TheMichgan Daily--Thursday, October 13, 1977- ARCADE ... a weekly roundup Opening night NEW YORK - The Metropolitan Opera opened its 1977 season Monday night with a 6-foot-7 basso towering as Czar Boris Godunov, an American mezzo-soprano making her debut and the wife of Vice President Walter Mondale in the audience. The performance of Boris Godunov as a whole was more ponderous than it should have been. Intellectually, one could appreciate it, but the excitement which should are from singers to audience and back again did not happen at this Met opening. Mrs. Mondale was the guest of Met executive director Anthony Bliss for the opera and a dinner attended by 50 board members, patrons and hon- some old time Hollywood hoopla. Vintage stars paraded down Sunset Boulevard in 1920 automobiles. The original cast of The Jazz Singer got together at Stage 6 of KTLA, where Warner Brothers premiered the film. Fifty years ago Al Jolson sang the first synchronized words ever heard in a feature film. May McAvoy, in the cast of The Jaz Singer, recalled what it was like to pioneer sound: "It was all done on records, enormous platters of wax. The cameras were so noisy so the studio had to build soundproof glass booths. The biggest problem was where to put the microphones. They were placed in flower pots and under pillows and the actors had to stay close to them so the dialogue could be Goodbye, Dolly NASHVILLE, Tenn.,- Blind sing- er Ronnie Milsap cut loose with a yell Monday as he stepped up to claim his title as country music's entertainer of the year in addition to honors for top male vocalist and the industry's best album. Fellow performers glittering with jewels and sequined outfits echoed his joy, jumping to their feet to applaud the singer's sweep of the Country Music Association awards ceremony. Milsap, who was born blind but mastered violin, piano and guitar by the time he was 12, won the male vocalist award in 1974 and 1976. Crystal Gayle, her hip-length hair swinging like sleek curtains around her face, said it was the sultry ballad, Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue, which won her best female vocalist honors over her sister, Loretta Lynn, and ,other well-established stars. Dolly Parton, favored to win best entertainer or top female vocalist, left the ceremony empty-handed. Waylon Jennings, also considered a front-runner but who won nothing this year, boycotted the awards saying they foster unnecessary rival- ry. The vocal duo of the year award went to Jim Ed Brown and Helen Cornelius while the Statler Brothers were picked best vocal group for the sixth year in a row. Roy Clark, whose banjo and guitar picking highlights the homegrown humor of HeeHaw was chosen instru- mentalist of the year. The Original Texas Playboys, assembled by the late Bob Wills who was known as the king of western swing, claimed the title of the year's best instrumental group. Some way to spend a holi- day! MY holiday! And where would you be if I'd never left Portugal? WASHINGTON - Nineteen years after its removal from the East Front of the Capitol, the government still hasn't decided what to do with a controversial statue of Christopher Columbus. The Discovery by Luigi Persico, stood outside the East Front for 114 years before it was placed in "temporary" storage during a Cap- itol renovation. The marble work protrays Colum- bus holding a symbolic globe, like a basketball referee ready to throw up the first ball. A scantily clad Indian maiden is at his feet. The statue became controversial when it was unveiled in 1844. Art critics have panned it and Indians Pii -size performance-AF MILWAUKEE, Wis. -- o-year-old Dana Putnam (right) looked to an older boy for pointers while participating in a young people's arts program at Alvermo College here. Pre-school through high school violinists took part. -AP Photo The Metropolitan Opera opened Monday night with the Mussorgsky opera Boris Godunov. Bigwigs from the worlds of politics and society attended. ored guests . in the Met's grand tier-level restaurant. Florence Quivar, a native of Phila- delphia, made her debut as Marina, the leading female role in the opera. Her voice is large, with controlled tremolo and a mature "grand lady" quality. But, perhaps because of debut nerves, she did not always have enough breath to support her tones, which also were often unap- pealingly husky. One though of her voice as more suited to a villainous role. Baritone Vern Shinall, of St. Louis, also made his debut in the smaller role of a Jesuit and had an appropri- ate edge of decisiveness in his voice. Kazimierz Kord of Poland con- ducted, and the first act especially sounded too slow. Since 1975, the Met has used the lean score of Boris that Modes Mussorgsky wrote and or- chestrated, and not the lush orches- tration and partial rewriting that Rimsky-Korsakov did later. Not the King James CQRDOBA, Mex. - The first Bible ever written in the Mexican Indian vernacular is about to be published by ,the Franciscan mission in Chi- apas, the state bordering Guatemala that once was a major center of Mayan civilization. The Bible will be written in Mayan and called Chujul- bajun- According to Franciscan Friar Facundo Ramirez, only 20 per cent of the 120,000 Indians who live in the region can read and write. He believes the biblical doctrines can more easily be transmitted in the native tongue because of the educa- tional level of the population. " Talkies Toasted HOLLYWOOD - Fifty years ago the talkies were born with Al Jolson's famous The Jazz Singer. This week in Hollywood, the first sound studio, the birthplace of the talkies was named cultural Landmark No. 187 by the Los Angeles Cultural Heritage Board. Postmaster General Benjamin Bailar issued a commemorative stamp in honor of talking pictures. He remarked that the film world has had five other stamps - for Will Rogers, George Eastman, Walt Dis- ney, D. W. Griffith and the silent pic- ture anniversary in 1944. .The half-century of talking movies seemed like a good reason to revive MOTD (D 0117 , TI IEATLI heard. We were all anxious to make a good picture, but frankly, I didn't think talkies would last." Taking nips of 'Gin, NEW YORK - The Gin Game is a small, funny play with a sharp finale wallop. Two ranking Broadway per- formers, Hume Cronyn and his wife Jessica Tandy, are the whole cast of the seemingly innocuous trifle that premiered Thursday night at the' Golden Theater. The production originated at the Long Wharf company in New Haven, Conn., which is becoming a regular contributor to Main Stem well-being, though the script has also been tested by several other regional companies. It was written by D.L. Coburn, a native of Baltimore now resident in Dallas, and is reportedly his first excursion into dramaturgy. Besides having a keen ear fpr dialogue, Coburn shows rewarding compassion and understanding for the way in which the minor irritations of every- day life can become time bombs that destroy a person. William Glover, AP drama critic, feels that "Nichols and his stellar players keep The Gin Game lightly diverting, and make the comments about geriatric life more amusing than they really are. Cronyn is a fidgety marvel, Miss Tandy a wonder of grandmotherly aplomb. The Gin Game is a miniature drama, present- ed with superbly professional artis- try." TONIGHT: 8 p.m. -Power Center protested the girl's semi-nudity. Defenders said the head of Columbus was taken from an original bust in Spain and could be the best likeness of the explorer in Washington. Today, it rests at the Smithsonian Institution's storage facility in Suit- land, Md. A Smithsonian spokesman, Paul Perrot, said, "There are no present plans for The Discovery." He said it might be placed in a museum exhibit in the future. The better-than- prime-time players? KIRBY, England - Five witches whose backyard fire dance disturbed neighbors watching a midnight hor- ror film on television have been put on probation by local magistrates. ''I was watching Night of the Zombie on television when I heard them shouting," said Robert Eaton. "They looked as though they were in a trance. It was worse than seeing the horror film." Other residents of the quiet neigh- borhood testified Monday that the three men and two women were chanting and dancing around a firepin in the shape of a cross burning in themiddle of a circular pit in the back yard of the house in which the witches were living together. The women and two of the men wore black robes bearing signs of the zodiac, the witnesses said. "They kept throwing something into the fire that seemed to cause an explosion," said George Taylor, 39. "Then they would jump through the smoke . . . I must admit I thought they must be unusual people whe saw one of them sunbathing naked the garden." Recent Deaths -Voltaire Perkins, the attorn actor who presided over hundred "divorces" on the daytime televis series Divorce Court, died of apparent heart attack Monday in Angeles. Perkins, a 1921 graduat the USC law school, maintaine private legal practice in Los AngE for 45 years. -DeWitt Jordan, Jr., 44-year- muralist and portrait painter, r shot and killed Sunday in Memp Jordan, who was marrivd, v visiting his girlfriend and was sho her brother. The artist, born Nashville, rose to fame with painting called Birth of the Blu Arts Arcade was compiled thro the wires of AP, UPI, and by staffers Marcelle Federici, Wi Goodman, Jeff Selbst, Renee S cusky, and Tim Yagle. IF YOUR STYLE WORKS STAY WITH IT U.M. Stylists at the UNION -AP Photo Flagstone field day? HARTFORD, Conn. - Officials here are dismayed with sculptor Carl An- dre's work entitled Stone Field Sculpture, located in a business section of downtown Hartford. Andre was paid $87,000 for the work by the Hartford In- stitute for Public Giving and the National Endowment for the Arts. NOON LUNCHEON Homemade Soup and Sandwich 50C Friday, October 14 MAUREEN O'ROURKE Women's Program Coordinator, U of M: "SOME OF THE WOMEN'S CONCERNS ON CAMPUS GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE (Corner of Oakland) POETRY READING WITH JOHN REINHARD and JOHN ALCOCK reading from their works Thursday, October 13-7:30 P.M. AT THE GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE (Corner of Oakland) Due to theme of this production, PARENTAL GUIDANCE is Advised. The Universityof Michigan Professional Theatre Program a . Guest Artist Series 1977-78 For info, colI: (313) 764-0450 before 5 p.m. (313) 763-3333, 6-8 p.m. coming first University Showcase THE FIRST BREEZE OF SUMMER Oct.26.29 in Trueblood Theotre ** ** * *** * *** **** * CUCAN DDIL1T7 UWL ° . S . -P" In Her 1927 ieo lMY Iit ij7 OFFICE OF CAMPUS LIFE *r IN CONCERT FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21--8 P.M. EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY BOWEN FIELD HOUSE TICKETS $8.50 - $7.50--Available at the'McKinney Union, Aura Sound, Bonzo Dog Records, Weorhouse Records, Hudsons. A BAMBOO Production BOB BAGERY'S presents * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *