Paga 6--Saturday, May 26, 1979-The Michi an Daily Dancers cook diverse Goulash' By ANNA NISSEN The University Dancers present "Goulash", a two- hour potpourri of student works, Thursday through Saturday nights this week at the Dance Building. Composed by the most prolific of the students represented, Whitley-Anne Strakian's "2 Sinfonias" seems to reinforce the rule that one should never dance one's own choreography. In a rather lukewarm solo opening, Ms. Setrakian's balance and strained exten- sion seem to result from her knowing all too well where accents and pauses ideally should come. Her solo "86th and Third" suffered much the same problem ; her own spine is too inflexible for the movements she conceives. Barbara Rinaldo's self -designed solo was superb, however, her choreography working within her strengths and limits as a dancer. She is taut, springy, and elastic, her movements articulate and clean. With an apparently solid background in classic ballet, she floats momentarily at the sol stice of every move. WHITLEY-ANNE SETRAKIAN should not be passed off as justan amateur choreographer. Her real forte with group pieces is demonstrated in the second "Sinfonia," danced by her and four other students en- thusiastically. Ms. Setrakian has a rare gift for in- troducing contrapuntal movement and asymmetric floor patterns without congesting or confusing the stage space. Transitions from individual solos to corps sequences are also effected well, each soloist ebbing slightly as the others merge into her movement. The flow of Ms. Setrakian and her friends is interrup- ted at times by technical snags. Several of the dancers lack the gratuitous extension and limber spines which the work requires. Also at times there is uncertainty as to what the arms should be doing; they hang rather than complement leg leaps and stretches. Setrakian's "Deva Duta" alludes to three divine messengers in Buddhist theology and is performed by Setrakian, Barbara Bellamy, and Loi Kail-tsubota. These Three Graces of the Orient vary dynamics in- triguingly, but their jerkier movements and casual pedestrian ambling contradict the consistent grandeur of the Barber orchestration. Again, each messenger has a solo passage, and these are blended masterfully wih trio phrases. this piece that prevents it from being truly professional. In the last twenty years the deluge of modern dances dealing with pre-Adamic biological strife has rendered the genre a cliche. Even so, Marko's number was not without value as an experimental piece. His dancers arrived at some interesting amorphous floor patterns, and we now know that polyethelyne does not make the most effective screen between audience and perfor- mers. SET TO A charming recording of "The Walrus and the Carpenter," Loi Kail-tsubota's dramatization of the Lewis Carroll poem is pure delight. Mark Dolengowski as the tuxedoed Walrus is appropriately portly and luuos n the t hre=ubl, oy-oy yses r A m ericans really cute enough to bite. The most professional piece in the program is Setrakian's poetically titled "and the heart an involun- tory muscle after all . .. , performed by Let Kail- c p C n e tsubota ina slippery green Lycra bodysuit. This dancer, with her high arches, hyperextended knees, and f ilm aw ards CANNES, France (AP) - The Cannes F Festival, which once treated American films as grade schlock, awarded all of its top honor American films Thursday. Apocalypse Now, Francis Ford Coppola's unfini Film low- s to shed spineless torso, embodies Setrakian's highest visions of how the human body can be made to look and move. Kail-tsubota reaches, blossoms, and contracts with sen- sual regularity, not unlike the effect of time-lapse photography. Limbs attentuate as tendrils, and she con- veys the grace, spontaneity, and passion of organic growth. Ken Marko's experimental "Primordial Amorphic Metamorphosis" concludes the program. Behind an elaborate polyethelyne stage set, amoebic dancers in various colored leotards squirm and roll. At least I think they were squirming and rolling; the plastic curtain, while it lends a definite embryonic quality, also suc- cessfully obscures the view. Three dancers suspended in polyethelyne cages crawl down, provoke the amoebas to frenzy, and are eventually coaxed back into their cages. Meanwhile, slides from Microbiology 201 are being flashed on the stage walls. It isn't so much the choreography or execution as the general conception of $30 million Vietnam War epic, was named best film, sharing the Golden Palm award with West German director Volker Schlondorff's The Tin Drum. Jack Lemmon was awarded the title of best actor for his portrayal of a nuclear reactor technician in The China Syndrome, a movie about an accident and its subsequent cover-up in an atomic power plant. Sally Field picked up the best actess award for her title role in Norma Rae, a recently released chronicle of attempts to unionize workers in an Alabama textile factory. Still another American, Terrence Malick, was named best director for Days of Heaven, a harrowing, exquisitely photographer story about love and greedset in the wheatfields of Texas just before World War I. The award for Coppola marked the second time he has won best picture honors at Cannes. His movie The Conversation won the award in 1974. Coppola is best known in the U.S. for his films The Godfather and The Godfather Part II. SPRING ARTS STAFF ARTS EDITOR Joskoa Peck ARTS STAFF: Sondra Bobrokf,Sarah Cassill, Mark Coleman, Sara Goldberg, Eric Graig, Jock Hender- son, Katie Herzfeld, Anna Nissen, Christopher Potter, Nancy Rucker, R.J. Smith, Nina Shishkoff, Tom Stephens, Keith Tosolt Ann Arbor police reflect community's diversity < Continued onPare 5) black uniform. A clock-wa cher you kidnapping is probably the most dif- - don't need." ficult crime to solve, even though the Woodruffe also said officers who most serious is murder, want to become detectives for the glory ANN ARBOR recorded five aspect of the job, "aren't here too long. homicides in 1978, and Woodruffe said it The farthest thing on your mind is to is difficult to solve such crimes without shoot someone. We are here to protect the help of cooperative citizens. the public." Woodruffe, who is 47, said witnesses Potential detectives, Woodruffe said, who volunteer information are "a big must pass a rigorous series of exams help. If you would get no information during a six-month training period. The from citizens, you'd be greatly ham- training period covers such areas as pered. But you don't get as much as arson, crime prevention, assault, stolen you'd like." property, bomb threats, checks-and- Woodruffe is a 25-year-veteran of the fraud, and breaking-and-entering AAPD, and has 34 people working for (B&E's). him who range in age from 27 to 60. Woodruffe said handling missing per- IN EVALUATING officers who want sons is particularly tough because to become detectives, Woodruffe said "people have just disappeared. You he looks for "the most mature person need a lot of information. If you don't you can find." He said the AAPD needs have it, where do you go?" "a self-motivated individual who is Woodruffe said the best part of police aggressive and gets along well with and detective work is the street work people; again, that key ingredient because "you're in on the situation first evident in every person who dons the hand." "Gimme a D Gimme an A* Gimme an 1 l... L . . .Y Giv6 the MICHIGAN DAILY * that old college try. CALL 764-0558 to order your subscription