The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 10, 1977-Page 5 ARS ARCADE. . a weekly roundup Holiday in Rome NEW YORK - Public television is offering a Roman holiday for its viewers in the next 13 weeks as the ancient empire is recreated with its intrigue, murder and decadence. The show is I, Claudius, which begins its Masterpiece Theater run on PBS stations Nov. 6 at 9 p.m., Eastern time (see local listings.) Based on the novels by Robert Graves, I, Claudius puts Roman Pearl Bailey Singer Pearl Bailey, who has an honorary degree from Georgetown University, is enrolling as a full-time student to get the real thing. Emperor Claudius (Derek Jacobi) to work in his old age writing a family history, and the scene immediately shifts back four Caesars to Augustus, who defeated Antony and Cleopatra at the battle ofrActium to unite Rome. White Christmas? ST. JOHN'S, Antigua - An Angli- can clergyman wants Caribbeans to stop singing British Thanksgiving and Christmas hymns about snow and cold weather. Hilton Carty, the dean of St. John's Cathedral, complained in his Sunday sermon that the traditional hymns "all tell us to give thanks to God but are mostly written for people accus- tomed to colder climates." He urged Caribbean composers to write religious music "which would be more appropriate to the aspira- tions of West Indian life." Looking for Leonardo FLORENCE, Italy - A lost mas- terpiece by Leonardo da Vinci prob- ably lies hidden under another fresco in the Palazzo Vecchio, says a report by researchers to a commission that will decide next month whether to look beneath the second painting. A research team financed by American philanthropists has deliv- ered four volumes of findings to the commission appointed to find Leon- ardo's Battle of Angiari, commemor- ating a 1440 Florentine victory. The commission will meet Dec. 12 to decide what to do next. The research team, using high- frequency sound and infrared heat probes, worked for a year before con- cluding that Leonardo's fresco is under another battle scene with which Girogio Vasari covered a third of one wall in the Palazzo Vecchio's Great Council Hall. "We found that from both acousti- cal and thermal tests, this spot shows a different behavior from any other layers of sub-surface plaster in the whole hall," said Maurizio Seracini, the scientific director of the project. He said the next step would be to make a small hole in the Vasari painting to sample the pigment beneath it. American industrialist Armand Hammer, who shared the cost of the search with the Kress Foundation and the Smithsonian Institution, has said he would provide more funds if permission is given to look behind the Vasari. DelsIca 's 1947 BCYCLE THIEF The so f a poor man's desperate search for his stolen bicycle that is essential to his livelihood becomes, in Desica's hands, an illumination of the extraordinary dimensions of an apparently ordinary life. One of the The later fresco could be trans- ferred to canvas and the layers of paint beneath it uncovered. Leonardo completed his painting in the early 16th -century during Florence's years as a republic. The fresco disappeared after the Medici family regained power and had Vasari remodel the hall in 1563. Some art historians believe Leon- ardo's painting faded away, as his Last Supper has done, because he used an impermanent fresco tech- nique. Others believe the mural was painted over because it glorified the republic. Travers Newton, an art restoration expert from Los Angeles, came to Florence in 1974 and deduced from historical evidence that the Vasari painting covered the spot where the Leonardo was most likely to have been painted. He did not have the equipment to check his conclusion. Seracini, a native of Forence who studied engineering at the University of California in San Diego, went to work with his team in October 1976. Simply 'Winston' LONDON - A landscape painting started by Sir Winston Churchill in the south of France in 1930 and finished by five other artists will go for auction Nov. 16, a representative of the auctioneers, Sotheby's, said Thursday. Julian Barran, a picture expert at Sotheby's, said Churchill was staying with artist Paul Maze at the time and four other artists had been invited to lunch. They included Andre de Segonzac and Edouard Williard, the post impressionist who died in 1936. Barran said Sir Winston asked the guests to finish the picture as he was having difficulty doing so. The guests finished the painting, entitled "In the Park oft the Chateau at St. Georges" and afterwards all six signed it. Churchill wrote simply "Winston." The picture is expected to bring $8,400-$9,350 when it goes on sale, Barran said. It had been sent for sale anonymously by a woman, but a salesroom spokesman said it was not Lady Churchill, who recently sold some of her husband's pictures to meet living expenses at her London home. Barran said: "This picture is quite unusual. It is the only painting of his that I know that was finished in this way and of course it is from his best, early period." In addition to De Segonzac and Vuillard, the picture is signed by Maze, Simon Levy and Ivor Balsan. Eton quits again LONDON - Rock singer Elton John says he is giving up live per- formances, which have helped make him Britain's richest pop music figure. John surprised a concert audience of 12,000 Thursday night with the announcement of an end to his road career. "It's been a painful decision for me," John said. "I really enjoyed to- night, but this is going to be the last show. There's a lot more for me than playing on the road." The singer said he has no inten- tion of giving up recording. A new album is due for release next year. Crossword addicts delight BRUSSELS, Belgium - A Belgian crossword fanatic has unveiled what he calls the biggest, toughest puzzle in the history of the game, 25,000 squares with 7,748 definitions. Henri Blaise, a 38-year-old expert from Liege in southern Belgium, said Wednesday that his French language puzzle took him eight years to com- plete. The Guinness Book of Records lists the "largest' crossword ever published" as one created in 1975 by Hank Koval, an American television producer, with 5,553 definitions and clues. Blaise said he hopes to cut a big swath among eight million French crossword addicts in Belgium, France, Switzerland and Canada. "But there are some 40 countries in the world where French is spoken, so it could develop into something big if it catches on," Blaise said. Interested fans will need space to pin up the puzzle. It measures 3.61 by 5.58 feet. The definitions come in a 170-page book, and Blaise charges $28 for a copy of the book and puzzle. "I estimate it would take a beginner about two years to finish the puzzle. An average crossworder Recent deaths HOUSTON - Band leader Guy Lombardo died Saturday from pro- gressive hardening of the arteries and kidney problems. He underwent major arterial surgery five weeks ago. Lombardo's "Auld Lang Syne" has been a mainstay of New Year's revelers for years.. LOS ANGELES - Silent screen actress Florence Vidor, once mar- ried to director King Vidor and then, to violinist Jascha Heifetz, has died at age 82 in her Pacific Palisades home. Her silent-era films included A Tale of Two Cities, Grand Duchess and the Waiter, The Patriot, Magnifi- cent Flirt and Chinatown Nights. Florence and King Vidor came from Texas to Hollywood as a young couple in 1928. He worked as an actor and director, while she started out as fixed to a sloping side is wired to an organ oscillator board inside. Only the numerals and 26 letters are wired. The operator cannot backspace if a wrong note is hit. Carmichael developed a code to write sheet music for MACKS, providing a letter or number equivalent for each note in a range of three chromatic oc- taves. On his sheet music "F-W-0-W" are the first four notes of "Amazing Grace. Here 'spapa NEW YORK - Francis Ford Coppola took the two Godfather films, cut them apart and pasted them back together in chronological order for a four-part tele- vision mini-series that has a different texture than the original. The nine-hour result will be broad- cast by NBC in four parts Nov. 12 through 15, with the first three seg- ments running 9-11 p.m., Eastern time, and the finale going 8-11 p.m. There is about an hour's added material in the television version, ac- cording to NBC - takes that previously had hit the cutting room floor and some that were newly shot. But for this viewer, the patches didn't show nor was it possible to differentiate the new material from the old. NBC calls the show "Mario Puzo's 'The Godfather.' The Complete Novel for Television," and it differs markedly from the original. College, careers and conflicts LOS ANGELES-Christina Raines, Laurie Heineman and Season Hubley star in "Loose Change," from the novel by Sara Davidson about the turbulent 1960s and 1970s. The NBC six-hour film follows the women from the college protest era, to their chosen careers and their resolu- tion of personal conflicts in the '70s. Chris ranks with Can Can ST. PAUL, Minn. - The opera Chris- topher Columbus was written by Jac- ques Offenbach to celebrate America's Centennial in 1876, but only now is it getting its world premier. The opening of the unlikely opera - with more improbabilities than a Marx Brothers' movie produced by Monte Python's Flying Circus - was perform- ed by the Minnesota Opera Company Friday night at O'Shaughnessy Auditorium. The production will be in English, but that is no guarantee Americans will un- derstand the madcap goings-on 'or the non-household word "quadrigamy," which is the underpinning of the plot. Christopher Columbus is the story history overlooked about the voyage of Columbus and the discovery of the New World. The music by the composer of Can Can is lilting and swinging, but Offen- bach was not satisfied with the-libretto when he read it, and the opera was shelved. The work was re-discovered by the Opera Rara in London, which gave a concert version of it after Donald White rewrote the libretto. But the show never has been produced in opera form. It opens with Columbus whooping it up in the square of Cordova to celebrate his engagement to a local belle. He con- fides to the young bucks that the way to successful seduction is marriage. " Modern not necessarily better STONINGTON, Conn. - The harpsi- chord, which reigned supreme among classical musicians for 300 years before being usurped by the piano, is popular Guy Lombardo sound like the composer intended. "We finally began to realize that modern wasn't necessarily better," said Way, referring to contemporary modifications in the instrument, in- cluding the use of metal and plastic. Prior to the 19th century, the orches- tra was centered around the harpsi- chord, Way says. It wasn't until the 1800s that the conductor moved from the harpsichord keyboard to the podi- um.. But by then, the piano had begun to take over as the basic instrument of European music, Way says. A history of the harpsichord compiled by Zucker- mann says production had ceased by 1800. By 1816, the French were burning harpsichords for firewood. "We've had to retrain young artists to play the instruments - the technique is much different from that of a piano a With a harpsichord the body stays quiet." Way believes his assembly kits, de- signed for people with minimum exper tise, result in better instruments than the mass-produced version. "This isn't really a kit, you see. It's as though we stopped the manufacturing process and said, 'Hey look, we need a lot of handworkg here'," he says. The instruction booklet, written in a breezy, personal and non-technical style, has elicited compliments as well as acid remarks from all over the world. A mechanic for Volkswagen in Germany wrote Way suggesting he give all the parts a number. "I wrote back, a'No! No, damn.you! You're building a fine instrument Everything has a name, no numbers;" Way says. t The Arts Arcade was compiled by Michael Baadke, Wendy Goodman, Renee Shilcusk., Mike Taylor, and Tim Yagle from the AI and UP! wires. TONIGHT AT 8 P.M.I (Gctting November Nlarried 10-12 A disquisitorv Play by Bernard Show University Showcase Productions November 9-12 Arena Theatre, 8 p.m. Tickets $2 at P. T. P. Office in the Michigan League 764-0450(313) Mon. -F~ri., 10-1, 2-5 p.m. Trueblood Box Office: 6-8 p.m. 764-5387(313) Tickets also through all Hudson's again, says one maker of the venerable instrument. David Way says many classical mu- sicians are demanding instruments constructed as they were in the 18th century or before, so compositions Probing possible da Vinci should take three to four months." Blaise said he also wants the launching of his puzzle to coincide with the beginning of a competition, a kind of world championship for French crossword experts, opening Nov. 17. The first to turn in the correct solution to his puzzle will be declared champion. Spain loses footage MADRID, Spain - Once the west- er world's favorite movie location, Spain is rapidly losing that status because of sharply increased costs. In a country where the making of films ranging from the classic Doctor Zhivago to Italian spaghetti westerns once was a business involving hund- reds of millions of dollars, no foreign movie has been made in months. Producer Stanley O'Toole has just moved the location of The Boys From Brazil from Spain to neighboring Portugal. "Only 10 years ago, moviemakers flocked to Spain because costs were so low that they practically ruled out any other country," he said. "Now the costs are prohibitive. Moreover, you're never quite sure what's going to happen next in Spain." a film extra and rose to stardom shortly after her cart ride with actor William Farnum in A Tale of Two Cities. She divorced Vidor in 1925 and married Heifetz in 1928, at which time she quit acting, saying: "My husband is my career." Typewriter tunes BATON ROUGH, La. - Musician-in- ventor Charlie Carmichael has made music as simple as ABC. His marriage of a typewriter key- board to an organ-like device enables just about anyone to play a recogniz- able song at first sitting. A touch-typist becomes a virtuoso. "If you can type, you can play," Car- michael said. It may be the perfect instrument for would-be musicians with songs in their hearts but blocks in their heads when it comes to reading musical notes. Carmichael calls it (MACKS) - Mu- sical Alphabet Code Keyboard System. His prototype is housed in a portable sewing machine case he bought from the Salvation Army. A 10-inch speaker produces the music from one end. An ordinary typewriter keyboard m S9 Eae p tlons NOON LUNCHEON Homemade Soup & Sandwiches 50t Friday, Nov. 11 PROFESSOR ZELDA GAMSON CENTER FOR HIGHER EDUCATION "The Political Economy of The University, 1970's" at GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE (corner of Oakland) POETRY READING Thursday, Nov. 10-7:30 P.M. DAVID VICTOR and JOSEPH ROSEVEAR reading from their work at GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE (corner of Oakland) Refreshments ptpA N THE POWER CENTER- F OR THE PERFORMING ARTS 1 J Ly Compa y . ° r ' ' Have You Heard the Latest? SUBSCRIBE to the DR. ALBERT FEUERWERKER Director of the Center for Chinese Studies will present a lecture an Friday, Nov. 11-8 p.m. tthi in the Lasty Q rte r of the 20th Centuy the third in the 1977 Distinguished Faculty eries -~rA l l+ ;%r k' in Nov. 11& 12 Chapeau by Alfred Uhry & Robert Waidma A Musical Based Upon Eugene Labiche' Italian Straw Hat Nov 13 mat. & eve MO7YZ'FR .^ sit a r