The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at Aud. A WEDNESDAY, September 13 THE BEST WAY (Claude Miller, 1975) 7 & 10:33--AUD A A beguiling comic drama concerning tronsvestismp, humiliation, and a quest for friendship in a boy's camp. This remgrkobly assured first film by the past assist- ant to Truffaut, Godard and Bresson has received great praise in Europe for its perceptive rendering of childhood crises and sensitive performances. ANN ARBOR PREMIERE. In French, with subtitles. LANCELOT OF THE LAKE (Robert Bresson, 1974) 8:40 ONLY-AUD A Bresson's severe vision of the Arthurian legends of Camelot and the Quest for the Holy Grail. He removes all the gloss and fat that Hollywood has dumped oan the medieval romance and leaves a starkly beautiful world of clanking armor, great piety, and impossible honor. "Bresson's latest film is on unquali- fied masterpiece. It is a film that only he could make."-TAKE ONE. "A film to see again and again; never have economics of composition, of editing, of bridg- ing dialogue been more beautifully planned."-THE NEW YORKER. Critics Prize, Cannes Film Festival, 1974. In French, with subtitles. Plus Short: TO PARISFAL (Bruce Bilee, 1963). In a few short moments (16 minutes), Bailee captures the essence of all great epics and quests. Music by Wagner. TOMORROW: George Romero night. NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD and MARTIN. The director will speak. Page 12-Saturday, September 9, 197$-The Michigan Doily Weak Antony buries 'aesar' . in. t-- 1 - &1Wr A A _.J A.A.AA AA A A A_ A A &.A.A . J. J _ .J_ A __ A .. !/' \' .,,; ~Legislation. has already raised the drinking age to 19 effective Dec. 3, 1978; BUT a further proposal, Proposition D, fftewould change the drinking age to 21 effective Nov. 18, 1978-with NO grandfather * 'clause (the drinking age will be raised 3 years in one stroke of the pen, taking the right to drink away from over half a million young adults)-THIS MEANS YOU- THESEODCAE IS HOLDING A BENEFIT TO Protect the Rights of Young Adults featuring ... Proceeds to go to fight Proposition D. Register Now and Vote NO on Proposition D PROTECT YOUR RIGHTS POLITICAL AD PAlD FOR BY Second Chance (Continued trom rage 6 them. Pennell lends his Brutus the ap- propriate idealist's sir, projecting him as a deliberative Stevensonian martyr passionately striving to remain above the bare-knuckles power struggle The Peace Corps is live and wuell and for you. All your life you've wanted to do something im- portant for the world. Now a lot of the world needs you to do it. We need volunteers with skills and all kinds of practical knowledge. Call toll free:- 800-424-8580. Peace corps swirling about him. Yet once drawn down into the political cesspool, this most high-minded of leaders finds him- self pathetically and tragically lacking in the basic hatchetman's tools necessary for survival in a' world of vipers. While Scarfe's Cassius remains very much the covetous instigator, the actor encases him in a surprisingly sym- pathetic tone combined with a force of authority that proves an effective coun- terweight to Brutus' always compelling presence. Too often Cassius is por- trayed as a kind of frenetic, prissy housefly buzzing discontentedly around the sturdy countenance of his noble colleague; Scarfe's refreshing inter- pretation restructures his character not as a hate-the-world malcontent, but as a thoughtful man who gambles for power and loses, and is willing to accept the consequences. DIRECTOR WOOD'S somewhat spare staginge and Susan Benson's austere sets fare generally better in the more cloistered Act II than in the tur- bulent Act I; in the latter, a touch here and there of Zefferelli pizazz might have been helpful. The assassination scene is marred by the strange decision to use invisible daggers, thus throwing an expressionist anomaly into an otherwise determinedly realistic production. The effect is .of Caesar being mugged rather than murdered, and the scene turns almost comical as a result. The unique notion of having Calphur- nia sit by her husband's body during the funeral oration works rather well; the subsequent revealing of Caesar's cor- pse as mummified and cobwebbed is grotesque and pointless. To Wood's credit, the conspirators' midnight meeting is appropriately, eerie and fraught with menace, and the final farewell of Brutus and Cassius before their last battle is unusually moving. Stratford veteran Eric Donkin acquits himself as Caesar about as well as one could expect, since ultimately the role is so small and symbolic as to severely limit any real thespian, achievement. Mary Savidge also does nicely in the equally unrewarding role of his wife Calphurnia. The rest of the multi-charactered cast is competent i not memorable, though Frank Maraden's Casca must be singled out for special praise. Gesticulating engagingly with his gangly scarecrow's body, Maraden invests his part with such an infectious energy and humor that in some ways his performance is the most memorable in the show. At the opposite end of the ledger is Jack Wetherall, whose Bowery Boys rendition of Octavious is a grating an- noyance mercifully alleviated by the relative brevity of the part. Wetherall once again cements his standing as an actor of profoundly miniscule talent, and his persistent presence in major Stratford roles must remain a vexing mystery to the audience and an ongoing embarrassment to a theatrical com- pany so otherwise rich in talent. This talent is apparent everywhere in Julius Caesar; it's just that the creative sparks don't really fly often enough in a production that is on the whole perfec- tly respectable but just a little too thematically muddled and artistically laid back to remain in one's memory nearly as long as it should have. Legionnaires disease hits N. Y. C E C 3 .4 C K e"Vlo A Public service d This Newspaper & The Advertising Council A SCHOOL KIDS' RECORDS --THE MOST COM1PLEE SELELTION OF TAz7-1 Roci FOLKr< "I'tREGr- [) ISC } ROCK( WMORT4 16LUE5 IN M1J41C,.Atl, . -LOW EVERYDAY PR ICE : 7.'8 LITo 41.9q -JND)EPEN~tN(T) LOCALLY OWN\ED ANDc l~ , \\\\-E$T SELE.CT.IONJ OF 'Q..vrOUT$ f3A.cET L.PS OLK1, R~OCKBLUES ,ay A2z. I ~ Z - I .,, Yt t f: wsq~ """i " r1.:::!' }.~ t~tt. ss . !."141.V..i "1. ROCK ~ ~ ~ ~ . : ; :"::::":;';:1. BS :tiS: ii" s: 7JtI~PRT {1;." 6'T LEAN$G ".n' ::"':' IMPORT5 N ' OA N S:~%*~~" E( ,~r, } o.FePtCL , . j. ~ :.)MPY r"uT t: I -x lri, ": ,. O~O~uE /i1 /f51 N I ~ ~ q7 ". ___ -. . . . --'7 3 Oa.5 $*t. ; r lkO~ 7 AAN ;": SE2' VOCALS' CM hJ n L 54 523 e. Iier m n~ st' Ii9su .2 r IlNt. 994 03 SNLLIUNAS V ; NEW YORK (AP) - Faced with five confirmed cases of Legionnaires disease and 50 suspected ones, city officials announced new steps yesterday to prevent any further spread of the disease, which so far has been confined to the bustling garment district. In Memphis, Tenn., meanwhile, authorities at Baptist Hospital announced the death of one of five persons confirmed to have the mysterious disease. Hospital spokesman Maurice Elliott said the The ancient Colossus of Rhodes was a bronze statue that stood 120 feet high. It was toppled by an earthquake in 227 B.C. victim, a 44-year-old man, died shortly before 11 a.m. yesterday. The hospital also said that two of the other four victims, three of whom remained hospitalized, were employees of the hospital. FIRE Department officials in New York opened a campaign to drain and disinfect water towers atop each building in the midtown Manhattan area where 75,000 garment industry workers are employed. Business, meanwhile, continued in the district, which includes Madison Square Garden and Herald Square. The number of suspected and confirmed cases of the disease in New York rose from 43 to 55 from Thursday to yesterday. There have been two confirmed deaths from the disease and it is suspected as the cause of a third death. Mayor Edward Koch appealed for a' end to rumor-mongering and asked those who work and live in the nation's largest city to stay calm. LEGIONNAIRES disease, which is caused by a bacterium and kills 10 cent to 15 per cent of its victims, got it name after it claimed the lives of 29 persons who attended a 1976 American Legion convention in Philadelphia. Dr. David Fraser, one of the chief investigators into the Philadelphiq outbreak and many others since, joine city officials in efforts to discover th. source of the disease, which has strut in isolated cases and in "clusters." Fraser, chief of a special unit at thr U.S. Center for Disease Control irt Atlanta, said he would not speculate why the disease sprang up in the garment district until he coul investigate the situation. The announcement of the Legionnaires disease occurrence i Memphis was made Thursday night b, hospital spokesman Elliott. He said there were four suspected cases as wel as the five confirmed ones. It was th second outbreak of Legionnaire disease in Tennessee. There were 2% cases and four deaths in Kingsport last October. Health officials in Washington, D.C. said yesterday they had one confirmed and one probable case of Legionnaires disease. Rudrunande Ashr rn 640 OXFORD, ANN ARBOR OFFERS INTRODUCTORY CLASSES IN MEDITATION AND KUNDALINI YOGA For Further i lormation Call 995-5483 Free hatha yoga classes are offered every Tuesday and Thursday at 5 pm. Ummmmmmmn BOOK RUSH! THIS YEAR TRY ULRICH'S. BOOK RUSH HOURS SEPTEMBER 5-14 MON.-FRI. SATURDAY SUNDAY 8:30-9:00 9:30-6:00 12:00-5:00 0