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March 24, 1973 - Image 3

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Michigan Daily, 1973-03-24

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Saturday, March 24, 1973

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Three

Saturday, March 24, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Paqe Three

0

tonight
6:00 2 4 News
9 This Is Your Life
50 Star Trek
56 Thirty Minutes With
6:30 2 CBS News
4 NBC News
7 Reasoner
9 Fishin' Hole
56 Consumer Game
7:00 2 Truth or Consequences
4 George Pierrot
- 7 News
9 Billy Graham Crusade
50 Hee Haw
56 Business Journal
7:30 2 Young Dr. Kildare
4 Adventurer
7 Town Meeting
56 Festival Films
J
Hove a flair for
artistic writing?
If you are interest-
ed in reviewinlg
poetry, and music.
drama, dance, film,
or writing feature
stories" a b o u t the
arts: Contact Arts
Editor, o The
Michigan Daily.

8:00 2 All in the Family
4 World Premiere
7 Here We Go Again
9 NHL Hockey
56 Movie
"Sawdust and Tinsel" (19.
50 That Good Ole Nashville
8:30 2 Bridget Loves Bernie
7 A Touch of Grace
50 Nitty Gritty
9:00 2 Mary Tyler Moore
7 Julie Andrews
50 Black Omnibus
9:30 2 Bob Newhart
10:00 2 Carol Burnett
7 Delphi Bureau
56 Net Opera Theatre
50 Lou Gordon
10:30 9 Document
11:00 2 4 7 News
9 CBC News
11:15 7 ABC News
9 Provincial Affairs
11:20 9 News
11:30 2 Movie
"Love Has Many Faces" (
4 Johnny Carson
7 Movie
"In Enemy Country." (19
50 Movie
"Planet of Blood." (1966)
1:00 4 News
1:30 2 Movie
-- "The Crosby Case" (1934)
7 Movie
"BusStop" (1956)
3:00 7 News
3:30 2 News
89.5 fm
9:00 Maranatha Music
12:00 Radio Prison_
4:00 Jazz
8:00 Progressive Rock
11:00 Potato Show

Hayden:
By WARREN ROSENBERG death wish:
"Too uncompromisingly black I yearned to
for the national poetry syndicate find those hi
and too outspokenly 'universal' ones, to flin
to suit parochial Blacks, Hayden the mask an
-above all other Black poets in yield to rap
the United States) has managed whisperings
to create a world which is fully done with s
his own out of the painful reality every dinnin
of blackness." From the back vain comple
cover of his latest book of poe- Yet in langu
try, The Night-blooming Cereus, frenzy strov
the above description of Uni- one freezing
versity professor Robert Hayden sleep desirin
1965) is certainly an apt one. Much of H
As he read to a large aud- dramatic int
68) ience in the Modern Language the most imp
Building Thursday afternoon, one volve process,
had the feeling that what was of the perso
being communicated was the es- event, realiz
sence of a real human being. brance. Poem
Hayden, unlike many literary combine aspe
figures of national prominence, transformation
is totally unassuming and hum- Storm," "The
ble. As he talked about the in- Peacock Root
spiration for each poem, he made "The Peaco
us realize that the writing of good emplifies Hay
poetry is not a gift from the style. The p
gods, but consists of agonizing impressions on
work which often, as he free- Victorian room
ly admits, may end in failure. cago, the mer
"The Diver," a poem in which and a childh
Hayden admirably succeeds, we while asking
find an example of the poet's tions about li
accessible style as the persona first stanza re
struggles with the tuggings of the Ars Longa

Honest, human

,r,
5'i,'
:t '

,:$"r.
.ti{ Y
', } }r

to
idden
ig aside
rd call to them,
turous
, have
elf and
g
exity.
,uid
ve, as
g fights off
ig sleep; . . .
Uayden's poetry is
this way. That is,
portant aspects in-
the transformation
na through some
ation, or remem-
ns that successfully
cts of memory and
n are "Electrical
Rabbi", and "The
m."
ck Room" best ex-
yden's personalized
oem combines his
n entering a gaudy,
m preserved in Chi-
mory of his mother
hood superstition,
meaningful ques-
ife and art. The
eads:
Which is crueller

Vita Brevis life or art?
Thoughts in the Peacock Room,
Where briefly I shelter. As in
the glow
(remembered or imagined?)
of the lamp shaped like a rose
my mother would light
for me some nights to keep
Raw-Head-And-Bloody-Bones
away.
Here is Hayden as scholar, ar-
tist, and son. All three carefully
evoked and working with each
other. Hayden is a fine poet be-
cause he is all the above (and
more) and never forgets it in
his poetry.
Hayden, who was born in Die-
troit in 1913 and received his Mas-
ter's degree from Michigan in
1944, is an artist who is vitally
interested in his contemporary
world. Poems such as "Astro-
nauts", "El Haj El Malik Sha-
bazz," attest to that interest as
do the numerous references to
current events which occur in
his work - often in close prox-
imity to classical or historical re-
ferences. The effect of these jux-
tapositions is to deepen the re-
sonance of the poems. Much the
same effect is achieved when
Hayden combines elements of
the Black experience with others
in the American tradition. His
famous "A Ballad of Remem-
brance," for which he reveived
the Grand Prize for Poetry at the
First World Festival of Negro
Arts, illuminatingly depicts the
poet's own struggle to find iden-
tity and the help he got from the
critic Mark Van Doren:
Then you arrived, meditative,
ironic,
richly human; and your pre-
sence was shore where I rest-
ed
released from the hoodoo of that
dance, where I spoke
with my true voice again.
It is the fact that R o b e r t
Hayden honestly confronts all the
aspects of himself in his poe-
try that gives it its "richly til-
man" quality.
Despite the fact that he has
been "colleged" as he puts it in
one of his poems, Robert Hay-
den masterfully recreates the suf-

fering and the harmonies of the
American Black experience. In
poems like "Incense of the Lucky
Virgin," "Homage to the Em-
press of the Blues," and my fa-
vorite, "Mourning Poem for the
Queen of Sunday," he movingly
catches the rhythms and the pain
inherent in one aspect of Black
history. Unfortunately space limi-
tations preclude printing this
musical poem in its entirety, butM
it can be found in Selected
Poems (October House, Inc. 1966).
It opens:
Lord's lost Him His mockingbird,
His fancy warbler;
Satan sweet-talked her,?
four bullets hushed her.
Who would have thought
she'd end that way?
four bullets hushed her. And the
world a-clang with evil.
Who's going to make old hard-
ened sinner men tremble now
and the rightous rock?'
Oh who and oh who will sing
Jesus down
to help with struggling and doing
without and being colored
all through blue Monday?
Till way next Sunday?
Maybe reading Robert Hay-
den's poems could help us all.
Sounds of

SAN DTRACKS

fine line
of highway
shooting up
the desert's
bloodless vein
with steel & rubber
motion fixed
with gas & oil
movement stained
outside
the car hot
& hollow dunes
pile up
memories
of wind

I

-PETER ANDERSON

L

.~...:..;.;.;:.;.;:;;.'..."w....;".. .

Cit wch k/Pv'4Aft£ie*'Oice4

A ngelicum

UNIVERSITY REFORMED LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN
CHURCH CHURCH (ALC, LCA) (formerly
1001 E. Huron Lutheran Student Chapel)
10:30 a.m.-"Goals of the Second 801 S. Forest (Corner of Hill St.)
Century of W b r 1 d Missions." Donald G. Zill, Pastor
Speaker: Rev. Paul Hostetter. Sunday Folk Mass-10:30 a.m.,
6:45 p.m. - "Man In a. Box; Sunday School-9:15 a.m.
_ There's More Than One Way to Sunday Supper-6:15 p.m.
Skin a Pigeon." Speakers: Dr. Program-7:00 p.m,
Alan Rice and Mr. Bill Benich. Wednesday Eucharist-5:15 p.m.
SAMARIA LUTHERAN, LCA
272 Hewitt Rd., Ypsilanti
Rev. Dean Tyson, Pastor
Family Worship and Nursery at
11:00 a.m. Faculty and Students
welcome.
CAMPUS CHAPEL
1236 Washtenaw
Rev. Peter Paulsen
Services:
10:00 a.m.-Morning Worship.
6:00 p.m.-Evening Service.

HURON HILLS BAPTIST
CHURCH: 3150 Glacier Way
Pastor: Charles Johnson
For information, transportation,
personalized help, etc., phone 769-
6299 or 761-6749.
* * *
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
1833 Washtenaw Avenue
SUNDAY: 10:30 a.m.: Worship
Services, Sunday School (2-20 yrs.).
Infants' room available Sunday and
Wednesday. '
Public Reading Room, 306 E. Li-
berty St.: Mon., 10-9; Tues.-Sat.,
10-5; Closed Sundays and Holi-
days.
For transportation, call 668-6427.
Church School.
* * *
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN
CHAPEL (LCMS)
1511 Washtenaw Avenue
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
Sunday at 9:15 and 10:30 a.m-
Worship Services
Sunday at 9:15 a.m.-Bible Study.
Wednesday at 10 p.m.-Midweek
Worship.
* * *
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL
On the Campus at the corner of
State and William Sts.
Rev. Terry N. Smith, Sr. Minister
Rev. Ronald C. Phillips, Assistants
** *
BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH'
OF CHRIST
423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149
Ministers: T. L. Trost, Jr.; R. E.
Simonson.
Associate Ministers: Dennis R.
Brophy and Howard F. Gebhart.
9 a.m.: Morning Prayer.
10 a~m.: Worship Service and
Church School.
ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL
CHURCH, 306 N. Division
8:00 a.m.: Holy Eucharist.
10:00 a.m.: Holy Eucharist and
Sermon.

FIRST UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDA-
TION - State at Huron and Wash.
9:30 and 11:00 a.m. - Worship
Services. Sermon by Dr. Donald
B. Strobe: "On Loving Your Ene-
mies." Series: Sermon on the
Mount. Due to the bad storm, this
sermon was not presented last
Sunday.
Broadcast on WNRS 1290 AM,
WNRZ 103 FM, 11:00 a.m.-noon.
Next Sunday: Sermon by Dr.
Donald B. Strobe: "On Losing Your
Shirt." Series: Sermon on the
Mount.
WESLEY FOUNDATION
Sunday, March 25:
5:30 p.m. - Celebration, Wesley
Lounge.
6:15 p.m.-Dinner, Pine Room.
7:00 p.m. - Program, Wesley
Lounge. "Christianity and Capital-
ism" with Fr. Charles Irvin.
Thursday, March 29:
6:00 p.m.-Grad Group, dinner
and program.
Friday, March 30:
7:00 p.m.-Meet at Wesley to go
roller skating.
Sunday, April 1:
8:30 a.m.-Young Marrieds Re-
treat. Meet in parking lot.
* * *
PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST
2580 Packard Road, 971-0773
Tom Bloxam, Pastor, 971-3152
Sunday School, 9:45 a.m.
Worship: 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Training Hour: 6 p.m.
*. * *
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw Avenue
Services of Worship at 9:00 and
10:30 a.m.-Sermon: "The Word in
the World."
COLLEGE PROGRAM
Bible Study-Tuesdays 12:00 to
1:00.
Holy Communion - Wednesdays
5:15 to 5:45.
Supper Program - Wednesdays
6:00.

By DONALD SOSIN
ANGELICUM ORCHESTRA OF MI-
LAN; Bruno Martinotti, conductor.
Wed. March 21, 8 p.m. Power Center.
Bach-Contrapuncti Nos. 1, 16 and 18
from The Art of the Fugue; Suite No.
1 in C major Riccardo Malipiero-Ca-
priccio; Boccerini-Sinfonia for Sev-
era lnstruments in D Minor "La
Casa del diavolo"
A rather small but grateful aud-
ience gathered in the Power
Center Wednesday night for a
pleasing program by the An-
gelicum Orchestra of M i1 a n.
Conducted by Bruno Martinotti,
the 30-member group is making
its first Americantour. It has
a rich, warm sound, for which
primarily the violins can be cre-
dited, but the low strings and
the five winds performed ably as

written by NEIL SIMON
directed by ELAINE MAY
"ONE OF THE
YEAR'S BEST"
--N.Y. TIMES
_._NEWSWEEK
-- -TIME
--NEW YORKER

...... _...

I

SAT. MAT. SEATS !

INGMAR BERGMAN'S
aRIESAND
WH-ISEPS

2 ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS
Jeannie Berlin, best
supporting Actress.
Eddie Albert, best
supporting Actor.

UNIVERSITY
OF MICHIGAN PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM

ULTURE CALIEINAR
DRAMA-The Professional Theatre Program presents Ap-
plaus at 3 and 8 at Power Center; Gilbert and Sullivan
Small Company enact Gilbert and Groschmit's Haste to
the Wedding in the Mich. Rm., League at 8.
FILM-Cinema Guild presents LaCava's Stage Door at 7, 9:05
In Arch. Aud.; Cinema II shows Hitchcock's Rebecca at
7, 9:30 in Aud. A, Angell; UAC-Mediatrics presents An-
tonioni's Zabriskie Point in Nat. Sci. Aud. at 7, 9:30; Bur-
sley Hall movies presents Borsalino at 9 in W. Cafeteria.
MUSIC-The Music School features Julia Conwell, soprano, at
4:30 and soprano Andrea Hofmeister at 8 in SM Recital
Hall; The Music School presents Men's Glee Club, Willis
Patterson, director, at Hill at 8; The Musical Society's
Chamber Art Series features the Aeolian Chamber Play-
ers at 8:30 in Rackham Aud.
POETRY-Trotter House presents Black poetry reading at
Trotter House at 3:30.
WEEKEND BARS AND MUSIC-Rubaiyat, Iris Bell Adven-
ture (Fri., Sat., Sun.), no cover; Pretzel Bell, RFD Boys
(Fri., Sat.) cover; Del Rio Jazz (Sun.) no cover; Bimbo's,
The Gaslighters (Fri., Sat., Sun.) cover; Blind Pig,
Brooklyn Bluesbusters (Fri., Sat.) cover, Classical En-
semble (Sun.) no cover; Golden Falcon, Fifth Revelation
(Fri., Sat.) cover; Mackinac Jack's, Salmagundi (Fri.,
Sat., Sun.) cover; Mr. Flood's Party Terry Tate and the
United Supply (Fri., Sat.) cover, Diesel Smoke and Dan-
gerous Curves (Sun. 3 p.m.) cover; Bimbo's on the Hill,
Apple Core (Fri., Sat.) cover; Ark, Leon Redbone (Fri.,
Sat.), admission.
M&~Mediatrics
ZABRISKIE POINT
7 &9:30 p.m.
Friday & Saturday
Nat. Sci. Aud.
Only 15c Tickets on sale at 6 p.m.
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN'S
ARTS CHORALE
PRESENTS A
TURN THROUGH TIME
FREE!

well.
Martinotti's transcriptions of
three fugues from Bach's 1a s t
masterwork, The Art of the Fu-
gue, were played with precision
and clarity. At times the sound
seemed to suffer from the not
terribly resonant acoustics of
the hall; otherwise there was not
a hitch in the performance; dan-
gerous though it is to open a pro-
gram with a work of such ex-
posed sonorities, the playing was
virtually flawless. Perhaps t h e
tempo was a bit too stately, but
Martinotti created enough dy-
namic interest to make the som-
ber pace work.
The Suite No. 1 in C took on
a crisp, if lush quality. Martinit-
ti's baton arm, often moving
stiffly from the shoulder, created
an equally stiff sound in spots,
and the dynamics, terraced like
Italian hillsides, gave a feeling
of overcontrol. One would have
liked more gradual changes in-
stead of merely different static
levels more frequently heard.
The Baroque segment of t he
program was balanced ater in-
termission by a contemporary
work and an early classical sym-
phony. The Capriccio for Cham-
ber Orchestra by Riccardo Mali-
piero (a nephew of the ; more
well-known 90-year old G i a n
Francesco Malipiero) was an ef-
fective, attractive work, com-
missioned by the Angelicum Or-
chestra last, summer. In a free
tonal field, in whicn elaborately
scored divided string chords were
planted side by side with tradi-
tional harmonies, rhythmic areas
were explored in a loose fashion,
sometimes too weak in terms of
construction, but generally inter-
esting and holding the attention.
The group was augmented by
harpsichord, which, along with
the five winds and first chair
strings, was given extensive solo
x Poet-
The Michigan
Daily Arts
Page is now
accepting
poetry for
publication.
submit work
to Arts Editor
c/o The Daily.

passages.
Boccherini's Conini ,ztw 8i-..'
Boccherini's Sinfonia in D mi-
nor, subtitled "the Devil's house"
was published only a few years
ago, and it is a gem of a piece.
An andante istroduces both the
first and last movements, vigor-
ous allegros, with many run-
ning scale pasages zestfully ex-
ecuted by the strings. The last
movement gives the work its epi-
thet, as all the themes are taken
from Glueck's Orfeo ed Euridice.
Or perhaps the other way around,
as the program notes suggested.
In any case, it was a treat to
hear, and the audience response
elicited two encores by Rossini
from the group.
Ragtime
-.- -
concert
coming
William Albright, nationally re-
cognized authority on ragtime,
will present his piano program
"An Evening of Ragtime, Har-
lem Stride, and Boogie-Woogie.
Piano." The one-man show will
take place tomorrow at 8:00 p.m.
in the First Unitarian Church,
1917 Washtenaw.
Proceeds will go toward the
purchase of a new pipe organ
for the church. Wine and refresh-
ments will be served at intermis-
sion.
Albright has been in the fore-
front of the revival of interest
in the music oI the "Ragtime
Era."
Widely recognized as a com-
poser and performer of new mu-
sic, he has since 1967 devoted
much of his time to the perform-
ance of rags. He has presented
such concerts in Paris, New
York Chicago, Detroit and Min-
neapolis; and he has just re-
corded his entire set of original
rags - including his "Grand
Sonata in Ragtime" - for
Jazzology Records.
The concert will include classic
rags by Joplin, Scott, and Lamb,
"stride" pieces of James John-
son, and new rags by Bolcom
and Albright. A prominent spot
on the program will be reserved
for the rags of Eubie Blake -
just turned 90 years old and also
enjoying a new wave of admira-
tion.

BEST MUSICAL 'u
~TORY AWARD WINNER 5
?ATRIC MVNSL
MARCH 24-25
POWER CENTER

I

f
"BEST
Picture Director
Screenplay
Actress (Liv Ullman)
-N.Y. Film Critics Awards
----------,----
"Nothing That Bergman Has Done
Before Is Likely to Prepare You
for 'Cries & Whispers.' It Stands
Alone and It Reduces Almost
Everything Else You're Likely to
See This Season to the Size of a
Small Cinder."
-vincent Canby, N.Y. Times

TODAY AT 1-3-5-7-9

764-0450

I

ISQUITE SIMPLY,
THE BEST AMERICAN FILM
I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!"Nni centSCanb
'IT'S ONE HELL OF A FILM! A
COLD, SAVAGE AND CHILLING
COMEDY!' -Brace'WiiaenmsonPLAYBOY
"'CATCH-22' says many things
that need to be said again and
again! Alan Arkin's perform-
ance as Yossarian is great!"
-Joseph Morgenstern. NEWSWEEFK
MA IIN WALSAM RCHAR BNJAMIN: ART NUR IARFUNIIL JACK CIFRO, 8BUCK HENRY. 808 NE WiART. ANTHONY PERKINS;PAULA PRNTISS,

MUSIC LESSONS
SIGN UP NO WFOR CLASS GUITAR LESSONS.
JUST $12.00 FOR A SIX-WEEK COURSE. Rentals
available.
Also private lessons on guitar, flute, recorder, banjo,
piano, and moog. CALL
Ann Arbor Music Mart
769-4980 9:30-9:00
336 South State Street

starring ALAN ARKIN
as Yossarian

.. Y r>

i nefe "roeov

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