Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 12,'1974 Page EIght THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 12, 197:4 Citurct ik4r4h)i, eOice _ Entertainment': Dance with MGM CANTERBURY HOUSE 218 N. Division-665-0606 Holy Eucharist at noon at Canterbury House. A meal fol- lowing. * * * FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Ministers: Robert E. Sanders, John R. Waser, Brewster H. Gere, Jr. "Where Christ, Campus and Community meet" Worship Services at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. -S e r m o n Title: "In Debt But Not Bankrupt." UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH, 1001 E. Huron Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, Ministers 9:30 a.m.-Church School. 10:30 a.m.-Morning Worship. 5:30 p.m.-Student Supper. ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL (Catholic) 331 Thompson-663-05$7 Weekend Masses: Saturday: 5 p.m. and midight. Sunday: 7:45 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m., noon, and 5 p.m. (plus 9:30 a.m. North Campus). ANN ARBOR CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 W. Stadium Blvd. (one block west of U of M Stadium) Bible Study - Sunday, 9:30 a.m.-Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Worship-Sunday, 10:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Need Transportation? C a I1 662-9928., CAMPUS CHAPEL Pastor: Don Postema 10:00 a.m.-Morning Service. *1 DI I ER 'SPEC MLC l -Dinner includes: Choice of Soup, Vegetarian Cassarole, Salad, and Beverage. BAKER'S BONUS WHOLE WHEAT FLOUR DEAF SMITH ORGANIC BREAD FLOUR-$1.25/5 LBS. WHITE FLOUR STONEGROUND, UNBLEACHED-$1.00/5 LBS. SUNFLOWER SEED FREAKS! RAW SUNFLOWER SEEDS-89c/LB. EDEN WHOLE EARTH GROCERY and RESTAURANT 330 MAYNARD 10-7 MONDAY-SATURDAY FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH State at Huron and Washington 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Worship Services. Sermon: "The Aboli- tion of the Laity." 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Church School for all ages. 9:00-12:30-Nursery Care. 10:30-11:00 a.m. - Coffee-Con- versation-Fellowship. Worship service broadcast on WNRS (1290) AM and WNRZ (103) FM from 11:00 to noon each Sunday. WESLEY FOUNDATION: Sunday: 4:30 p.m.-What Is Commit- ment? 6:00 p.m.-Dinner. 6:45 p.m.-Celebration. Monday: 6:30-8:00 p.m.-TA Class and Experience. Thursday: 6:00 p.m.-Grad Community. Call 483-8344 or 668-6881 for de- tails. * * * UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 409 S. Division M. Robert Fraser, Pastor Church School-9:45 a.m. Morning Worship-11:00 a.m. Evening Worship-7:00 p.m. * * * ST. ANDREW'S EPSICOPAL CHURCH, 306 N. Division 8:00 a.m.-Holy Eucharist. 10:00 a.m. -Morning Prayer and Sermon. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday Services at 9:15 and at 10:30 a.m. Sunday Bible Study at 9:15. Midweek Worship Wednesday Evening at 10:00. LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (ALC-LCA) (Formerly Lutheran Student Chapel) 801 . Forest Ave. at Hill St. Donald G. Zill, Pastor Sunday Service at 10:30 a.n. Try Daily Classifieds UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST Presently Meeting at YM-YWCA, 530 S. Fifth David Graf, Minister 3:00 p.m. - Sunday Worship Service. Students Welcome. For information or transpor- tation: 663-3233 or 662-2494. * * * BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149 Minister: Orval L. E. Willimann 1000 a.m. - Worship Service and Church School, ,* * * FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Sunday Service and Sunday School-10:30 a.m. Wednesday Testimony Meet- ing-8:00 p.m. Child Care-Sunday, under 2 years; Wednesday, through 6 years. Reading Room - 306 E. Lib- erty, 10-9 Mon., 10-5 Tues.-Sat. "The Truth That Heals" - WPAG radio, 10 a.m. Sunday. WELCOME TO ANN ARBOR FRIENDS MEETING (QUAKERS) 1420 Hill St.-668-9341 (if no answer, 769-3354, 971-4875, 665-2683)r Silent Meeting for Worship-! Sunday, 10-11 a.m. First Day School, nursery/ high, 10-11 a.m. Adult Forum, 11-12. Potluck every first Sunday, Businessameetingevery third Sunday after worship. D a i 1 y Morning Meditation (546 Walnut St.), 8:30-9 a.m. Wednesday Sack Lunch (1073 East Engineering), 12-1 p.n. Worship-sharing Groups (in homes), Tues. / Wed. / Thurs. eves. Friday Evening Family Night (1420 Hill St.), 7:30-11 p.m.- s t o r i e s, discussions, games, crafts, singing and dancing for all ages. American F r i e n d s Service Committee (AFSC), 1414 Hill St., 761-8283. Bail & Prison Reform, 761- 8283, 761-8331. Friends International Co-op, 1416 Hill St., 761-7435. Friends L a k e Community, 19,720 Waterloo Rd., Chelsea, 475-8775. Movement for a New Society (MNS), 665-6083. World Peace Tax Fund, Box 1447, Ann Arbor. Cavender and Catlin Funny man George Carlin performs at 8:00 this evening in Hill Aud. in a benefit for Prof. George Cavender's Michigan Marching Band. Remaining tickets are priced at $3, $4 and $5, and will be available at the Hill Box Office from 8-12 this morning and 5-8 tonight. MOVIES on11 V. by MICHAEL WILSON (Continued from Page 5) Jerry Lewis stars with Dean it up in Send Me No Flowers Martin in this remake of Car- (1964), an excellent black com- ole Lombard's Nothing Sacred edy directed with style by Nor- (1937), about a sinus problem man Jewison and also featuring that's mistaken for radiation Tony Randall and Clint Walker. poisoning; Janet Leigh is also Walter Matthau copped the featured. coveted Oscar for his super- White Heat (1949) is being human effort in part I of Billy telecast at the same time on Wilder's Fortune Cookie (1965), a different channel (50), and I airedon Channel 7 this Thurs- guarantee this fine gangster day at 4:30 p.m. Jack Lemmon picture with Jimmy Cagney and also stars in this harmless com- Edmond O'Brien will be hard edy about fake whiplash and to compete with. Cagney is tops what some people will do for as a crime fanatic with his money. (The second part will mom on the brain and a point- be shown Fri. same time, same blank gun in every hand. The channel). picture is well directed by Raoul Thursday night on Channel 2 Walsh and maintains a pace at 11:30 p.m. don't miss The that is still furious for its time. Good Die Young (1954), a fumb- ling stream - of - consciousness If comedy, gangsters aren't melodrama about four men your thing, tune in atrmid- from totally different back- night on Channel 9 Saturday for groundswho execute a terrific- some biting Lillian Hellman sen- ally exciting armed holdup. timent in the choppy and ef- R i c h a r d Basehart, John fective Chase (1966), starring Ireland, Stanley Baker and Glo- Marlon Brando as a small-town ria Grahme star. Southern sheriff with big-time Friday night promises to be problems. The cast includes the best in a long line of late- Robert Redford, Jane Fonda, night weeks of tube viewing, E. G. Marshall and James Fox, kicking off with Living It Up and the story may be obnoxious (1954) at 11:30 on Channel 11. but Brando's acting never is. (Continued from Page 5) Still, Garland was not the studio's major concern - her faults could usually be repaired in the cutting room. But prob- lems with the Technicolor film stock, naturally, could not. Almost all of the previous ex- perience with the prism-based Technicolor process had been basically unfavorable; in fact, the only decent color print ob- tained before 1938 was Disney's! Snow White. But with David O. Selznick planning to mount the massive Gone With The Wind in just a few months-and in Technicolor, studio executives decided to take the chance and shoot Oz in the bulky color process. Thanks to some clutch work by director Fleming and the best team of technicians in Hollywood, it worked. World War II effectively halt- ed large-scale musical produc- tion at Metro, but soon there- after the studio went back to work with a new roster of per- formers: Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra, Donald O'Connor, and Esther Williams. Astaire and Kelly were the last really great actors to grace the Metro musical, but they were also probably the best of the entire lot. Both could es- tablish a character or a mood just by a small movement or step, almost like the immortall Chaplin. Who would ever have imagin- ed that there could be anything! sensual about a man dancing! with atwooden hat rack? But as Astaire demonstrated in Royal Wedding, even inanimate objects contain an underlying sense of motion-all they need is the proper artist to bring them to life. (Funny that the expressionist art movement had shown the same thing back in the early part of the century.) Kelly, meanwhile, was the consumate choreographer. In An American in Paris, Kelly and director Vincent Minelli used stylized motion and bold light- ing to evoke an atmosphere of cinema erotique. The simple shadow-a device employed in recent Truffaut and Bergman pictures-worked for Kelly and Minelli as a tool to separate and define the two sides of Gersh- win's Paris: the bawdy and the glamorous. Shortly after Kelly, Astaire, and Sinatra left MGM in the late '50s, the great musical machine began the long trek downhill. It soon became clear that television had relieved movies of the audience that at one time would eagerly sit through untold minutes of banal story and script just to ooh an aah at the few bouncy musical sequences. Unfortunately, Metro execu- tives found that impossible to accept until the studio was al tually on the brink of ban' ruptcy. The effects of the musical genre linger on, however. When science fiction author Michael Crichton directed Westworld at MGM last year, he wanted t. use several large studio sets to simulate the control center of his futuristic amusement park. The lighting problems involved might have been insurmount- able at other studios-but not at MGM. Metro technicians just remounted the massive old "chicken coop" fixtures that had lit the biggest of the sing- ing spectaculars, and Westworld was underway. But of course, the musical is not entirely dead. Some recent "tuners"-most notably Cabaret -have managed to succeed both critically and financially. And, after all, there is every reason to believe that a musical film-- if produced with the more dis- criminating tastes of the modern cinema audience in mind-could indeed be just as successful as a straight picture. Yet therein lies the magic question-can Hollywood forget 40 years of singing and dancing tradition and learn to use music the way European filmmakers have for decades? Perhaps we will find out when Peter Bog- danovich's At Long Last LoO and Robert Altman's as yet un- titled countrytmusical arrie early next year. Have a flair for artistic writinq? If you are interest- ed in reviewing poetry, and music or writing feature stories ab o ut the drama, dance, film arts: Contact Arts Editor, c/o The Michigan Daiy. .. .... . i r I-, CONDOLANCES to MSU from: BIVOUAC The world's best camping equipment aT the best price in town. 330 S. STATE ST. CABLE 3 TV You can see the game at 1 1 a.m. on Sun., Oct. 13, and 6 p.m. on Tues., Oct. 15. CAMPUS CORNERS Stop by on the way to the game. PACKARD & STATE CHECKMATE The store for Levi's. 302 S. STATE COTTAGE INN The oldest pizza parlor in Ann Arbor 512 E. WILLIAM MARTY'S-SOUTH U Have you been in to see us yet? Great threads! MOE SPORT SHOPS 711 NORTH UNIVERSITY 902 SOUTH STATE NATIONAL BANK & TRUST CO. OF ANN ARBOR Over 81 years of continuous banking service to Ann Arbor and Washtenaw County THE PERSIAN HOUSE OF IMPORTS Largest selection of hand-made sheep skin coats for men & women, 1/2 off. 320 E. LIBERTY-769-8555 BEAT THE CREAM DASCOLA BARBERS & STYLISTS from the class of M '36 DAVID'S BOOKS Books and evertyhing 25 % off 662-8441-529 E. LIBERTY DELTA CHI FRATERNITY and their little sister Chi Delphia say GO BLUE-Beat MSU! STADIUM RESTAURANT & PIZZERIA Featuring Greek menu 4 days a week 338 S. STATE TICE'S MEN'S SHOP Levis and formal wear 1111 SOUTH UNIVERSITY ULRICH'S BOOKS INC. Ann Arbor's friendly book store 549 EAST UNIVERSITY VAN BOVEN INC. Fine clothing, furnishings and OUTU OF EDEN'S FOOD Dinner Plate Special $2.00 330 MAYNARD-761-8134 lilt'