ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, March 19, 1986 Page 5 I jMuseum brings diversity By Lisa Leavitt Isolated in the midst of an expan- sive and empty desert, a woman desperately wanders in search of some sign of life. Gradually sinking in quicksand up to her waist she stuggles futilely to get to the land just beyond her reach. Surreal and nightmarish, this scene embodies overwhelming gloom as the common fear of complete alienation is visualized. The sensation created in this work by Salvador Dali is quite opposite from the feeling one gets when visiting the new exhibit at the Univer- sity of Michigan Museum of Art. Surrounded by life in the form of over one hundered works of art from a wide range of cultures, time periods, and media, the observer can view the finest works of public collections from all over the state of Michigan in the Michigan Masterpieces exhibition. There is incredible diversity in this celebratory exhibition compiled by the Detroit Institute of Arts. Im- pressive artists included in this major show are Rembrandt, Picasso, and El Greco. Cultures from all over the world such as Asian, African, European, and American are represented. The exhibit encom- passes art ranging from Greek sculp- ture from the second century B.C. to abstract art of the twentieth century. Composing wildly brilliant colors and swirling shapes in four expressive compositions, the works of Henri Matisse create an intense feeling of movement. The German Expressionist movement is represented by Kathe Kollwitz's Woman and Death. This gruesome and disturbing black and white etching portrays a woman in agony. Entangled with a terrifying skeleton representing death and a small child, the woman cries out in desperation. As death pulls her one way, the innocent child symbolizing life grasps onto her breast. The woman, torn between the two, lunges for life. Two contemporaries, Emil Nolde and Paul Klee, are juxtaposed in the exhibition. Though the works of both are created in watercolor, the two styles are very different. While Klee's work is linear and geometric, Nolde's work is full of vibrant color and void of any lines whatsoever. Though his sculpture called Alphabet Good Humor is a free stan- ding and juicy looking popsicle, it definitely does not look good enough to eat. In fact, it looks as if part of a brain, squishy and convuluted, has been shoved on to a stick. Doesn't sound too tasty does it? If one looks, closely enough, they will see that the convolutions are actually letters of the alphabet. The Exhibit will be shown through April 9. Check it out and enjoy. 'Female Transport', at the Performance Network, stars (clockwise) Eli Tucker, Amanda Sutton, Jane Gire, Maureen McGee, Marina Seeman and Jean Graham. hA moo saiing Gargoyle: Apathy rules By Dave Turner As the Ann Arbor area moves in- to one of the busiest theatre times of the year, an interested play-goer should make an effort to get to the Performance Network over the next couple of weeks to see their presentation of Female Transport. The play offers a variety of themes and ideas to the audience without banging them over the head with any one in particular, and leaves the viewer well enhanced by the experience. Female Transport is written by English playwrite Steve Gooch and tells the story of six female prisoners on a voyage to Austrailia during the early nineteenth cen- tury. The women are seen as lamentable products of a society which treats them as captives even when they are not imprisoned, and their enchained situation further enhances this idea. The cast is filled out by four males whose job it is to serve different authorities' interest in the prisoners. The cap- tain sees the women as cattle who must reach their destination so that he can be paid, and the surgeon upholds their physical value by keeping them at sub- sistence level. The play is a very physical one in which the prisoner's spiritual and human desires are constantly ignored. Director Pauline Gagnon, a theatre student at the U of M, of- fers the audience an interesting political, economic, and historical view besides the more obvious human one. These factors, always being juxtaposed with the human ones, make it sometimes hard to get a firm grasp on the play, but, this is obviously the intent. This requires a little work from the audience, but this is a welcome ef- fort which gives the play a lasting effect. The cast is an accomplished one, although some characters are more fully developed than others. Maureen McGee is a real standout as the card shark Winnie, as is Jennifer Graham in the role of the politically-minded Nance. This character utters some of the play's most memborable lines, such as "It's time we hollered, ain't it?" when the prisoners report a suicide to the crew. The victim of the suicide is Pitty, whose character was unfortunatley underplayed in her few outbursts. The men fulfill their cold, professional roles well, although the more humanitarian sides of the Surgeon and Tommy could do with a little more emotion. This production is an enriching addition to the abundance of theatre currently being produced in the area, and its thematic ap- proach is truly unique and rewar- ding. It continues at the Perfor- mance Network Thursdays through Sundays until March 30. Call 663-0681 for ticket information. By Nicole Pinsky Berke Breathed is laid up, space shuttle jokes are in poor taste, and campus politics just aren't funny anymore. University students are starved for a good, cheap laugh-yet many aren't even aware that a humor magazine is published by students right here on campus. It's the Gargoyle, written and drawn in the Harvard Lampoon spirit of poking fun at absolutely everything. The Garg has a seventy-five year history of hilarity and hijinks, and the latest issue (publication date, "March-ish, 1986") is the funniest in a long while. The new issue's theme is "Apathy" (ironically, and perhaps inten- tionally, it was originally scheduled to come out in December), and it aims to spark some humor and activism on the "pasty" Michigan campus. No clique is spared by the Angry Young A defense against cancer can be cooked up in your kitchen. Call us. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY VOTE!!! VOTE!!! VOTE!!! 1986 GOVERNING BOARD ELECTIONS MARCH 17-21,9 AM -5 PM or mail in your ballot by March 21* AT fJW 1429 HILL ST. Any student on the ili mailing list before FEB. 14, 1986, is eligible to vote!! MAILED BALLOTS MUST BE IN THE HILLEL OFFICE NO LATER THAN MARCH 21 Souls who compiled this issue, and they even manage to get their message across: laughing at our own passivity, we begin to question it. Af- ter all, why is it that, as editor Danny Plotnick moans, "nobody buys the Garg?" If nothing else-and it is something else-the "Apathy" issue is a great sales ploy. The new Gargoyle doesn't limit its targets to Ann Arbor, by any means:. two of the funniest things in it are an exchange of letters with Marvel Comics over a possible lawsuit and a comic-strip rendering of a no-holds barred game show. The Garg's han- dling of nuclear war, Cherry Choke, South Africa, and other worldly con- cerns is so professional that Univer- sity students experience a proud thrill to recognize their very own Village Corner in a photo comic at the end of the issue. If the Garg has had a fault in the past, it's been exclusivity: some past issues have seemed like little more than a series of private jokes between the editors. The present issue, however, avoids this pitfall: we can all relate to CODE and jaded hippies. Read it for the spoof of USA Today. Read it for "Harold Shapiro: A Day in the Life." Read it because it's the University's own and in dire financial straits. But do read the "Apathy" Gargoyle: It's genuinely funny, and that's more than you can say for Newsweek. r Chemical Professionals with Japanese, Reading Skills Career Opportunities at Chemical Abstracts Service 'Official Story'officially intense By Brian Hall The Official Story is a beautifully told tale of human drama. With mar- velous direction, brilliant performan- ces, and an overall superior script, it is well worth seeing. Made in Argen- tina, the film has finally reached Ann Arbor after receiving numerous ac- colades everywhere it has been shown. It stars veteran stage actress Norma Aleandro as Alicia and Hector Alterio as Roberto and was written and directed by Luis Puenzo. The Official Story is about a woman's search for the truth surrounding her adopted daughter's origins. The movie centers around Alicia, a history teacher who one day tells her students that "no people's can survive without memories." The film will exploit this statement to mean that no peoples, or persons, should live without memories, and that they must honestly face the past, if there is to be a better future., Roberto and Alicia are a happily married couple with a beautiful, adopted daughter named Gaby. They are very well off and live what initially appears to be a normal existence. For Alicia, this existence will soon be shattered, when an old friend recounts her horror of being imprisoned by the former military government. She tells Alicia about the great number of women who had been imprisoned and had their babies taken away from them. Alicia is shocked. Could her beloved baby ac- tually have been the child of a woman imprisoned by the former regime? She becomes compelled to find the truth. Puenzo frequently exposes the viewer to the love and closenss shared between Alicia and Gaby and shows how protective of her child she is. The director places this in opposition to those women who were thrown in prison and could not become close to or protect their children. They were taken away and given to those people whom the government knew would 'ask no questions." The statement "ask no questions" i begins to take on particular relevan- while others around her were living in poverty, or being imprisoned, or murdered. She had never once questioned her husband about how he came to adopt Gaby. "I always believed what anyone told me, now I can't." "I always thought that her mother didn't want her." But, the more she begins to question her own self, the stronger she becomes, and the more determined she is to find the truth. The film is not perfect, however. The director's constant efforts to jux- tapose Alicia's search for the truth with her everyday life at times becomes annoying, and frequently undercuts the emotion expressed in the preceeding scene. This is a minor problem, however and the viewer un- derstands what the movie is trying to say. Despite the world's occasional atrocities, there is certainly room for hope, and as individuals, we can make a difference. Our fellow man's plight should always concern us and we shotld never make them suffer so we can prosper. Living in an imperialist country, this film takes on particular importance. It is one of the few films that could possibly make the viewer really question his lifestyle. Chemical Abstracts Service, a division of the American Chemical Society, provides state-of-the-art chemical informa- tion services on a world-wide basis. We have created several full-time editorial positions that will allow chemists, bio- chemists and chemical engineers to make an important con- tribution to science by analyzing the world's chemical journal and patent literature. Reading knowledge of Japanese is highly desirable. CAS is located in Columbus, one of the most desirable cities in America. Our salary levels are commensurate with your back- ground and experience and we provide a complete benefits package that includes relocation assistance, tuition reimburse- ment for graduate-level education, a range of insurance pro- grams and continuing opportunities for career growth. To learn mor e about these opportunities, please contact: CHEMICAL ABSTRACTS SERVICE Employment Department P.O. Box 3012 Columbus, Ohio 43210 1-800-848-6538, ext. 3668 -I SUMMER JOBS EARN $3000- $4500THISSUMMER " Exterior House Pointing " 14 Week Minimum Season " Management Opportunities in 1st Year " 40 Hours Per Week " Great Career Experience . " Starting $S Per Hour Woge HURRY! lJk*sTEAM HOUSEPAINTERS Appitetf neo fnes: Minneapolis, Si Paul "N +-.1s pi.m.**kia", (612) 935.9250 Chicago West Suburbs Cleveland Suburbs (312) 65.9209 (248) 831.0957 Chicago North Shore Columbus (312) 459Ex 34( (C14)C 91 1900 %Excting Permanent Careers Also Available.. The University of Michigan has a national reputation for excellence. THE COLUMBIA SCHOLASTIC PRESS ASSOCIATION awards this FIRST PLACE CERTIFICATE to Given at Columbiauniversity in the City of New York, in i ts GoI Circle Awards for 1985 Nor [he !I It lo tit I<'d UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER COMMITTEE CHAIR APPLICATIONS MUSKET Soph Show Mediatrics Michigras Minicourses VipxAmnint ,Pturps Impact Jazz Comedy Company College Bowl Starbound Homecoming