; Happenings. The Michigan Daily-Friday, November 10, 1978-Page 9 For the week of November 1 0-16 0 FRIDAY November 10 T CINEMA Spellbound (Old A&D, 7 and 9:05) Hitchcock goes Freudian in this thriller about amnesia victim Gregory Peck. =Camelot (Nat. Sci., 7 and 9:40) Much beloved musical about King Arthur and his unfaithful wife. "On second thought, let's not go to Camelot. It is a silly place." - Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Two films by Werner Herzog at MLB, Aud. 4: Aguirre, Wrath of God, at 7 and 10:20, and Signs of Life t 8:45 only. The Miracle Worker (AH, 7 only) Beautiful drama of deaf-mute Helen Keller and her teacher, Annie Sullivan. Lilies of the Field (AH, 9 only) Sidney Poitier works with darling flock of nuns. Amen, amen, amen! EVENTS Musical Society - Vladimir Ashkenazy, English Chamber Orch.; Hill Aud, 8:30 p.m. SATURDAY November 11 CINEMA The Ruling Class (A&D, 7 and 9:30) British nobleman (Peter O'Toole) thinks he is Jesus Christ. Slaughterhouse-Five (Nat. Sci., 7 and 9) Shown in honor of Armistice Day and the birthday of Kurt Vonnegut, who wrote the novel this poignant anti-war .sci-fi film is based on. * Outrageous (MLB 3, 7, 8:40 and 10:20) About a homosexual female im- personator and his friend, a young schizophrenic woman. Sneered at by mjst critics. Decide for yourself. "'Butley (AH, 7 and 9:15) Comedy starring Alan Bates. Young Frankenstein (MLB Aud. 4, 7 and 9) The funniest and most accurate lampoon yet of the Karloff/James Whale cycle of Frankenstein films. The Oedipus Film Festival (Halfway Inn, starting at 9) Young artists are en- .Couraged to bring their films, photographs and xerox art to exhibit in this notorious hangout of bohemians ,and punk rockers, located in East Quad. EVENTS Bandorama-Marching, Jazz, Sym- phony, Concert Bands; The Friars: Hill Aud., 8 p.m. SUNDAY November 12 CINEMA Alice's Restaurant (Old A&D, 7 and 9:05) Director Arthur Penn turns Arlo G4thrie's endearing protest ballad into a'pedestrian story about aging flower children. Really dreadful. The Last Detail (AH, 7 and 9) Bawdy and tragic, about a young sailor's trip to the brig. With the inimitable Jack Nicholson. EVENTS Chicago: Crisler Arena, 8p.m. MONDAY November 13 CINEMA The Steel Helmet and Park Row (,Aud. A) Two films by Sam Fuller, at 7 and 8:30 respectively. TUESDAY November 14 CINEMA Wild Angels (Old A&D, 7 and 10) and Teenage Doll (8:40 only). Two by Roger Corman0, king of the B-movies. Equinox Flower and Zatoichi - Fire Fighter (Aud. A, 7 and 9, respectively) Two recent Japanese films, Deliverance (MLB, Aud. 4, 7 and 9) A group of men on a canoe trip must con- tend with the forces of nature and depraved backwoodsmen. Magnificent, but a bit on the stark side. EVENTS Jimmy Cliff: Hill Aud., 8 p.m. 'Musical Society - Barbara Str- zelecka, harpsichordist: Rackham Aud., 8:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY November 15 CINEMA The General (Old A&D, 7 only) The love story of a Civil War engineer (Buster Keaton) and his locomotive. Walter Kerr called this 1926 film an epic; and rightly so. A perfect showcase for Keaton's sophisticated, almost surrealistic brand of slapstick. The Gold Rush (Old A&D, 9:05 only) Another silent classic. This is the one where Charlie Chaplin elegantly dines on a boiled boot. Hilarious, aside from the usual nauseating moments of Chaplin's gooey sentimentality. Harlan County, USA (Aud. A, 7 and 9) Much-acclaimed documentary of a coal miners' strike. Charles, Dead or Alive (Nat. Sci., 7 and 9) A Swiss film directed by Alain 'Tanner (his first feature film). EVENTS University Philharmonica - Hill Aud., 8p.m. THURSDAY November 16 CINEMA State of Siege (Old A&D, 7 and 9:30) Directed by Costa-Gavras (who made Z), with Yves Montand. The Haunting (Michigan Union Assembly Hall, 7 and 9) Based on a novel by Shirley Jackson. An eerie, sensitive, literate variation on the musty old theme of people forced to spend the night in a haunted house. Barbarella (Aud A, 7 and 10:30) A very young Jane Fonda as a scantily- clad space baby. HUNGRY? THE SOLUTION IS THIS CLOSE! DalI663-0511 cg - I ", ' you ring, we bring!" SUBMARINES & PIZZA New sex center to stimulate A2 t .. . . I (Continued from Page 1) the one in Poona, he admitted that this may not be realistic. "Therapists are afraid to carry out some of the methods used in Poona because they are illegal," he said. AS AN EXAMPLE, Amido, cited a technique iteed in Poona to help women who have a fear of being raped. In ac- cordance with Bhagwan philosophy, women who have such a problem are actually raped as a means of over- coming that fear. A similar method is used to help women who have a father complex, in which fantasies of having sex with their fathers have been left unfulfilled. "In such instances the woman is provided with a warm, loving situation wlere she can develop that kind of transference with the group leader-the fther- surrogate," explained the guru. He explained that these types of methods can be enacted within the con- fines of an ashram. "There is one in Los Angeles-it's behind closed doors, so it doesn't matter what the law, says." THE ANN ARBOR center, located in the guru's apartment, has yet to take on those kinds of dimensions. Relatively tame forms of meditation are used in the group sessions to "unblock sexual tension." Amido demonstrated one of these methods, known as Dynamic Meditation. The "Sex Guru," attired totally in orange-the required dress code for those of the Bhagwan faith-began slowly shaking to the steady bet of a bongo drum. His movements became quicker and quicker-the locket around his neck with the image of Bhagwan striking against his chest with each chaotic jerk. Techniques of this kind help people to release and disperse their energy, ac- cording to Amido, and this type of ac- tion will ultimately lead them beyond the merely physical. - "People can learn to become one, not just physically," he explained. "The psychic aura itself breaks down most often in sexual union, and people can learn to feel this." SENIORS... An MBA at NYU?. Located in the business and financial capital of the world, New York University has the nation's largest private Graduate School of Business Administra- tion. Leslie Dukker can discuss the possibilities there for you on Tuesday, November 14 when she visits the campus. The Career Planning and Placement Office has program information and a sign up schedule. It's Your Future CONSIDER THE POSSIBILITIES Profs disagree on inflation plan NYU is an equal opportunity institution 4 (Continued from Page 1) Inflation is built into the current American economic system, and nothing short of a basic change in the system will remedy it, Weisskopf con- tended. "We can't solve the falling dollar and inflation without changingi the nature of the whole modern i capitalistic economy," he said.I Brazer and Wilhelm indicated they thought the credit-tightening measuresI wh wrds.out on cM pus... If you want to be in the know, you shoul be reading The Daily . . . the latest in news, sports, les affaires academiques, and entertainment.. . CALL 764-0558 to order your subscription todc which Carter outlined in his second ad- dress might be more effective than his wage and price guidelines in cutting in- flation and the dollar's slide. Wilhelm said the dollar will be stabilized by cutting U.S. inflation, and Carter's credit measures will help do this. "It will make the cost of credit higher and it will be more expensive to invest. This reduces the amount of borrowing and investing," he said. Id es day smatt"Mfth / I , li } 'lls FM I I WILHELM labelled Carter's actions so far as "symbolic." He added, "The question is if the Federal Reserve will reduce the growth in the money supply. It could be a media event for the (recent) November election." The measures which cut inflation will also lead to a recession, according to Brazer and Wilhelm. The odds for a recession in the near future are "at least 55 per cent," Wilhelm said. "Ex- cept for war times, a recession occurs about every three and a half years. Sin- ce the last one was in 1974, we are at a peak point for a recession," he added. Weisskopf disagreed, saying that Carter's credit actions would be too weak to affect the slide in the dollar. 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