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February 22, 1975 - Image 8

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The Michigan Daily, 1975-02-22

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Saturday, February 22, 1975

-age Eight TH MICiGAN'l. DA!ILY 1IIIlilnIIMllIniiiM-I~idl~""-"-""--"""~ "0--

--

3entugs.

events and entertainment

- -

for the week

of feb.

22-28

11 om"

all week
COMMERCIAL CINEMA
Flesh Gordon - (Campus)-
Porno, yes, but funny and un-
usually well-doone. Worth the
evening out. ***

DISCUSSION:

Lenny - (Fifth Forum) -
Bob Fosse directed this docu-
mentary - style look at the
tragicomic life of Lenny Bruce.
Dustin Hoffman and Valerie
Perrine are excellent. The rest
of the film, however, drags. ***
Murder on the OrientBEx-
press - (The Movies, Briar-
wood) - Nothing like a good
Agatha Christie mystery to pro-
vide a fun night at the cinema.'
Try and guess the ending. ****
Report to the Commissioner-
(The Movies, Briarwood) -
Another, if somewhat more biz-
arre, cops and robbers story in
the best (and worst) tradition
of The French Connection. **
The Night Porter - (Michi-
gan) - Lilina Cavani directed
another post-Nazi era tale here,
but came up with a picture
much more stark than the usual
somber: an interesting look at
masochism, if that is indeed
possible.**
Young Frankenstein - (State)
-Mel Brook's latest comedy
film is frantically funny. Watch
for the sure-to-be classic se-
quence with Gene Hackman as
a kind-hearted blind man and
Peter Boyle as an unsuspecting
monster...*
A Clockwork Orange -(The
For all
University of Michigan Students,
Faculty and immediate family
Montego Bay
$2 Mar. 2-9, 1975
During Spring Break
s nights
" Round trip jet via Air Jamaica
Party Jet
" Gourmet meal service in flight
" In-Flight Fashion Show
" Rum bamboozles in flight
" 7 Night hotel
" Jamaican Cocktails
" AND MORE!
Phone: Pete Savoie
764-8738

higher price. Always worth
ing. ****

see-

"THDE CHARISMATIC
MOVEMENT AND
THE CHURCH"
TOMORROW NIGHT
at 6:00 p.m.
MR. ROGER VERHEY, of
the Ann Arbor Christian
Reformed Church, w i I I
lead a discussion on the
Charismatic movement.
All are invited.
Morning Worship begins
at 10:00 a.m. Come Wor-
ship with us.
CAMPUS CHAPEL
1236 WASHTENAW
(Corner of Washtenaw & Forest)
Rev. Donald Postema

Movies, Briarwood) - Stanley
Kubrick's provocative look at
behavior modification comes
back to town, although at a

saturday
FEBRUARY 22
CINEMA
Burn (New World, MLB 3, 7,
9:15) - Pontecovro's direction,
of crowd scenes is brilliant.
Brando is competent. Burn is a
sometimes stirring tale of revo-
lution. ***
Magical Mystery Tour (New
World, MLB 4, 7, 9) - The
Beatles being self-indulgent and
occasionally entertaining. **
The Producers (UAC Media-
trics, Nat Sci. Aud., 7, 8:30,
10) - Mel Brooks' first and
some say finest. This is debat-
able but Zero Mostel, Gene Wli-
der, Dick Shawn and production
numbers make this worth a
watch.*
Rebecca (Cinema Guild,
Arch. Aud., 7:00, 9:05) - Hitch-
cock's direction, DuMaurier' s
novel, performances by Lord
Olivier, Joan Fontaine, and
Dame Anderson, need you ask
more? *
The Servant (Cinema II, Au-
ditorium A, Angell, 7:00, 9:00),
- Harold Pinter wrote the
screen play of this disturbing
Joseph Losey effort. Dirk Bo-
garde is exceptional. ***
MUSIC
Ark - Jean Redpath, Scot-
tish, $2.50.
Blind Pig - Dave Workman
Blue's Band, blues, $1.00
Chances Are - Shakers, 60's,
$1.50 for students, $2.00 others.
Del Rio - (1:30-4:00), Poetry
Reading, No cover
Golden Falcon - Hotlips,
light rock, $1.00
Mr. Flood's Party - Silver-
tones, jazz, $1.00
Suds Factory - Masquerade,
rock, $1.00
Musical Society - .Indian
Masked Dance: Rackham Aud.,
8:30 p.m.
EVENTS
Big Ten Volleyball Tourna-
ment - I. M. Building, 10 a.m.
Gymnastics - U-M vs. Iowa:
Crisler Arena, 2 p.m.
Women's Project - A series
of workshops on women and
health will be held in the Public
Health School starting at 12:30.
Hockey - U-M vs. Denver;
Yost Ice Arena, 7:30 m.m.
Dance - Concert, "Tears and
Shutters": Schorling Aud.,
School of Education, 8 p.m.
THEATRE
Residential College Players-
Pinter's "The Lover": Wil-
hams' "I Can't Imagine Tomor-
row": Residential College Aud.,
East Quad, 8 p.m.
THE TUBE
Sleep in, and then start your I
weekend viewing at 3:00 by tun-
ing in to Channel 2 for the clas-
sic thriller The Mummy. The
infamous Boris Karloff stars as
an Egyptian price who rises
from his tomb to claim the re-
incarnation of his old love. Now

buffs, because immediately fol-
lowing the Karloff chiller, wo-
men's tennis heavies Margaret
Court, Evonne Goolagong, Les-
ley Hunt and Co. will battle it
out in the $75,000 Virginia
Slims Tournament of Detroit.
Top contender will take home a
$15,000 purse. At 9:00 the made-
for-TV movie Hustling explores
the world of the prostitute from
sleazy hotel rooms to police
vans and jail cells on channel
7. If that falls a bit short flip
the dial to channel 4 at 10:00
and catch the Entertainment
Hall of Fame. This two hour
live special features - among
others - George Burns, Bette
Davis, Peter Falk, Jack Lem-
mon, Anthony Newley and Ros-
alind Russel.
Sunday
FEBRUARY 23
CINEMA
Drums Along The Mohawk
(Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud.,
9:05) - John Ford's classic is
visually absorbing and this
story of upstate New York far-
mers caught in the middle of
the revolutionary war raises
some interesting questions. ****
I Was A Male War Bride
(Cinema II, Aud. A Angell, 7,
9) - Howard Hawks once again
tackles the theme of the battle
of the sexes. Cary Grant and
Ann Sheridan are pure charm,
Hawks' direction is pure bril-
liance. **
Secrets Of A Soul (Cinema:
Guild, Arch. Aud, 7) - Pabst's
absorbing expolration of a
man's continuing phobia. ***
Touch of Evil (New World,
MLB 4, 7, 9) - Orson Welles1
was recently given a life
achievement award by the A.F
.1. This absorbing tale of a cor-
rupt policeman peppered with1
performances by Marlene Die-
trich, Charlton Heston and Den-1
nis Weaver shows you why.-
Zardoz (New World. Nat. Sci
Aud, 7, 9) - John Boorman's
main sin in this one is not sex-
ism but rather boredom. Sean
Connery is atrocius. *
MUSICf
Ark - Miller Brothers, blue-
grass, $2.50
Blind Pig - Silk Purse, clas-
sical, $.50
Chances Are - Friends Road
Show, jazz band with mime
troupe, $1.00, pitcher night
Dooley's - Autumn, no covert
Mr. Flood's Party - Mike
Smith and His Country Volun-
teers, country, $.50
Music School - Symphony'
Band, Hill Aud., 3 p.m.
THE TUBE
If you can bear the Bill Ken-
nedy commentary, tune in to
channel 50 at 1:00 and enjoy the'
1944 Samuel Goldwyn production
of Up in Arms. It stars Danny
Kaye in his first first big fea-
ture as a hypochrondiac who's
just been drafted. On a more
serious note, the weekly 60 Min-
utes news - magazine features
a timely report on the rising
cost of medical malpractice in-
surance at 6:00 on 7. At 7:30 the
science-oriented program Nova
asks the controversial question
'How do homing pigeons find
their way home,' in a reeat of
"Bird Brain - The Mvstery of
Bird Navigation." If that turns
out to be less than thrilling,
finishing cramming for Mon-
day's midterm until 11:30 when
John Ford's classic The Infor-
mer hits the screen. Victor
McLaglen radiates in his Os-
car-winning performance of a
slow-witted man who turns
traitor during the Irish rebel-
lion.

I I

I

A Bengalese masked dancer will show his many faces at Rackham tonight.

Head liners:
The most exotic event on campus this week is definiceiy the Bengalese Masked Dance at Rackham tonight at 8;30. .
the Residential College Players will be presenting two plays, The Love by Harold Pinter and I Can't Imagine Tomorrow
by Tennessee Williams . . . as far as cinema is concerned, the most spine-tingling flick of the week is Murder on the Orient
Express, based on the book by Agatha Christie, which will be showing out at Briarwood all week.

- - --- - - -- - -2

w '
IIIiM aA

Prospects for Peace in the
Middle East-The View from
Cairo, Jerusalem, Damascus
A TEACH-IN FORUM with:
PROF. RICHARD MITCHELL, U. of M.
PROF. ITAMAR RABINOVICH, Tel Aviv Univ.
ALL WELCOME
Sunday, Feb. 23-8:00 p.m.
at HILLEL-1429 Hill St.

-

UP TO 60% OFF
WITH TRADE-IN OF YOUR
OLD HIGH SCHOOL RING
~-PLUS-
BECAUSE YOU'VE
ACHIEVED
R15PY

don't touch that dial

sports

"Aj

...
-

I

III

DROP IN
Fiber and
Weaving Workshops
EVERY SAT.
12-2 p.m.
at
EWE 'N DYE
994-1166
$7 for 2 hrs on Sat.
INCLUDES:
0 unlimited weaving and
dveing t i m e during the
week

Red, boogie, $1.00
Chances Are - Mo-Jo Boogie
Band, boogie, $1.00
Sud's Factory - Hot Lucy
Rock, rock, $.50
Music School - Composer's
Forum: School of Music Recital
Hall, 8 p.m.
Musical Society - Moscow
Balalaikas: Power, 8 p.m.
EVENTS
UAC Future Worlds-George
Kish, "View of a Finite World:
Man's Use of his Resources":
Rackham Aud., 8 p.m.
Audio-Visual Center - "Birth
of Soviet Cinema"; Pendleton
Center, Union, 8 p.m.
Art - Cynthia Schira, "Weav-
ing": Art and Arch. Lecture
Hall, North Campus, 8 p.m.
THE TUBE
Aspiring Bod Woodwards and
Carl Bernsteins be sure to catch
the Phil Donohue show at 11:00
and hear NBC White House
news correspondent Tom Bro-
kaw discuss his pencil - wield-
ing work in Washington. Elvis
Presley week kicks off at 4:30
on channel 7 with Fun in Aca-
pulco. Ursula Andress joins El-
vis in this 1964 musical spiced
with good tunes and Mexican
scenery. 9:00 brings the boy-
meets-girl flick Butterflies Are
Free featuring Don Baker and
giddy Goldie Hawn. The well-
received adaptation of the 1969
Broadway hit also features Ei-
leen Heckart in her Oscar win-
ning performance for Best
Supporting Actress.
FEBRUARY 25
CINEMA
The Bank Dick. (Cinema
Guild, Arch.kAud, 7) - Egbert
Souse was one of Fields' favor-
ite characters. He'll be one of
yours too in this brilliantly fun-
ny film.*
Class Of '44 (New World, Nat.
Sci, 7, 9) - This sequel lacks
the sincerity, honesty and as a
result charm of the original. *
Murmer Of The Heart (Ann
Arbor Film Co-Op, Aud. A An-
gell, 7, 9:30) - Malle's unique
and unsettling vision dominates
this tale of loss of innocence
which turns out to be his mas-
terpiece. ****
The Way We Were (Indo-
china peace campaign, MLB 3,
7:30, 9:30)-Streisand and Red-
ford are interesting for a while
but they just aren't strong
enoigh to hold this film togeth-
er. **
The Wizard Of Oz (Cinema
Guild, 9:05, Arch. Aud.) - If
you haven't seen it in full color
and on a large screen, you
haven't seen it. ****
MUSIC
Blind Pig - Big Daddy G.'s
Groove Review, rock, $1.00
Chances Are - Ten High,
rock, $.50 for students, $1.00
others
Sd's Factory - Hot Lucy
Rock, rock, $.50
Music School - Chamber Or-

chestra: Hill Aud., 8 p.m.
EVENTS
English; Extension Service-
poetry reading, Jerome Rothen-
berg: Aud. 3, MLB, 4:10 p.m.
THE TUBE
Tuesday begins with a 9:00
airing of Move Over, Darling,
part one. The not so sparkling
comedy features a somewhat
sparkling cast which includes
James Garner, Polly Bergen,
Doris Day and Edgar Buchan-
an. At 3:30 watch the colonel's
daughter corrupt Gomer as she
leads him on a merry chase
from go-go club to beatnik pad
on Gomer Pyle, USMC, on
channel 9. At 8:00 the made for
TV Journey From Darkness
tells the story of a blind college
student's frustrating struggle
to gain entrance into medical
school. This 1975 dramatization
is based on a true story.
MA S*H addicts can watch
the whole zany gang, with the
predictable exception of Hawk-
eye and Trapper, work them-
selves into a tizzy over the up-
coming visit of Gen. Douglas
MacArthur. Real fanatics can
then catch McLean Stevenson-
minus army garb - as he hosts
the Tonight Show at 11:30 on
channel 4.
wdnesday
FEBRUARY 26
CINEMA
Alfredo, Alfredo (New World,
Nat. Sci. Aud. 7:00, 9:00) -
Dustin Hoffman's body, some-
body else's voice produces a
startingly refreshing effect.
I-However this story of a young
bank clerk's marriage to an ag-
gressive woman quits about
halfway through. *.
She Done Him Wrong (Cine-
ma Guild, Arch. Aud, 7)-For
pure personality you can't beat
Mae West and a very young
Cary Grant in this titillating
cinematic effort which some
say was singlehandedly respon-
sible for the installation of the
production code. ***
Wizard Of Oz (Cinema Guild,
Arch. Aud., 9:05) - See Tues-
day.
MUSIC
Ark - Hootenanny, amateur
night, $.75
Blind Pig - Bete Noire, elec-
tric jazz, $1.00
Chances Are-Ten High, rock,
$1.00 for guys, free for women
Golden Falcon - Mojo Boo-
gie Band, boogie $2.00
Mr. Flood's Party - Eric
Glatz, old fashioned blues, $.50
Sud's Factory - Hot Lucy
Rock, rock, $.50
Music School - Faculty Re-
cital: Rackham Aud., 8 p.m.
THE TUBE
Move Over, Darling moves to
its conclusion this morning at
9:00 facing stiff competition
from the soap How to Survive
a Marriage. If neither of those
sound worth the early morning
arisal, stay in bed until 1:00
when the The Public Enemy
knocks 'em dead. James Cag-
ney reached stardom in this
hard - hitting gangster classic

worth viewing for the famous
courtship scene alone.
thurday
FEBRUARY 27
CINEMA
Hour Of The Wolf (Ann Ar-
bor Film Co-Op, Auditorium A,
Angell, 7, 9) - Bergman's ter-
rifying tale is one of his most
moving. ***
In A Lonely Place) (Cinema
Guild, Arch. Ad., 9:05): An-
other Nicholas Ray film. This
time his narrative of a Holly-
wood writer accused of murder
is complimented by masterful
rerformances by Humphrey
Bogart, and Gloria Grahame.
***
They Live By Night (Cinema
Guild, Arch. Aud., 7:00) - Ni-
cholas Ray's first film the in-
spiration for many "gangsters
in love films." ***
War Of The Worlds (Indo-
china Peace Campaign, Nat.
Sci. Aud., 7:30, 9:30) - Most'
people who go to see a film
with special effects by George
Pal go to watch the aforemen-
tioned effects and nothing else.
They are quite smart. **
MUSIC
Blind Pig - The Other Side,
jazz, $1.00
Chances Are - Ten High,
rock, $.50 for students, $1.00
others
Golden Falcon - Mojo-Boo-
gie Band, boogie, $2.001
Mr. Flood's Party - Diamond
Rio, Country-Western, $.75
Sud's Factory - Hot Lucy
Rock, rock, $.50
Bach Club - Bach program:
Greene Lounge, East Quad, 8
p.m.
Music School - Varsity Band:
Hill Aud., 8 n.m.
EVENTS
Pendleton Arts Inform-4tion
Center - Percy Danforth "Mr.
Bones": bones player, Pendle-
ton Center, Union, 12:10 p.m.
Spanish Language, Culture
Films - "Yo Soy Chicano":
126 Residential College, East
Quad, 4 n.m.
International Night - food
from the British Isles: League
Cafeteria, 5-7:15
THE TUBE
Early risers are rewarded
this morning with guest appear-
ances by folk singers Arlo Gu-
thrie and Pete Seeger on the
7:00 Today Show. Barbara Wal-
ters and Jim Hartz co-host the
popular morning side program.
Later, the 1:00 channel 50 mo-
vie brings Three Coins in the
Fountain to the tube. Oscars
went to Milton Krasner's loca-
tion photography and to the
title song of this romance about
three American girls in Italy.
At 5:30 drop in on the Ward
household where you'll find
Wally trying to bow out of the
family's vacation plans when
he falls for a pretty librarian
on Leave it to Beaver. Break
for dinner then return at 9:00
for the film adaptation of Ru-
mer Godden's best seller, In
This House Of Brede. Diana
Rieg portrays a middle-aged
widow in this drama ofo reli-

A, Angell, 7, 9) - Few direc-
tors have used Marlene Diet-
rich effectively. Josef Von
Sternberg is one of these and
his characterization of Dietrich
as Mata Hari is perfect. ****
General Della Rovere (Cine-
ma Guild, Arch. Aud., 9:30) -
Vittoria de Sica in the perform-
ance of his career in the title
role of this Rosselini tale of
deception. **
The Rustler (Ann Arbor Film
Co-op, MLB 3, 7:15-9:15)-Paul
Newman's performance is one
of the high points of this occa-
sionally dull story of a pool
shark.
Sgt. York (Cinema Guild,
Arch. Aud., 7) - It is a true
tribute to the skill of Howard
Hawks that Gary Cooper as the
title character who is decorated
for killing a slew of Germans
in World War I comes off as a
genuinely sensitive, gentle man.
Ark - Rambling Jack Elliott,
country, $3.00
Blind Pig - Old Buck, rock,
$1.00
Chances Are - Ten High,
rock, $1.50 for students, $2.00
others
Golden Falcon - Mojo-Boo-
gie Band, boogie, $2.00
Mr. Flood's Party - Grevious
Angel, Country-Rock, $1.00
Sud's Factory - Hot Lucy
Rock, rock, $1.00
EVENTS
Hockey - UM vs. Michigan
State: Yost Ice Arena, 7:30 p.m.
African Students' Film Ser-
ies - "Civil Rights Move-
ments"; "The Ku Klux Klan's
Invisible E m p i r e:" Lecture
Room 1, MLB, 8 p.m.
THE TUBE
For all those concerned,
Cornell University researcher
Eleanor Macklin will discuss
cohabitation oh college cam-
puses on the Donahue hour at
1:00. Presley week rounds off
with Blue Hawaii on channel
7 at 4:30 when Elvis shows he
j prefers the full life to the pine-
anule business. Masterpiece
Theatre brings the story of a
naive 17-year-old who finds her-
self in the etaoinshrdlushrdl
self in the employ of a bedrid-
den old woman and the object
of her husband's lust in an
adaptation of H. E. Bates'
short story The Mill. That's at
9:00 on channel 30. Late night
viewers are treated with Not
With My Wife, You Don't at
11:30 on channel 2. Tony Cur-
tis and Virna Lisi star in this
comedy of a colonel's neglected,
wife who is re-united with her
husband's old love rival.
I.

The experiences that have "carved" your real achievements
are the personal ones. Wear a class ring and remember.
Order on Ring Day and save 5%.
--on all soles regardless of trade.in
In the MICHIGAN UNION LOBBY
FEB. 20, 21, & 24-11 a.m.-4 p.m.

I

11

monday
FEBRUARY 24
MUSIC
Blind Pig -- Boogie - WV

oogie

* 10% OFF
plies w h i l e
course

on all sup-
taking the

PARK
TERRACE
848 Tappan

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COMMUNITY QUAD
AT LAST:

at Oakland
Deluxe 1 and 2
Bedroom Apartments
See Don or Marilyn Olsen
APT. 10
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A contemporary

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Ann

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NnhCmti4.urp- WithnutFreedonm

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