Sunday, November 14; 1976- THE MI ICHIGAN DAILY Page Five .. . SUNDAY MAGAZINE BOOKS 1. ' eartland Mort Sahis bitter memoir HEARTLAND, by Mort Sahl. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich: New York and London, 158 pp. By MIKE NORTON WHAT DO YOU do if you're a hip, relevant, socially aware comedian who wakes up one morning to find that no- body laughs anymore? If you're Lenny Bruce, you can kill yourself. If you're Mort Sahl you can white a book about how it's all a fascist plot concocted by un- seen enemies to silence you. Aca dem (Continueci from Page 3) "You freeze a jug of fresh cider solid and then set it out to thaw," explains Rick. When it starts to thaw, the water in the juice will sit frozen in a lump in the middle of the jug. Rick tells you to then drain off the juice and lethitdfer- ment a few weeks - "That's your apple jack. It doesn't taste like vinegar and it's really powerful." Rick works seven days a week from March until Hallo- ween. After that, the cider business slows down and he cuts back to a six day week. He had planned to buy some chickens this year, but pruning time caught up to him in March and he didn't get around to it. "Maybe I'll get them next year. When the season starts you just kiss life goodby for the next nine months." It takes four people to run the pruning machine. "We nev- er do the 30,000 trees all in one year. We alternate, half one year. half the next. In March it's incredible; the snow's a foot deep. Still, you never even get half of, them done. You prune till you've got other things to do, then start up next year where you left off," When it comes time to pick the apples Rick heads for the employment agency. He doesn't like to hire college students to pick because "they usually only last a day." Picking apples is rough - the workers sometimes spend 12 or 14'hours a 'day perched on shaky ladders' with apple sacks hanging from their shoulders. , And all the apples aren't on trees. Many are blown off the branches, and pickers are forced to crawl under the rows of trees on their hands and knees to gather these "wind- falls". Rick finds the physical farm labor to be good for the soul.. "When it's nice outside," he says with a grin, "the work can be enjoyable - with the sunshine on ybur back and ev- erything. But when the weather is bad, when it's cold or it rains, the work is rotten." The compensation is good no matter what the weather's like. "If you keep working," Rick remarks, "the pay is incredible - sometimes $80 a day." You can elevate your private failure to the level of national tragedy, weave your legend into the fabric of history, and stand forth justified. The name of the book is Heartland. It isn't funny. Sahl began his career in San Francisco's North Beach dis- trict in the early fifties. He was an innovator: the first American comic to use sensi- tive political material in his act, the first to record a com- edy LP, the first to play the jazz joints and the university circuit. Most of today's better into a madman's tale. Full of. comedians openly acknowledge sound and fury. their debts to him. And the man was funny,. God knows. But somewhere along the line something hap- pened to him. Heartland is Sahl's account of his journey from success into obscurity. Its beginning is innocuous: it gives the im- pression that what will follow' is one of those pleasantly vic- ious memoirs which famous people leave behind them like turds. But the book makes sev- eral turns ,this way and that, and finally transforms itself THE TROUBLE started, Sahl jvsays, when he started to get involved in New Orleans D. A. Jim Garrison's investigation of the Kennedy assassination. From that moment on, he claims, he was blacklisted from nightclubs, television appear- ances and movies. His best "lib- eral" friends - Paul Newman, Hugh Hefner, et al - suddenly would have nothing to do with him in public. Ie was given LSD at a cam- cy is too easy a target these days, and Sahl goes on to launch a bitter attack on lib- erals in general, on showbiz liberals in particular. These days, it's hard to work up much surprise when some- body claims the FBI has been sniffing his bedsheets or poi- soning his hamster; but the real point is whether or not the fas- and debunks myths about a lot of current heroes. It raises some necessary questions about the morality and sanity of the times we live in - and Sahl proves himself as adept as he ever was at calling up the per- fect image to make his point. For instance, in a telling con- demnation of political expedi- ency, he says: nant and then trying to fall in love." But who benefits when Sahl stoops to the level of fishwif- ery, complaining about how much he's been abused by Pet- er Lawford and Woody Allen? Maybe it's therapeutic for Mort. And maybe he needs to get it off his chest. But I can't advise anybody to buy his book. Let him pay for his therapy by the hour, like the rest of us. Mike Norton is a Daily staff writer. cist conspiracy has made Sabi "No matter who the Demo- un-funny. And 1'm afraid he's crats nominate, the liberal's managed to do it all by himself: position is, 'Well - I - don't- know - who - he - is - but - he H e a r t l a n d, for all might - work - out.' It's reverse its paranoia, is notmwithout English; it's like being preg- value. It provides some excel- lent glimpses into the backbit- ing world of Hollywood politics pus party, and over a cliff as blames the CIA. drove his car a result. He But the Agen- to agriculture 'A Ikh, DORM RESIDENTS File now for University Housing Council Elections SEATS AVAILABLE / "NE OF RICK'S PICKERS is' pickle cucumbers. "This is a Blackie Alvarez, who la- bors in the orchards with his wife, children and grandchil- dren. Blackie runs the tractor that hauls the apples, directs the picking, and often climbs into the trees himself. His wife and older childrentalso pick in the trees, while the youngest of the family gather the wind- falls and put them in the older children's sacks. In the morning Blackie hauls' them all to the orchards in the' back of the tractor. They fill' the tractor cart, go back to the barn to unload the apples and' eat lunch, and then return to the trees to pick until sun- down. When Blackie comes back from his noon break he sitsf atop the tractor to digest his lunch. The kids pile in the back as he drives up, and when he stops they slip out of the cart, rummage for their sacks, and set off to work. Blackie earns $30,000 each year working as a crew fore- man in a Florida orange grove for eight months. He brings his family north at har- vest timie to pick apples and' vacation," he says. Rick says he appreciates} Blackie's experience and loyal-' ty, as well as his willingness to work. "He does a lot of extra things for me. He's gone through rows that have already been picked to get the windfalls. He's not going to make any money on; that. A lot of guys won't do it but he does. I try to make it up to him. I give him mores money tha the other workers. There's nothing else I can do. I can't improve his working conditions. I can't make the sun shine. I can't make it warm . . Money is the only compen- sation I have." Rick believes that despite all the mechanization that has been introduced into farming, the agrarian life style can still be romantic. "You can have the type of farm where you. have all these great things go- ing on - your little garden here, have your cows there, chickens there, you got your pigs there. "I don't have it yet, but I'm slowly working on it. . . . I en- vision one day I'll have my own piece of land." I J;:stPTP" Featuring NICHOLAS PENNELL Guest Director in Residence "A *9 ;;; British * LI WELT IRNWv 1AIEt Nov. 23,24,26,27- 8pm; Nov. 28-2&8pm Power Center Tickets at the PTP Ticket Office Mendeissohn Theatre Lobby, Mon.-Fri 10-1, 2-5 For information Cal: 764-0450 Tickets aso Ava lable at al Hudsons HILL AREA (Couzens, Stockwell, Mo-Jo) 1 Full Year CENTRAL CAMPUS (West Quad, Barbour, Newberry) 1 Full Year ALICE LLOYD- EAST QUAD 1 Full Year MARKLEY-OXFORC 1 Full Year SOUTH QUAD- FLETCH'ER 1 Full Year, 1 Half Year BURSLEY 1 Full Year, I Half Year BAITS 1 Full Year, 1 Half Year Sign up in MSA Chambers, 3909 Michigan Union, Nov. 12-18 ELECTIONS NOVEMBER 30, DECEMBER 1, 2 I ! Chi Psi Fraternity PRESENTS A Special Midnight Concert WITH THE David Bromberg Band I1 ii i N ii F R I DAY, NOV. 19 at Midnight MICHIGAN THEATER 603 E. LIBERTY, ANN ARBOR Advance Tickets $5.50. Day of Show $6.50 TICKETS NOW AVAILABLE at Discount Records (both j stores). -Aura Sounde & Schoolkidis Records and in Ypsilanti at Where House Records. (DOORS OPEN 1 1 :301 Smoking or Beverages Prohibited ANN AU CV FILM 0-CC-C A TONIGHT in MLB SUNDAY, NOV. 14 TWO JAPANESE MASTERS UTAMARO AND HIS FIVE WOMEN (KENJI MIZOGUCHI, 1946) 7 ONLY By the director of UGETSU and SANSHO THE BALIFF. Utamaro is an ukiyo-e woodcut painter in Edo in the late 1700's-a world of brothels, love affairs, drinking parties and market places-but he remains a spectator, concerned only with his art. Surrounded by models and courtesans, all are only mistresses of his art. One of the best films of Mizoguchi's middle period. Japanese with subtitles. * THRONE OF BLOOD (AKIRA KUROSAWA, 1957) MLB 4-9 ONLY Kurosawa's version of MacBeth doesn't use Shakespeare's text. Instead he adapts the plot to Japan during the Middle Ages with MacBeth as a samuari. Peter Brook calls the result "a great mas- terpiece, perhaps the only true masterpiece inspired by Shake- speare." Toshiro Mifune. Japanese with subtitles. $1.25, DOUBLE FEATURE $3.00 p.. LUCHINO VISCONTI'S 1967 j3 THE STRANGER Visconti translates one of the landmark novels of the 10th century into film-letting the omnipresent sun, the solitude of the Algerian land- scope and Marcello Mastroianni's existential nausea speak the precise directives of Albert Comus. The director offers a meticulously accurate recreation of Algiers circa 1938-1939 in a film that is at once, both ' visually beautiful yet faithful to the spirit of the-novel. TUES.: THE JAZZ SINGER CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. 7:00 & 9:05 Admission $1.25 JEAN RENOIR'S 1948 DIARY OF A CHAMBERMAID An Ah-nerican film by the great French director of THE RULES OF THE GAMF nndl THF GRAND 1 ISION this "traaic force." in which TONIGHT! London Philharmonic Orchestra BERNARD HAITINK, Conductor HILL AUDITORIUM, 8:30 I A'TiiMsic by A rio/i, PIiirand Mic Aahler I I I m