PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY ._ , .-theatre APA's 'Show Off' Captivates Audience with 'Flashy' Acti ... ........ h.: . . . . ... . ... ..... ..... .... ..., . . . 1 DAILY OFFICIAL Bmf5ULLETIN . . . . .. .... 1...1, . ... .: ., ... ...a .. : :.. ..... .., rig I I By JOHN CONRON Scene: Mrs. Fisher (Helen Hayes) and Clara (Gwyda Don- howe) waiting in a living room of the 1920's: head-high wood-panel- ed Walls stained brown, jacketed photographs propped on every wooden ledge and outcropping. Talking about Aubrey Piper, known around town as 'Carnation Charlie.' Clara, Mrs. Fisher's daughter, says: "Frank, her hus- band, says: 'He's a clown.' " Mrs. Fisher says: "Pop (her husband) says: 'Next time he slaps me on the back, I'm gonna get up and leave the room.'" Clara thumbs a magazine. Mrs. Fisher gloats and flutters over bonbons. They say people say he's dandy-carnation in his button- hole, patent leather shoes; and he's a talker, yes sir, Mrs. Fisher can vouch for that - talk your ear off. Yes sir, he's always blow- ing off, all talk. Finally, finally, a door slams off stage. There's a loud voice, full of talk, alaugh somewhere be- tween a cackle and a donkey's bray. He's here. It is Aubrey Piper's play and Clayton Corzatte's performance, and when he starts the talking, the play revives, the acting picks up, the audience picks up. Even Helen Hayes's Mrs. Fisher, role needs him.. Surfeit of Action As for George Kelly's "The Show- Off," the APA's current product- ion, it never lets down again. If anything mars the second act it is a surfeit of action. Piper is by now married to Amy, the Fishers' second daughter; Pop (we see only a few tousled, dis- tracted minutes of him onstage) dies of a stroke at his plant; at the spectacle of Helen Hayes's brilliantly adumbrated portrayal of shock, the laughter gets ner- vous; then, enter Aubrey, his head banaged and full of tall tales about how a traffic cop, a pedes- trian, has collided with his bor- rowed car. "It's all right now. I fixed it. I talked to them." And the rest of this second act is a kind of contrapuntal tetralo- ' gue, alternately about the ac- cident and the hurried prepara- tions to get to the hospital, al- ternately melodrama and brag- gadocio. Everybody Swings By the third act, everybody swings, caught up in the Piper's spell, a kind of Babbitized stump preaching about the American dream. Mrs. Fisher - throughout the play a practical, warm money- pinching, comically narrow-mind- ed ("Opera? Oh, that 'Dago'- singing.") fiercely maternal family guardian - is the last resistance, eyes rolling upward in speech- less perplexity as the curtain falls. Few 'problems' are allowed to trouble the play, and these are, touched lightly. If you can forgive George Kelly most of his first act and over- look a less upsetting question of taste in the second, "The Show- Off" is a real entertainment with flashes of American humor at its complex best. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only, Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call i64-9270. Programmed Learning Effort": Michi- gan Union, 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. School of Music Concert-Piano Cham- ber Music: School of Music Recital Hall, 12:30 p.m. Student Relations Committee Meeting 3529 SAB, open meeting, 3:00 p.m. College of Engineering Lecture -Dr. Paul C. M. de Belatini, San Miguel de Allende, Gto., Mexico, "The Morphology of Physics," Today and Thursday, 311 West Engineering Bldg., 3:00 p.m. ..Department of Speech Student Labor- THURSDAY. OCTOBER 19 atory Theatre Program - H. James Owen Wingrave: Arena Theater, Frieze Day Calendar Building, 4:10 p.m. Center for Programmed Learning for School of Music Lecture - Sangita Business Seminar - "Managing the Raminathan, University of Illinois, ORGANIZATION NOTICES USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- Christian Science College Organiza- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially tion holds their weekly testimony recognized and registered student orga- ea nizations only. Forms are available in meeting this Thursday, 7:30-8:34 p.m., Rm. 1011 SAB.E 3545 SAB, * * *f Mobilization: Friday, Oct. 20, 7:15 p.m. - Buses loading on Thompson St. between Jefferson and Madison. Cars and drivers urgently needed, bus tic- kets are still on sale. Come to the Fishbowl or call 769-0120 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.. after 6 p.m. call 663-9564 or 663- 7814 or 662-1344. Engineering Council, meeting, Oct. 26, 7 p.m., SAB 3511. Guild House. Friday noon luncheon, Prof. Arthur P. Mendal: "Response to the Two Revolutions," Guild House, 802 Monroe. Evening Dinner (at Cost) Oct. 20, 1967, 6 p.m. India Student's Association presents a "Cultural Program" to celebrate Diw- all (India's Festival of Lights) on Sat. Oct. 21 at 7:30 p.m. in the Trueblood Aud. Frieze Bldg. THURSDAY October 26th * * * Le Baratin, meeting every Thursday, 3-5 p.m., 3050 Frieze. '. * * SCEC (Student Council for the Ex- ceptional Child), meeting, Oct. 19. UES Lunchroom.s7 :30, Social work presen- tation on servies. Southern Asia Club: There will be a bag lunch on Friday, Oct. 20, at noon in Lane Hall. Masa Nishihara will speak and show slides of his recent trip to Southeast Asia. Phone 434-0190 EntAC On CARPENTER ROAD OPEN 6:30 P.M. FREE HEATERS -Associated Press NOBEL PRIZE WINNER Toasting himself with a glass of champagne, Harvard Prof. George Wald celebrates yesterday's announcement that he had been awarded the Nobel Prize for medicine. Halden K. Hartline of New York and Ragnar Granit of Sweden were joint recipients. H oue - S Challeng Over Student Conduct (Continued from Page 1) Both resolutions were proposed by the council's executive com- mittee, f o I1o w i n g consultation with South Quad Director Thomas R. Fox and Hunt Resident Direc- tor Mrs. ;lorence Davis, accord- ing to 'Nancy O'Reilly, Hunt Council president. Accordig to-Miss O'Reilly, Fox told her that if Hunt Council passed a resolution eliminating freshman hours from the house rules, this would be taken as an assumption that the house judi- ciary was abrogating its respon- sibility for enforcement of Uni- versity regulations. Under these circumstances, Miss O'Reilly told the council, Fox said he would be forced to deal with flagrant violations by expelling the violator from South Quad. Since freshmen are required to live in University residence halls, this would be tantamount to ex- pulsion from the University. Fox later confirmed the statement, saying "If counseling fails, we might have to resort to such a solution." The resolutions passed by Hunt Council were both urged by the executive committee as a way to avoid such serious reprisals. Abolition of late minute penalties would still keep disciplinary meas- ures within the house judiciary and the student judiciary struc- ture. SGC Vice-President Ruth Bau- mann, '68, commented that Coum- cil gave freshman women, not house councils, the right to de- cide hours. SPECIAL POPULAR PRICES SPECIAL SCHEDULED PERFORMANCES MATINEES 1:15-4:50 EVEN I NGS 8:30 NO SEATS RESERVED Every Ticket Holder Guaranteed A Seat THE SAND PEBBLESi A ON[ WIE PROOI MION STEVE MCQUEEN RICHARD ATTEINOOOH RICHARD CRENNA CAIDICE IEIIOEIM ATANDRIANE ROBERT WISE ROBERT ANDERSON RiCHARD McKENNA IS LEVENJERYCODSWlTM a AM $ 501*CJT M VU* "riW0 * ftroa Mms* THURSDAY at the STATE Theatre TECHNICOLOR Barbara Steele Peter Baldwin PLUS ... SHE WAS A MAN ON THE LAM! I LIKE A THIEF STARRING RICHARD LONG DIRECTOR'S FESTIVAL ~LaI 0!~ DIAL 8.6416 UNIVERSITY OF DETROIT STUDENT GOVERNMENT PRESENTS THE RAMSEY LEWIS TRIO 8 P.M. SUNDAY, OCT. 22 THE RAMSEY LEWIS TRIO $4,50, 3.50,12.50, 1.50 THE RAMSEY LEWI1S TRIO Telephone: 342-1029 I1 ENDING TONIGHT AKIRA KUROSAWA'S MASTERPIECE RASHOMON Set in the middle ages it probes the ungraspable quick silver nature of truth and subjective reality. An eloquent masterpiece brimming with action. A piece of cinema art. "A110NAL GENERAL CORPORATION 5th AND OX EASTERN THEATRES~l 5tb AND fU11 I E FINAL WEEK FOHlV . LER. E OA75 No. MAPLE RD. "769.130+' Feature Times Monday - Friday 8:30 p.m. only Saturday - Sunday 2 - 5:10 - 8:30 p.m. FRI.-SAT.-OCT. 20-21 TRFACIS JULM and JIM STARRING JEANNE MOREAU AND OSKAR WERNER Although Truffaut evokes the romantic nostalgia before World War 1, he exquisitely illuminates a modern woman. This film established him as the leader of the New Wave. SUN.-MON.-OCT. 22-23 MICHELANGELO ANTONIONI'S 71VWE T R4 This.story of Italy's idle rich established Antonioni as one of the leading directors in the world and is a provocative statement about modern society. Alt-Time Film Great. . .. . .. : . . THE MIRISCH CORP"MON PRSFNTS JULIE ANDREWS-MAX VON SYDOW-RICHARD HARRIS m THE GEORGE ROY HILL wALTFR MIRISCH PRODiCTON ("HAWAII"PANAVISION' CzLdn,,Nm I + F ' THE SCRJEE JIM TO HE YEAR COLUMBIA PICTUE .wn TOMORROW NIGHT ' ONCE ONLY AT 7:00 *+s~ i .. I. , ii+'_ .iw.1_ . 1f'ti'l i i I i;{' I 1 1 '; i ., i A VERY SPECIAL PREVIEW OF A VERY SPECIAL COMEDY . IN COLOR.. PLUS OUR REGULAR FEATURE i 1 :; .L": --- BOB WA ' MOST IMPOSSIBLE CA... 'S MOST HILARIOUS PICTURE! NYf PR INEMILON PBELJOEY8/HOP P ..- {N. XlE ;r . Aw - -S.", ~) ~