-Monday, September 11, 1989- The Michigan Daily - Peg.,9 : :ti {v.;. ii'} {Y ti}., ... :r.; v.-.;},. is y y .: ti;:" .;;:r /'t 4 At IN REVIEWS is the column in which members of the Daily Arts staff get to rhapsodize about their artistic experiences during the previous weekend. REVIEWS appears in Arts each Monday. Who's on 56 Crucify me for geekiness or bad taste, but I happen to think that Dr. Who is just about the coolest TV show around, worth postponing homework for. Channel 56 (that's channel 12 for you cable folk) has been showing old episodes back-to- back on Sunday nights, usually starting around 11 p.m. (the time has an annoying tendency to change, so look it up) and ending a joyous eternity later. The Doctor, as he is usually called, is a Timelord, this guy from somewhere far away who travels through space and time in an English police call box... any fur- ther description of the show would take pages. Just watch for yourself and figure things out for yourself. Dr. Who can be really goofy at times, and the sets and special effects are typically laughable, but that's part of the fun. Watch it with a 1 bunch of friends and predict the end- ing an hour ahead of time. Alyssa Katz ha a~S Gift loses something in delivery Fine Young Cannibals' 70 minute set at the opulent Fox Theater in Detroit on Friday seemed like an evening in front of the MTV saved only by the opening act! backup singers and instrumentalists Mint Julip (fortunately the iffy- when-live Nench Cherry cancelled). Roland Gift's neato voice sounded as great live as it does on vinyl, but their videos reach my soul more than the distant Gift did on stage. Mint Julip's amusing performance added the personability that the shy Cannibals, Andy Cox and David Steele, lacked. The six woman a cappella group from London gained cultural knowledge about American audiences and dropped a pop reference of their own by comparing a male audience member to whom they sang to John Boy Walton. I give it a 75 and you could dance to it. -Annette Petrusso Zen and the art of poetry All summer The sky roared Earth tumbled Morning dove sang For the golden eye of the sun- flower These lyrical phrases by the Venerable Samu Sunim are reminis- cent of the exotic yet serene atmo- sphere of the Zen Buddhist Temple, 7:30 p.m. last Friday. While in- cense spiced the pre-storm breeze and candles flickered around the golden statue sitting cross-legged, the monk spoke in gentle tones of his child- hood in the rice fields and bomb ex- plosions of Vietnam. The softly-lit faces listened attentively as Sunim told the intimate, touching and amusing tale of how he became a monk: he originally wanted to sweep and clean what to him was merely a large house, in exchange for room and board. The friendly, narrative na- ture of this meeting differed slightly from the services offered every Sunday, from 5 to 7 p.m. at the temple, 1214 Packard, which also include chanting (supplemented by text for those unfamiliar with the art) and meditation. -Jay Pinka Some Pig The Grand Re-Opening that the Blind Pig staged this weekend in order to show off its new, slightly yuppified interior - and some new portraits of the great musicians Jim Morrison and Alan Parsons - turned out to be well worth the $13 admisson fee. Friday's showcase starring the Junior Wells Blues Band started out with a strong performance by Ann Arborite Steve Nardella's Rock and Roll Trio. Nardella and his trusty Rickenbacker jammed out a healthy combination of blues and Chuck Berry-style rock tunes. The surfing classic "Wipeout," given a new, swampy feel, was a highlight. The Harmonica antics of Peter "Madcat" Ruth and his Pressure Cooker followed, and as usual, didn't disappoint. Chicagoan Joanna Conner, promoting her new LP on Blind Pig records, came on a little strong for most of the crowd, but by the end she had evidently won some new fans judging by the clamor raised by everybody when she wound it up. But the next thing you knew, none of that mattered. After a couple numbers without their fearless leader, The Man himself strode through the crowd. Clad in a sharp red-and-white-striped shirt and a white hat with a red band and an ex- tra-wide brim, Junior Wells took control with a soulful blues wail that was once virtually the model for James Brown's style and still can make your ears ring. He played the blues like only a handful of people can do anymore up until the the servers at the Pig collected all the empty pitchers and the lights came up. Wells ended, appropriately enough, with his own version of Brown's classic "I Feel Good." - Mark Swartz '1'' . 1'/ / ' Y / K I ?IA - -- w I THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 The Secret Is of Weight Control... No Secret! The Weight Control Clinic at The University of Michigan A Comprehensive Weight Control Program Featuring: Nutrition Seminars, Daily Exercise Classes, Body Composition Testing, Counseling, Computerized Diet Analysis, Personal Exercise Training, Stress Testing. Fall Program Begins October 2 747-2722 Registration by Appointment Beginning September 11 WEEKEND MAGAZINE 1 dvks(3 ID Q If you ever want to see your favorite blues, jazz, or reggae artists (a)live again, become a Michi- gan Daily music writer. Call us at 763-0379, or bring yourself (in a brown paper bag) to the second floor of the Student Pub- lications Building. Fridays in The Daily 763-0379 Free Introductory Meeting September 14, 7:00-8:00 pm Room 1250, Central Campus Recreation Building . Call for More Information -4 1 -j I I T1 *on 7 0 A r I - ti rilliant. Brilliant work. Apple's most powerful personal computers enable you to create it. As your scintillating thoughts pour out of your genius mind, you can instantly edit, organize, revise, even change fonts for that perfect paper. What you see will be brilliant. ,:.__ _ Become a Daily Photographer' Kickoff Sale. Come to the Computer Kickoff Sale Hands on Display at the Michigan Union on the ground floor. With Computer Kickoff prices, you can afford brilliance. Brilliant Options Mac SE* Mac SE/30* Mac Plus Mac IICX All Mac SE models now have Apple's new "Superdrive" to read MS-DOS, OS/2 and Apple II files. Macintosh. ._ __ i