qturdoy, January 25, 1 §75 THE MICHI6AN DAILY F6§ Thte6 citurday, J~riuory 25, l~75 THE MICHIGAN DAILY l~e§~ Tl~e~ events and entertainment apPenut Os. or the week of jan. 25-31 * wonderful It Happened One !Night (1934) tonight at 6 on Channel 20, a sure-fire winner. Later on 7 watch Frank Sina- tra deal with a homosexuality case and not even ruffle his tou- I pee when a special repeat per- formance of The Detective COMMERCIAL CINEMA (1968) is aired at 9 p.m., fea- Harry and Tonto - (State) - turing top-notch supporting cast rt Carney stars in this slow members including Ralph Meek- ut generally interesting film er, Lee Remick, Jack Klug-j hat exposes, and quite inter- man and Jacqueline Bisset. To- stingly so, the great American night at 11:30 on Channel 13 ragedy - growing old. *** The 32nd Annual Golden Globe The Godfather, Part II - Awards is presented live fromj Michigan) - Francis Ford The Beverly Hills Hotel with oppola directed this second host John Davidson and a whole nd equally brilliant installment slew of big-name guest stars f America's Mafia epic. A receiving awards. Both televi- ood and extremely interest- sion and mrvies are honored in ng film. *** this Hollywood Foreign Press Going Places - (Campus) - Association big-deal ceremony. Elegant, if undeniably softcore rnography. The Towering Inferno-(Fifth orum) - The flames shoot higher and higher in this good guys vs. nan onys Durn'emu.Jnay2 t , s uys vs. bad buys burn-'mu.Jnay2 Birthdays: Douglas MacAr-' Paper Moon - (The Moviet, thur, Paul Newman, Jules Feif- Briarwood) - Peter Bogdano- fer, Eartha Kitt. vich's tribute to the Depression CINEMA is both charming and amusing. The Point (Cinema II, Aud. ratum O'Neal, playing Addie A, 7, 9) - Harry Nilsson pro- ray, is absolutely priceless. vides the music while Dustin Hoffman narrates this funny but! Iovies, Briarwood) --Burt socially significant fable of Reynolds headlines this occa- Oblio and his dog Arrow, who ionally comic work by Robert have been ostracized from point- idrich. Quite watchable. *** land. Animated cartoon with a The Man With The Golden lot of sophistication and poig- un -- (The Movies, Briar-nance. Short: Braverman's con- od) - James Bond= (Roger densed cream of Beatles. **** oore), rocks that do funny Cleo from 5 to 7 (Cinema hings, and the burned out Cun- Guild, Arch. Aud., 7) - As a rd liner Queen Elizabeth unite derivation of the French New n a dismal continuation of the Wave, the film attempts to be 07 saga. * experimental in technique, re- Freebie and the Bean-(The suiting in irresponsible over- ovies, Briarwood)-Alan Arkin dulgence.* nd James Caan carry the title Here's Your Life (Cinema oles in a bad attempt to dupli- Guild, Arch. Aud., 9:05) - Jan :ate the Warner Bros. "screw- Troell's first feature film. In-I >all" comedies of the '30s. * teresting only in comparison with his present work.** Deliverance (New World, MLB, 4, 7, 9) - John Boorman nearly killed his cast and crew JANUARY 25 in filming James Dickey's nov- Birthdays: Somerset Maugh- el. The result is a disturbing am, Virginia Woolf. journey into nature, where CINEMA "machismo" is raped from ex- To Kill A Mockingbird (Cine. istence. *** tinis (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Angell Hall, Aud. A, 7, 9) - E u r o p e a n star Sanda Dominique portrays a beauti- ful Jewish girl whose wealthy family is terrorized by Fascists in Mussolini's Italy. *** Introduction to the Enemy3 (Ann Arbor Indochina Peace} Campaign, MLB 3, 7:30, 9:30)- A documentary on Tom Hayden and Jane Fonda's visit to NorthI Vietnam. MUSIC Ark - Aging Children, folk, $1.00 Blind Pig - Muskadine Blues Band, blues, $1.00j Chances Are - Dr. Bop and the Headliners, featuring the White Raven, 50's and early 60's, $1.00 for students, $1.50 others.a Mr. Flood's Party - Dia- mond Rio, country, $.75. Suds Factory - Ian-Quail, rock, $.50 Music School - Philharmonia, Uri Mayer, conductor: Hill Aud., 8 p.m. EVENTS International Night - food from Spain and Portugal:1 League Cafeteria, 5-7:15 p.m. Spanish Language, Culture Films - Castro vs. Batista; Kennedy vs. Krushchv; Cas- tro: 126 Residential College, 4? p.m. THE TUBE Barney Miller is a new Chan- nel 7, 8 p.m. ABC police com- edy about life in a big-time cop station, and is followed a half- hour later by Karen, a new Ka- ren Valentine sit-com about a staff worker for a Washington citizen's lobby. Both sound like pure dudds but everybody de- serves a chance, right? NBC debuts Archer tonight at 9 on 4, with ex-Family Affair father Brian Keith as the hard - boiled detective, based loosely on the old Ross McDonald mystery stories. This series, thrust into NBC's prime-time at the last minute, may make it big if the scripts are any good. Keith is excellent as Archer, and Mar- joe Gortner guest-stars in this very heavy first episode. JANUARY 31 Birthdays: Tallulah Bank- head, Jackie Robinson, Nor- man Mailer. CINEMA Le Feu Follet (Cinema II. 1930's in Berlin. Excellent point- counterpoint technique empha- sizes the decadence of the caba- ret as-well as the decay of Ber- lin society and the rise of Hit- ler.. *** American Graffiti. (Media- trics, Nat. Sci., 7:30, 9:30) - Director George Lucas' envi- sioned film of 1962 high-school life. Seeking out of the golden support of Francis Ford Copol- la, he has created one of the truly excellent period pieces in film history.*** MUSIC Suds Factory - Ian - Quail, rock, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Cosmic Cowboy, country, $1. Blind Pig - Muskadine Blues Band, blues, $1. The Ark - Lou & Sally Killen, English traditional music, $2.50 EVENTS Women's Swimming - U-M vs. Purdue: Matt Mann Pool, 5:30 p.m. Men's Swimming - U-M vs. Indiana: Matt Mann Pool, 7:30 p.m. Indochina Peace Campaign- Speakers: Fred Branfman, di- rector of Indochina Resource Center, Washington; Le Anh Thu, Vietnam woman living in exile; Jean-Pierre Debris, for- mer political prisoner of Thieu; Bob Chenoweth, POW in Hanoi -Hill Aud., 8 p.m. THE-TUBE A salute to Jack Benny high- lights Mike Douglas today on Channel 2 at 4:30; guests in- clude Benny's daughter Joan. Mel Blanc, Don Wilson and many film clips of the infamous Benny career. Tonight on Chan- nel 20 at 8 p.m. don't forget Patrick McGoohan as The Pri- soner, a completely different TV show that never quite made it but should have. Viva Max is telecast tonight at 11:30 on Channel 2 with stars Peter Us- tinov, John Astin and Jona- than Winters excellent in this wartime comedy vehicle about an Alamo takeover in the 1960's. At 1 a.m. on Channel 4 to second - best - of - the -Mid- night Special is aired, and fea- tures stars like B.B. King, Da- vid Bowie, Ray Charles and Aretha Franklin in a repeat of very special performances from this commercial rip-off of the Woodstock Nation's pocket- books. DAVID BOWIE . . . Ch-ch-ch-ch-changes into a TV star, Friday night in the wee hours. Headl iners: It would be a sham of a travesty of two shams of a fraud, as Woody Allen would say, to tell you this will be an exciting week. It won't. It will be cold, and there won't be much hot stuff in the way of entertainment. So, on general principle, we recommend the Smothers Brothers Tuesday 8 p.m. variety show on NBC. Tom and Dick are back in stride with wise- guy comedy . . . and if you're still awake Friday night at 1 a.m., "Midnight Special" presents a round of its "best" shows, including the oddities of David Bowie. There are a few good local movies, too ... Yawn. THE SMOTHERS BROTHERS . . . cackling their way through a triumphant comeback, Monday night on the tube. a1 I, Aud. A, 7, 9:15) - Greg- ry Peck stars in this engross- g drama of southern racism nd a lawyer who attempts to mve a framed black man. **** Tarzan, The Ape Man (Cine- a Guild, Arch. Aud., 7, 9:05) ohnny Weissmuller's first rid greatest of the jungle epics. The Emigrants (New World, fLB 3, 7, 9:45) - Beautifully lned epic of Swedes bound America; Max Von Sydow nd Liv Ullman are excellent. *4' Sacco and Vanzetti (New World, MLB 4, 7, 9:15) - Mar- ed attempt at offering justice o an infamously messy trial. ** Harold and Maude (Media- rics, Nat. Sci., 7, 8:45, 10) )ne of the true cult films, Hal shby's film returns again to no nes complaint. Wait Until Dark (Couzens ilm Co-op, Couzens Cafeteria, 10) - Audrey Hepburn and Ian Arkin enhance this clever- made thriller that deserves epeated viewing. *** It Happened One Night (Burs- ey Hall Enterprises, Bursley MUSIC Blind Pig - Silk Purse, clas- sical, $.50. Chances Are - Jackal, rock, $.50 for students, $1 others. Dooley's - Craig Marsden, contemporary rock, no cover. Mr. Flood's Party - Jawbone, country - western, $1. Suds Factory - Ian-Quail, I 3 i EVENTS Men's Basketball - UM vs. Wisconsin, Crisler Arena, 8:05 pm. Alpha Phi Omega - U-M Stu- dent Blood Bank; Union Ball- room, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. UAC Future Worlds - Al Lithman, '"Auroville'; a n evolving Alternative Future": Hill Aud., 8 p.m. THE TUBE rocK, ~u. Two thrillers play opposite Music School - F a c.u l t y T Chamber Concert, Roesgen- one another tonight as The Bos- Champion, Purcell, Stravinsky, ton Strangler (1968) and Play jazz classics: Rackham Aud., Misty For Me (1971) air at 9 4 p.m p.m. on Channels 7 and 4, re- Citizen Kane (1941), one of the spectively - Misty, directed and most influential, plagiarized starring Clint Eastwood, has a and overrated films ever made, fie performance by Jessica airs on Bill Kennedy's Channel Walter as the deranged and sex- 50 Showtime today at 1 p.m. starved Evelyn Draper, but Later watch Anne Francis never rises much above third- match wits with Gene Barry on rate Hitchcock. Strangler stars Burke's Law at 2:30 on 20 - T Cuti dand isuaonsit it's Honey West vs. Amos Burke ently well-done documentary- in this classic 1960's TV rerun. type feature on the trials and! Tonight on Channel 7 don't miss tribulations facing a big-city{ Cliff Robertson's Academy- strangler as the police close in. Award performance as Charly The ending is especially effec- p(1968), abrain -damaged. . tive, although not very factual. (o96w),isbin damagsecond Celeste Holm guests on Medical chance at life through the re- Center tonight at 10 p.m. on sults of an experimental skullth Channel 2, and you can also, s a~nermnta.2skthi tune in on Dinah with guests enough, part two will do you in. Yellow Submarine (Ann Ar- bor Film Co-op, Angell Hall, Aud. A, 7, 8:45, 10:30) - Fan- tastic animated cartoon featur- ing songs and caricatures of the Beatles before-the-break-up. *'* MUSIC Blind Pig - Ann Arbor Ex- perimental Jazz Band, jazz, $1.00 Mr. Flood's Party - Stony Creek, bluegrass, $.50 Chances Are - Lightnin', rock, 5.50 for students, $1.00 others Suds Factory - Ian-Quail, rock, $.50 EVENTS Alpha Phi Omega - Student Blood Bank: Union Ballroom, 11 a.m.-S p.m. Residential College - John Allen, "Film and Visual Arts: The Foreignest of Languages**: Greene Lounge, East Quad, 7 p.m. THE TUBE Marcus Welby, at 10 p.m. on Channel 7, guest-stars Lucie Arnaz as a tennis pro with! bone cancer, and later on Chan- nel 50 at 11:30 you can see a fascinating study of guilt when William Wellman's Ox-Bow In- cident (1943) is presented, with stars Henry Fonda and Anthony{ Quinn tops as cowboys with a conscience. At 1 a.m. on Chan- nel 2 one of the weirdest movies about movies ever made is broadcast -- Stand-In (1937). A stupid story concerning a Wall Street broker who tries to run a production company in Holly-c wood, it features the talents of i Davis and David Crosby discuss Leslie Howard, Joan Blondell, the record business for a whole Jack Carson and Humphrey Bo- hour! Davis, who just wrote a gart! Don't miss this cheap and scandel - laden book on the exciting melodrama if you want: subject, was the former pres. a real peek behind-the-scenes. of Columbia records - Crosby is currently a member of the famous C,S,N, & Y recording group. This promises to be a fascinating show if Snyder shuts JANUARY 29 Birthdays: Thomas Paine,I Anton Chekhov, G e r m a i n e. Greer. CINEMA Mother and the Law; Broken Blossoms (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., Mother at 7, Blossoms at 9:05) - see Tuesday. MUSIC Suds Factory - Luther Alli- son, blues, $2.50. Chances Are - Dr. Bop & the Headliners featuring the White Raven, 50's and early 60's, $1 for students, $1.50 others. Mr. Flood's Party - Stony Creek, bluegrass, $.75. The Ark - Hootenanny, ama- teur night, $.75. Blind Pig - Other Side, jazz, $1. EVENTS Alpha Phi Omega - U-M Student Blood Bank: Union Bgll- room, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.I THE TUBE Joan Crawford guests on I{ Love Lucy today at 12:30 on Channel 50; later on the same channel watch Spin and Marty cavort in the woods on Mickey Mouse Club's 5 p.m. time-slot, followed on Channel 20 by Jerry Mathers in Leave It To Beaver. Tonight at 1 a.m. on Tom Sny- der's Tomorrow don't miss Clive up long enough to let the two talk. I ti thursday JANUARY 30 Birthdays: Franklin Roose- velt. Vanessa Redgrave, Gene Hackman. CINEMA The Wild One (Mediatrics, Nat. Sci., 7, 8:30, 10) - Marlon Brando fills Stanley Kramer's idea of the misguided teen of the socially - disturbed fifties. Suffers from Kramer's usual heavy hand, but Brando trans- cends as usual. *** The Garden of the Finzi-Con- Fa i . Aud. A, 7, 9) - Louis Mafle's 1969 social document of the French elites. Interesting. *** Rules of the Game (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7, 9:05) - Renoir's early classic that shocked France in its 1939 re- l lease. An artistic piece of some sort. ** Cabaret (New World, MLB 4, 7, 9:30) - Liza Minelli and Joel Grey immerse themselves in "divine decadence" during the U is what Ann Arbor needs, Listen for it Soon! Vest Cafeteria, 9) - Clark Ga- operation. Teiecast at s:3 u, tns le in Frank Capra's biggie. A film is sensitive in its treatment eat achievement for "the of both the Robertson character ame above the title". *** (excellently supported by Claire MUSIC Bloom as the teacher) and the Ark - Hedy West, guitar & basic subject matter-although anjo, $2.50. a few flashy split - screen tech- Blind Pig - Tribe, jazz, $1. niques and obscure plot twists Suds Factory - Pear, rock, somehow detract from the end- ing's powerful, crashing climax. Mr. Floods' Party - Jaw- Later tonight at 1 a.m. The one, country - western, $1. Bowery Boys find Alladin's Del Rio 2- Gemini, rock, no lamp in Bowery to Bagdad -ver (1954), a semi-hilarious romp Golden Falcon-Friends Road through magic-carpetland and ompany, jazz band and mime also featuring Eric Blore as oupe. $2. the Genie with a speech impedi- Chances Are - Jackal, rock, I ment. 1 for students, $1.50 others. EVENTS Center for Japanese Studies o Zen practices workshop, reathing techniques, postures, JANUARY 27 Yoshi Philip Kapleau, Union Birthdays: Wolfgang Mozart, allroom, 9:30 am-4:30 pm. Kaiser Wilhelm, Donna Reed. BRa s k e t b a l l - Wolver- CINEMA es vs. Northwestern, Crisler 1st Erotic Film Festival (New ena, 2:05. World, Nat. Sci., 7, 8:45, 10:30) Swimming - Wolverines vs. - The original; medium-core outhern Illinois, Matt Mann porno with a pseudo-arty touch. ool, 4 pm. Allows everyone an intellectual Hockey-Wolverines vs. Min- excuse for being there. * esota, Yost Ice Arena, 7:30 MUSIC m. Chances Are - Mojo Boogie THEATRE Band, boogie, $.50 for students, Professional T h e a t r e $1.00 others rogram - Peter Arnott's Mar- Suds Factory - Ian-Quail, nette T h e a t r e, Euri- rock, $.50 ides' "Medea", Residential Mr. Flood's Party - Mike ollege Aud., 8 pin. Smith and his Country Band, TM '. TUBE _ country, 5.50 Clark Gable and Claudette Blind Pig - Boogie Woogie olbert star in Frank Capra's Red, boogie, $1.00. ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE Art Carney, Lawrence Welk, Peter Finch and Diahann Car-I roll at the same time on Chan- nel 50 if you're really hard up. tuesday JANUARY 28 Birthdays: Artur Rubinstein, Claes Oldenburg CINEMA Mother and the Law (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7) - Silent film from D.W. Griffith circa 1915. Social drama as only they could make. " Broken Blossoms (C i n e m a Guild, Arch. Aud., 9:05) - D. W. Griffith's 1919 film headlines Lilian Gish as a girl who falls in love with a Chinese immi- grant. * 2nd Erotic Film Festival - (New World, Nat. Sci., 7, 8:45, 1030) -If part one wasn't DR. PAUL USLAN Optometrist Full Contact Lens Service I Visual Examinations SOON all of Ann Arbor will be Rocking with wfrIWB I Couzens Film Co-op PRESENTS WAIT UNTIL DARK Friday & Saturday, Jan. 24 & 25 8& 10p.m. Couzens Hall Cafeteria Adm. $ 1 Student ID required A aIIIIIIL. Bursley Hall Enterprises presents IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT with Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert I l -i oLey's Announcing Sal., Jan 9:00 P.M. .25 Bursley W. Cafeteria ADM. $1.00 ti HAPPY HOUR 548 Church 663-2476 Must present U-M ID. for admission i ... . ,., ._. i NuFs was one in" was was 4:30-6 * CAREER OPPORTUNITIES FOR WOMEN IN BANKING Monday thru Wednesday A lama' CAREER The fourth in a series of informal lunch hour discussions with employers and graduate school representatives from 40c ,OFF Im p \l) II ,.,r z I 1 .i 1 A