment and shuffle the or- a seats itself and makes er proper amount of move- and shuffle, followed by dual testing of r e e d s, pieces and drumsticks. cacaphony fades away and the audience shuts up. Suz- Ornstein, our concertmis- is met with applause. Then e; she signals the first for an A, the traditional note. Backstage the door and conductor Theo Ala- 'a strides proudly to his po- He acknowledges his ap- e, mounts the podium and at us. baton comes down and two ve chords, two walls of in- le sound start the Brahms hony. Our reactions are al- instinctive ones, for what ve done dozens of times in rsals is done again. s hardly routine, however. music is too absorbing, too ming for that. Time flies ge, and the piece is soon 4 7 News One Step Beyond Movie "The Law and Jake Wade" (1958). Johnny Carson File itUnder Fear News "The Gunfighter." (1950) Movie "Me and the Colonel." (1958) 7 News Movie "Cry Tough." (1959) News over. Intermission. Most sane performers head right for the bathroom at inter- mission, producing a long jam at the doors of the john. Somehow the wait is well worth it. The water fountain is the next stop. People are reassuring one an- other - it went very well, the audience liked it. The audience is our ultimate barometer - they show the emotional impact of our collective efforts. Once onstage I am aware of the lights at the ceiling, not be- cause of the light, but because of the incredible heat. Now the American premiere of the "Angelus Novus",replete with wa-wa sounds, tam tam noise and a baby crying in the audience. The Stravinsky, well known to the audience, brings Have a flair for 9 artistic writing? if you are interest- poetry, and musi or writing feature stories about the drama. dance, ftilm, arts: Contact Arif Editor, c/o the Michigan Daily. the house down. People out there. are standing up, cheering, clap- ping, screaming "Bravo!" and enjoying themselves. As the audience goes home, the orchestra retires to Metz- ger's, Bimbo's and other houses of food and drink. After all, we earned it. Philippines to dance Sun. Complete with native orches- tra, the Bayanihan Philippine Dance Company returns to Power Center for its third Ann Arbor visit this Sunday at 3 and 8 p.m. Sponsored by the University Musical Society, the 27 dancers make use of Indo-Arabian fan- tasies, as well as the colorful Spanish influence on their islands, in a wide variety of dance styles. Tickets are available at Burton Tower. "ARENA" PRODUCTION HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-"Arena" has been acquired by MGM as one of its major 1973-74 produc- tions. behind and 1Jr. 'Wel saturd v oct. 13,8Pm c4 .y HILL AUD. # ' 4 .'0A0, 'r 5c 34 r. the mouIriO at BRIARWOOI Adjacent to J.C. Penney 0 769-8780 * 1-94 & S. State, Ann Arbor By MARY BENSON It pays to examine your mail carefully. That's what quite a few Ann Arbor residents dis- covered last month when they took a second look at what first appeared to be a standard, al- beit clever, flyer advertising a new publication. These randomly selected people had received the first issue of Periodical Lunch, the latest of- fering of Street Fiction Press. That's the local group who also put out Anon, a yearly University literary magazine, and Spineless Fiction. "Yes, but what is this thing if it is not an advertisement?" you ask. Well, it's an unwieldy collection of about 25 loose pages surrounded by a wrapper and then sealed in a plastic bag. Available at the University Cellar and local bookstores, those 25 pages contain: lists of local events, recitals, craft guilds, bookstores, bars, restaurants, community service organizations, a recipe for onion soup, poems, sngs, book reviews, short stories, interestingdgraphics, superb ads, an~d on and on. The format and graphics add an extra dimension to this com- 'Y is pendium that raises it from the ranks of the ordinary literary nagazine.I P e r i o d i c a l Lunch is com- piled by editor Warren Hecht, a creative writing instructor at the Residential College, and a coterie of contributors and staff. Lunch is put out by Giraffe Graphics, another local enterprise. Coping with those pages (It doesn't matter if you drop the whole thing on the floor; each page is a self-contained unit), looking at its contents, anticipat- ing what could possibly come next, the reader is transformed into a participant. The poetry -and fiction are promising, though unsubstantial. Editorial selection policy may be responsible for this. In an effort to keep things light and attrac- tive in the maiden issue, flash may have substituted for heft. With a policy of actively seek- ing out local talent, and a staff that already includes several of the area's better talents-Peter Anderson, Howard Kohn, and Marge Piercy-Periodical Lunch can only improve. It has all the characteristics of a snowball rolling down a snow- covered mountain. EMU Major Events Committee PRESENTS: October 13 Bowen Field House TICKETS ON SALE WED., SEPT. 26 $4.00 advance, $5 at the door general admission TICKETS ON SALE at: Hudson's, AA Music Mart, Grinnells, Huckleberry Party Store, McKenny Uniont ai I. 10:20, 12:15, 2:10, 4:05, 6:05, 8:05, 10:10 S i This cep plays Take away hl' badge anid he'd top the Ten Most Wanted lost! AIi 7i ELIZABETH TAYLOR LAURENCE HARVEY I HU S A IOOOCOL.ON A W WSIC.. +7A1MO,9:20 CHARLES R N$6I0 the II 4"NIGT WIT04 10:35, 12:25, 2;15, 4:10, 6:00, 7:55, 9:45 10:40, 12:35, 2:30, 4:25, 6:20, 8:15, 10:10 OPEN DAILY AT 12:45 OWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. DON'T MISS IT! Rated G DAILY EARLY BiRD MATINEES (EXCEPT SUN. & HOLIDAYS) Open 10 a.m. Adult admission $1.00 till 1:30, Mon. thru Sat. 1 I F, I I UAC-Daystar Presents: s': f : ANORMA ) MFVSON f0m JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR" CUITURE CA L ENIDAR flILM-Ann Arbor Film Co-op presents McCabe and Mrs. Mil- ler, Aud. A, 7, 9:30 p.m.; Cinema Guild features Ball of Fire in Arch. Aud. at 7 and 9:05; New World Film Co-op presents I Am Curious Yellow in Aud. 3, MLB at 7:30 and 9:30. MUSIC SCHOOL-Wind and Percussion Student Recital in SM Recital Hall at 12:30 p.m.; Recital by organ majors in Hill Aud. at 3:30. "A JOY! STUNNING! BEAUTIFUL!" NY TIMES -SATURDAY REVIEW -PLAYBOY PARAMOUNT PICTURES piens A SHE IIL'4 F1kACO ZEFFIREWL Produton or &JULIET TECHNICOLOR 603 astlibrtyBACK TO THRILL YOU AGAIN! Open Daily at 12:45 Shows at 1 p.m.-3:30-6:10-8:45 COMING-James Coburn is "~HARRY IN YOUR POCKET" TH COODY BLUES Thursday, Nov. 8, 1973 $7.00, $6.50, $5.50 (rear) 8:00 p.m. Crisler Arena. all seats reserved Tickets go on sale TODAY, Oct. 9,10:00 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. only at Crisler Arena walk up window box office. Limit 6 tickets per person. No personal checks. Should any tickets remain, they will Desk on Wednesday, October 10th. 1 be sold at the Michigan Union Lobby Ticket 1:00 am-5:30 pm. m" Call 763-1 109 anytime for recorded information message. Ann Arbor is one of only 13 cities on the Moody Blues 1973 North American tour. POETRY-The University's Extension Service and Dept. English present Michael Harper reading his poetry Aud. 4, MLB at 4:10. of in OTHER COMING ATTRACTIONS PRESENTED BY UAC-DAYSTAR: THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM Repertery Companies Series USHER APPLICATION ON SALE NOW MICHIGAN UNION NAME- ADDRESS- B. B. King Fri. Oct. 19-Hill Aud.-$5.50-$5.0044.50-$3.50 Judy Coli*ns Sat. Oct. 20-Hill Aud-$5.00-$4.50-$4.00-$3.00 Roberta Flack Sat .Oct 21-Hill Aud-$6.00-$5.50-$5.00-$4.00 ON SALE SOON: Mim. rnieocoming Wed. Nov. 14 to Power Center $2.50 TELEPHONLC.=__ U. OF M, ID. NO. RULES 1. You must be a U. of M. student. 2. You must choose your series in order of preference. 3. Married students may send applications together. 4. This application must be mailed by U.S. Mail NO SOON- ER THAN OCTOBER 15, 1973. (Mail to: PTP Office, Mendelssohn Theatre, Ann Arbor, MI 48104) 5. Include a stamped, self-addressed envelope. PLEASE NUMBER CHOICE 1.2. 3.4. 5. 6 i I ULYL-r IiMA U' iI*U1' 'AV U kfV*Ut s I i m