ARTS Friday, February 6, 1981 The Michigan Doily Page 5 This week in, A 2 MUSIC Human Sexual Response/The Busboys-Boston band Human Sexual Response . features four lead singers and an innova- tive musical format even more alluring than their name. The Busboys rocked themselves into the public eye with a brilliant performance on Saturday Night Live. Catchy, rhythm-based New Wave style. Second Chance, Monday, February 9. THEATRE I Can't Hear the Birds Singing-The third production in PTP's Guest Artist series, this original drama stars Earl D. A. Smith, an infinitely talented actor from the Detroit area. Smith plays Walt, a black factory worker determined to rise above the poverty of his parents. By Brenda Faye Collie, winner of the Lorraine Hansberry Playwriting Award for black drama. Power Center, February 11-15 at 8 p.m., with a Sunday matinee at 2 p.m. Voodoo Macbeth-The three minute witches sequence in Shakespeare's Macbeth is the subject of this play by Orson Welles. The director has reset the play in darkest Africa replete with voodoo witch doctors and an all encompassing touch of the eerie occult. This is the first time the play has been produced since 1936 and God knows when it will be done again. Catch it! Quirk Theatre, Eastern Michigan University, February 10-14 at 8 p.m., and Feb. 15at 7 p.m. Minority fest at East Quad . Q(ZC By PATRICIA SCHAEFER "We want to expose students to the arts and cultures of different groups, to develop an appraciation of minority experiences," says Hayward Maben, one of the directors of the Seventh An- nual Minority Arts and Cultural Festival, taking place this weekend at East Quad. The event, which will emphasize black culture and awareness, will in- clude poetry readings, a jazz concert, mime shows, ethnic dancing, gospel music, a political workshop, and karate and art exhibitions. THIS YEAR's edition of the festival, which began in 1974 as a showcase for minority students in East Quad, has at- tracted campus-wide attention and par- ticipants from Metropolitan Detroit, according to Maben and co-director Annie Malayang. Among the highlights of this year's festival are: " a panel workshop on "Strategies of Social Change for Peoples of Color" Friday afternoon, focusing on planning of grass roots organizations. The panel will specifically address the problems of racism, unemployment, and the lack of educational opportunities'as well as discussing methods of prompting minority cultures in the community; " a fashion/performing arts show Saturday, night, which will exhibit clothes from local stores and showcase African and Hispanic dances, a mime show, singing, and jazz music; " a Saturday afternoon presentation from black fraternities and sororities on campus, accompanied by slide shows and an exhibit of assorted paraphernalia;" and " a benefit dance Friday night to provide funding for four East Quad Minority Scholarships of $25 each. The awards-will be granted on the basis of grade-point averages and extra- curricular activities. The festival began last night with Mayor Robert Blackwell of Highland Park speaking on "1981-1985-The Outlook for Minorities" during the opening ceremonies followed by a jazz concert featuring the Lyman Woodard Organization from Detroit. The warm- up band was the local MC2. The event is sponsored by the East Quad Representative Assembly, University Housing-special Projects, the Residential College, and the Michigan Student Assembly. WINTER 1981 BALLROOM DANCING DATE Mar 4,11,25 April 1, 8 TIME 7-9 pm PLACE Ballroom COST Couple $22, SingIe12 Register N OW ; at TICKET CENTRAL, 1st floor Union CINEMA 11 presents TONIGHT-Friday 7:00 & 9:00 Aud. A, Angell HIP SHORT NIGHT (please note revised program) A special program of seven films hand-picked to catapult you into grooviness. Beat poets Allen Ginsburg and Gregory Corso star in Pull My Daisies, narrated by Jack Kerouac. Ron Reagan is made a monkey in "foreign Press Awards" by Jane Mansfield and Mickey Rooney. Days of Dissent is a student film on the 1969 war moratorium. Also shown will be Stan Vanderbeck's Breath Death, Man Ray's Emak Bakia, acclaimed jazz short 'Jammin' the Blues, and the satirical Muscle Beach party. I:. American Cancer Socie ty)~ Thsspace otrbu t e v h )DIhl SAT., Feb. 7 7:00 & 10:00 Aud. A, Angell s Xerox art by Dan Mulholland ART Xerox Art-Moving from the storefronts and telephone poles of Ann Arbor to the walls of a local grocery, Dan Mulholland opens an exhibition of xerox art entitled "Rockets From Flint." Mr. Mulholland, lead singer with the Urbations, selects his images from a fascinating catalogue of blues punks, hot rods, highway cliffhangers and 50's surrealism. Many of the posters are surprisingly affordable, so check it out at the Dreyfuss Gallery, 2091/2 N. Main. Two days only, February 6,7-9 p.m. and Feb. 7, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. MOVIES The Chase-Arthur Penn's supposed "first masterpiece" is relentlessly terrible, and you can have a wonderful time watching all these respectable folk act as if they're in heat-Jane Fonda, Robert Redford, Marlon Bran- do (the only one in on the joke), Robert Duvall, Angie Dickinson, etc. Lillian Hellman, who wrote the original script, claimed interference; Pen can only claim temporary insanity. This is the penultimate in-the-heat-of- the-night southern mellers, complete with lynch mobs and martyrs and heaving breasts-all the worse for being heavily dunked in Meaning. Oh, the decay of it all! It's like a Tennessee Williams play at 78 rpm-hyper- ventilation played for tragedy. A scream. Thursday, January 12, 9:00, Lorch Hall. Eight Minutes to Midnight--An anti-nuclear documentary about Dr. Helen Caldicott, President of Physicians for Social Responsibility. At the Detroit Institute of Arts, February 6, 9 p.m. BOOK SALE 10% OFF The list price of all cloth and paperback titles in the store (except textbooks and special orders) FEBRUARY INVENTORY REDUCTION PAIDEIA BOOKS 313 S State Above Wild Men's Clothes EDVARD MUNCH (Peter Watkins, 1976) Munch, crucified by critics in the late 19th century, is now considered one of the seminal figures of Expressionism. To portray this complex character, Watkins suggests the totality of factors that produce an artist. Part biography part sociology, part history, part psychology, part visual analysis, Edvard Munch is a monument to the man whose life and art were a prophecy of the anxiety of the 20th century. (167 min.) SUNDAY, Feb. 8 7:00 & 9:00 Aud. A, Angell JULES AND JIM (Francois Truffaut, 1961) This is the film that propelled Truffaut to the head of the French New Wave. Although it evokes the romantic nostalgia before the First World War, Jules and Jim exquisitely illuminates a modern woman, Catherine (Jeanne Moreau), amoral and classically beautiful, who loves two fraternal friends and must have them both. "Will rank among the greatest lyrical achievements of the screen." Pauline Kael, French with subtitles. (104 min.) NEXT WEEK: Tue-FACE TO FACE, Thurs-THE ORGANIZER & THE WOBBLIES, FrL OBSESSION, Sat. & Sun. DON GIO- VANNI (A* Premiere) Join olJhe a atIV Arts Staff "Y"SUMMER CAMPS The Ann Arbor Y is now accept- Ing applications for staff posi- tions at the following camps: CAMP AL-GON-QUIAN; a resident camp for boys and girls located on Burt Lake in northern Mich. Camp dotes are June 22 to August 8. Senior staff positions, ages 18 and above are available in the following areas: horseback rid- ing, sailing, canoeing, arts and crafts, trips direc- tor, archery, nature, woodworking, riflery, land sports, swimming and water skiing. Salary plus room and board. CAMP BIRKETT: A day camp for boys and girls located on Silver Lake near Pinckney. Camp dates are June 22-August 21. Senior staff positions, ages 18 and above are available in the following areas: Archery, swimming, sailing, canoeing, arts and crafts, and nature. Applications and additional In- formation regarding positions at both camps may be obtained by contacting the Ann Arbor Y. 350 South Fifth Ave. Ann Arbor or calling (313) 663-0536. In 1931, King Alfonso of Spain went in- to exile and a Spanish republic was proclaimed.