0 Wednesday, December 13, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page I hree Wednesday, December 13, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 0 By DONALD SOSIN A big plum, for seasonal gift- giving is a six-record set from Columbia entitled The Art of Jo- seph Szigeti (M6x 31513). Issued in honor of the' great violinist's 80th birthday, the set contains historic performances dating ,. back to 1908, with most from the 30's and 40's. The choicest exam- 'f' ples are ,Prokofiev's First Con- certo, and some of the shorter encore pieces. Other works in- clude the Beethoven, Brahms and Mendelssohn concertos, two Beethoven sonatas with Artur * Schnabel, recorded live in 1948, by which time there are flaws in intonation and passage-work, but still a vast amount of mu- .W sicality and hints of the extra- ordinary playing that pervades the earlier performances. Other violin music on Colum- ' bia: Mozart - Sinfonia Concertante r Stern, Zukerman, Barenboim, English Chamber Orchestra (M ' 31369). This is heavenly music - mak- ing. It is no surprise that Pin- chas Zukerman, at 24 one of the finest violinists around, is also an excellent violist, and he and Isaac Stern match bows in this Tips for the classical shopper divinely beautiful' work. The slow movement is worth the price of the record alone for the uncanny teamwork in the solo parts. Another work in the genre by Mozart's contemporary, Karl Stamitz, rounds out the album. A must for string connoisseurs. Stern is also featured in a double album called The Great Beethoven and Brahms Violin Concertos, which makes me wonder if there are not-so-great concertos by these men that Co- lumbia is hiding from us. Such a qualifier is superflous where Stern is concerned, and he is aided in these eloquent perform- ances by Bernstein and New York (in the Beethoven), and Ormandy and Philadelphia (in the Brahms). A reissue, previous- ly available as separate albums. * * * Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli, the unpredictable Italian genius, sometimes k e e p s audiences waiting up to an hour after start- ing time for his piano recitals. But in a new record of works by Chopin on Deutsche Grammo- phon (2530 236) there is no de- lay in getting to the best of Michelangeli's playing. He per- forms ten Mazurkas, with a wide variety in mood within the set form; a prelude ,a ballade and a scherzo. It is a sensitive col- lection, executed with the auth- ority and fire that have earned Michelangeli the epithet "the 'Horowitz of Europe." Glenn Gould's interpretation of Book Two of Bach's Well - Tem- pered Clavier (Columbia D3M 31525) would make anyone's stocking richer by a large de- gree. The three records are now available for Gould's hum- ming, his rhythmic and articu- lative quirks, one still has to ap- tOv. tonig ht 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father 50 Flinstones 56 Maggie and the Beautiful Machine 6:30 2 4 7 News 9 I Dream of Jeannie 50 Gilligan's Island 56 Making Things Grow 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 1 Love Lucy "'LAD THE A RI SMA -Gene Shalit Y SINGS 4TH SMASH B HITWEEK! * 1 * HOTNDY ED SINGS kSHM'~THE ,NBC-TV BLUES Fiirmed n PANAVSiON* - In COLOR A PARAMOUNT PICU _____ preciate how much sense he makes out of each one of these forty-eight masterpieces. * * * Bach - Brandenburg Concertos. Anthony Newman and friends. (Columbia M2 31398). This set has my no-holds-barred recom- mendation. The playing is stun- ning, the interpretations thought- ful and exhibiting a good deal of common sense. The perform- ers, besides Newman, who is a young harpsichord wizard, are other young musicians - Annie and Ida Kavafian, James Kreg- er; and well - known New York pros - Karen Phillips, Walter Trampler, Shelley Gruskin. Newman conducts from the harpsichord, and his interpre- tative ideas include using a transcription of a trio sonata for organ as the second movement of the third concerto; there are also all sorts of little ornamen- tations and improvished caden- zas that add charm and a feeling of spontaneity. The sound is ex- cellent, and the mixing makes it not-unpleasingly plump, even with only one or two on a part. 56 Zoom 7:30 2 what's My Line? 4 Festival of Family Classics 7 Wild Kingdom 9 All Outdoors 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Consumer Game 8:00 2 Harlem Globetrotters Pop- corn Machine 4 Adam-12 7 Paul Lynde 9 News 56 How Do We Get From Here to There? 50 Dragnet 8:30 4 McMillan and Wife 7 Movie "Every Man Needs One," 9 One Thousand and One Nights 50 Merv Griffin 56 Playhouse New York 9:00 2 Medical Center 10:00 2 Cannon 4 Search 7 Julie Andrews 9 Benny Hill 50 Perry Mason 56 Soul! 10:30 9 This Land 11:00 2 4 7 News 9 CBC News 50 Mancini Generation 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Apollo 17 4 Johnny Carson 7 Dick Cavett 50 Movie "Stop, You're Killing Me." (1952) 12:00 2 Movie "An Eye for an Eye." (1966) 9 Movie "Alcatraz Express." (1962) 1:00 4 News 7 Blue Angels 1:30 7 News 2:00 2 Movie "Sherlock Holmes and the Deadly Necklace." (German (1964) 3:30 2 News 25 years of Gilbert and Sullivan By THOMAS FIELD With this weekend's production of Gondoliers the Gilbert and Sullivan Society marks its 25th anniversary on campus. The Society has always been open to any interested students and functions financially inde- pendent of the University. The initial spark for the organ- ization came in the fall of 1946 from an enterprising co-ed, Gloria Katlan, who had per- formed Gilbert and Sullivan at her New York high school and felt that the campus, whose cul- tural activity was at a low, could use such a group. Her first advertised meeting was mildly successful but trouble developed later on and the group all but died out by the end of the school year. With help from two other members, Ben Hazard and Jim Ueberhost, Katlan scheduled an- other meeting the following fall that was advertised with posters reading, "BOYS, GIRLS, DO YOU LIKE TO SIN?, DO YOU LIKE TO DANCE?" The absence of the final "g" in "sing," whe- ther intentional or not, seemed to have helped attract the good- ly crowd that turned up for the meeting. The fledgling group, working without University assistance, had trouble at first, but manag- ed to survive. Prof. Kenneth Rowe of the English department and his wife provided valuable help to the Society. The Michigan Daily Arts Page is now poetry for ' publication Submit work to Arts Editor c o The Daily. NShows Times of Every 1:15-3:45-6:15- Wed. 8:45 p.m. 1-5 P.M. Box Office Opens Bargain 12:45 Day Theatre Phone 662-6264 W WHO IS T HE MECHANIC? FRIENDS OF NEWSREEL "It is not only Kurosawa's most vital pic- ture, it is also perhaps the best Japanese' picture ever made." -Donald Richie. ". . . an epic on violence and action, a rag- ing sensuous work of such overpowering im- mediacy that it leaves you both exhilarated and exhausted. Kurosawa 'is perhaps the greatest of all contemporary craftsmen ..:" -Pauline Kael Takashi Shimura, Toshiro Mifune Ain AKI RA KU ROSAWA'S To raise money each member, was asked to contribute a two dollar deposit. Before the term was out the group had put on their first play, an euthusiastic- ally received production of The Mikado, and ever since has stag- ed at least two Gilbert and Sulli- van operas a year. Two Englanders, W. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan, the former a humourist with a knack for words and the latter a composer of lively, ebullient music, collab- erated during the later part of the 1800's on some 14 comic op- eras that brought this theatre form to its ultimate in refresh- ing hilarity. The Gilbert and Sullivan works have demonstra- ted a lasting popularity over the years and are kept alive by a countless number of amateur theatre groups throughout the English speaking world. The local G&S Society uses a repertoire of eleven operas so that each is repeated about once every five years.nAlthough they are generally enjoyed by all ages, Prof. Harry Benford and his wife, who have been advisors to the Society for fourteen years, feel that the Gilbert and Sulli- van operas are primarily a "middle-age phenomenon" and says that the Society's presenta- tions are attended mostly by townspeople. According to Prof. Benford and the original foundress, now Gloria Bennish, the Society has always been a dedicated and enthusiastic group. Bennish, who now resides in Ann Arbor, recalled one year in which the two leading players in the term's production, Pina- fore, were confined by doctor's orders to the Health Service B'iilding for the week of the per- formance because of s o r e throats. With hel from friends, the two managed to sneak out from the building each night, make the performance, and then sneak back in. The present members of the Society, which number over a hundred for the presentation of Gondoliers, are, according to Bennish. "exactly the way we were." The group's participants attest to a sense of joy in what they do that holds them togeth. er. Throughout the year they have parties, picnics and hold annual events like a Halloween Costume Party and a Christmas Caroling Night. The Society elects officers each year who select the two operas to be performed and the direc- tors for each. Mass meetings are held in September and January for anyone interested in trying out for the term's production. DOW'T BLOW YOUR t MIND)... EXPAND IT: cliff's Notes put you inside the heavy stuff...the novels, pays and poems that can 'Im add real meaning >.N A M L E T to your life if you really understand them. Cliff's Notes can help. Ecology...we're working On 1f suring the past 14 years C ,f's Notes has used over 2400.000 toft of paper using recycled pulp. More than 200 titles available at: ULRICH'S BOOKSTORE INC. 549 E. UNIVERSITY ANN ARBOR, MICH. AL 48104 Participants need not be concen- trating on theater in school and the Society's current president, Cyndy Haidostian, happens her- self to be majoring in Political Science. Over the years, the Society has expanded and improved - al- though it is still an independent group and is financied through box office receipts and contri- butions through FUMGASS, an acrononym for Friends of the University of Michigan Gilbert and Sullivan Society.- FUMGASS has over 300 dues paying members and actively seeks out former members of the G&S Society. It publishes a m o n t h 1 y newsletter, GAS- BAG, and helps the Society with- some of its activities. The Gil- bert and Sullivan Society, has an auxiliary group, the Small Com- pany, which presents less ambi- tious shows during the year. Lat- er on this school year it will be pres2Tting a work by Gilbert & Gross-nith entitled Haste to the Weddi::g. Sever:A past participants in the Society have gone on to pro- fessional theatre. Now a Broad- way performer, one member, Marian Mercer, participated back in the early '50's. Ara Ber- berian has become a star for the Metropolitan Opera and Frank Poretta has worked with the New York City Opera. Bill Flem- ming, a television sports com- mentator, was in the chorus for the Society's first performance 25 years ago. The group is hold- ing a twenty - fifth anniversary celebration this Saturday for past and present members and friends of the group. Marco (James Bryan) embraces the woman of his dreams Gianetta (Ashley Putnam) in a scene from University Gilbert and Sullivan Society's production of The Gondoliers opening tonight. 1. - t0y narorfi * "copraiv ARTS Seven Samurai (TH E MAGN I F ICENT SEVEN) Dec. 15 Friday &'Saturday 7:00 and 9:30 P.M. MODERN LANGUAGES BLDG. $1.25 Dec. 16 IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT STUDENTS WISHING STUDY/TRAVEL IN EUROPE SUMMER 1973 CONTACT CENTER FR4OEINSTUDY CFS Directors All Have Professional Experience in European Study/ Travel Apply '73 Summer Programs Europe Now! An Ingo Preminger Production R Color by DE LUXE] Panavision5 CULITURE."CALudlINWARk SOCK HOP TIME-Straight from their recent engagement at Detroit's Roostertail, Jimmy and the Javelins and Chas- tity and the Belts kick out the last day of classes with music from the fifties tonight at 8, West Quad Dining Room. ART FAIR-SGC sponsors a December Art Fair featuring works by local artists Sunday from noon to 6, Union Ballroom. DRAMA-Gilbert and Sullivan Society presents The Gondo- liers tonight, tomorrow and Friday at 8, Saturday at 7, 10, Mendelssohn. MIME-Ann Arbor Mime Troupe presents Alice's Adventures Under Ground tonight, tomorrow Friday and Saturday at 8, Schorling Auditorium, School of Ed Bldg. SCHOOL OF MUSIC-University Philharmonia, Josef Blatt conducting, presents works by Schubert, Schumann and Smetana tonight at 8, Hill Aud. FILMS-AA Film Coop, Altman's MASH tonight, 7, 9:30, Aud. A; Cinema Guild, Mann's Man of the West tonight, 7, 9:05; Psych 171 Film Series, The Great American Novel: Grapes of Wrath, Dorothea Lange: Under the Trees to- day at 4, UGLI Multipurpose room; NLF film on chemi- cal and biological warfare today at 4, 1041 Randall Lab- oratory; AA Film Coop, Friedkin's The French Connec- tion, Thurs., 7, 9:30, Aud. A; Cinema Guild, The Adven- tures of Sherlock Holmes, Thurs., Fri., 7, 9:05, Arch. Aud.; Cinema II, Polanski's Fearless Vampire Killers Fri., Sun., 7, 9:05, Aud. A, Couzens Film Coop, On the Waterfront, Fri., Sat., Couzens Cafe.; Cinema Guild, Marx Brothers' Night in Casablanca, Sat., Sun., 7, 9:05, Arch. Aud; Cinema II, Phantom of the Opera with piano accom- paniment by Donald Sosin, Sat., 7, 9, Sun., 9, Aud.A; Bursley Hall Movies, Shaft, Sat., 9. I TONIGHT! Dec. 13th ONLY! 7 & &9:30 p.m. TOMORROW EVENING-Academy Award Winning THE FRENCH CONNECTION ALL SHOWS IN AUD. "A", ANGELL HALL-$1 tickets for the evening's performance on sale outside the auditorium at 6 p.m. I 1 SPAIN o PARIS . ITALY . Language & Civilization. Special CFS Courses-History, Literature, Art, Guitar, Folkdance-Univ. of Salamanca. $790' Language & Civilization. Special CFS Suppl. Courses- Theatre, Art, Cooking, Photography-Univ. of Paris-~ Sorbonne. $810* Language & Civilization. Special CFS Cultural Activities. Perugia Italian Univ. for Foreigners. $810* CFS-PERUGIA APPLIED ARTS COURSE: Drawing, Paint- ing, Ceramics, Sculpture, Printmaking, Restoration, Art History. Pietro Vannucci Academy of Fine Arts. $810* German Language & Civilization. Special Additional CFS Courses. Univ. of Vienna. $740. VIENNA.9 *All programs include special excursions& tours, round-trip commercial 747 trans- portation, all European connections, full room-board, tuition, fees, insurance, U-M Profs. Program Advisors. I IF THEY GAVE ACADEMY AWARDS FOR BESTADULT FILMS,THIS WOULD WIN BY A LANDSLIDE! A TOTALLY NEW CONCEPT IN SENSUAL INVOLVEMENT! - *EARN UP TO 8 HOURS TRANSFER CREDIT, s UNDERGRADS COMPLETE LANG. REQ. WITH FLUENCY * GRAD. STUDENTS-COMPLETE* DISCOVER NEW IDEAS IN m Ili