Wednesday, October 11, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednesday, October 11, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT TONIGHT and THURSDAY: MOJO BOOGIE BAND 9:30-2:00 FRIDAY and SATURDAY: ROCKETS (John Bidanchet & Jime Macardi) 9:30-2:00 208 W. Huron LUNCHES DAILY .... :. . Beryozka: Spectacular By DONALD SOSIN Beryozka Dance Company, Nadezh- da Nadezhdina, Artistic Director. Tuesday, October 10, 8:00 p.m. Power Center; Choice Series of the University Musical Society. There are those that believe that folk dancing is fine as a participatory activity, buthas no business being made into a spec- RETURN OF: X v, attk : . to <. Ftg"1D ykeur of;: r WOODY ALLEN'S "Everything you always wanted to know about sex* *BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK 9 WOODY ALLEN. JOHN CARRADINE -LOU JACOBi TONY RANDALL'LYNN REDGRAVE"BURT REYNOLDS The Best of the First Annual N.Y. Erotic Film Festival tator sport. The New York Times dance critic Clive Barnes said as much in a recent review of the Beryozka Dance Company, and went on to make some sour re- marks about all folk music and the company as well. Unfortun- ately, one learned very little about the troupe from his article, gaining only an impression of Mr. Barnes' petty prejudices. Such misuse of power in a major news- paper is injurious both to the per- formers and to the field of criti- cism. Perhaps I am less sophisticated than Mr. Barnes, and perhaps the Ann Arbor audience is not as sensitive to the fine points of folk dance; in any event, the packed crowd at the theater last night enjoyed itself immensely, the dancers seemed to be having a good time, and this reviewer was laughing and applauding as much as he has for any spectacu- lar he can remember-so phooey on Mr.cBarnes, and cheers for folk dancing and the Beryozka Dance Company. The program was made up of elaborately choreographed num- bers that reflected dance styles in various parts of the U.S.S.R. We saw peasant round-dances and the well-known heel-kicking Cossack dances as well as grace- ful pieces that seemed to have less to do with actual dancing than with a display of costumes and imaginative patterns. The opening dance featured fifteen women in floor-length red gowns, carrying the birch leaves from which the group gets its name. They glided across the stage, seeming to be on a turn- table, as their feet moved in- visibly under their dresses. The effect was stunning and pro- voked the first of many bursts of applause during the evening. Following this, men and wom- en joined in a competition dance that contained a lot of spinning and jumping, as the men tried to outdo each other. Gasps of delight were endless, especially in the next dance. The women, imitating the threading of a needle, swayed in a line across the stage and suddenly parted Sovieis! to reveal the men, who had magically appeared (through the upstage curtain) without being noticed. Such touches were fre- quent, and greatly appreciated. A Siberian suite made the high point of the evening. Be- ginning quietly as the men tried to entice the girls to dance, it soon developed into a bear-hunt, complete with bear, who was the hit of the show, clowning with the audience, performing comical acrobatics, playfully kicking the men and hugging the women, and generally stealing the spot- light from the tour-de-force leap- ing and whirling that went on around him. A lighting malfunction marred the opening of the second half, but was soon corrected, and the remainder of the program, gen- erally more subdued than before, closed with a flashy Cossack dance. High praise also goes to cos- tume designer Liubov Silich, and the unseen musicians backstage who kept a lively pace under their conductor, Albert Ryzhkin. CUU CALENDAR UPCOMING CONCERT TIP-Folksinger Gordon Lightfoot comes to University of Detroit Memorial Bldg. this Saturday at 8:30. Tickets available at U of D box office and all J. L. Hudson ticket outlets. DRAMA-George Farquahr's Restoration comedy The Beaux' Stratagem opens tonight in Lydia Mendelssohn as the first offering of this season's University Players' Playbill series. The play runs through Saturday. Tickets available at Mendelssohn box office. FILM-The Psych. 171 Film Series shows High School today at 4 in the UGLI Multi-purpose Room. Ann Arbor Film Co-op offers The King of Hearts at 7 and 9:30 in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Daily reviewer Sheldon Leemon has this to say about the film: "Rarely do we find a movie about war which is simple, humane, and charming, but such a movie is The King of Hearts. When a French town is evacuated in World War I, inmates of the insane asylum come out to live their twisted, amusing, and basically harmless fantasies, while around them nations are living ' out their twisted, distasteful, and massively destructive fantasies. The quiet, unassuming manner in which the theme progresses sets up the audience for a stunning, brilliant finish." Cinema Guild shows Orson Welles' Immortal Story at the Arch. Aud. at 7 and 9:05. MUSIC-The Univ. Musical Society presents the Beryozka Dance Company tonight at the Power Center at 8. Limited 2 Week Engagement STARTS TOMORROW cinema So, what's the connection? ARTS ,, FRI.-SAT., Oct. 13-14 7:30-9-10:30 p.m. NAT. SCI. AUD. $1.25 cont. FRIENDS OF NEWSREEL Midwest premiere: Dec. 8-9 NY EROTIC FILM FESTIVAL II Order Your Subscription Today 764-0558 By LARRY LEMPERT We o p e n w i t h compelling rhythms, sharp whites and blues, intriguing patterns of movement. Unfortunately, this is the "where the action is" skiing short sub- ject, not the main feature. Next comes a cartoon which manages to vary the "Tom and Jerry, Wolf-Roadrunner" theme only by substituting a snake and a Japa- nese beetle who uses karate and hums Gilbert and Sullivan. The downhill trend has been established and, sure enough, The Salzburg Connection carries the trend to fruition. Its failure is understandable. With television swamping the ac- tion movie genre with entries every week, only a skillful ex- ploitation of screen qualities and techniques can bring viewers anything they can't find on their set at home (especially if they have a color TV). One can imagine, for example, watching The French Connection on television. But, the force of its violence (for better or worse), the skillfulness of its editing, the speed of its movements and the impact of certain images would certainly be lost on the house- holder periodically interrupted by commercials. poetry and prose- Winter strikes early SHOWS DAILY At 1 P.M.:4:30-8 P.M. Pass List and Bargain Day Suspended for "Fiddler On The Roof" CHILDREN $1.00 ADULTS Mon.-Sat. Matinee $2.00 Eve. and All Day Sunday $2.50 Program Informat ion 662-6264 By ROB HORWITZ As I drifted from the UGLI after Walter Clark's poetry read- ing yesterday afternoon, I was startled-awoken as if out of a trance-by the crisp evening air tinged by a steadily unrushing winter. Professor Clark's poetry, much of which was composed during his year's leave 'of ab- sence on a Fullbright scholarship in Austria, seemed to reflect this contrast. His first five poems, presum- ably written during his leave, were extremely smooth, polished pieces-sensitive, as every good poet's work should be, to the most minute detail of the scenes described. And yet, they seemed to be narrated from a somewhat detached point of view. Snow everywhere In the Stadtpark, Chestnut trees In white pajamas, Pigeons stooping from boughs Like sinister fruit. Single Tickets On Sale Now home. As back from complicated Troy Ulysses comes His old dog wakes in him only the portal of a fact. Leaping away from this serene, reflective sensibility, Clark mov- ed to some of his old favorites. New Yorkers, "an unfinished poem which I'll read anyway because I like the beginning," raucously rolled through the room amidst occasional bursts of laughter from the audience. For the most, born, Some are made, painfully. A born one never looks back, His voice carries him like a flag To the ends of the airways; D~itches of Venice Are only spokes to his wheel. MANAHATTAN! He wears its streets on his sleeve, Its song up his nose. His "old stuff" is filled with these exciting, sometimes ludi- crous, always quite alive and actively present moments. Pro- fessor Clark, as you have said yourself in one of your poems: "Winter is no/Time for artists." This critic must agree. Unlike The French Connection, The Salzburg Connection relies almost entirely upon its plot. This would have been disastrous in The French Connection and the result her'e, if not disastrous, is at least unfortunate. Nothing beyond the standard machismo and a dash of patriot- ism motivates a handsome and heroic lawyer (Barry Newman) to spice up his vacation with a bit of international intrigue, on behalf of the leading lady in dis- tress (Anna Karia). A multitude of agents appear - the blonde lure, the young toughs and others; they look sinister, search for clues, follow people, get' kill- ed, or any combination of the above. The agents represent a wide assortment of nations and intelligence groups, but the view- er is never sure (and, it might be added, never really cares) who represents whom. The film-makers have sprinkled their product with as much sus- pense as they can muster. Where is the mysterious MISS- ING CHEST? What in THE CHEST could be-so valuable as to justify the murder of six peo- ple? Well, most movie-goers enjoy suspense, even when it is arti- ficially induced by obvious tech- niques (a la Hitchcock, in many of his films). But when the sus- pense fizzles into an impracti- cality, when the whole basis for the plot turns out to be so im- probable-it's a bit of a disap- pointment. (Boy, wait 'til you see what's in that chest-you'll probably demand your money back.) The plot's suspense is nothing compared to the real question of the movie. The real question: When is the car chase? The real answer: About two-thirds of the way through, and it's embarrass- ingly inferior to chases in Bullitt, Diamonds Are Forever, The French Connection, and even to one on the NBC Mystery Movie several weeks ago. By MADELINE TRIFFON No, it's not just a little old man who locks himself in the bell tower to entertain us with splendid renderings of San Fran cisco "Be sure to wear flowers in your hair. Burton Tower houses a legiti- mate musician named Hudson Ladd - the University Carillon- eur who presented a program of carillon music this past sum- mer, featuring distinguished in- ternational performers. The 25 recitals, which opened early in May and ended earlier this month, included carillon- neurs from France, Belgium, Holland and the United States. Ladd plans a similar series for next spring. The carillon, an instrument consisting of over 23 tuned bells, came here 36 years ago. Its unique size and weight - Bur- ton's carillon weighs 100 tons - t.v. t 0 tonight 6:00 2, 4, 7 News, Weather, Sports 9 Eddie's Father 50 Flintstones-Children 56 Maggie and the Beautiful Machine 6:30 2 CBS News 4 NBC News 9 Jeannie 50 Gilligan's Island 7 ABC News 56 Making Things Grow 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News, Weather Sports 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Pro Hockey 50 I Love Lucy 56 Zoom 7:30 2 What's My Line? 4 Family Classics 7 Wild Kingdom 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Consumer Game 8:00 Carol Burnett 4 Adam 12 7 Paul Lynde 56 A Public Affair/Election '72 50 Dragnet r These lonely, BURTON CARILLON 100 tons of chimes first poems are cold, longing - perhaps for -I eliminated the Michigan Union and Angell Hall successively a. possible installation sites. Bur- ton Tower was finally built for. the primary purpose of housing the carillon. Full university credit is given to c-rillon 'students whom Ladd teaches personally. If you're in- terested, you must be in the School of Music and will be ac- cepted into the program at Ladd's discretion. He insists that "they must have a thorough ac quaintance with the piano key- board." Ladd's students are permitted to play the "real thing" after plenty of practice on a model carillon. Hudson Ladd is a member of the Guild of Carillonneurs and became the University's carilon- neur in residence on July 1, 1972. (Incidentally, no one rushfs up every 30 minutes to ring the time. It's done automatically.) killed her husband and whether he was on the take. 50 Merv Griffin 56 Playhouse New York 9:00 2 Medical Center 9:30 9 Bandwagon 10:00 2 Cannon 4 search 7 Julie Andrews 9 News, Weather, sports 50 Perry Mason 56 Soul! 10:20 9 Nightbeat 11:00 2, 4, 7 News, Weather, Sports 9 Cheaters 50 Mancini Generation 11:30 2 Movie-"Charlie Chan in Bono- lulu" (1938) 4 Johnny Carson 7 Dick Cavett 9 Movie-"Strategy of Terror" (1967) UN assassination plot uncovered by journalist and dying man. 50 Move-"Watusi" (1959) remake of H. Rider Haggard safari classic. 1:00 4, 7 News 1:30 2 Movie-"Man'Bait" (1952) Bookstore manager suspected in murder of one of his clerks. 3:00 2 News Correction The Daily says "We're sorry" for some mistaken profit figures which appeared in Tuesday's re- view of the Cheech and Chong concert. Cheech and Chong made $4,500 and The Persuasions made $1,000, while UAC-Daystar made only $400 and Project Comnu- nity made only $300. Have a flair for artistic writing? If you are interest- ed in reviewing drama, dance, film, poetry, and music, or writing. feature stories about the arts: Contact Arts Editor, C/o The Michigan Daily. FRANK WILKINSON from the National Committee Against Repressive Legislation SPEAKING ON: "Civil Liberties View of the Nixon Court" Perhaps, like Diamonds Are Forever, The Salzburg Connec- tion is meant to be parody itself. If so, parody is veiled with definite genius. No, the film ad- vertised as "the suspense ad- venture of the year" is appar- ently meant to be just that. Ac- tually, it will probably be the suspense adventure of next year, when it appears where it be- longs-on television. 3:30 P.M.-THURSDAY LAWYER'S CLUB LOUNGE I I benefit for the Media Access Center sponsored by Friends of Newsreel prior to its U.S. premiere at the SAN FRANCISCO FILM FESTIVAL 1 8:30 4 7 Banacek Movie-"Lieutenant Schuster's Wife" (1972) Cop's widow fran- tically tries to find out who DELTA SIGMA DELTA r DELTA SIGMA DELTA Dental Fraternity T.G. FRI., OCT. 13 7 p:m. 1502 Hill, Ann Arbor LIVE BAND REFRESHMENTS Jane Fonda Yves Montand IN TOUT VA BIEN (Everything's O.K.) plus: short film, "Letter to Jane" I 2-4-6-8-10 p.mr SATURDAY Oct. 14 $2.50 benefit cont. 00.. Imaline ~l*A1 as o f Tvrolean Aud. A meet with the directors-8 p.rr . II I U x~." ~; . ., I I II