ARTS The Michigan Daily Sunday, January 17, 1982 Page 5 Innovative duo By Gina Di Maria E VERY CORNER of Trueblood Theatre was used in Friday night's presentation of Dances For 2, a program choreographed and perfor- med by Susan Matheke and Willie Feuer. The Trueblood Theater, now in arena form, was effective as the stage, allowing one not only to watch the ac- tions of the dancers, but the reactions of the audience. A curtain never went up or down; and the backdrops were the faces of the viewers. It was the first time Dances For 2 had performed at the theater. "Bits of the dances had to be altered," Matheke said, but it was a nice change. Premiered were Matheke and Feuer's solos, Interior and Ether. Interior began with heavy sounds of piano and alto sax. Matheke reacted with leaps and leg extensions that swept her around the stage. However, as the music mellowed, her movements became less outward and more inward. Wrapping "around herself" and using the floor with her whole body was a well-designed contrast to the sweeping beginning. Ether's "music" was a reading by James Martin on endurance sleeping, a parody on endurance running, while Feuer "sleep-walked" across stage. Though a wonderfully new approach to dance, it didn't quite work. The spotlight was on one too many persons. Had Martin been just a "voice,"atten- tion would not have been diverted from Feuer. Concentration on the syn- copation of movement and words would have been greater had Martin not been there. Other dances were the duets Rumble, Swamp, and The Crane's Waltz, which originally premiered last June in New York City. With Rumble, Matheke and Feuer appeared black and sleek in costume. Like flirtatious birds they moved from dances soft arabesque lines to wing flapping. After creating more facial expressions than most dancers allow themselves, they enhanced their story with a touch of vaudeville drama. Heavy footing and heavy breathing as well as light jungle tactics were in- corporated by the dancers as they took us through the Swamp. Jumping into steadfast plies, creeping and crawling amidst "tall reeds", they waited for an imagined enemy. For the finale, Dances For 2 glided through The Crane's Waltz, light and leggy, preening their feathers and en- joying their grandeur. Combining themes of nature into human expression as a modern dance form was accomplished successfully, balancing the serenity of the cranes with the sense of urgency one would feel in a swamp. Dances For 2 mixes innovation, liveliness, and expert execution to provide an entertaining as well as stimulating dance program. Willie Feuer and Susan Matheke in Dance For 2 'Mareos JmIaintainls strict controlO in Philippines MANILA, Philippines (AP)- One year after he proclaimed martial law lifted, President Ferdinand Marcos maintains strict control over nearly every aspect of Philippine life. Opponents say nothing has changed since Jan. 17, 1981, when Marcos issued his proclamation to end eight years of the state of emergency. "DURING THE past year, various superficial, cosmetic changes have been blown up to appear as major advances in democratization. They are nothing of the sort," says former state university president Salvador Lopez. When martial law was ended, Marcos retained the right to restrict freedoms in the interest of national security and to make new law by decree. His orders have ranged from a ban on video game machines to restored levies in the coconut industry. Last year, Marcos played host to Pope John Paul II, a boost to Marcos' prestige in this overwhelmingly Roman Catholic country. The president also halted a spate of terrorist bombings in Manila, weathered economic problems and won a new six-year term. HIS BACKERS hailed him as the hero of Cancun, the economic summit in Mexico at which poorer countries from the Southern Hemisphere confronted the industrialized north. There, Marcos developed closer ties with his seatmate-President Reagan. Reagan has cracked down on Philippine dissidents in the United States and is pushing a Philippine ex- tradition treaty. And he has invited Marcos to Washington for an official visit. The end of martial law has meant little to the average Filipino, whose annual average earnings are equivalent to $734 a year at a time of rising unem- ployment and a decline in the value of the peso. THAT POVERTY contrasts with the wealthy elite and with the glitter of a government-financed inter- national film festival that opens tomorrow in a $20 million building ordered by the first lady. There is a growing middle class in Manila that patronizes two new U.S. fast-food restaurants, shop- ping malls and the city's 100 movie houses. The end of martial law has meant a freer press, but the freedom is untested. Some magazines and small newspapers regularly attack Marcos, but the major media don't: They are owned by Marcos' relatives and friends. STRIKES ARE permitted, unless Marcos deter- mines they're not in the national interest. There have been few student demonstrations in recent months, and none have been violent. Several groups have said they will take on Marcos politically, but none has won a national following. His New Society Movement holds nearly every office and is the only accredited political party. Marcos is pressing officials to find Tommy Manotoc, 32, who disappeared Dec. 29 after dining with Marcos' daughter, Imee, 26. Manotoc secretly married Imee last year in Arlington, Va., according to documents there. His family has accused Marcos of being behind the disappearance because he didn't approve of the marriage. Marcos has blamed Manotoc's disappearance on rebels. Doctors (Continued from Page 1) by two San Diego State University marketing professors reported that "lose to one-half of the sample ex- pressed the, belief that advertising would force physicians to. be more responsive to consumers' needs and wants, improve consumers' awareness and knowledge of doctors, assist them in making a better selection of physicians and thus affect their choice of a doctor." The authors maintain that "in- creasing competition could lead to lower medical fees, but it was not believed that advertising would stimulate overall demand for doctors' services." "The research has shown that adver- tising by physicians will not reflect ad- versely on this profession," wrote the marketing professors, because con- Course examines black role In -media divided on advertising French reject IU I sumers will be responsive to it. Never- theless, they add, "the present study has shown that the majority of the public is ignorant of the legal status of advertising liy doctors. This is not sur- prising, given the recency of legislative developments on the topic of professional advertising." Legally, doctors may advertise in whatever fashion and to any extent they please. According to Warren Pryloff, Direc- tor of the Michigan State Medical Society, the issue before the court is not simply advertising, but the gover- nment's attempt to take self-regulation away from professional societies such as the AMA, "The AMA is simply trying to clarify who has jurisdiction," Pryloff said, ad- ding that the Michigan chapter con- tinues to permit the practice of "free and open advertising." "It (the advertising) has to be ac- curate, that's all," said Pryloff. "We are not aware of any physicians adver- tising anything inappropriate.'We, (the AMA) know what's going on," he ad- ded. Pryloff maintains that the adver- tising issue has never really affected the Michigan chapter, because there are no official prohibitions or guidelines. "There is no regulation of fees," said Richard Robb, Chairman of the Washtenaw District Dental Association which also would be affected by the court's ruling. "What we hope people will do is advertise fairly and respon- sibly," he added. Robb maintains that widespread ad- vertising and government regulation will decrease the overall quality of patient care. "I am opposed to it (regulation)," Robb said. "I think it(the FCC) is a large bureaucratic organization that can't do anadequate job. ' Robb said like most professional societies, dentistry maintains local "peer review committees" to self-- monitor their profession. Seventy per- cent to 80 percent of complaints by con- sumers are settled at the local level, he said. "We have a peer review commit- tee," explained Robb, "and if anyone would like to file a complaint, they are able. The ultimate (peer review decision) is revocation of the license.'' Edwin Bladen, Michigan Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Economic Crime Division and the Anti- trust Unit, said that regardless of the AMA's arguments, any professional society that bans or otherwise restricts advertising is in violation of the law. "The first amendment does protect a person's right to advertise prices of their services," Bladen said. Daily Classifieds Get Results- Call 764-0557 plan to nationalize PARIS (AP)- The Constitutional principles of nationalization conf9rm to Council dealt a setback to Socialist the constitution but the legislation does President Francois Mitterrand's am- ~not provide enough compensation to bitious economic program yesterday by stockholders of groups targeted for rejecting essential parts of a bill to takeover. nationalize 36 banks, five industrial The council, created by the con groups and two major investment com- stitution of 1958, is made up of nine panies. jurists who oversee presidential anc The ruling means Parliament must parliamentary elections, and rule or modify six articles and one amendment the constitutionality of legislation. Con in the 50 article bill before it can., servative opposition groups asked the become law. council to rule on the nationalizatior The nine-member council said the program. 375 N MAPLE ~I 769-1300 in MAPLE VILLAGE SNPG CTR7910 BARGAIN SHOWS $2.N Bforo B Pm Monri ;efore 3 PM SotSun JOHN 1:15 3:15 STEVE MARTIN BEWUSHI 5:15 1:15 DAN 7:15 9:20 Pennies '4:00 AYKROYDFRO7:00 NEIGHBORS® Ha vnR9 ..hysole histr?13 -JOHN CLEESE 1:30 3:30 SEAN CONNERY 4:00-5:30 TIME 7:30 T'.rrs O 1- 'Continued from Page ) University President Robben Fleming, who is also former president of the Cor- poration for Public Broadcasting; ac- tress Jayne Kennedy; and Benjamin Hooks, former director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The lectures will be open to the public and taped for the Center for Afroamerican and African Studies. Scott, 34, studied at the University and has been working in media since 1966. He began at WGPR in Detroit as an announcer and producer and has since worked for the state Civil Rights Commission. He also has been nominated for two Emmy awards-one for "An Evening with Bobby Seales," a 1976 interview with the former Black Panther leader and for "56 Reports," a weekly news- magazine he produced in 1980 for WT- VS-TV (Channel 56) in Detroit. Haldeman 'home movies' to air on television Support the March of Dimes, W"" M = DEFECTS FOUNOAT1OPN LOS" ANGELES (AP)-A series of home movies shot by H. R. Haldeman at the Nixon White House is being edited for distribution as six hour-long TV specials, Haldeman and an in- dependent producer say. The Super-8 film has been edited and transferred to videotape by Jim Devaney and JPD Enterprises of Rolling Hills Estates, and Executive Television Productions, a Canadian producer, Devaney said. "It's an unprecedented film," Devanay said. "Never in history has a presidency been filmed from inside the White House." "THE EFFECT will be to bring back some of the reality and dismiss some of the myths," said Haldeman. Haldeman, a home movie buff, shot some 20,000 feet of presidential activity during the Nixon years, 1968-74, in- cluding plans for Tricia Nixon's wed- ding, the return of then-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger from a secret trip to China in 1972, and Nixon giving former President Harry Truman the White House piano. c mon Change Your Evening Routine. Try Us. ApI___ ree The Collaborative An Alternative Art Experience Registration Begins: January 11 Classes Begin: FehraIjarv 1 ... 5th Av. at Liber ty 710700 SAT, SUN $1.50 til 6:00 (except "REDS") "A CLASSIC LOVE STORY" -Ann Arbor News Port burlesque, part satire FELLINI CiTY oFv \A/C)FN Wrren Beatty ©° ogL p7 I i