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May 07, 1981 - Image 15

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1981-05-07

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The Michigan Daily-Thursday, May 7, 1981-Page 15

DAILY CLA
(Continued from Page 14)
SITUATIONS WANTE
I'M LOOKING for an attractive, friendly gal to enjoy
the summer with. I'm a well educated man in my
late 20's with above average looks who considers
himself a sensitive individual. Let's get together,
theres a whole world todiscoverout there. P.O. Box
2454, Ann Arbor 48106. 0400513
HOMESITTER available. Experienced. Mature.
Discreet. Long-term preferred. Normal upkeep.
Solid references. 994-4975. 1300508
REA L ESTATE
CREATIVE IMPULSIVESwelcomedtothisoldtown
hall. Two complete floors for studio/workshop and
living areas. Updated systems, insulation, low taxes,
pastoral setting. $61,500. Call Marty Drago 994-0400,
evenings. 663-1639Caldwell & ReinhartRealtors.
SUBLET great efficiency $200 month May-Aug,
Division & Williams. Private entrance, fireplace.
Sue Johnson, 763-4099 days or 995-1750. 15U0509
Campus-Summer sublet w/Fall options on 1, 2, & 3
bedrooms bilevel furnished apartments in modern &
older homes. 996-5929. 18U0519
SUBLET-Fall option-own room in fine house.
Parking, free laundry, friendly housemates. 995-
9222. 21U0508
Sublet-June-Aug., Single room in three bedroom
apt.-just $60 a month-possible fall option, near
campus, laundry, parking, call 996-1692. dU0508
VERY CHEAP SUBLET. Room in house, Packard &
East U. Call early mornings or late nights. Chris, 994-
0572. 25U05W8
Use Daily
Classif ieds

SSIFIEDS

I

2 Nights with Eugene

LUXURY SUBLET Available now. 1 or 2 bedrooms.
Call Vinnieor Scott at 9%-0071, 682-8706. 10U0508
SUMMER SUBLET-Possible Fall option-own
bedroom in twos bedroom modern apartment-fsr-
nisbed, A/C, balconies, parking. Campus-s.10 Ray
996-5988. 14U0512
Available bedroom in clean, spacious 4-person co-ed
house. Sundeck, fireplace, washer and dryer. Group
oriented, semi-cooperative. May-May, rent
negotiable. 665-5050. 38U0508
Room in house to sublet for June, July and August.
Sunny with many windows and private entrance.
Washer, dryer, piano, and close to campus. Call Bill.
evenings until 10.995-2759. dUtc
LARGE ROOM, cool stone walls, sink/refrig, sauna,
parking, paid utilities, quiet, clean. 663-9136 or 994-
4810. dU0508
SUBLET-A/C, 2 bdr, two story apartment, balcony,
available5/17. 995-2416 persistently until 11 p.m.
30U0509
One bedroom apartment-great for one or a couple.
May 19-Aug. Fall option. Near campus. May rent
free. 662-2399 Dave. 33U0507
JULY-AUGUST Female for Private Bedroom in
three bedroom bi-level apartment. Debbie 663-1337.
26U0509
SUMMER SUBLET-Share cheap female double in
Abbey Apt. 909 Church. Spacious, bay windows,
dishwasher, a/c, huge living room, 1 baths. Laun-
dry & parking available. Muse see to believe. Call
663-0756. dU0500
Great room. Great house. Great location. Grrreat
price. Free laundry 662-2899. 39U0513
SUMMER SUBLET
Own room in a newly furnished apartment in
beautiful house. Male preferred. 2 min. to central
campus. Nice neighberhood. Incredibly cbeap. Call
persistently, Jeff 769-0186. dU0507
SUMMER BARGAIN. $100/person/month for 3 per-
sons furnished apartment. Immediate occupancy.
Near campus on High St. 665-8227. 35U0509

(Continued from Page 11)
themselves to this work that one almost
believes Tchaikovsky penned it with
some precognition of the orchestra in
his consciousness.
Though Ormandy & Co. could
presumably perform this symphony
blindfolded, their familiarity certainly
doesn't breed laziness; the orchestra
executes with such loving intensity that
the Fifth is revealed not as an over-
played warhorse but as a work of
mature, passionate genius.
SATURDAY night's concert com-
bined poignance with academia. The
poignance eminated from Roy Harris'
Symphony No. 3; once dominant among
20th Century American composers,
Harris gradually slipped from public
esteem until by his death in 1979, his
voluminous body of work lay virtually
forgotten save for this one sym-
-phony-a lovely, complex one-
movement work played with warmth
and respect by The Philadelphia.
Harris' unjust fall from grace speaks
Volumes for the traditional prejudice
against American music pursued even
more vigorously in this country then it
is abroad.
The rest of the evening was devoted
to Bartok-not an easy test for many
concertgoers.Bartok is the composers'
composer, the academics'
academician, revered by critic and
colleague alike; yet the uncom-

promisingly acerbic colloquialism of
his work perpetually constricts his
popularity in concert halls.-
IF ANYBODY, however, can bring
out the best in Bartok, then his fellow
countrymen Ormandy and pianist
Gyorgy Sandor are ideally suited to the
task. The two artists combined Satur-
day for a 35th anniversary performance
of Bartok's final work, The Concerto
No. 3 for Piano, first premiered in 1946
by Sandor, Ormandy and The
Philadelphia. Guided by their assured
readings, the listener was able to slide
through the concerto's austere surface
to feel the very real passion under-
neath.
No guide was necessary for Bartok's
Concerto for Orchestra, the most ac-
cessible piece he ever wrote, and whose
joyous tone is all the more remarkable
when one considers the composer was
impoverished and dying of cancer when
he wrote it. The Concerto, really a five-
movement symphony, is like sirloin
steak for The Philadelphia, who
proceeded to devour it with swift,
crowd-pleasing ravenousness.
The assembled Bartokian exuberan-
ce provided the perfect jumping-off
point for the orchestra's finale-a
roaring, whooping rendition of The Vic-
tors so seethingly glorious as to leave
no doubts the Wolverines will steamroll
through a 12-0 upcoming season. Would
that May would turn into September.

FOLLETTS.
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