ARTS Monday, January 29, 1990 The Michigan Daily Page-5 y:"f }":}; }i . y .{ .' t .i .." " .':SV t " f:.1' 1". titi " Flexible flyers take off Lichtenbaum and Poneck to read from works'. Y:: ".": 1Y5 "" '.'::"::'' '}": X11. t lll Folk fest: as long as the rest By the end of the 13th Ann Arbor Folk Festival Saturday night at Hill Auditorium, the capacity audience seemed to be drained of energy and making a gut-check. Old favorite Loudon Wainwright III and original new act Alain LaMontagne as well as Alison Krauss and Union Station provided the brightest moments, while Sweet Honey in the Rock worked over the remaining emotion. From start to finish the Festival was loaded with talent and inspira- tion, resulting in another big success for its promoters, the Ark and the University's Office of Major Events. Appearing midway through the evening, the brilliant harmonica player Alain LaMontagne roused the crowd, which had been looking ahead to the big name acts, with his in- tense, impassioned playing and the step-dancing style he calls "Podo rhythme." Wainwright connected with quick and rolling laughter, going out to a standing ovation and calls for more numbers. However, the rigid Festi- val time slots held him back in the wings, sending out Michael Hedges to push the energy level further with his freshly-dubbed "violent acoustic guitar." Hedges won points for mak- ing the fastest mid-song string change on record (half a minute), and by the time the headliners, Sweet Honey in the Rock, came on, the audience was wavering. The singers raised a spiritual charge to the night after several minutes of crowd exhor- tation by leader Bernice Johnson Reagon. LaMontagne, sponsored by the Government of Quebec and the Canadian consul in Detroit, strode on stage wearing a broad-lapelled black jacket, low-riding black jeans, and a barrel-striped jersey in gray and white. With his Gallic nose, and light brown mop of hair curling over his forehead, the St. Lawrence mar- itimes were immediately evoked. He opened with a huge drone winding into a French folk melody with blues wails at the top of rising scales. His mid-ranges were filled with throaty tremolos as though produced on a barrel organ. The late-arriving crowd was en- thralled, then startled as his feet be- gan to move, shuffling, then stamp- ing on a booming footboard. He lowered himself into a chair, feet building to a cascade, harmonica gaining in pitch, then, standing and stomping, a High West siren call re- coiled back over the melody. "The Windmill" imitated a French hunting horn, heralding to the chase, while his feet echoed like congas, then trotting, galloping into stride, his head bouncing side to side. Another song, he said, "...is music to dance on hoods of cars." LaMontagne demonstrated a bizarre sense of humor. Before one song he cautioned, "Love is a strange thing, so I don't want to mix up my words." He sang, "Love for some people...too often...it's like a fart...After it's the fume...And then it sneaks away." The hardcore blues that followed proved his claim to be true. Alison Krauss and Union Station were delightful. Promoted as a fid- dling phenom, Alison Krauss has assembled an extraordinary quartet that puts less emphasis on her tal- ents than on tight ensemble picking and singing. Krauss carried much of the lead singing. The gentle purity of her voice has the clarity that Dolly Parton has when Parton sings traditional songs. The members of Union Station filled harmonies and sang several leads themselves. Krauss' fiddle coated rhythms, checking the bow against the strings, over Jeff White's guitar and Alison Brown's banjo. Brother Victor Krauss on bass fiddle played with the finesse of a jazz con- servatory proteg6. Krauss worked in a variety of styles, decorously playing High Ap- See REVIEW, page 7 BY JAY PINKA W ELL, here we all are, at the widely exalted University of Michi- gan, getting degrees that will surely make us rich, famous or simply god- like. By choosing a major, we have imprisoned ourselves in a bland, nar- row psychological set, making the remaining storybook of our lives bleak and predictable, lacking the ad- venture and surprise from the days of our youth. Of course we must even- tually settle down, settle for what A e can get, settle into the routine and reliability that is expected with ma- turity. Of course, as we strut sto- ically into "the role," we will re- member that "Superheroes Don't Have Moveable Limbs." Not according to writers Elisa Lichtenbaum and Lisa Poneck. Lichtenbaum just tap-danced her way into a prestigious Cowden award with three stories, including "Lola Uncovered," "88 Deception," and "Superheroes Don't Have Moveable Limbs." By no means stiff, Lichtenbaum makes "jabs at things...to make you laugh and make you think at the same time." The verve has not left Lichtenbaum, who graduates from the University's MFA writing pro- gram this year, takes "perverse, frightening things and twists (them)." In "Lola Uncovered," Licht- enbaum mixes pop culture with li erary ingenuity, taking off on the is- sue of weight gain and women high- lighted in TV show Designing Women. This writer insists on hav- ing "fun" with her writing, and of course, this makes her fun to read. Ah, but will we lose our intellec- tual dexterity by reading a "fun" writer? U of M-ers, never fear! While you might yawn your way through Plato's acclaimed The Republic, you'll puzzle over Lichtenbaum, a contemporary Chaucer. "Fiction is about people's masks and getting through those masks," says Lichtenbaum, who shoots the elusive yet utilitarian value of hu- See GUILD, page 7 Great River escapes its own pre- dictability, particularly when Her- nandez depicts Kata's almost palpa- ble feelings of suffocation, usually at the hands of men or the snakes which, all too obviously, symbolize them through-out the novel. Kata's dreams and the links that they allow her to forge with the cuandera, Anita, occasionally capture that sense of awe, mystery, and terror which are so much more fully devel- oped in Rudolfo Anaya's treatment of similar themes in Bless Me, Ui- tima. In moments such as these, the novel's prose offers a promise of See BOOKS, page 7 Across the Great River By Irene Beltran Hernandez Arte Publico/$8.50 Irene Beltran Hernandez' debut novel, an account of the often brutal experiences confronting "illegal" Mexican immigrants in the U.S. Southwest, has all the ingredients for a great story. Told by a young girl, Kata, it recounts her family's harrowing crossing - abounding with mysterious meetings and wild shoot-outs - of the Rio Grande; their subsequent life with one of the mysterious cuandera, or healing women, who people so many of the pages of Chicano fiction; and their fierce battle with a villain who could have walked off a Hollywood set, right down to his thin mustache and macabre tattoo. But as is so frequently the case in initial literary efforts, all of these dramas - and several others that Beltran Hernandez throws in for good measure - are inflated in a manner that serve to erode rather than under- score their potential power. In the process, what begins as a potentially rich portrait of the young Kata and her encounters with a world frighten- ing in its otherness, becomes instead a frequently lifeless succession of episodes held together more by their plots than by the characters who en- act them. There are times when Across the The Calendar of The University of Michigan The Calendasr combins meatin5, ictasn. workshop and £ogerw nfouncawnnu with A&rvernsappainpach wetkon cw.. isae,donTs Ud iyReccW Catn~,rndU opn 10811Uaivtn y- oRStwederogr ed orgmiuioas ec i kd by tA. Mkician Sudent AAsmbly. Iem ,nwa be smPfted in wriin by S p.m. LA.e Tuesday before publication. AMden all ifenm*ieq to Anne Suekky, Publication, Assigaav. Univniaty Rearud, 412 Maynard Street An antriA ()dnots ewento wAicA 0miadoeischated MONDAY JANUARY 29 Tae kwon do Club-Mtg (beginners welcome), 7-8:30 pm, 2275 CCRB, 677- 3135. Christian Scl Organization-Mtg with readings, 6:15 pm, Mich League. Canterbury House-Lesbian-gay men's community open house, 8:45 pm, 218 N Division, 665-0606. Northwalk-North campus safety walking svc, 8 pm-1:30 am, Bursley Rm 2333 or 763-WALK. Safewalk-Safety walking svc, 8 pm-1:30 am, UGLi Rm 102 or 936-1000. Career Plan & Place-Writing the Professional Sch Essay, 4:10-5 pm, CP&P Conf Rm; Writing & Formatting Your Resume on Comput, 7:10-8:30 pm; 764-7460. CRLT-TA Wkshp, "Discussion," 3-6 pm, 109 E Madison, reg req, 763-0162. History Art-Seminar, "A Neglected Field: English Sculpture in the Thirteenth Century: Example Westminster Abbey," W Sauerlander, 4 pm, Tappan Hall, Rm 180. *Comput Ctr-Wkshps: MS-DOS Basic Skills, 9 am-noon; Macintosh Basic Skills, 1-4 pm; Monday Programmers' Seminars, 7-9 pm; Intro to TEXTEDIT, 1-3 pm; 3001 SEB; Comput Networking Technology, 10 am-noon, 4212 SEB; reg req, 763-3700. Near East & N Afr Stds-Brown-bag lec, "The Nature of Artifice: Art and Literature in the Islamic Garden," Y Tabbaa, noon, Lane Hall Commons Rm; Faculty seminar, "Dialogue in the Qur'an," M Mir, 4 pm, Rackham W Conf Rm; 764-0350. Research Human Devp-Lecture, "The Race, Hispanic and Ancestry Questions in 1980: An Evaluation of Their Quality," R Farley, noon, Pop Stds Ctr, 936- 1055. CSMIL--Seminar, "Economics of Social Relationships," C Seifert, 3:30 pm, 6050 ISR, 747-4948. St Mary Sdt Parish-Habitat for Humanity Info Mtg, D Steeves, 7-8:30 pm, 996-8466. Slavic Lang & Lit-Lecture, "Post-Stalin Period in Ukrainian Literature: Poets of the 1960's" (Part 1), V Andrushkiw, 7-8:30 pm, 2231 Angell Hall, 764- 5355. Univ Lutheran Chapel-Handbell choir, 7 pm, 1511 Washtenaw, 663-5560. Undergrad Math Club-Mass mtg, "Daffy Duck and Mathematics," 4-5 pm, 3011 Angell Hall, 995-3759 Women's Stds-Poetry reading, J Harjo, 4 pm, 236 W Engr, 763-2047 TUESDAY JANUARY 30 WCBN/Lesbian & Gay Radio Collec-Public affairs talk show, "Closets are for Clothes," 6-6:30 pm, 883 FM, 763-3500 or 3501. LaGROC (Lesbian & Gay Men's Rights Organizing Committee)- Mtg, 7:30 pm, Mich Union Rm 3100, 763-4186. Iranian Sdt Cultural Club-Mtg, a non-political, non-religious group, 7:45 pm, Mich League, 662-8933. Northwalk-North campus safety walking svc, 8 pm-1:30 am, Bursley Rm 2333 or 763-WALK. Safewalk-Safety walking svc, 8 pm-1:30 am, UGLi Rm 102 or 936-1000. Career Plan & Place-intro to CP&P, 1:30-2 pm, CP&P Lib; Generating Career Options, 4:10-5:30 pm, CP&P Conf Rm; Summer Job Search, 6:10-7 pm, CP&P Lib; 764-7460. Ctr Chinese Stds-Brown-bag lec, "Reminiscences of a Missionary Childhood in China," H Milk, noon-1 pm, Lane Hall Commons Rm, 936-1603. CRLT-TA Wkshp, "What Can I Do In Class This Week?" 7-9:30 pm, 109 E Madison, reg req, 763-0162. EECS-Colloq, "A Functional Framework for Mechanical Systems Design," S Kota, 3:30-5 pm, EECS 1200, 747-2045. Faculty Women's Club-Winter Newcomers' Welcoming Party, 1 pm, Clements Lib, 663-0793. *HRD-Wkshp: Improving Your Listening Skills, 8:30 am-noon, 1111 Kipke Dr, reg req, 764-7410. *Comput Ctr-Wkshps: Macintosh Basic Skills lec/demonstration, 6-8 pm; Basic Concepts of Local Area Netwks, 8:30 am-12:30 pm; 611 Church St; Outdoor Rec-Cross-Country Ski Waxing Clin, 7-8:30 pm, NCRB Conf Rm, reg req, 764-3967. Univ Lutheran chapel-"Life Light" bible study, 10 pm, 1511 Washtenaw, 66 3-5560. King-Chavez-Parks Visit Prof Prog-Lecture, "Native American Women's Literature and Memory," J Harjo, noon, 236 W Engr, 763-2047 WEDNESDAY JANUARY 31 WCBN-Radio talk show, "Womyn's Rites and Rhythms," 6-6:30 pm. AIESIC-General mtg, 6 pm, Bus Admin Bldg Rm 1273, 764-2906. Tae kwon do Club-Mtg (beginners welcome), 7-8:30 pm, 2275 CCRB, 677- 3135. Lord of Light Lutheran Church-Bible study, 6:30 pm; worship, 7:30-8:30 pm; 801 S Forest, 668-7622. Canterbury House-Service, "Women Worshipping in the Christian Tradition," 7 pm, 218 N Division, 665-0606. Northwalk-North campus safety walking svc, 8 pm-1:30 am, Bursley Rm 2333 or 763-WALK. Safewalk-Safety walking svc, 8 pm-1:30 am, UGLi Rm 102 or 936-1000. Concerned Faculty-Discussion, racism & course requirements, noon-1 pm, 802 Monroe St, 936-1257. *Matthaei Bot Gdns-Course begs, "Wed AM Investigations," 9-11 am, Bot Gdns, 998-7061. Career Plan & Place-Intro to CP&P, 9:10-9:30 am, CP&P Lib; MBA Prog: Preparation .& Application, 4:10-5 pm, CP&P Conf Rm; Interviewing Tips: The Employers' Perspective, 5:10-6 pm, CP&P Lib; 764-7460. CSMIL-AI Open House, 9 am-5 pm, ATL Bldg, 764-8505. IOE-Seminar, "Logistics Replenishment Using Bandit Processing," K D Glazebrook, 4 pm, 241 IOE, 747-4948. Chem-Seminars, "The Fascinating Structures of Organopolylithium Compounds," M Postich, 4 pm, Rm 1640; "Countercurrent Chromatography," A Peters, 4 pm, Rm 1650. U-M Dearborn-Film begs, "A World Apart," 7:30 pm, Rec & Organization Ctr, 593-5390. Film & Video Stds-Film, "Berlin, Symphony of a Great City," 7 pm, Angell Hall Aud C, 764-0147. *Comput Ctr-Wkshps: MTS Basic Skills, 1-4 pm; Intro to TEXTEDIT, 1-3 pm; 3001 SEB; Comput Conf lec/demonstration, 7:30-9 pm, MLB Aud 3; Comput Netwk Tech, 10 am-noon, 4212 SEB; reg req, 763-3700. *Outdoor Rec-Pre-trip mtg, Caving Trip, 7 pm, NCRB Conf Rm, reg req, 764- 3967. Near East & N Afr Stds-Lecture, "Israeli Art," R Volk, 7:30 pm, 1429 Hill St, 764-0350. Slavic Lang & Lit-Lecture, "Post-Stalin Period in Ukrainian Literature: Poets of the 1960's" (Part 2), V Andrushkiw, 7-8:30 pm, 2231 Angell Hall, 764- 5355. Sdts Objectivism-Winter reception & video, "Intro to Objectivism," 8 pm, Mich Union Pond Rm, 996-4141. Univ Lutheran Chapel-Choir rehearsal, 7:30 pm; Holden Village Vespers, 9 pm; 1511 Washtenaw, 663-5560. *Univ Mus Soc-Hungarian State Folk Ensemble, 8 pm, Hill Aud, 764-2538. Women in Scl Prog-Discussion, Going to Grad School, 4 pm, Rackham E Conf Rm, 998-7225 THURSDAY FEBRUARY 1 MSA-Intl Sdt Affrs Commission mtg, 6:15 pm, Intl Ctr Rec Rm, 995-5547. Northwalk-North campus safety walking svc, 8 pm-1:30 am, Bursley Rm 2333 or 763-WALK. Safewalk--Safety walking svc, 8 pm-1:30 am, UGLi Rm 102 or 936-1000. Career Plan & Place-Researching Organizations & Employers, 4:10-5:30 pm, CP&P Rm 1; Resume Writing Lec, 5:10-6 pm, 1040 Dana; 764-7460. Chem-Seminar, "Thecretical Studies of the Products of the Gas-phase Reaction of Sc(+) with Ammonia," J Harrison, 4 pm, Rm 1640. East Asian Initiatives Prog-Lecture, "The Roles of the Chinese Mass Media Before, During, and Since the June 4th Movement," L Binyan, 8 pm, Rackham Amphi, 764-6308. Evol & Human Behav Prog-Seminar, "Modeling Hunter-Gatherer Diet Choices: A Tool for Reconstructing the Past," G Belovsky, 4 pm, Rackham E Lec Rm, 936-2526. U-M Flint-Brown-bag lec, "How to be Good Without Thinking About It," G Trianosky, 12:30-2 pm, Superior Rm, 762-3085. Gifts of Art-Voice recital, A L Toppin, 12:30 pm, Univ Hosp Lobby 1st fl, 936-ARTS. *HRD-Wkshps: Writing It Right, Part I: Grammar, 8:30 am-noon; Supervisory Rights and Responsibilities, 8:30 am-noon; 1111 Kipke Dr, reg req, 764- 7410. *Comput Ctr-Wkshps: Using the DOS 40 Shell, 10 am-noon; dBASE III PLUS, Part 1, 1-5 pm; MacDraw, 10 am-noon; Using a Macintosh as a UMnet Terminal, VersaTerm, 1-3 pm; 3001 SEB; Begin Word, Part 1 lec/demonstration (Macintosh), 6-8 pm, 611 Church St; reg req, 763-3700. Intl Ctr-Discussion. "Verbal and Nonverbal Behavior: How Does Your Culture Caribbean Sdt Assoc-Happy Hour, 6-10 pm, Mich Union Rm 1209, 764- 5040 or 769-2703. Tae kwon do Club-Mtg (beginners welcome), 6-8 pm, 1200 CCRB, 677- 3135. Lesbian-Gay Male Prog-Mtg, "Black Gay Men Together," 8 pm, Mich Union Rm 3200, 763-4186. Safewalk-Safety walking svc, 8-11:30 pm, UGLi Rm 102 or 936-1000. *Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Film, "A Clockwork Orange," 7 & 9:30 pm, MLB 3, 769-7787 *Women's Athiet-Gymnastics (co-ed), U-M, Mich State & Iowa, 7:30 pm, Varsity Arena, 763-2159. Career Plan & Place-Interviewing Lecture, 12:10-1 pm, CP&P Conf Rm, 764-7460. CSSEAS-Lecture, "The Relative Autonomy of the Third World Politician: The Politics of Economic Development in Soeharto's Indonesia," W Liddle, 12:10 pm, Lane Hall Commons Rm. U-M Dearborn-Film, "The Invisible Man," 8 pm, CAB Rm 138, 593-5000. East Asian Initiatives Prog-Panel discuss, "The Mass Media and the Beijing Spring," J Moore & J C Thomson, 9-11:30 am; R Bernstein & C Wolfson, 1:30-4 pm, Lane Hall Commons Rm, 764-6308. Folkdance Club-Intl folkdancing, teaching 8-9 pm, dancing 9-11 pm, Angell Elem Sch, 1608 S Univ, 663-3885. Friends of Common Ground Thtre-Performances beg, "In the Name of Love," 8 pm, Mendelssohn Thtre, 763-1085. Film & Video Stds-Film screening & appearance, "Killer of Sheep," C Bumett, 7 pm, Lorch Hall Aud, 764-0147. Gay Liberation-"Brothers" coffee house, 8 pm, 802 Monroe St, 763-4186. *HRD-Wkshps: Editing Techniques, 10 am-noon; Payroll Ofc & Timekeeping Proced, 8:30 am-noon; 1111 Kipke Dr, reg req, 764-7410. *Comput Ctr-Wkshps: Intro to Comput, 611 Church St; MTS Visual Editing Basic Skills, 8:30-10:30 am (MAC) & 1-3 pm (IBM); MTS Visual Editing with Commands, 10:30 am-12:30 pm (MAC) & 3-5 pm (IBM); Using an IBM PC- Compatible as UMnet Terminal, PCTIE, 10 am-noon; 3001 SEB; reg req, 763- 3700. Lesbian-Gay Male Prog Ofc-Massage therapy class for gay/bisexual men, 8-10:30 pm, ICC Educ Ctr, 1522 Hill St, 662-6282. LSA-Seminar, "Time Management," 4 pm, Mich Union U Club, 763-0624. Sch Music-Mixed Chamber Music Ensembles, 8 pm, RH, 763-4726. SATURDAY FEBRUARY 3 *Exhib Mus-Planetarium show, "Brightest Stars," 10:30 & 11:30 am, Exhib Mus, 763-4190. Safewalk-Safety walking svc, 8-11:30 pm, UGLi Rm 102 or 936-1000. Asian Sdt Coalition-"Collage" film series begs, "Ourselves," 7 pm; "Chan is Missing," 8 pm; Lorch Hall Aud, 761-2486. *Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Films, "In Cold Blood," 7:30 pm; "Why Does Herr R Run Amok?" 9:45 pm; Angell Hall Aud A, 769-7787 U-M Dearborn-Winter Ecology Tour, 10 am, Environ Std Area, 593-5556. Friends of Common Ground Thtre-Wkshps beg, "A Teach-In For Peace," noon-5 pm, Mich League 3rd fl, 662-2087. Film & Video Stds-Mtg, C Burnett, 10 am-noon, MLB Lec Rm 2, 764-0147. *Univ Mus Soc-St Olaf Choir, 8 pm, Hill Aud, 764-2538 SUNDAY FEBRUARY 4 SNR-Lecture, "Wetlands: No Net Loss-The Role of Creation/Restoration," J Kusler, 3 pm, 1040 Dana. Vision Lunch-Seminar, "Visual Function of On and Off Pathways," M Powers, noon, 20/20 Cafe, Kellogg Eye Ctr, 764-0573. Mich Union-Arts at Mid-day, trombonist D Jackson, 12:15 pm, Mich Union Pendelton Rm, 764-6498. Intl Ctr-Peace Corps film, "The Toughest Job You'll Ever Love," 7:30 pm, Intl Ctr, 764-9310. EECS-Seminar, T Rockafeller, 4 pm, EECS 1200. FRIDAY FEBRUARY 2 *r Wels Lutheran Campus Ministry-Worship svc, 10 am, 1360 Pauline Rd, transport provided, 662-0663 or 761-6362. *Ballroom Dance Club-Dance lesson, 6-7 pm, dancing, 7-9 pm, 3275 CCRB ($1 with CCRB pass), 668-8423. Lord of Light Lutheran Church-Worship, 10 am, 801 S Forest, 668-7622. Univ Reformed Church-Worship, 10:30 am, 1101 E Huron, 662-3153. Canterbury House-Holy Eucharist, 5 pm, St Andrew's Episcopal Church; dinner, 6 pm, 218 N Division; 665-0606. Iranian Sdt Culture Club-Coffee hr & movie, 2-4 pm; Persian lang classes, 4-6 pm; 3050 Frieze, 662-8933. Northwalk-North campus safety walking svc, 8 pm-1:30 am. Burslev Rm 2333 11