The Michigan Daily-Friday, April 15, 1983-Page 7 MS Glee(ful) music from Club The U-M Men's Glee Club will perform at Hill Auditorium Satur- day night, April 16,.at 8 p.m. The concert program will feature several popular college songs, such as "Blue Book Blues," plus the premiere of a song written especially for the University troupe. Also featured will 14e several serious pieces, such as Franz Schubert's "Nachtelle." Patrick Gardner, professor on the conducting faculty of the School of Music, will direct. Tickets are $3, $4, and $5, and $2 for students, and are on sale at the Hill Auditorium Box Office. C Ross University Schools of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine Now accepting applications for study leading to degree in both Medicine and Veterinary Medicine. Courses taught in English. Programs under guidance of American Dean utilizing American curriculum. Transfer students accepted. Semesters begin July and November 1983. We are an accredited school and listed in W.H.O. and affiliated with U.S. hospitals for clinical rotation. Direct inquires to: Ross University Portsmouth, Dominica, WI. Attention: Mr. Butler or Caribbean Admissions, Inc. 16 West 32 Street, New York, N.Y.10001 i The Friars stand as one of the featured attractions at the Men's Glee Club concert tomorrow night at Hill Auditorium. Fun and frolic from CFG I DW By Joe Hoppe C FG'S LAST WALTZ. Mysterious veiled women. The 3-D House of Beef. New wave chicks. Wow, all in a strange and wondrous happening tonight at the Halfway Inn, in the basement of East Quad. CFG stands for Civilian Fun Group, the most popular and widely acclaimed of all of the East Quad basement bands. Groupies are Lawrence Kent, trom- bone, vocals; Jake London, guitar; David Waldenstein, drums; Nick Grif- fen, bass; and John Shaw, guitar. This is their last show because Kent and Griffen have decided to continue their educations in Madrid, Spain, and things just wouldn't be the same for the band without that devil trombone and funky bass. They are not breaking up because of. internal strife, musical dif- ferences, or disgust with the Ann Arbor . music scene. Combined with its last stand status, and all the wildness usually put into a CFG show, tonight should be much fun. The Civilian Fun Group lives up to its name. Kent describes CFG's music as "classical/hardcore with an r&b in- fluence." That fits as well as any other label. The CFG's noise ranges from funky, as in "Jake's Funk" with Lon- don doing a big funked up guitar, to Public Image-like droning to Ian Dury-inspired crackpottiness. Then there's the times when it's just loud and fast. The main thing that defines CFG's music is Kent's elephant-monster tromboning-that's the big thing that stands out. The Civilian Fun Group will be doing all of their old standards tonight: "Pleasure Dog," "Pool Blow" 4(about blowing up the neighbor's swimdming pool and getting in the Detroit News), "Biker Wallets," a sociological thesis- statement, "LS&A," an anthem for the education-minded, "The Space Shuttle is My Life", an anthem for engineers, and "Eat My Funk." Plus, all week each band member has been working very hard on a 20 minute encore version of Lynyrd Skynyrd's "Freebird." The mysterious women in veils that were mentioned so long ago are girl group Black Purda. "Purda" is the Islamic practice of secluding females. The veiled beauties will be singing back-up vocals for CFG. 3-D House of Beef is a parody band, and it'll be their debut performance to get the Inn warmed up. The new wave chicks will be com- peting in a New Wave Chick contest. Prizes haven't been announced yet. Hopefully, they'll be Make Waves gift certificates. This is your final chance to see CFG, so don't you miss it, don't you miss it! The show costs $1, and starts at 9 p.m. Records Ric Ocasek - 'Beatitude' (Geffen) I know it's getting late, but I had to put in a good word for Cars mechanic Ric Ocasek's long-awaited solo albumg, Beatitude. It gives a distinctly different side to the man behind the Boston four- some, bringing out more of the human element than the mechanical aspects that have made the Cars into such mega-bucksters. The smell of change was on the wind with last year's Shake It Up, wherein Ric and crew simmered down and gave us their most smoothly-idling disc * yet. "Since You're Gone," with its ob- vious Dylan twang, and the bright pep- piness of the title song, strayed away from the cold preciseness of Panorama and made many-a summer day easier to enjoy. 7:10 HOFTFMAN 9 uO A LMBAP 10:00 GANDHI 1:30 The Man of 5:00 the Century. 8:30 T ot i No $1 Tues. WINNER 8 OSCARS or Discounts Inc. BEST PICTR 10:00 G N H 12:15 lack ~ - - -----o m - * 7:00 fL 9:30G MSOn 10:00 12:15 DUGA 2:30 DUGAN 5:00 j RETURNS 9:15 *4PGJ' Beatitude finds Ric sans the Autos ('cept for ivoryman Greg Hawkes) and working with a cast of mostly- unknowns. The resulting batch of songs are supposedly closer to the way Ric envisions them-that is, before the other Cars add their two-cents-worths. Some, even, such as the "Shake It Up"- like "Jimmy, Jimmy," are basement- produced demos with Ocasek playing all the instruments. The variety is nice. "Prove" features a finer sax solo than Hawkes has ever blown, "Connect Up To Me" chugs along on a swell sythesizer line, and the concluding "Time Bomb" zings out with a bitingly-overdone guitar solo by Fuzzbee Morse. Pop music's renaissance man? Beatitude promises future fun. -Larry Dean FLASH" U7:15 ~ALIP9:30 U~h1~FRI & SAT 1111:30 Ukeitsrealy 1:00 ttallSHotfn3:00 can hav ou kn 5:00 7:15 G E 9:30 Fri. & ST thkeireat 10 Stotadv tenmotfure.3:00 7:15 $GOF THE 9:30 PICTU RES The 1:00 Outsiders ** Theywere 5 looking to 930 obelong. bong e-L4 BEIIDThEt ,6i ;94 p, QgBUNDPNGCAFEA g 20GT ~ 4P A-2 48103 A~DRIA~N'S T-SHIRT PRINTERY "The very best Porn Film ever made" LAST DAY 01 NAT SCI AUD: 7 Tuesday, A By PopularI The Return OfT ON ,( eAN i V i