THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Chris Christian's Killers : Explosive social comment By ROB MEACHUM What began as a simple, sar- castic dialogue among prison inmates, quickly exploded into a fierce and bitter social comment on subjects ranging from prison reform to homosexuality to black/white conflicts in Chris Christian's one act play, The Killers from E-1. Killers was performed before a delighted crowd of 50 Thursday evening in East Quad's auditor- ium. .The cast of nine put on a sur- prisingly good production with outstanding performances by Ron Parson as Crust, Jay Sand- weiss as Francis, Marvin Pett- way as Nate, and Christian him- self as Boise. The play centers around four new inmates assigned to cell block E-1 and their fears of hav- ing to protect themselves from the "killers" of the main cell block who intend to initiate them. Nate, Boise, and Francis are basically very frightened individ- uals with Crust (pronounced with a silent "t") coming off as the only cool, calm, and collect- ed person in the bunch. But even he admits that "you can't have courage without fear." The "killers" become frightened when they hear of Crust's reputation as a gang leader in Philadelphia. The final confrontation occurs WABX AIR WAVES: Harrison to tour America; Filmore goes up for auction as the lights are turned off, leav- ing much of what actually oc- curred up to the viewer's imagi- nation. The play utilizes much of the language and attitudes used and held by the so-called "street peo- ple." It portrays the deep-down fears that most of these people have, despite what they appear to be on their 'crust.' Every phrase, every motion, every response or lack thereof is meant to have some signifi- cance. The ending could have been done a bit better than it was, however. From the time the ac- tors first appeared on stage un- til they exited, a certain tense- ness had been created for the audience. They expected some kind of a climax that never real- ly happened and thus, unfor- tunately, were left suspended in mid-air. Christian, however, admitted that he was quite unsure on how to end the piece, adding, "I thought I would end it Greek style - off stage." The show will be repeated to- day at noon and again tomor- ceeds will go to the African row at 8 and 10 p.m. The pro- ceeds will go to the African drought relief fund. Daily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI Music of Java Three University students rehearse for a performance of Javanese "Gamelan" music to be held tonight in Rackham at 8. The woman in the center, foreground, is playing the kenong, and the woman on the right, background, is playing the gong. The orchestra is under the direction of Prof. Judith Becker. -Dancers concert good, spotty By WABX Rolling Stone magazine reports that George Harrison, R i n g o Starr, Jim Keltner and Alvin Lee will tour some 15 U.S. cities in 25 concerts this September. Rumors have it that Eric Clap- ton may also be involved. The Grateful Dead unveiled a new concert sound system in San Francisco. The new system is hailed as the greatest thing in concert sound reproduction. The system took 8 years of research and engineering to make and cost $350,000. The Fillmore East Theatre will go up for auction in early April. After Bill Graham closed the Fillmore in 1971, no one has been able to run it with any success. SHORT NOTES: Roberta Flack will portray Bessie Smith in a film version of the autobiography "Bessie" . . . filming will begin in May. Flash Cadillac and the Contin- ental Kids announced that they may change their name to Flash Datsun for the duration of the energy crisis. The Grateful Dead will begin production of a new album in ear- ly May . . . Jerry Garcia will re- lease a solo album about the same time. Mick Jagger is looking for a place to live in L.A. The Who are currently working on a soundtrack album of "Tom- my" . . . they plan to tour the U.S. this spring. Other tours include Paul Si- mon going to Japan in April, Deep Purple's member Jon Lord in Munich, Lou Reed going for six weeks to Europe in May. CBS Records has breeched the Berlin Wall. They signed a deal with an East German record company to act as their distri- butor. The first releases will include Andy Williams, Johnny C a s h Louis Armstrong and French singer, Danyel Gerard. Commander Cody was playing basketball in Florida, slipped and fell on his face .. . he now has a broken nose, a doctor reports the injury should not interfere with his piano playing. Terry Knight has quit the re- cord business and has joined the energy rush managing his own oil and natural gas wells. His new company, called En- erco, will manage the wells (awarded him by the court in his suit against Grand Funk.) RCA Records has a new gim- mick for their new "Grand Ole Opry" album. Included with each album will be a swatch of the famous Martha White Flour Cur- tain that hung over the Grand Ole Opry stage. RCA announced that the al- bum will be a limited edition . . . determined by the number of swatches they can cut from the curtain. The nation's first "Steakers' Ball" was held in San Francisco. Naked persons were admitted free to the concert, and several dozen streakers took advantage of it. The event was stagel1 by the .Tubes, a theatrical rock group. Brian Jones' guitar is once again being played in public, nearly 5 years have passed since he died. Terry Taylor from the Tucky Buzzard Band was given the gui- tar by Bill Wyman, who hasbeen keeping it in storage. Denny Doherty from The Mam- as and Papas is working on a single called "You'll Never Know." When the group filed a lawsuit against their record com- pany, Doherty was so broke he had to hitchhike to L.A. for the proceedings. A feature film starring Alice Cooper will be released this spring . . . providing everything goes as scheduled. By MARNIE HEYN Last n i g h t the University Dancers opened their spring con- cert series at the Power Center with an excellent, thoroughly professional, performance mar- red only by limp choreography in two numbers. The show opened with Vera Embree's. Aska: Celebration, a gorgeous synthesis of African and western dance styles, vivid, joyous, and hypnotic. The dancers adapted well to a differ- ent tradition and made this rapid-fire, physically demanding piece delightful. , The second number was Ami- boisme: Cellule Humaine by Martine Epoque. Four dancers in black and white pied jump- suits performed this angular well-designed piece in all its stran.geness and off-beat grace; it was a beautiful example of cellular coordination-shades of Henri Rousseau. The musical aspect of John C w ia k a 1 a' s No Soap-Radio moved from Gregorian chant to rinkytink piano to "Why Was I Born Too Late." The dancers were costumed as stylized flap- pers; they pushed a tea cart around the stage and posed- gracefully, of course. I had the feeling that there was a message somewhere, but it was well-hid- den. The performers had nice strong ankles. The dance had at best a shoddy conception. Homage by Elizabeth Berg- mann is a quasi-religious litur- gical piece that is effective and un-trite. It isa sstrong, bright spring chorale without schmaltz or sententious hamming. The dancing is vigorous and precise. Imbedded in the piece is a beau- tifully performed quintet con- taining some of the nicest asym- bolic interpretive motion I've seen in a long time. Carol Richard's Toe/Ball/Heel is light, smooth, stretchy cool j a z z, an impressive sensual mime trio, and a lot of fun. Everything from The Apple to the old soft shoe is woven to- gether into a really fine piece. Maybe the reason I couldn't tolerate Passcaglia and Fugue by Doris Humphrey was the maroon and tan spaghetti-strap- ped outfits, but I doubt it. There is some really fine footwork by the lead duet that could have been outstanding, but it got lost in the decorous masses. This kind of' choreography went out with DeMille's silent movies, and it should have stayed went. Vera Embree's second piece in this production, Bifrost, is very smooth, very organic, very geo- metric, very nice. The sky-blue- clad performers sprout like seeds out of fog. Embree has dramati- cally defined growth and matu- ration in motion. The final number in the pro- duction was Jose Limon's Cha- conne, a fall, formal, stylized flamenco ballet. It is a dissection of dance as a social ritual, and it is brilliant: making the best of the past grow with the present. The spring concert series con- tinues this weekend with two more evening concerts, Satur- day and Sunday at 8 p.m. at the Power Center, and two special matinees, the Young People's Concert Saturday at 3 p.m. and a showcase concert of new works by young choreographers Sunday at 3 p.m., both at Power. 603 E. Liberty DIAL 665-6290 PG OPEN 12:45 SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 p.m. s 0 FJ i1 t' a - e e e s ARTS __ ._ i I a WANTED: Pre-1949 copies of the ichigonensian Box No. 4 BURSLEY HALL ENTERPRISES present DAVID LEAN'S DOCTOR ZHIVAGO SMORGASBORD SATURDAYS 6-9 pm. AND WEDNESDAYS 6-9 p.m. $3.95 1. cold vichysoisse 2. co au vin 3. potatoes anna 4. shrimp newburgh S. boeun burguignone 6. rice 7. swedish meat balls S. 'vermicelli 9. breaded veal cutlet 10. fresh garden green 11. tarragon peas 12, eggplant parmesan 13. beef oriental 14. veal hearts 15. chicken giblets 16. cheese casserole 17. sliced bee 18. ried chicken 19. barbecued ribs 20. fried cod fish 21. black olives 22. greek olives 23. green olives 24. dill pickles 25. celery 26. carrots 27. green onions 28. crab apples 29. red peppers 30. radishes 31. corn salad 32. sliced cucumbers with sour cream 33. sliced tomatoes with fresh dill 34. red bean salad 35. greek bean salad 36. italian green peppers 37. greek stuffed eggplants 38. sliced beets 39. garlic sauce 40. herring 41. Portuguese sardnes 42. anchovies 43. cod fish caviar mousse 44. cod fish red caviar 45. liver pate 46. sliced janmbon 47. sliced salami 48. sliced cold turkey 49. chcken salad 50. russian flIh salad 51. tuna fish salad 52. cottage cheese 53. sliced mushroom In dill sauce 54. eggrolls 55. hot mustard sauce 56. stuffe eggs bonnefemme 57. cole slaw 58. cold salmon 59. fresh tuna in soy -sauce 60. butter 61. home made bread 62. sliced tongue 63, horse radish sauce 64. chicken wings japanese 65. fried squid 66. smoked pork chops 67. potato salad 68. russian salad 69. macaroni salad 70. jellied fruit salad 71. tossed green salad 72. chef's dressing 73. french dressing 74. 1000 island dressing 75. russian dressing 76. tartar sauce 77. hot sauce 78. bacon crumbs 79. croutons 80. parmesan cheese 81. sliced onions 82. eggplant salad 83. cocktail sausage 84. hors d'oeuvres 85. stuffed grapeeaves 86. greek feta cheese 87. swiss cheese 88. ceddar cheese 89, bread pudding 90. rice pudding 91. creme caramel 92. baked apples 93. house cake 94. peaches 95. mandarin oranges 96. orange sliced candies TONITE April 4, 1974 8:00 p.m. i SATURDAY April 6, 1914 Admission $1.00 I READ and USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS BURSLEY HALL West Cafeteria i I i i i I Z=a - s "CONRACK" ONE BEAUTIFUL MAN. HIS STORY IS TRUE. mediatrics presents "PUTNEY SWOPE" The Truth and Soul Movie 'Putney Swope' is a stinging, zinging, swing- ing sock-it-to-them doozey. It is going to take off and be one of the most talked about flicks in recent times. By oll means I suggest, hell, I damn well insist y o.u see 'Putney SoeCn' eo h e nrenrd for the ntitiect wild- ACADEMY AWARD WINNER --BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY INGMAR BERGMAN'S "CRIES & WHISPERS" Sat., Sun Wed. at m 1,3,5,7,9 Mon, & Tues. 7 &9 only l WINNER OF 11