-, I I PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY i2. 1999 R A G E T W OT ~ l E M I C I G A N D A I Y F T D A V J A T T A R 1 ~ ior i'svairiiij MCi.I:"1{,/,ciil+i iFf 1a7p0 I cinema Laugh At, Not With, Fumbling 'Fitzwilly' ADMINISTRATION TACTIC: Anti-Draft Leaders Indicted I TONIGHT! #A By DANIEL OKRENT There's this big, bright spickety- span new building out on Wash- tenaw past U.S. 23 called the Wayside Theater, and is really a nice building, with nice, smiley cgxpets and curtains and chairs and things like that. And inside this monument to the culture of the sixties, they show movies. And, again a testi- mony to the culture of the sixties, they are currently showing this really bad movie, "Fitzwilly." The screenplay for this calamity was based on a novel by some guy named Poyntz Tyler. With a writer with a name like "Poyntz", we should have guessed what kind of film it would be. But we didn't. So be it with our own personal problems. * 'Insipidity "Fltzwilly" is silly, almost to the point of being insipid. The streams of blatherous drivel that flow from the mouths of the characters ("No, Juliet, I don't like Miss Vicki; I LOVE Miss Vicki") pour forth in an endless waterfall of trite two-liners and cloying sentimentalities. Ostensibly, "Fitzwilly" is the "laugh riot of the year." But the only laughs come because the film is laughable "at," not laugh- able "with." The plot revolves around a do-gooder domestic staff in a once-wealthy household and that staff's cutely successful at- tempts at robbery, so to buoy up the household's vacant bank ac- count. As they flit about Man- hattan with forged employe pass- cards and a surprising amount of what Jewish mothers call "chutz- pah" (i.e., gall), this little band of Robin Hoods has only one artistic route to follow, and that one happens not to be up. Nine Inches Led by Dick Van Dyke, the best actor in Hollywood with a nine- inch chin, and supported by Barbara Feldon (who did a much better job rolling around on that snug Tiger rug on TV) and portly John McGiver (believe it or not, McGiver plays a demi-butler for a change, capitalizing on years of cinema experience and still able to play only one role), the cast is stifled by its own medio- crity.: The only possible bright spot might have been Edith Evans as the eccentric mistress of the house, but this was spoiled by our own sense of sentimentality. To place an actress of Dame Ed- ith's caliber in a vehicle like this is like casting Richard Burton as "Flipper." More! More! Oh, yes, there are other things. Like a painted .backdrop outside Miss Evans' mansion that is sup- posed to look like uptown New York but more resembles a paint- by-numbers canvas. Or Miss Fel- don's father, who is supposed to be a Columbia professor and looks so much like a Columbia professor that he no longer looks like a Columbia professor. Or an inter- ior decorator friend of Van Dyke's who is such an obvious parody of the proverbial male interior dec- orator that it is not only unfunny, it is downright revolting. But, there are two virtues .in this picture. Number one is a pro- longed sometimes-funny riot scene near the film's end. Number two is the end itself. So, be warned. If you want to go see the Wayside Theater, do so. But, first, wait until toe next picture comes. WASHINGTON (CPS)-College professors and other adults who are helping to lead the anti-draft movement may be taking a great- er risk than young people who actually resist the draft. The Johnson Administration apparently has initiated a full- fledged effort to stop the "ring- leaders" of the growing nation- wide anti-draft campaign. By fighting the resistance movement from top down, the Administra- tion hopes to effectively decrease the number of young people who engage in destructive anti-draft protests and literally refuse to be inducted into the armed services. Department of Justice and Selective Service officials have not admitted that this strategy is indeed being followed. However, observers argue that this strategy has been indirectly acknowledged by statements and actions of members of the Administration. Draft Resisters To Hold Protests Across Nation WASHINGTON (CPS) -Draft resisters are planning demonstra- tions in a dozen major cities in response to the indictment of five men who encouraged non-coopera- tion with the Selective Service System. . Immediately after the five men -Dr. Benjamin Spock, Yale Chaplain Rev. William Sloan Coffin, former .White House aide Marcus Raskin, author Mitchell Goodman and Harvard graduate student Michael Ferber-were in- dicted, Student for a Democratic Society (SDS) issued a call for a national day of demonstrations to be held today. While the draft resisters planned demonstrations, a group of their elders were circulating a state- ment of support and complicity with Spock and the others. "If they are sentenced we must be sentenced," the statement says. Its signers include Dr. Martin Luther King; authors Noam Chomsky, Dwight McDonald, and Paul Goodman; professor Robert McAfee Brown of Stanford; and Arthur Waskow of the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington. Greg Calvert of SDS said Tues- day that plans were not yet firm for most of the demonstrations but that there would be protests in- most major U.S. cities today. In the San Francisco Bay Area, home of the draft resistance move- ment, demonstrators will march on the draft boards in Berkeley, Oakland, and San Francisco. Other West Coast demonstra- tions are planned for Seattle and Portland. In Boston the father of a draftee will go to the induction center handcuffed to his son and refuse to allow his son to be turned over to the Selective Serv- ice officials.I New York anti-war groups held a major meeting last week, but what their plans will be today is uncertain. Calvert said there would also be demonstrations to- day in Chicago, Detroit, Philadel- phia, and Austin, Texas, as well as a number of small local and campus demonstrations. In Washington resisters will demonstrate at the Justice De- partment and the District of Co- lumbia draft board today, then go to local high schools to counsel draft resistance to students there. The reaction is also expected to affect a demonstration by Women Strike for Peace planned for Mon- day, the day Congress reconvenes. The demonstration will be led by Jeanette Rankin, the first woman elected to Congress, who voted against participation in both World War I and World War II. Leaders of the demonstration will meet with House Speaker John McCormack. At Yale, President Kingman Brewster said he has no plans for action against Chaplain Coffin, although he believes draft resist- ance and its advocacy as a politi- cal tactic is ineffective, unwise, and improper. He said he plans no action against Coffin because "Respect for due process of law requires that anyone who is ac- cused is presumed to be innocent until he is found guilty under a constitutionally valid law." The Justice Department, for example, announced last week that a federal grand jury in Bos- ton has returned indictments against five men who have en- couraged young people to violate draft laws. The prosecutions are being handled by a newly created unit in the Justice Department designed specifically to prosecute demonstrators. Despite the large number of young people who have been involved in destructive anti- draft demonstrations, the first indictments since the new unit was c r e a t e d involve "adult" leaders. A Justice Department spokes- man said more indictments may be returned against the leaders of the anti-draft movement. "If we find a clear violation of the law, we will prosecute. But we are not predicting if there will be two or 200 additional indictments." Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey has said he believes many adult leaders who are too old for the draft are behind many anti - draft demonstrations.He favors "busting" the "ringlead- ers" because most of them "are older and should know better." One Selective Service official said pediatrician Dr. Benjamin Spock, a veteran leader of the anti-draft movement, "is encour- aging young people to disobey the law and thus saying to hell with Congress." The official said Dr. Spock and other adult leaders "don't have any obligation to the Selective Service but they're out there advising the young people to beat the rap." Spock, 64, and four others who were indicted last week are ac- cused of violating a section of the Universal Military Training and Service Act which says any person is guilty of violating the law if he "knowingly counsels, aids, or abets another to refute or evade registration or service in the armed forces" or knowing- ly hinders or interferes "by force or violence or otherwise" with the Selective Service system. The trial 'of the five men- scheduled to takeplace in about three months in Boston-will rep- resent the first confrontation at law between the Administration and the anti-draft movement. If the men are found guilty, the case will no doubt end up before the Supreme Court. Several of those indicted and a number of civil libertarians have charged that the law under which the in- dictments were returned repre- sents an infringement on free speech. The last Supreme Court deci- sion on the law was handed down in 1919. The Supreme Court ruled in Schenck vs. the United States that the freedom of speech guar- antee of the First Amendment does not protect a person from conviction for "counseling" others to evade the draft. However, there has been some speculation that today's Supreme Court would overturn this decision, given the chance. The Justice Department is at- tempting to avoid a new Supreme Court ruling by staying away from the free speech aspect in the cases now set for prosecution. Officials have said the Justice Department plans to base the prosecutions on actions rather than words. Although the Administration may want to prosecute the adult leaders of the anti-draft move- ment first, young people who re- fuse to cooperate with the draft will still be turned over to the Justice Departmentfor prosecu- tion, a Selective Service official said.. friday saturday sunday 330 Maynard LEN CHANDLER p. 8:00 p.m. $1.75 per person TONIGI 8:30 P.M. HT at + :; ; sA NN\ SYPSILANTI DIAL ,.x A.N,-%TN'ARBD A.L 4 3 4 -1 7 8 2 WAYSIDE" THEATRE ff ,J1/' K-MART. 4S ~ys1 PACKARD . - %, 4 .. W Michigan's "&s' Newest, Most Modern Theatre - OPENS TONIGH T AT 44 o 3 New Luxury Showplace of Greater Wastenaw County Area he modern theatre of today must be built to satisfy the entertainment requirements of the * 1,000 Luxury Spaced Seats discriminating 1968 motion picture theatre * All Weather Waiting Area Dl- p atrons. W. S. Butterfield Theatres, Inc. is proud * Acres of Parking Space toprset oneo heiet most modr inor* All Lighted Parking Space .\ Michigan. * Twin Box Office .0A Step into an entirely new world of modern mo- *Only a Few Minutes from tion picture theatre presentation. We had you * Your Doorstep ,inmind when this theatre was first conceived. W/e sincerely believe that we have achieved the ultimate in design, comfort and service. - / We dedicate this new theatre to your greater enjoyment of the very best in motion picture en- '/tertain ment. SGALA OPENING ATTRACTION V& 1421 H ill Street JOEL SAXE-singing folk, rock, and folk-rock, playing 12-string guitar DAVE JOHNS-singing rhythm and blues, folk-rock, and folk music, playing 6- and 12-string guitar and harmonica i Vth Forum TENORS 210 S. FIFTH AVE. 761 -9700 and BASSES, Join U-M ARTS CHORALE Tuesday and Thursday-3 P.M. Aud. C, Angell Hall NO REASONABLE VOICE REJECTED! I i I I NEW SHOW TIME POLICY: CONVENIENT MATINEES EVERY DAY LATE SHOWS AT 1 1:00 EVERY FRI. & SAT. MON. thru THURS. Shows at 2:30-7:00-9:00 FRI. & SAT. continuous from 1:00; Shows 1-3-5-7-9-11 SUN. continuous from 1 :00; Shows 1-3-5-7-9 STARTS TOMORROW LOADED ITH LAUGHS! "VlA' uR at(h Yth forum Gives Vittorio Gassman a chance to explode. It is as though Peter Sellers or Alec Guinness were turned loose in an Italian film. It is wild... it is fun!" - Bosley Crowther, N. Y. Times " Love and Larceny' does for larceny what 'Divorce Italian Style' so gaily did for divorce.!" - Peter Bunzel, Life Magazine "Like all satisfying comedies, 6.ENERAI$AssMAikkthis one is loaded not only with laughs but with satire and irony. I recommend a visit to The Coronet. Gassman - is! a masftr of imneronntinn 1" n POSITIVELY ENDS TUESDAY FOX EASTERN THEATRES m FK VILL R6 375 No. MAPLE RD.-.769-1300 MONDAY-FRIDAY DOORS OPEN 6:30 P.M. I Jungle Book-7 :00-9:45 Charlie- :20 Only A SWINGING SAFARIOFLAUGHSI/ Walt Disneyresents An al cartoon TECHNICOLORO r ND WALT DISNEY'S THE s r.Y.. F A ' TEEN-AGE MOUNTAIN TECHNICOLOR' LION! m ,. NO NEED FOR BABY SITTERS "An "A ingenious and thoroughly captivating romp" '-'Hollis Alp ert, Sat. Review '1 -Judith Crist, Herald Tribune tN[AC1US" GASSU N "'Love and Larceny' Is loaded with guffaws. SI'm still laughing!" --Jim O'Connor, Journal American .IEA HE lACKEC" pgANS 1OVE NA LItCEN5J One of the Happiest Film Presentations from liSCH cORI'ORAJON Co-Starring BARBARA FELDON "GET SMART" TV Star t A, A Sat.--Surf. Jungle Book-1:00-3:45-6:30-9:15 Charlie-2:20-5:10-7:55-10:40 STARTS WEDNESDlAY. JANUARY 11thI I lk NOW- immotrow"I", «. I