Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 6, 1971 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 6, 1971 MUSIC Muddy: By BERT STRATTON Muddy Waters' first *set last n i g h t wasn't that good, yet everyone knows the next sets will be better. It's the same old story: musician arrives in town, tired, has to play his first set anyway, barely warms up, breaks for second set, and reviewer writes about how blah every- thing is. But things will improve. The crowd will react better. Muddy will be higher, drinking his $9 champagne, and everything will work out fine. As a great blues band performs in a new, im- proved Alley where the chairs line the walls leaving the middle floor space clear - for people to stretch out and move in. The band-incredibly good- especially Paul Oscher, doing it on harp, Pinetop Perkins piano- ing well. Everybody was good and Muddy even better. How- ever, nobody got off on it. Mud- dy was brought down by the lack of response from his audience, and played a quick set. Friday night first sets are what I'm talking about. It's too bad those are the ones that get reviewed. So, there's rno guarantee that Blue sing the Alhey Last night it was all so bleary. For sure, Muddy will pull it all together - crowd and all. the music is for certain to becout- standing, the event will become exciting. It'll be worth the. prie, Placement Service The following schools will interview prospective teachers in our office dur- ing months of November and Decem- ber. Make appointments by calling 764-7459. or at Career Plan. & Place- ment through Educ. Div. Receptionist on Monday of week before the inter- view date. ,Nov. 9;" Midland, Mi.-Eng., El. Ed. . Home Ec. only; Nov. 16, Garden City, Mi.; Nov. 18, Bureau of Indian Af- fairs, Indian Schools - Elem only; Dec. 1, Wyandotte, Mi.; Dec. 7, Alpena, Mi. Southfield, Mi., Detroit, Mi., Rochester, Mi.; Dec. 8, Cleveland, Oh.; Dec. 9, Grand Rapids, Mi. For the student body: LEVI'S. CORDUROY Slim Fits ... $6.98 (All Colors) Bells.. .... ..$8.50 DENIM Bush Jeans . $10.00 Aieu GRAD COFFEE HOUR Come for dessert and cof fee after dinner TUESDAY, NOV. 9 8-10 p.m. 4th Floor RACKHAM I 0 1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6 Cf Day Cal endar Sch. of Education R. Heyns, "Ad- ministrative Problems in- Higher Edut- cation,"Rackha AssernbIy Hali 9 am, Orthodox Christian Felowship> D. Bush,. Univ. of W, Ontario; 'Oxtho- doy: A Ghetto?" St. Nicholas Ortho- dox Church, 414 N Maip St., 10:4, am. Football: .Michigan.. vs. Iowa.,~ici gan Stadium, 1:30.pm Men's Glee Club: Joint Concert with Iowa Scottish Highlanders,:-Hill Aud., ! 7, 9:30 pm. IUAC Soph Show: 'The-Pajama Game," Power Center, 8 pm. Musical Society: Chamber Arts Series. "Concentus Musicus from Vienna," Rackham Aud., 8:30 pm. joe orton WHAT THE BUTLER SAW Bells ...... Boot Jeans Pre-Shrunk Super Slims - $8.00 $7.50 $7.50 $7.00 + , I 8 P.M.-Arena Theatre THURS., FRI., SAT. EVES Box Office-Trueblood opens 2 P.M. Seats at $1.00, $1.50 CHECKMATE J' 1I -d L I SState Street at LibertyI Sneak Preview Tnihat9 P.M. I CINEMA II FRIDAY & SATURDAY THE THIRD MAN (1949) 5py story set in Vienna, with Orson Wells, Joseph Cotton, Alida Valli and Trevor Howard, directed by Carol Reed, with screenplay by Graham Greene 7 & 9:05 Aud. A, Angell Hall Muddy Waters Muddy will play as well as he did at Hill Aud., that'd be pretty hard, but there's the definite possibility that things will turn out to be what one would ex- pect when Muddy Waters plays a small coffeehouse. Dynamite. When Muddy played at Hill he .-had everybody going nuts, dancing, and in general digging it. By some sort of logic the Alley should be an easier place in which to excite a crowd than big old Hill Aud. There used to be reasons why the Alley was a bum place-be- ing hit with pinball commer- cials, cinema commercials, and cider announcements just when you wanted to get into some Corner of State and Liberty Sts. DIAL 662-6264 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9.05 FRANK ZAPPA'S R music and away from all that. Well, now there is some of that Canterbury House aura, there is a chance to break in the Alley, and do it right. With Oscher screeching and belching on his harp-(I say belching because I'm tired of moaning) and Muddy carrying on that mysterious dialogue be- tween his voice and his guitar, and Pinetop smiling and pound- ing on the piano, and everybody high, the Alley will fall to the pressures. Really there is no better, no tighter, blues band in the land. They are incredible to say the least. To say the most would be lie, because they didn't excite the majority of the first-set this KIKM $1.50 86 FRI., SAT,, SUN. Vanguard Recording Artist PATRICK SKY AND LIAN O'FLYNN playing the Ullion pipes 11011il $TREET 't1 gSI -Daily-David Margolick crowd. N o b o d y got up and danced, nobody did anything, and there wasn't any demand for an encore. To judge solely the musician- ship is a worse trip. There's ab- solutely nothing to say without putting the audience in the pic- ture too. -- SPECIAL - Fish Dinner $1.00 4 reg. $1.25 Lord Nelson's 1315 S. University is y I r SAT. 5 . 7 0 FREE BILLIARtD INSTRUCTION Thurs. 7-9 p.m. Nov. I1I & 18 -Michigan Union Saturday and Sunday MURIEL DIR. ALAIN RESNAIS, 1963. with Delphine Sey- rig. Resnais takes you in- to the world of the mem- ory. Former love and for- mer horror invade the present in a Proustian rememberance of things past. Muriel is a film ex- quisitely constructed with Resnais' sophisticated ed- A PARAMOUNTJ//1 PICTURES PRESENTSfriends"MUSIC BY ELTON JOHN TECHNICOLOR! A PARAMOUNT PICTUR9 A :; * M w I . r, iting. In color, French, with subtitles. ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 7:00 and 9:05 75c the onn arbor film cooperative presents COME and SEE JANE FONDA as BARBARELLA DO HER THING! WITH MARCEL MARCEAU - DAVID H EMMINGS-JOHN PHILLIP LAW TUESDAY - November 9th - ONLY! I*, auditorium a angell hall Panavision Technicolor 7 & 9:30 p.m. still only 75c COMING THURSDAY-Fellini's JULIET OF THE SPIRITS MAOR Theater presents I Ift., A oI 0 I I I