Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, June 8, 1974 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, June 8, 1974 Fingei (Continued from Page 5) shows he is still a consummate showman. Martin apprenticed with Bil Monroe and the Bluegrass Boys for five years, starting in 1949. They were regulars at WSM' Grand Ole Opry in Ntashville, the dean of all country shows. He then joined the Osborne Brothers, Bob and So-ny, f/>r two years before forming the Sunny Mountain Boys. Tle spent four years on the 3ig iatn Frolic in Detroit and as t,'"L.W- TV in Windsor. His performance Tsursday r pickin' was marked by an overwhelm- ing enthusiasm between him and the audience. Interactirg with the crowd is an essential part of Martin's style, and he can get an audience who)ping and hollering. Be is a showanan in the truest sense of the ward and is as much a country comic as a musician. Bad jokes mnd outrageous facial expressions were interspersed w i t h his music. But while his comedy m:iy seem like high camp to some, his music is pure country all the way. The songs are gems NEW AMERICAN MOVEMENT The New Americsn Movement (NAM) exists to help organize a movement for democratic socialism in the United Stntes. Our aim is to establish working-class control of the enormous productive copacity of American industry, to create a society that will provide material comfort and se- curity for all people, and in which the full and free develop- ment of every individual will be the basic goal. Such a society will strive for decentralization of decision makina, an end to bureoucrotic rule, and porticpation of all people in shopina their own lives and the direction of society. OPEN ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING Huron Valley NAM SUNDAY, JUNE 9-2 P.M. ANDERSON ROOM "A" MICH. UNION SOutdoor Clea'fra-nce Sale ;+ ON MORE THAN' r 1000 CHILDREN'S BOOKS 200 TITLES NO BOOK OVER $1.75 & All Books Reduced 40 to 70% SUMMER FUN CAN MEAN READING BOOKS. BRING YOUR ALLOWANCE AND -6 Q SHOP IN UN-AIRCONDITIONED SUNSHINE 4 1 Shop at Centicore's Outdoor Q BARGAIN PLAZA4 SALE BEGINS MONDAY, JUNE 10 N ui.enticore Bookshop 336 MAYNARD good of that genre, unrestrained and unihibited. They are either pure fun or overwhelmingly heart- rending - there is no middle ground. The best song of the lot is an old Bill Monroe tune, "20-20 Vision." A song of lost lose, Martin makes the song all tis with his unique interpreta:ion. "I've been to the doctor, he says I'm all rightI know %nat he's lyin', I'm losin' my sight he should have examined :he eyes of my mind 20-20 visiiia and walkin' round blind." The Sunny Mountain Boys are a more than able backup ve- hicle. The banjo, guitar, bass and mandolin blend together like interlocking gears on fine machinery. The one flaw in the Martin show, however, is the female vocalist, Gloria Belle. She is nowhere near the stature of Tammy Wynette or Dolly Par- ton. Her voice is, at best, unin- teresting, and listening to her do "Keep on the Sunny Sde" made me long for Maybelle Carter's original version. The second act on the bill was the P-Bell's regulars, "The R.F.D. Boys." No one can real- ly steal the show away froi a man like Martin, but it's quite an accomplishment when you come close. The Boys came close, awfully close. Here is a group that is very talented and perform with a high degree of skill and verve. They mix traditional and mod- ern material in just the right amount. (I wonder if Jimmy Martin knew what "Down to Seeds and S t e m s Again" moans?) They closed out their set with a brilliant rendition of that grandaddy of f i d d I e tunes, "Orange Blossom Special." The technical expertise needed to play that song is enormous, and they did it flawlessly. If you haven't heard the R.FD. Boys yet, by all means do no. They seem incapable of disap- pointing an audience. In 1890, according to one story, a New England woman used baking soda instead of cream of tartar while making peanut taffy. Her mistaxe became known as peanut brittle. (Continued from Page s) audience selects the subject matter, yes, but the cast over- lays the audience's choices onto one of several pre-planned stock situations. The actual dialogue of each scene is composed "on spot." The general flow and toe. blocking are, however, for the most part rehearsed in ad- vance. Such preparation frees the cast at showtime from hav- ing to work with the mechanical details of performance and per- mits them to concentrate solely on "writing" the "script." The advance work also makes possible coordination between music - aptly prepared and performed by Diane Bulgarelli - the action out front. Admit- tedly, some spontaneity is lost, but Extension's finale 'situation' -a Broadway musical parody Slaughterhouse 5 Friends of Newsreel 7:30, 9:30 Kurt Vonnegut Jr.'s Slaugh- terhouse 5 is a fascinating work about the bombing of Dresden in 1945, and is a vivid picture of the futility of war. The film made of the novel is very ac- curate, and does not lose the- theme that Vonnegut intended, as so many films adapted from books do. The main character, Billy Pil- grim, is messed up in time. He is at Dresden, in Schenectady, and on the planet Tralfamador all at the same time. He is a gentle person who is constant- ly victimized by the people around him. The direction is well carried out, and helps to create the proper effect. The acting is good, but there seems to be a few rough spots. If you are a fan of Vonnegut, then this film should not be missed. -David Warren Golden Voyage Arnold Golden Voyage: Michigan Arnold: State The other night in a dream I saw two of the worst movies I can ever remember seeing: Arnold and The Golden Voyage of 4Siabad. Not only were they just bad pieces of film, b u t they didn't do much for my - would not otherwise be p- sible. Generally, the show's staging comes of fquite well, given the Rubayiat's ad hoc thrust plat- form - four tables with felt thrown over them. An interesting touch is the closed-circuit TV system the management installed so that patrons seated at the bar - which is placed at right angles to the stage - could have an unimpaired view of the action. Extension continues at the Rubayiat Wednesday through Saturday nights until August 10, with ticket prices scaled from $1 to $2.50. Theatergoers should mark it as a must on their schedule because - to para- phrase M c G o w a n ' s com- ment during a VD skit - Ex- tension is "something to clap about." toiui'14ht ego: I was about the only per- son in both theaters. There was some small excite- ment toward the end of Sinbad: some sexy squeals, insinuating laughs, and helpless giggles. Un- fortunately, I soon realized that this was not part of the film- two ushers Krebs and Veronsky, were playing footsie in the last row. Oh, why didn't my editors, Blomquist and Fink, steer me clear of these bombs? F o r heavens sake don't make the same mistake I did - avoid these two dregs at all costs -Louis Meldmian Spike's Gang The Movies, Briarwood Lee Marvin again asserts him- self as a master performer, playing .Harry Spikes in this sur- prisingly amusing western - 'surprisingly" amusing because it happens to be nothing more than the story of three young kids, tired of the chores of home, who run away and get hooked up with the fiercest and meanest bank robber in the world. Still, Spike's wisdom and mel- low nature draws the three lads to him; somehow, he has a deep-down loneliness which lets him be their idol. The picture was shot in Spain, with director Richard Fleischer doing a fine job of tying and keeping the movie together. -Louis Meldman 'The Extension': Fun PD. POL. ADV. Who Should Control Public Schools? STUDENTS are directly affected by the schools. Yet by law they cannot serve on the boards that run those schools. Students should have a determ- ining voice in the governing of their schools. WORKERS should have power to determine their own working conditions. All school employees, including busdrivers, teachers, secretaries, and cus- todial workers, must have their constiutional and human rights guaranteed. These rights include the right to strike and to form and join unions. PARENTS and non-staff non-student members of the community must be adequately represented on community school control boards. Present and past School Boards have consistently ignored input from the community they supposedly serve. HRP feels that the community should control their school. HRP also supports an immediate end to all forms of discrimination in the public schools, including racism, sexism, ageism, and tracking. The Human Rights Party is running two candi- dates in a supposedly non-partisan election. School Boards are political, as are their individual members. With Astrid and Larry, you know exactly what their politics are and what they would do when elected. Write in Larry MANN Vote Astrid BECK JUNE 10 Jbm nu Rahx1 at "IT CAN BE SAID, SIMPLY AND WITH THANKS, THAT IT IS AN ABSOLUTELY TERRIFIC MOVIE" Jaycocka Time Magazine THE THREE MUSKETEEIRS Ai-at t --t SG ES T TCfNICOLtOf-- tatsPRIN tel lsst5