ARTS Thursday, November 3, 1983 6oej. The Michigan Daily n gory glory and other histronic cliches More than 48 fun hoursi HJOSTILITY. It flows in the air like some thick, virulent com- municable disease; everybody has it, but the organism is as yet uniden- tified. Tempers are short, sighs are long. Everyone suspects the other of being a carrier, but each can easily justify his own actions. Peace- keeping force, indeed. A pleasant Monday afternoon walk on the campus of The University of Michigan, circa Halloween. The wind is a bit chilly, but we have clear sun, a warm jacket, and lunch already digested. In the Diag, Stoney gives the Marines hell ("What are those damn medical students doing down there anyway? You know they're not going to stay'there, that's for sure."). The audience is amiable, amused, not hostile. Now and then an adult throws a suspicious glance. A skeleton mask walks by. A few steps further, out of the Carribean, out of the 20th century: onto the battlefield of Concord and in- to the William L. Clements Library. Director John C. Dann hold up General Thomas Gage's actual quilled order to send troops to a small town in eastern Massachussetts. Visitors icrowd around the yellowed parch- ment, now encased in plastic. There is a sense of great import; a war begins, hostility translates into 'bullets. SAnd there's more. Dann beams as he displays a priceless coded ,manuscript wherein Benedict Arnold betrays his friends, or another spy's detailed map of Valley Forge, one which proved instrumental in the restoration of that site 200 years later. In an original tract from 1777, General Burgoyne takes several pages to alert military superiors to his capitulation 'it Saratoga; victory is swift, defeat a ti e oquacious. - The audience, a group of about 10 visiting dignitaries from around the Big 10 and beyond, is amiable, in- terested, not hostile. This is stark history, in all its glory. TheClements Library is filled with such history, from the solid antique chairs and great wooden tables to the close to 90,000 musky books, maps, and manuscripts dating from 100 to 500 years agao. Though world- renowned for its collection of rare materials, especially of colonial and revolutionary times, the library is seldom frequented by students, out- side of graduate-level researchers who actually use the sources. The bulk of non-scholarly visitors are older non-students, often monied per- sons whom the University hopes to impress. Why the relative paucity of un- dergrads? Because history, while not necessarily bunk, is boring, especially when considered next to the Pistons' new season or the upcoming Fixx concert. The library's impressive facade makes for a cheerful visual. pause, situated as it is between the UGLi and the House of Harold, but few presume to look further. A definite hostility to things dead or hand-bound persists. Most students probably don't even realize that their tuition and tax dollars support the upkeep and ex- pansion of a building they may never enter. The library's long-term con- tract requires that the University provide at least $15,000 annually for new purchases; students also help pay Dann's $34,000 salary, as well as that of his staff. How valuable is it to maintain a prestigious institution during these times of financial distress and preclusively high tuition? Why com- pete with some snooty Eastern colleges and the rest of the private sector? Consider first that the lion's share of library income comes not from the University but from private support. Although large endowments - those on the scale of that made by William L. Clements himself for the building's construction back in 1922 - are rare, the library still manages to raise enough money to support a $100,000 annual purchasing budget. The most expensive acquisition to date, an ex- tremely rare 17th centruy map collec- tion of the West Coast of South America which sold for $200,000, was made possible only through a highly succesful public fund-raising cam- paign. The manuscript was hand- printed around 1690 by William Hack in London, based on illustrated charts pirated from Spanish vessels. Consider further that the library does serve a definite scholarly fun- ction, in addition to a social one. Clements boasts about five to six hun- dred serious users yearly: about half from the University and Southeast Michigan, the rest from all over the nation and the world. Director Dann himself has published several scholarly works, the latest being a very successful volume entitled The Revolution Remembered: Eyewit- ness Acounts of the War for Indepen- dence. Also, the library does serve as an attractive visiting site. The quiet unhurried atmosphere of the place has a decidedly calming effect, on persons looking for an afternoon study spot as much as on tourists. The University uses the spacious main hall for special lectures, teas, and receptions; the resources are made use of. The defense of history, of course, goes far beyond tea ceremonies. The distinctive nature of the Clements collection lies not only in the scarcity of value of its holdings - from Christopher Columbus' newsletter announcement of his first voyage to the certification of George Washington's death - but in the kind of history collected. Rather than con- centrate on analyses or "history books," the library has focused on primary accounts: old newspapers, correspondence, and other first hand material. These are records made with history, instead of afterwards. Thus, we have a letter from Sarah Orne Revere telling Paul not to come back to town for a few days, lest he be imprisoned. The irony of that bit of history arises from the fact that the messenger poor Mrs. Revere en- trusted her cautionary note to was a Dr. Beard, yet another British spy. Another mail service victory. Ultimately, though, the highest value of history lies not in the past but in its present relevance. Lessons to be learned, and all that. And the: truth is that the American Revolution, and the motivations behind it, are of- ten viewed these days in terms of cliches, which is probably why so many students find it tedious. Cer- tainly, philosophic comparisons bet- ween the founding fathers' foresight and current conflicts are tolerated by even the most liberal observers with a touch of sarcasm. But, then, hostility has become a kind of cliche, and, like all cliches, there's a certain fascination in repeating it. Maybe by glancing at the inscrutable twists of forgotten faces we can recognize the different expressions staring back today. Support your local library. By Brad Parks L ET'S FACE IT - movies about politics are dull and boring. They're the kind of thing people from East Quad watch while they smoke dope and talk about Marxism. So you can just be thankful that the new "political" movie in town, Under Fire, isn't like that. Sure, there's politics (what do you expect - it takes place in Nicaragua), but the politics are just a thin ploy to get you into the swiftest, coolest, meanest action-adventure picture since 48 Hours. The reason this movie works is simple - it stars Nick Nolte. If you haven't seen 48 Hours or Who'll Stop the Rain or North Dallas Forty you've been missing the acting sensation of the decade. Nolte doesn't act, he is. In this latest flick he plays Russel Price, an American photojournalist covering the Sandinista uprising against dic- tator Anton Somoza. Like every role he plays, Nolte makes being a photojournalist look like it's the coolest job apthinking, breathing human being could ever have. For convienience, there's a plot (after all, some people - the infidels! - might not be satisfied with just frame upon Nick Nolte ... Nicaraguan photojournalist Record:. Mick Fleetwood - 'I'm No Me' (RCA) Mick Fleetwood is an archetypal band organizer - as a drummer who doesn't sing he has to be - and he's at it again. Fleetwood, co-founder of Fleetwood Mac, has not forsaken the band that has made him famous, but is simply following in the shoes of Fleetwood Mac vocalists Lindsey Buckingham an Stevie Nicks, both of whom have had successful solo albums recently. I'm Not Me, though, is not really a solo project - he has formed a new band, Mick Fleetwood's Zoo. Gathering guitarists Billy Burnette and Steve Ross and bassist George Hawkins, Fleetwood has found a power ful instrumental lineup. Along with their instrumental expertise, all o these three can sing, which gives the band a smorgasbord of vocalists - a la Fleetwood Mac - to mix and match 01 different songs. The band is releasing an MTV vide for "I Want You Back," written by Ros t and Buckingham. Reminiscent at the same time of Fleetwood Mac's recent hit "Hold Me" and Buckingham's own " Trouble," the song should do well on the charts, but it doesn't really reflect the album. The title track seems more to showcase the band at its best. Written by Burdette, it has a paradoxical loose, almost raunchy, sound, yet is basically a very controlled song. If "I Want You Back" does well enough on the charts, "I'm Not Me" could turn into a very successful follow up. Some other tracks worthy of note are a surprisingly enjoyable cover of the N Beach Boys "Angel Come Home," also sung by Burdette, and Hawkin's best contribution to the album, "Tonight," e another song with that loose feeling in - the midst of great control. h The album tries to do a lot of different things but, save a few good songs, it e doesn't come up with much. Many of a the songs have a tired feeling as if theyr n hadsbeen done before, and others seem so over-controlled as to become almost o lifeless. S Joseph Kraus It i I U mm PARTHENON 226 s. Main at 1Libr ty V-0 Xk. _: -5 OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK Ann Arbor Carry Out Service 994-1012 Now Serving Liquor, Imported Greek Wines, Imported Beers. m .. frame of our man Nick). Nolte and his fellow reporter. (Joanna Cassidy - JoJo on T.V.'s "Buffallo Bill") stumble" onto the big "secret" that could determine the outcome oftht revolution. Of course they have to decide what they're going to do with that secret, and ultimately, their own lives (one, guess as to whether or not Nick chooses right over wrong . From that point on the war becomes a steadily closing jet,, and it takes all the dexterity and toughness a person has just to get out alive. Of course this is not to say that the movie doesn't have a political or thematic axe to grind. After all, these are the, huddled masses (The Good Guys) being oppressed by the un-i caring military government (The Bad Guys) with the help.of the CIA (us). And you can have a field day with the theme o'" photographic images vs. "the real thing," and journalitic: objectivity in war vs. being a thinking, caring human being.: But who has the time? Bombs are exploding, people are flying up in the air, and Nick Nolte is acting. ("Whose side- are you on?" a peasant asks. "I don't take sides," Nolte: says, "I take pictures." Too cool.) We ekends The indispensable Kahlua <.-'' Duffle bag: take it on a weekend aboard a plane or to the health club. Brown with white lettering. f. Top zipper closure, heavy M ... canvas handles. 19" x 1.*' y ,.*..{ $22.95each, postpaid.t The Kahlua Purse: smaller version that's big on style. 13"x 8 r ~ $11.95 each, postpaid. Why ordering two is . better than ordering one: ,S fry..4 4{ . , ..... f- . f~ t. . {..;?9: .. "*<' .6 . .' I i 1' Stanley H. 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