-wm n T T e ..............:... a. ...>::....35i. "t iGi >:>;:......": >::::;: =:;;%::::.... .: r.,;: s:;";rr:>:a:-:rrs:;:_y;:::n ;:; p:>:::->:: ::::.: >:;:: ::a::::>s:.>::"::a:"::a<:::t":::.... COVER STORY An alternative education Page1. Community High School is Ann Arbor's "school without walls," where students can design their own education. Anything is fair game-from traditional literature to working at McDonald's. Skateboarders and future actors come together in this non- traditional setting to learn about math and music and Weekend takes a look at how. Cover photo by Doug McMahon. MUSIC In the mood for music Page 4 This week Ann Arbor offers the best in classic rock 'n roll with the Moody Blues as well as classic jazz with Joco Pastorius. The Moody Blues bring favorites such as "Nights in White Satin" to Crisler Arena Saturday night while Pastorius fills the U-Club Sun- day night with jazzy sounds. Don't miss this week's previews as they psyche you for this weekend's musical events. DISCS Culture and young stuff Page 5 Boy George has found the secret formula to suc- cessful pop tunes and his latest effort with Culture Club, Colour by Numbers is definitely in keeping with the style of his previous works. Also, Britain's top act Paul Young has released No Parlez. Catch this week's reviews and see what's in store for you in the world of discs. FILM Duvall goes director Page 6 Angelo My Love is the touching story of a young gypsy boy who must grow up before his time. Robert Duvall makes his first directorial-debut in this realistic film that follows the gypsy-boy Angelo. This week's review let's you know if this movie is for you. THE LIST Happenings Pages 7-9 Your guide to fun times for the coming week in Ann Arbor. Film capsules, music previews, theater notes and bar dates-all listed in a handy-dandy, day-by- day schedule. Plus a weekly feature on your favorite foods. THEATER Biblical tales Page 11 The Professional Theater Program's production of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat promises to be a PTP success, according to this week's theater preview. The play that lit up Broad- way will surely light up the night for the elite Ann Ar- bor crowd looking for something a little different as theatrical productions go. FEATURES Historic tid-bits Page 14 The history of the Michigan Theater is as majestic as Russ Collin's plans for its renovation. This week, Weekend takes an in-depth look at the theater's past, present, and future. Don't miss the deta'ils on one of the Ann Arbor community's most revered locales. DANCE) Ballet Kozlov Page15 The University Musical Society proudly presents Leonid and Valentina Kozlov Saturday along with the 10-member International Corps de Ballet. Get ready for beautiful ballet with this week's dance preview. ; Weekend Weekend Vol. IIIssue 7 Magazine Editors .....................Mare Hodges Susan Makuch Sales Manager ......................Meg Gibson Assistant Sales Manager ............ Julie Schneider Weekend is edited and managed by students on the staff of The Michigan Daily at 420 Maynard, Ann Ar- bor, Michigan, 48109. It appears in the Friday edition of the Daily every week during the University year and is available for free at many locations around the campus and city. Weekend, (313) 763-0379 and 763-0371; Michigan Daily, 764-0552; Circulation, 764-0558; Display Adver- tising, 764-0554. Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily. Starry night Kozlovs and Stars University Musical Society Power Center 8 p.m., Saturday, October 29 By Ellen Rieser T HE OCTOBER 29TH arrival of Leonid and Valentina Kozlov and company in Ann Arbor as part of their national tour'promises to be one of the glittering high points of the University Musical Society's 1983-84 season. The recent cutbacks in the National Endowment for the Arts' -dance touring/dance residency program have resulted in less visits to smaller com- munities and less tours by companies overall. It seems that fewdance com- panies can afford to make the trip to Ann Arbor anymore. Nevertheless, with the Kozlovs' concert, Ann Arbor, dance fans can rejoice in an oppor- tunity to see live some of the people they ordinarily only read about. For those of you who may have forgotten (or are not ballet trivia buf- fs), the Kozlovs are two Soviet ballet dancers who defected to the United States in 1979 while on tour with the Bolshoi - the same tour from which Alexandr Godunov had earlier defec- ted. After Godunov's defection, Soviet security on the Bolshoi's dancers tightened greatly. Furthermore, the Kozlovs' knew that the KGB had also heard rumors that a married couple was planning to defect. It might not have seemed a good time to try to escape to the West under these circum- stances. However, the Kozlovs were keenly aware that artists associated with a tour from which there has been a defec- tion tend to be tarred by association - they are frequently kept back from the next few tours abroad. Accordingly, after the Bolshoi's last American appearance in Los Angeles, the Kozlovs decided it was now or never. °After a performance of Romeo and Juliet, the Kozlovs left the auditorium by a little-used and hence unguarded back door, spent the night MATH (MAJORS/MINORS! APTITUDE).. . You're Needed All Over the World. Ask Peace Corps Moth volunteers why their degrees ore needed in the class- rooms of the world's developing nations. Ask them Why ingenuity and flexibility are as vital as adapring to a different cul- rure. They'll tell you their students know Moth is the key to a solid future. And they'll tell you that Peace Corps odds up to a career experience full of rewards and accomplishments. Ask them why Peace Corps is the toughest job you'll ever love. I PEACE CORPS sleeping in a van, and the next morning went to a local police station to ask for asylum. Several hours later, the Kozlovs were under the protection of the United States. After their defection, the Kozlovs spent the next three years in a hectic schedule of touring and performances with many different companies as guest artists. They danced with such prominent troupes as the Milwaukee Ballet, the Jackson Ballet, and London Festival Ballet, the Australian Ballet, and the Caracas Ballet (which was reincarnated as the Caracas New World Ballet, seen last week at Power Center). Leonid and Valentina Kozlov staged ballets for various companies; they participated in arts festivals; and they somehow found time to also become ar- tistic directors of the Classic Ballet of New Jersey, a state-supported com- pany with aspirations of becoming professional. For a time, it seemed that if a stage existed, no matter how grand or how humble, then the Kozlovs had either just performed there or were due in town next week. Just like other Soviet ballet dancers, upon defection, the Kozlovs had said that they wanted artistic freedom and that they wanted to expand their reper- toire. These same sentiments have been expressed by other recent defec- tors - who then joined American Ballet Theatre where they danced such "new" and "modernistic" -ballets as Swan Lake and Giselle. Thus, the Kozlovs' statements were received with scep- ticism by many. Nevertheless, in March of this year, the Kozlovs surprised nearly everyone by joining the New York City Ballet. They may actually stay and make a success of it. Baryshnikov too had at- tempted, for a year or so, to drink from Balanchine's artistic spring; however, he was already a principal dancer,, molded in a style alien to the sharp angularity of the NYCB. The Kozlovs came to the United. States as promising soloists but hardly stars. Their extensive guest-artist ex- perience exposed them to new and dif- ferent styles of ballet when they were not yet "set" in their approach. Indeed, Valentina Kozlov has been getting good reviews of her performances with the. NYCB. It will be interesting to see the effect of the Bolshoi's bravura technical training combined with the NYCB's emphasis on speed and flexibility. For the Ann Arbor portion of their tour, the Kozlovs are accompanied by WHAT DO YOU CALL A PERSON WHO'S HAD ONE TOO MANY? The Kozlovs; Free at last what is essentially a pick-up company of eight friends and acquaintances. Three of the Pennsylvania Ballet's best young dancers, Deidre Duffin, Tamara Hadley, and William De Gregory, will appear- with the Kozlovs along with An- ne Marie De Angelo, until recently one of the stars of the Joffrey Ballet. (Un- fortunately, Katherine Healey, who had been expected to appear on the tour, had to cancel.) The Kozlovs' program for tomorrow evening is an ambitious one. It will in- clude a few standards: the Act II pas de deux from Giselle (Valentina Kozlova and Leonid Kozlov) and a diver- tissement from Don Quixote. The program will also include two rarities, however: a beautiful pas de deux that is a Bolshoi favorite, Grand Pas Classique, and the pas de six from La Vivand by Arthur A specia ce of a sec unusual si nsylvania celebratio Alexander when the:. formed at how well a fare by its is someth excel at a piece shou A few ot the rest of would spa So, run, ge Whether y pert - thi should see 4 1 Call him a cab! That's an old joke-not like drunk driving. The new law isn't funny when you get-caught. It's embarrassing having your name in the paper. And it costs money. And takes time. Aside from being dangerous. So. if you know someone who shouldn't be driving, make them walk. . . or call them a Yellow Cab-help eliminate drunk driving. YELLOW CAB 663-3355, 663-4244 0 m m E m 2 Weekend/October 28, 1983. 15