Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, January 18, 1975 events and. entertainment appeni: igs .-- for the week of jan. 13-24 all Week long ALL WEEK LONG COMMERCIAL CINEMA The Godfather, Part II - (Michigan) - Francis Ford Coppola directed this second and equally brilliant installment of America's Mafia epic. A good and extremely interest- ing film.** Dracula - (State) - Andy Warhol's production company turned out this sickening effort as a sequel to Frankenstein. It takes a strong stomach to stom- ach it.* Going Places - (Campus)- Elegant, if undeniably softcore pornography. The Towering Inferno-(Fifth Forum) -The flames shoot higher and higher in this good guys vs. bad guys burn-'em-up. Paper Moon - (The Movies, Briarwood) - Peter Bogdano- vich's tribute to the Depression is both charming and amusing. Tatum O'Neal, playing Addie Pray, is absolutely priceless. ** * The Longest Yard - (The Movies, Briarwood) - Burt Reynolds headlines this 'occa- sionally comic work by Robert Aldrich. Quite watchable. *** The Man With The Golden' Gun - ((The Movies, Briar- wood) - James Bond (Roger Moore), rocks that do funny things, and the burned out Cun- ard liner Queen Elizabeth unite in a dismal continuation of the 007 saga. * Freebie and the Bean - (The Movies, Briarwood) - Alan Ar- kin and James Caan carry the title roles in a bad attempt to duplicate the Warner Bros. "screwball" comedies of the '30s. * The Front Page - (The Mov- ies, Briarwood) - Billy Wilder directed Walter Matthau and Jack Lemmon in this fast, fun- ny remake of the classic Ben Hecht - Charles MacArthur play. But Howard Hawks's ver- sion with Cary Grant is still the best. *** saf rturday Saturday January 18 1968: U.S. and Russia sign nuclear non-proliferation treaty. Birthdays: Daniel Webster, Danny Kaye, Cary Grant. CINEMA Chinatown (Cinema II, Aud. A, 7, 9:30)-Roman Polanski's stylish film of social decadance with Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway giving the perform- ances of a lifetime. **** Paper Chase (Mediactrics, Nat. Sci., 7, 9)-This frightfully close-to-home film will ring an all too familiar bell with stu- dents at the "Big U." *** African Queen (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7, 9:05)-Katherine Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart combine their tremendous tal- ents and create a thoroughly entertaining film. **** Harold and Maude (New World, MLB 4, 7, 8:45, 10:30)- One of the true cult films, Hal Ashby's film returns again, to no one's complaint. *** MUSIC Ark-Marshall Dodge, come- dian, $2.50 Blind Pig .- John Nicholas, blues, $1 Chances Are - Head East, rock, $1.50 for students, $2 others. Golden Falcon-Friends Road Show, jazz band with mime troupe, $2. Mr. Flood's Party-Eddie and the Mueller Brothers, bluegrass, $1. Suds Factory-Chopper, rock, $1. Del Rio - (1:30-4 .p.m.) Friends Road Show, mime troupe, no cover. EVENTS Benefit - African Students' Association, dinner for the Af- rican Drought Fund, Ethiopian cuisine, 423 S. 4th, 6:30 p.m. Which Way to Winnipeg? - Multi-Media show, Residential College players, East Quad, Green basement, 7:30-9:30 p.m., free admission. Experimental theatre and music performance. THEATRE Oh, Coward! (Professional Theatre Program, Power Cen- ter, 8 p.m.) - This musical tribute to the late Noel Coward has slow moments, but is never- theless a fine salute. THE TUBEj It's a big night for All in the Family fans, with Archie and clan debating psychological techniques at 8 p.m., and their neighbors, The Jeffersons, ap- pearing in the debut of their own show at 8:30, all on Channel 2. At 10 p.m. on the same channel, catch the Entertainer of the Year Awards. Headliners are Jackie Gleason and George Burns - for those who have grown long of tooth - plus Chicago, Gladys Knight, and: Helen Reddy for us younguns.I sunday Sunday January 19 1861: Georgia secedes from the Union. 1969: Two airliners hijacked to Cuba at height of "skyjack" scare. Birthdays: Robert E. Lee, Edgar Allan Poe, Paul Cezanne. CINEMA Cul-de-Sac (Cinema II, Aud. A, 7, 9) - tapestry of social alienation as woven by the in- comparable Roman Polanski. Olympia (Cinema Guild, Arch.i Aud., part I 7, part II 9:05) -' Filmed in Berlin during the 1936 Olympics, Olympia is a detailed photographic record of the games as they appeared1 forty years ago. Harold and Maude - see Sat- urday Cinema. MUSIC Blind Pig - Silk Purse, clas- sical, $1.00' Chances Are - Head East, rock, $1.50 for students, $2.00t others' Dooley's - Craig Marsden, folk, no cover Mr. Flood's Party - Eddie and the Mueller Brothers, blue-' grass, $.75 Musical Society - Mstislav Rostropovich, cellist, Hill Aud., 2:30 p.m.f Music School - Eva JesseyeI Birthday Observance, Cady Mu- sic Room, 3) Flute and Piano Concert - Nancy Warner and Sarah Her- shey, Union Gallery, Union. EVENTS TV Center - Art Show: JACK NICHOLSON plays gumshoe in "Chinatown". Headliners: .. All in all, a mix bag. Linda Ron- Stadt, the honey - voiced queen of country rock, graces Hill Aud. Tues- day night at 8 p.m. . . . Nosey Jack Nicholson plays the fast-tongued, fre- netic flatfoot in "Chinatown", a slam-bang cinematic scorcher that also features Faye Dunaway. For classical music lovers, Mstislav Ros-> tropovich comes to Hill Aud. at 2:30 p.m. Sunday ... and it's a very goodf week for journalists: N. Y. Times ace r scandal-buster Sy Hersh lectures at Rackham, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday; JackF Lemmon and Walter Matthau get the real story in "The Front Page", all . week at Briarwood's Movie;. and don't forget The Daily's mass meet- ing for prospective journalists, Mon- A w day night at 7:30 p.m., 420 Maynard. LINDA ROT We want you. at Hill Aud. THEATRE I The Real Inspector Hound (Professional Theatre Program Showcase Series, Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg., 8 p.m.) - See1 Sunday Theatre. THE TUBE A big, big night for private eyes and coppers. Robert Wag- ner and E. G. Marshall star in a bizarre made-for-TV film, The Abduction of Saint Anne, 8:30, p.m. on 7. Then, duck: Hawaii Five-O at 9 on 2, Barnaby Jones an hour later on the same chan- nel, Police Story at 10 p.m. on 4, and an old Banacek 1 -hour rerun at 11:30 p.m. on 2. M*A*S*H (8:30 on 2) is the only relief. wednesday Wednesday January 22 1973: Supreme Court legalizes abortion; Lyndon Johnson dies of heart attack; George Fore- man wins boxing crown from Joe Frazier. Birthdays: Lord Byron, 1) W. Griffith. CINEMA The Mother and the Whore (New World, MLB 3, 8) - See Tuesday. Last Tango in Paris (Ann Ar- bor Film Co-op, Angell Hall, }And. A, 7, 9) - See Tuesday Cinema. MUSIC Ark - Hootenanny, Amateur Night, $.75 Blind Pig - Other Side, jaz, Si. EN.gTAY)T rrnnnc T47PC(igv night PIN31fil Taylor arrested in bank robbery (Continued fromfags 1) He was turned over to FBI agents after being charged. Bond was set at $25,000 for both he and Rogers, and a hearing is scheduled for municipal court on Monday. Taylor's old coach, Bo Schem- bechler, had no comment yes- terday, but was a great en- thusiast of Taylor while he was playing at Michigan. "You don't realize how valuable he is until he's not in there", Bo said in 1971. "He's really some- thing." FOR TAYLOR, his arrest yes- terday was the final plunge from the peak of glory he oc- cupied in 1971, when he was named Michigan's Most Valu- able player. Taylor was recruited by for- mer Wolverine coach Bump El- liot out of high school, but achieved his playing fame un- der Bo Schembechler, who took over as head football coach in Taylor's sophomore year. That year, Taylor stepped in as a starter, and rushed for 83 yards in Michigan stunning 24-12 up- set of Ohio State. Two years later, Taylor again led the Wolverines to the Rose Bowl, setting a team career rushing mark of 3,072 yards in the process. His 22 yard end sweep against Ohio State gave Michigan a 10-7 victory and an undefeated mark in regular sea- son play. THE FOLLOWING January, the Ohio Senate commended him as "one of the finest col- lege athletes in the entire na- tion." Sport Magazine featured him as its player of the month for his work with children. But it was all downhill from there for Billy Taylor. Drafted in the fifth round by the Atlan-! ta Falcons, he was cut during training camp. The Falcons, claimed he could not catch the ball, and that his blocking was suspect. Taylor felt differently. He charged the Atlanta organiza- tion and coach Norm Van Brocklip with racism. "IT WAS 'Yes sir' this and 'no sir' that and he'd cuss you out in front of everybody during practice," Taylor said at the time of Van Brocklin. "After- wards, he'd pat you on the back and you'd say 'Yes sir' and 'No: sir' to him. I didn't, but a lot of veteran players did, and it made me sick to my stomach." Taylor was picked up as a' free agent by the St. Louis Cardinals, but was cut before the season began. He later tried the Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian football league, but was also cut after playing one season. Taylor left the NFL with the feeling that he had been black- listed because of his refusal to knuckle under to Van Brocklin's petty tyranny. TAYLOR tried again to make it as a football player, this time with the Memphis Southmen of the World Football League. He latched on to the team as a re- serve, but suffered a pulled ham- string muscle and was cut in July, finishing the season with the bankrupt Philadelphia Bell. His last residence listed before the bank robbery was in Flint. Robert Reed and Phyllis Mark, WWJ-TV, Channel 4, noon. Gilbert and Sullivan Society- auditions for Yeoman of the Guard, Henderson Room, Michi- gan League, 8 Oh, Coward! (Professional Theatre Program, Power Cen- ter, 3 p.m. - See Saturday Theatre. The Real Inspector Hound (Professional Theatre Program Showcase Series, Arena Thea-, tre, Frieze Bldg., 8 p.m.) - PTPsinnovative approach to; Tom Stoppard's play. THE TUBE Ever see Walt Frazier do the rubber band trick? Has Kareem Jabbar ever cleared a path toj the bucket by screaming "Bat- man?" Well, it'll never happen in the NBA, but tune in ABC's Wide World of Sports for bas- ketball like you've never seen it played: The Harlem Globe- trotters take on the Washington Generals. Later, two great films: The Heartbreak Kid at 8:30 p.m. on 7, with beautiful Cybil Shepherd in a touching Neil Simon romance. At 11:30 p.m. on 9, Ida Kaminska de- livers a simply incredible per- formance as the old woman who owns The Shopon Main Street, a depressing Czech masterpiece. monday t Monday January 20c Inauguration Day .1892: First officially recog- nized basketball game played at YMCA in Springfield, Mass. Birthdays: Federico Fellini, Aristotle Onassis. CINEMA Fortune and Men's Eyes (In- mate Projects Frame-Up Film Festival, Aud. C, 7:30, no ad- mission)-Filmed at Canada's1 Quebec prison, this 1971 movie' attempts to depict the destruc- tive results of imprisonment and the prison's troubled homo- sexual culture. * . MUSIC, Blind Pig - Boogie-Woogie Red,, boogie, $1. Chances Are - Mo-Jo-Boogie7 Band, boogie, $1., Mr. Flood's Party - Eddie and the Mueller Brothers, blue- grass, $.75. Suds Factory Pear, rock, $.50. EVENTS Mass Meeting - For all those interested in joining The Daily, 7:30 p.m., 2nd floor, 420 May- nard. Five-cent Cokes provided.; The opportunity of a lifetime. 1 Future Worlds - Gene Rod- . . . cronsiu "ii' Chances Are - Jackal, rock, $.50 for students, $1 others. Mr. Flood's Party - Eric Glatz, blues, $.50 denberry lectures: "I n s i d e Suds Factory - Pear, rock, Science Fiction, Outside this $.50 World," Hill Aud., 8 p.m. Music School - Campus Or- Pocket Billiards Exhibition - chestra, Uri Mayer, conductor, 2nd Floor Union, time unspe- Hill Aud., 8 p.m. cified. EVENTSE THEATRE Lecture - N.Y. Times re- The Real Inspector Hound - porter Seymour Hersh, "Inves- Professional Theatre Program tigative Reporting and Mistrust Showcase Series, Arena Theatre, of Government," 7:30 p.m., Frieze Bldg., 8 p.m.-See Sun- Rackham Lecture Hall. day Theatre. THEATRE Marionette Theatre - (Pro- TAh childhood! Regress joy- fessional Theatre Program, East' fully to the good old days at Quad Auditorium, 8) - Euripi- 5 p.m. on 9 when W~alt Disney's des' frantic play "Bacchae" Mickey Mouse Club returns to about Dionysius and his hair- a Monday-through-Friday time tearing female followers. slat, complete with Donald THE TUBE Duck, Minnie andwthe Mouse- Robert Stack, who has proven keers.Asce nd thewise-yuntouchable since Name of the{ keteers. Ascend to wise-guy Game bit the bullet, returns on! adolescence at her Bro I erChannel 7 at 8:30 p.m. in civil are joined by Kate Smith and war period piece, The Monor- Sha-Na-Na. The AFC-NFC Pro able Sam Houston. Otherwise, Bowl kicks off at 9 p.m. on 7, Wednesday night drags as usual. and reliable Rhoda airs at 9:30 Check .out Errol Flynn and Paul on 2. Lukas matching wits and Nazis n1in:Uncertain Glory (1944) at 0 11:30 on Channel 50, but don't Auditorium, 8 p.m.) - Sopho- cles' play about a noble man whose hubris is his downfall. THE TUBE Blah! Unless you salivate over Ann-Margret Olsson (variety featuring Ann and Tina Turner, 9 p.m. on 4), you're better off studying or getting drunk. Then you can stagger home from the UGLI or the V-Bell in time for The Norliss Tapes, a creepy made-for-TV film about dead men who walk. Great post-binge viewiing. 1:50 a.m. on 2. friday Friday January 24 Birthdays: Oral Roberts, Fred- erick the Great, Neil Diamond. . . CINEMA Visions of Eight (Cinema II, Aud. A, 7, 9) - Eight inter- national filmmakers present their views of the 1972 Olympic games. A short on olympic and world gymnastic champions ac- companies the film. *** The Immigrants (New World, MLB 3, 7, 9:45) - Beautifully filmed epic of Swedes bound for America; Max Von Sydow and Liv Ullmann are excellent. *** A Night at the Opera (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7, 8:45, 10:30) -Vintage Marx Brothers, per- haps their best stuff ever. The state-room scene is worth the price of admission alone. **** Wait Until Dark (Couzens Film Vo-op, Couzens Cafeteria, 8, 10) - Thriller starring Aud- rey Hepburn stars as a blind woman who is nearly scared to death. Still 'thrilling after a couple of viewings. *** MUSIC Ark - Hedy West, banjo and guitar, $2.50 Blind Pig - Tribe, jazz, $1.00 Chances Are - Jackal, rock, $,50 for students, $1.00 others Mr. Flood's Party - Jawbone, country, $1.00 Suds Factory - Pear, rock, $1.00 Music School - Chamber choir, University Orchestra, Stravinsky's "Oedipus Rex," Thomas Hilbish, conductor, Hill Aud., S p.m. EVENTS Educational Media Center - "Volpone" by Ben Jonson, Schorling Aud., School of Edu- cation, noon. Hockey - Wolverines U-M vs. Minnesota, Yost Ice Arena, 7:30 p.m. THEA4TRE Marionette Theatre - Mo- liere's "Les Fourberies de Scapin (Professional Theatre Program, East Quad Auditor- ium, 8) - witty French comedy. THE TUBE It's a matter of thuds and grunts as dashing Clint East- wood and dapper-domed Telly Savalas lead Don Rickles, Don- aid Sutherland, and Carroll 0'- Connor on a fearful and funny WWII heisa in Kelly's Heroes, 8 n.m. on 2. ABC's debut of Hot-L Balti- more, a play-based comedy abot characters in a rundown hotel whose sign lacks one letter, looks promising. 9 p.m. on 7. i i I Economy outlook grimKennedy (Continued from Page 1) praised the tax rebate and pro- posed tax cut, predicting that "additional money in workers' paychecks will hopefully stim- ulate spending somewhat." Schmiedeskamp clearly under- lined his preference for more of an emphasis on increased spend- ing and downplayed Ford's op- timistic attitude towards the crisis. "I don't advocate a Herb Stein approach, saying all black figures are really roses; that just lessens credibility. But, on the other hand, can you imagine Winston Churchill saying 'Well, boys, we can't make it'?" Schmeideskamp criticized the President's earlier economic policies, which emphasized con- tinuity with Nixon's economic programs at a time when Nixon's credibility was ruined in the eyes of the American people. ACCORDING to Schmeide- skamp Ford "passed up a gold- en opportunity to shore up con- fidence" in opting to follow the Nixon economic line. Schmiedeskamp, who is di- rector of the University's pres- tigious quarterly survey of con- sumer a t t it u d e s, predicted, "We're going to have to wait awhile for this thing to turn around," asserting that the up- swing would not occur in the first or second quarter as some economists predict. LONG BEACH, Calif. UP) - Each Friday the Downtown Long Beach Lions Club mem- bers take turns selling little white plastic canes to help fi- nance research and treatment of eye problems. Kids who can't afford glasses are among those who benefit. There have been corneal trans- plants in a unit set up by the Lions at St. Mary's Medical Center. ordered wire tap~s (Continued from Page 1) United States between 1951 and 1956." Most of the 21 had a direct connection with the CIA, Colby said. "But two private citizens1 whose phones were tapped in 1963 were thought to bereceiv- ing sensitive intelligence in- formation, and the effort was aimed at determining the source," he said. "Our records show," Colby said, "that these last two taps were approved by the attorney general." LITTLE ROCK UP) - Mrs. Hattie W. Caraway became the first woman elected to Con- gress from Arkansas on Nov. 9, 1932. Tuesday January 21 1908: New York City enacts law banning smoking by women. 1954: U.S. launches first, atomic-powered submarine. Birthdays: Stonewall Jackson, Jack Nicklaus. CINEMA The Mother and the Whore (New World, Nat. Sci., 8) - A sex and love triangle is exam- ined in this French film as a young man alternates between a nymphomaniac nurse and a slightly "older" woman who owns a boutique. ** Last Tango in Paris (Ann Ar bor Film Co-op, Angell Hall, Aud. A, 7, 9) - Marlon Brando stars in this remarkable film about an alienated, aging Amer- ican who delves into an affair with a young French model. * MUSIC Blind Pig - Friends Road Show, jazz band (without mime troupe), $1. Chances Are - Jackal, rock, $.50 for students, $ others. Mr. Flood's Party - Eric Glatz, blues, $.50 Suds Factory - Pear, rock, $.50 Linda Ronstadt - UAC Con- cert Co-op, Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. EVENTS No way around it: a dull day. No events. Guild, Arch. Aud., 7) - a col- * * * lage of historical figures make This week's Happenings Cal- this memorable early French endar was prepared by Dave film literate. ** Blomqnist, Sarah Polarek, Jim Fast and Loose (Cinema Guild, Valk, Chris Kochmanski and Arch. Aud., 9:05) - tired yarn Dan Biddle. of class clashes; a grade A e x a m p 1 e of "crossing the tracks," little more. * ! d V Official Bulletin Battle of Algiers (Ann Arbor,....,,,t,:. Film Co-op, Angell Hall, Aud. A, 7, 9) - Semi-documentary Day Saturday, January is A, 7, 9)y Calendar film from the same director who wUOM: From the Midway - brought you "Z." **** Kissinger, "An International Ener- MUSIC , gy Policy," & Herb stein, "nfla- Blin Pi - ilve toestion," 10 am: The consequences of Blind Pig - Silver t N Growth Policies - Dennis Mea- rhythm and blues, $1. dows, Dartmouth college, "Some Chances Are - Jackal, rock, Social Aspects of the sustainable 5.50 for students, $1 others. State." 1 pm. Mr. Flood's Party - Diamond Planetarium: Audience - request- o. c ed topics, Exhibit Museum, 2, 3 pm. Rio, country,. $.75African Students' Assoc.: All Maz- Suds Factory - Pear, rock, rin, "Food Energy and the Future $.50 of the Human Race," 423 S. 4th Musical Society - Syntagma MiS30co.ol: Kay Murray. so- Musicm kam Aud., 8 A0xe.,ic Sco6l:30 urpm.so Misicum, R k, 8:30 prano, Recital Hall, 4:30 pm; Linda p.m. Postle, clarinet, Recital Hall, 8 pm. EVENTS PTP: "Oh, Coward," Power, 8 thursday Thursday January 23 1942: Film Casablanca re- leased. Birthdays: Humphrey Bogart, Stendhal, Edouard Manet. CINEMA Pearls of the Crown (Cinema get your hopes up. ;I f ON'T MISS Friends m*onln H International Night - Food pmm Summer Placement from the Netherlands and itel- 3200 SAB, 763-4117 gium, League Cafeteria, 5-7:15 Grand Canyon Nat. Park Lodges: p. m ;will interview Fri. Jan. 24 from 9 Sorority Rush - mass meet- I to 5. Openings include waiters/ess, .fU30 bus drivers, mechanics, security, ing, third floor of Unon, : maids, clerks, etc. Register by phone p.m. or in person. THEATRE Youth Vacation Camps, Ibadan, ! Marionette Theatre - Sopho- Nigeria: counselors needed to teach ties' Oedipus Rex, (Professiona l physical exercise, swimming, lan- eus guages, practical sciences, martial Theatre Program, East )uad & body arts; appl. deadline Jan. 31. ________--- These are courses dealing with law, media, and a host of original topics we're not allowed to mention. Teachers in- clude undergraduates, law students, professors, and other wierdos. Come to the Course Mart office for a complete list of courses. at the lokkra f~lorb Jazz Funk Band Mime Dancing Acrobatics tPAI. "WHICH WAY TO WINNEPEG." A free structured multi-media experience . . . a happeninaof four envornments desiqned to shorten the distance between the audience and the visual I ,i I Ii I II II