Thursday, April 17 1975
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Page Five
Thursday, April17, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five
Rome"
Burger King churns
out local 'Whoppers
By CATHI SUYAK kets: the student, the business- As the counter girl, and food
It's a Whopper, all right. Real- man, the shopper. server, she said there is no
ly, no pun intended. The new The venture is paying off, be- pressure to perform, like forI
Ann Arbor Burger King, at the cause "there has been a tre- restaurant waitresses. "There's
corner of Maynard and Liberty mendous student response," much more of a concentration
is selling over a thousand Whop- says Justin Ting, Burger King directly from you to the food,
pers, their star hamburger, ev- manager, who notes the student whereas in restaurants there's
ery day. Thirsty students and afternoon snackers and crowds all the tidbits of service," she
hungry workers are flocking to of dorm dwellers who come for explained.
Hillel Closing Party
with LIVE MUSIC by
THE SILVERTONES
and BEER and PRETZELS
Saturday, April 19
8:30 p.m.
Admission-$i.00
1429 Hill St.
at HILLEL
r
I I '
the counters for fast service;
a cheap, filling meal.
Burger King brings to m
Suburbia U.S.A., and h
school days when the only p
a sophomore could socia
was the local hamburger j(
Aware of the patterns ands
cesses of the suburban sto
Burger King decided to gam
and try a new format.
A successful New YorkC
branch prompted Burger K
to try a city locale in Michig
Ann Arbor was chosen. A c
pus city seemed ideal, beca
there would be several m
and tne"run' a nigriL hiners. Every detail, every motion,
Business is booming - but it's is planned and checked, from
still a lot of work. The Burger the size of the meat patties to
gind King operation must work at the crew uniforms. As you sip
high top efficiency to cook a large on a Coke and observe the Bur-
lace amount of made-to-order food, ger King machinery in motion,
alize make it somewhat tasty, and even the girls' faces start to
oint. get it out fast. It's done by an look alike after a while.
suc- assembly line process that .
res, mocks the automobile factories a Isn't is all lot of work just
able of Detroit.3 for a hamburger? So much at-
S"It' like running a football tention is given to the honor
"I'slie unin afotblland glory of a nwcYTeasr ground be
City team," Ting explains. "The girl sandwich. Th angr i one
King , out front is my quarterback; she wordwccompetitn.r Ti is
gan. calls the signs and the people aware that just down the street,
am- in back have to respond. If they the enemy lurks. A McDonald's
ause ' don't respond, we're a losing is scheduled to open next to Ni-
nar- team, and I don't like a losing chols Arcade in June.
team.
"You just have to do what "We expect they will take
you have to do," says Donna away some business, no ques-
Schnerderman, one of the grill tion about that. They are the
girls. "You just keep working, biggest fast-food corporation in
working, working. When you the country. But Burger King
slow down for a minute, there'll is very progressive. We are like
be five people up front standing :Avis Rent-a-Car. We're Numn-
around yelling, come on, come brTo u etyhre.
If
Doily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI
'Have it your way .0..
CAMPUS FLICKS:
Kubrick exerts control
By JAMES VALK
This weekend,:Mediatrics closes out the
winter semester with another encore
showing of Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A
Space Odyssey. Needless to say, the film
is one of the great landmarks in cine-
matic history, standing well on its own
merits. Yet to dwell on an intellectual
interpretation would ultimately prove
repetitious, conjecturious and strictly per-
sonal. On these grounds, the film will be
set aside,
In its place, however, is the real force
behind the power of the film - director,
producer, co-screenwriter and special
photographic effects1 designer Stanley Ku-
brick.
In strictly cinematic terms, Stanley Ku-
brick is a phenomenon. Starting as a pho-
tographer fo Look magazine, he turned
his experience to film, making a 16 min-
ute documentary entitled Day of the Fight
for RKO.
Forming his own production company
in 1953, Kubrick produced,' directed, pho-
tographed, and edited Fear and Desire, a
film which he today labels "undramatic
and embarrassingly pretentious."
Complete with the experience of having
made a feature length film, Kubrick mov-
ed under the banner of United Artists,
making Killer's Kiss in 1955 and The
Killing a year later. It wasn't until 1957
that Kubrick produced his first commer-
cial film, Paths of Glory.
The result was an immaculate work
that glowed with Kubrick's technical mas-
Hail'spC
By BRENT SPENCER experien
Following one of the most hi- flected in
larious introductions that has his poem
dared utterance in recent his- ther ort
tory (itself a titular success), WWII pi
an appreciative audience heard "The
Donald Hall read his poetry aps mco
this last Tuesday in the MLB. Here, th
comforta
Hall, who is currently best throughf
known for his play Bread and With H
Roses, was the last poet to be however,
presented in this year's English of empha
Department / Extension Service rected m
poetry series. The gap,
From the first, Hall capti- minished
vated his audience vith his re- ly at his
sonant voice, gesture and, of Even t
course, the power of his poetry. tactile,r
Beginning with selections from personal.
The Town of Hill,, soon to be in "Suck
published by Godine, the poet ing the I
held his listeners with the grace ter of t
and subtle energy of his lyric meditati
* poms. eststrong rh
imagery
By far the best received of This h
these poems was "To A Water- ing Hall
fowl," Hall's comic tribute to bor this
" the ordeal of doing poetry read- different.
ings. The volume's title poem, same po
however, achieved as powerful have gor
an effect. visions. T
It is characteristic of Hall's his audi
finest work in which he is able tunity of
to. call forth deep-rooted fears to perfe
by the balance and interplay of A read:
his imagery. What makes this always a
poem particularly evocative is this last
the eerie calm with which those so. Itc
fears are overlaid.-
Similar qualities characterize
much of the poet's older work
as well. $uch- poems as ".The
Man in the Dead Machine"
"Christmas Eve 'in' Whitne-
ville," and "Digging" exemplify
this.
What distinguishes them from
Hall's most recent work is their R
tendency to deal with those'
fears indirectly, to place them
outside of the poet himself.
Thus, he understands his own Mi
tery of the medium, and proved him to
be a filmmaker with a sense of cinematic
control and execution.
In the following years, Kubrick under-
took Spartacus, in which he replaced di-
rector Anthony Mann, resulting in a final
work that Kubrick disavows because he
didn't exert total control.
Lolita followed in 1961, with the impec-
cable list of Dr. Strangelove, 2001 and
Clockwork Orange rounding out the aes-
thetic accomplishments. Due for release
this Christmas is Kubrick's film that
has been 4 years in the making, Barry
Lyndon.
Little is known about the film, as Ku-
brick would allow no studio publicists on
the set. But Ryan O'Neal (who stars in
the film) has let on that Kubrick, in keep-
ing with the 17th century authenticity of
the film, refused to use any type of ar-
tificial lighting.
Thus, the director has invented a revo-
lutionary type of lens that would allow
on unprecedented amount of light through
the aperture, permitting Kubrick to use
only candlelight for the lighting of all in-
door sequences.
Kubrick's "maniacal" infatuations for
precision have become infamous. Aubrey
Morris had to expel a wad of spit, onto the
face of Malcolm McDowell some twenty
times until the saliva landed precisely on
the crease of McDowell's lips. It is rumor-
od that Kubrick reshot a single scene of
Paths of Glory over 50 times before it was
filmed to his liking.
His personal insistence on total safety
dictates a policy of restricted travel,
avoiding the use of airplanes and cars if
at all possible. (He purposely bought a
home near England's Pinewood Studios
so he could ride a bike to work.)
During the filming of 2001, Kubrick
donned a hardhat while working within
the intricate sets. And when dissatisfied
with the lab work being done on A Clock-
work Orange, Kubrick loaded the nega-
tives into a land roverand transported
them personally across town - with film
editor Bill Butler driving at a reduced
speed in front of him to obsorb any pos-
sible collision.
One must take him seriously when he
proceeded to Lloyds of London in June of
1965, three years before 2001's completion,
to price an insurance policy against Mar-
tians being discovered before the release
of the film.
But it is these subleties that make up
the Kubrick mystic. His films are mys-
terious endeavors shrouded by secrecy un-
til their initial release, when critics unite
in unanimous acclaim or dissipate in di-
vided controversy.
A fitting end to the intricacies of the di-
rector is my favorite Kubrickism: the hu-'
manistic computer of 2001's name is HAL.
If you take the next letter of the alpha-
bet that follows H, A and L, you get IBM.
Kibrick swears he didn't realize that upon
concention of the name. I believe him. But
then, I think the monolith is Kubrick,
on."
Patricia Cole, who takes cus-
tomers' orders, likes the feeling
of being a cog in the machin-
ery. "I just start turning my
mind off and doing it, and it all
comes so automatic. My mind
isn't involved in it."
A city ordinance forbidding
large street signs keeps Burger
King almost hidden until you
face its doors. Publicity, and
reputation, will hopefully keep
them coming back for more.
Yet thenae bseems so appro-
priate. The burger is king.
Richardson's Optical
OWEN KOCH TIMOTHY KOCH
STATE ST. AREA -
" PHYSICIANS PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED
" PRESCRIPTION SUN GLASSES
" LARGE SELECTION OF FRAMES
" COMPLETE REPAIR SERVICE
DAILY 9 m--5Dm. 662-1945
SAT. i Noon
318 S. STATE-ANN ARBOR
Between Liberty & William On The Campus
PRESENTS
8~/
Fellini's Autobiographical
Masterpiece
(DUBBED)
PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM
APRIL 23-27 POWER CENTER
EVES, at 8 p.m.; SUN. MAT. at 3 p.m.
Tickets now on sale at PTP ticket office, Mendelssohn
lobbys764-0450. Tickets also available at Hudson's at
Briorwood.
I
i
Arby's
Beef
Piles
It On! .
retry stirs audience
TONIGHT, Thurs., April 17
AUD. A ANGELL HALL
I
7:00 & 9:30
$1.25
ce by seeing it re- qw
the centtal images of poe
s, the death of his fa- cit
the bizarre death of a f
lot, of
Space Spiders" is per its
ost indicative of this.it
e fear is made more be
Mile by being expressed
fantasy.
all's most recent work,
comes a subtle shiftI
asis. The poems are di-
iore toward the interior,
if it is a gap, is di-'
. The poet looks direct-
fears.,
the imagery is more
more deeply felt and1
The poet,aespecially
Ming Pig" and "Kick-
Leaves," is at the cen-
hese poems. They are
e yet lack nonedof the
ythmic power and vivid
of his lyric_ poetry.
as been the third read-
has given in Ann Ar-
year. Each has been
Though some of the
ems were read, they i
ne through various re-
Thus, the poet has given
ences the rare oppor-I
watching a poem growa
ction.
ing by Professor Hall is+
n important event, but
one was particularly
did more than reac-
)ifl The
Daily
saint his readers with familiar reer.
ems and introduce them to ex- Donald Hall is the kind of
ing new ones, poet whose readers are not only
His shift of emphasis, his use enthusiastic about his publish-
the narrative technique with ed work, but anxious about what
longer line, may prove to is to come. That is never truer
a turning point in his ca- than now.
NNW
Arby 's
COUPON SPECIALS
Offer Good at Arby's of:
ANN ARBOR YPSILANTI
WASHTENAW AVE. 1/2 Ml. WASHTENAW AVE. ACROSS
WEST OF ARBORLAND FROM K MART NEAR GOLFSIDE
ROBERT REDFORD
in PG
"THE GREAT
WALDO PEPPER"
* ENDS TONIGHT! *
TONITE at 7 & 9
The Anan Arbor symphony orchestra
PRESENTS
FRIDAY EVENING AT 8:30
APRIL 18, 1975
HILL AUDITORIUM
ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN
EDWARD SZABO, Music Director and Conductor
KRYSA KOUMPARAKIS,
MEZZO-SOPRANO
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MEN'S GLEE CLUB
WILLIS PATTERSON, Director
-PROGRAM-
Symphony No. 104 in D
Major ("London") . . . . Joseph Haydn
Rhapsodie for Alto Solo, Chorus
and Orchestra ......Johannes Brahms
INTERMISSION
Sheherazade for Voice and
Orchestra.............Maurice Ravel
Russian Easter
Overture . . . Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
ADMISSION COMPLIMENTARY
Mel Brook's
"YOUNG
TA TFRANSENSTEIN"
Shows at 7 & 9 p.m.
Open 6:45
STARTS FRIDAY
is
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'JANISIoduced by CRAWLEY FILMS-ExecutiveProducer F R CRAWLIEY
Duet ted anel Fdited byii.WARI )AlK and SEATON FINDIAY U 'AINIVFRSAL RELEASE
lI( IINI( ()If)R i.R..1 RESTRICTED '
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at 7 & 9 p.m.-Open at 12:45
-I-°* ENDS TONIGHT!
James Ivory's
"SAVAGES"
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STARTS FRIDAY!
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BERT ALDRICH'S 1955
KISS ME DEADLY (at 7)
ckey Spillane's Mike Hammer investigates a series of murders in his
ual tough guy fashion but Aldrich transforms the mystery into a vision
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