Saturday March 31, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three C/iUc/ kiWv'hti eiice4 WCI3N : Weird new ideas for listeners UNIVERSITY REFORMED HURON HILLS BAPTIST ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL CHURCH CHURCH: 3150 Glacier Way CHURCH, 306 N. Division 1001 E. Huron Pastor: Charles Johngon 8:00 a.m.: Holy Eucharist. 9:30 a.m.=-Discussion Classes. For information, transportation, 10:00 a.m.: Holy Eucharist and 10:30 a.m.-"The Story of Ruth" personalized help, etc., phone 769- Sermon. dramnatintion by members of the 6299 or 761-6749. 6:00 p.m.-Wesley Grad Com- munity, dinner and discussion. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL On the Campus at the corner of State and William Sts. Rev. Terry N. Smith, Sr. Minister, Rev. Ronald C. Phillips, Assistant PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST 2580 Packard Road, 971-0773 Ui.RliiQiiGQii{!il il Y t114111VV10 Va. saav congregation. 5:30 p.m.-Student supper, 75c. * * * LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (ALC, LCA) (formerly Lutheran Student Chapel) 801 S. Forest (Corner of Hill St.) Donald G. Zill, Pastor Sunday Folk Mass-10:30 a.m. Sunday School-9:15 a.m. Sunday Supper-6:15 p.m. Program-7:00 p.m. Wednesday Eucharist-5: 15 p.m. * * * FIRST UNITED METHODIST FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDA- SCIENTIST TION - State at Huron and Wash. 1833 ashtenaw Avenue 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-WORSHIP SUNDAY: 10:30 a.m.: Worship SERVICES. Sermon by Dr. Donald, Services, Sunday School (2-20 yrs.). B. Strobe: "ON LOSING YOURI Infants' room available Sunday and SHIRT". Series: Sermon on the! Wednesday. on. Public Reading Room, 306 E. Li- MBroadcast on WNRS 1290 AM, berty St.: Mon., 10-9; Tues.-Sat., WNRZ 103 FM, 11:00 a.m.-noon. 10-5; Closed Sundaysand i-NEXT SUNDAY: Sermon by Dr. days *Donald B. Strobe: "IS THE GOLD- 11 Tom Bloxam, Pastor, 971-3152 Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. Worship: 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Training Hour: 6 p.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Avenue Services of Worship at 9:00 and By DIANE LEVICK Associate Arts Editor What does the Long Ranger have in common with Dannon Yogurt? Not a hell of a lot, ex- cept that both figure in WCBN's new aims at answering students' interests. WCBN, the student-run cam- pus radio station, has set up a contest with yogurt among the prizes and has begun broadcast- ing original Lone Ranger episod- es. To enter the contest, which ends April 6, students must guess the total number of individual serv- ings of yogurt purchased by the food services of the following col- leges combined: Antioch, N e w Mexico Highlands University, Black Hill State College, George Washington University, and the University of Texas at El Paso. Students can bring or send to WCBN as many entries as they wish. The prize that awaits them is 50 free records and between five and 10 dozen yogurt serv- ings. How did such an unusual con- test evolve? Jeff Hirsh andDav- id Gales, disc jockeys on the FM Morning After Show, decid- ed that the campus needed a real- ly fun contest. And, says Gales, "No one has ever given away a really superkiller prize . . . We thought 50 free albums was phe- nomenal." According to WCBN publicity director Pam Cukor, the response to the contest has been "incred- ible." "One girl from S o u t h Quad stayed up three hours here last night doing entries." Well, if people will "walk a mile for a Camel," imagine what some will do for yogurt . . . As for the Lone Ranger, Cukor explains, "People are really in- terested in old radio serials. We got a lot of requests." The UAC- sponsored episodes are broadcast on WCBN-AM Tuesday and Thursday at 10 p.m. Cukor hopes that the serial "The Shadow" can be arranged for broadcast next fall. SAMARIA LUTHERAN, LCA 272 Hewitt Rd., Ypsilanti Rev. Dean Tyson, Pastor Family Worship and Nursery at 11:00 a.m. Faculty and Students CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 Washtenaw Rev. Peter Paulsen I C' .-- .r - EN RULE ENOUGH?" Series: Ser- 10:30 a.m. Sermon: "On the Suf- mon on the Mount. fering Love Of Christ." Preaching: WESLEY FOUNDATION Robert E. Sanders.. COLLEGE PROGRAM welcome. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 9:15 and 10:30 a.m- Worship Services Sunday at 9:15 a.m.-Bible Study. Wednesday at 10 p.m.-Midweek Services:S 10:00 a.m.-Morning Worship. Sunday, April 1:e 6:00 p.m.-Evening Service. 5:30 p.m.-Celebration, Wesley Worship. Lounge. * * * 6:15 p.m.-Supper, Pine Room. BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH 7:00 p.m.-Program with film and OF CHRIST discussion on "The Elderly", Wes-' 423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149 ley Lounge. Ministers: T. L. Trost, Jr.; R. E. Tuesday, April 3: Simonson. Evening-NBC's First Tuesday Associate Ministers: Dennis R. will include a segment on amnesty. Brophy and Howard F. Gebhart. Wednesday, April 4:j 9 a.m.: Morning Prayer. Noon-World's Smallest Circus,; 10 a.m.: Worship Service and on Diag. Church School. Thursday, April 5: Bible Study - Tuesdays, 12:00 to 1:00. Holy Communion - Wednesdays, 5:15 to 5:45. Supper Program - Wednesdays, 6:00. Hi-oh, yogurt! The Lone Ranger "eats it" again! He and Tonto are shown here waiting for the sunset so they can ride into it, down to WCBN to enter the "yogurt contest." GLENDA JACKSON, OLIVER REED, ALAN BATES in KEN RUSSELL'S 11 I IFF tonight 6:00 2 4 News 9 This Is Your Life 50 Star Trek 56 Thirty Minutes With 6:30 2 CBS News 4 NBC News 7 Reasoner Report 9 Fishing Hole 56 Consumer Game 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 George Pierrot 7 News 9 Untamed World 50 Hee Haw 56 Business Journal 7:30 2 Young Dr. Kildare 4 Adventurer 7 Town Meeting 9 This Is the Law 56 Festival sFil 56 Festival Films 8:00 2 All in the Family 4 World Premier "Hitched" and "Savage" 7 Here We Go Again 9 Movie "Strangers When We Melt" (1960) 56 Movie 'Two Daughters" (1962) 50 That Good Ole Nashville Music 8:30 2 Bridget Loves Bernie 7 A Touch of Grace 50 Nitty Gritty 9:00 2 Mary Tyler Moore 7 Julie Andrews 50 Black Omnibus 9:30 2 Bob Newhart 10:00 2 Carol Burnett 7 Delphi Bureau 56 Dance Theatre of Harlem 50 Lou Gordon 10:30 9 Document 11:00 2 4 7 7News 9 CBC News 56 Mandolinist: Frank Wakefield 11:15 7 ABC News 9 Provincial Affairs 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "Die! Die! My Darling" (English 1965) 4. Johnny Carson 7 Movie "Imitation of Life" (1959 9 Movie "The Champagne Murders" (French 1967) 50 Movie "voyage to the Planet of Pre- historic Women." (1966) 1:00 4 News 1:30 2 Movie "Jungle Captive" (1945) 7 Movie "Pinky" (1949) 3:00 7 News 3:30 2 News wcbn 89.5 fm 9 Maranatha Music 12 Radio Prison 4 Jazz 8 Progressive Rock 11 The Potato Show plus "FLASH GORDON" Chapter 9 Midnight Showing Only Friday and Saturday Poetry in music These six members of the University's School of Music faculty collaborated last night on a concert at Rackham entitled "Hugo Wolf Liederabend." Dra -ma, co edy balance doors open 11:45 p.m. not continuous with "Fellini's Roma" " 'H P jl!A w 9-90 NEXT FRI., April 6, 7 at Midnight "IF" plus FLASH GORDON No. 10 nicely in Jean I SATURDAY and SUNDAY March 31-April 1 A gorgeous film by the maker of LAST TANGO IN PARIS Bernardo Bertolucci's on n Written by Bertolucci Andriana Arti, Francesco Barilli, Allea Midgette "REVOLUTION": The work of a man with great promise THE New York Film Festival Stendhal character, residing in iure at love symbolizes a death cf is still capable of surprises.. Parma and ultimately marrying a the past, an angst-ridden sense Last night, Philharmonic Hall bourgeois girl named Clelia. He of fultility in any kind of revo- presented "Before the Revolu- is also an Italian Holden Caul- lutionary striving, whether emo- tion," an unheralded Italian fea- field, flailing his adolescent tional, political or merely intel- ture by an unknown writer-di- limbs and querying intellect lectual, amid the defeat of con- rector named Bernardo Bertoluc- against the social structures of temporary society. ci. He is 23 years, old, and his 1962. film is a beauty. Viewing life in such romantic The title derives from Talley- terms is the special province of So is its star. Adriana Asti, a rand - "Only those who lived a very young director, but Mr. large-eyed brunette making her before the revolution knew how Bertolucci has approached his celluloid debut, appeared on- sweet life could be." In a typi- story with such deep feeling that stage with the director to take cal gesture of searching youth, its full implications are com- a modest bow before the screen- the boy revolts against every- municated. This is a young ing. Her unfamiliar face meant thing in his surroundings-his man's film, but it has large so- little to the audience at the respectable middle-class family, cial references. time. Before the evening was ov- his lovely but dull childhood er, it had become a face that sweetheart, the political climate Cinematically, it is also filled discerning film-goers are unlike, in his provincial town. He dallies with references, to the best mo- ly to forget. with Communism, with abstract dern directors in Italy and philosophy, with art, and, most France. Knowledgeable viewers She is the focal point of a meaningfully, with his striking, can detect strong influences from poignant love story epitomizing unhappy young aunt who falls Roberto Rossellini and Alain Res- a young man's growth through hopelessly in love while realiz- nais in Mr. Bertolucci's sophis- the dense, chaotic jungle of con- ing she is only filling an adoles- ticated style. temporary civilization. L i k e cent's temporary need. Astonishingly, he has managed many of the best modern films, the drama is difficult, subtle It is a moving story on the to assimilate a high degree of and extraordinarily complex in most immediate level, and the filmic and literary erudition into imagery.director has given it sweeping a distinctively personal visual ap- connotations. When the boy, un- proach. Technically, he displays M rth whnf . nn hig. a toch i th exraor- authoritative control. Here is a By ALVIN CHARLES KATZ Scottish brogue filled the air of Lydia Mendelssohn T h e a t r'e Wednesday night as Ann Arbor CivicnTheatre premiered its lat- est offering, a likeable produc- tion of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. A nice balance of com- edy and drama, the show is as enjoyable as Scottish accents are abundant. Adapted by Jay Presson Al- -TONIGHT- Vanessa Glenda Redgrave - Jackson MLB $1.25 Friends of Newsreel len from the novel of the same name by Muriel Spark, the play is set in the 1930's at a strict Scottish girls' school in Edin- burgh. The rather thin plot deals with a middle-aged spin- ster school teacher, Jean Bro- die, who insists that she is "in her prime"; each year she se- lects a brood of young and im- pressionable students whom she molds into "Brodie girls". She teaches them culture and ro- mance, disseminating disdain for traditional education. Miss Brodie is a fantasizer, and she lives her fantasies vicar- iously through her girls. This ex- tends into her personal life as well, where she use a hapless school teacher and a third-rate artist the same way she uses her students. The play, which covers a span of eight years, watches a particular set of Bro- die girls grow up, reflecting the poisonous effect that Miss Brodie has on their lives. Brodi e All this happens with a bare minimum of action. The play is very static in nature, and that constitutes its principal weak- ness. Although the character studies and plot complexities are absorbing and the show is never boring, nothing really happens. Still, the show is extremely di- verting, the stasis being over- powered by a strong sense of psychological interaction that the play develops. The production is a very good one, featuring attractive and functional sets by Gerald Jane- sick which permit the play to move swiftly along, unencum- bered by lengthy set changes. Di-, rector Nathan Garner, realizing that the play is neither uproar- iously funny nor intensely dra- matic, strikes a nice balance be'- tween the two extremes. The show moves at a comfort- able pace, fast enough to stay interesting, but slow enough to develop the subtleties of charac- ter interaction which the show depends on. Nancy Huesel, who was fea- tured earlier this season in Civic Theatre's production of Forty Carats, gave an eloquent and sensitive performance in the role of Jean Brodie. While failing to convey the degree of sexuality that the role demands, looking perhaps a bit too ma- tronly, Ms. Huesel incisively de- veloped a finely honed and con- sistant character, and display- ed excellent control as she han- dled comic and dramatic scenes with equal dexterity. Although The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie is pretty much a See ENJOYABLE, Page 8 CUT.URE CALENLDAR WEEKEND BARS AND MUSIC-The Ark, Aly Bain and the Boys of the Loch (Sat.) admission; Bimbo's, The Gas- lighter§ (Sat., Sun.) cover; Del Rio, Jazz (Sun.) no cover; Rubaiyat, Iris Bell Adventure (Sat., Sun.) cover; Pretzel Boys, RFD Boys (Sat.) cover; Blind Pig, Steve Nardella (Sat.) cover (Closed Sun.); Golden Falcon, Fifth Revela- tion (Sat.) cover; Mackinac Jack's, Circus (Sat.) cover, Bizzaro (Sun.) cover; Mr. Flood's Party, Cadillac Cow- boys (Sat.) cover, Diesel Smoke and Dangerous Curves (Sun. 3 p.m.) cover; Bimbo's on the Hill, Longspur (Sat.) cover. DRAMA-U Players perform Arrabal's The Architect and the Emperor of Assyria in Frieze Arena at 8; Union Gallery presents Albee's The American Dream at ,8; Ann Arbor Civic Theatre shows the Prime of Miss Jean Brodie in Mendelssohn at 8. FILM-Cinema Guild presents Bertolucci's Before the Revo- lution in Arch. Aud. at 7 and 9:05; Cinema II shows Re- noir's Picnic on the Grass in Aud. A at 7 and 9:30; He- brew Dept. screens Moshe Vntliator in Trueblood (Frieze) at 7 and 9; UAC-Mediatrics presents Rosemary's Baby in Nat. Sci. Aud. at 7 and 9:30; Bursley Hall shows 2001: A Space Odyssey at 9 in its w. cafeteria. DANCE-U Musical Society brings the National Ballet Com- pany to Power performing Tchaikovsky's Sleeping Beauty at 8. I TONIGHT-Hill Aud.-8 P.M. $2.50 reserved seats and returned seats on sale at Union 11-5 and at Hill Aud. after 6:30 WATER SHOW-Michifish perform "Visions of Future Passed" at Bell Pool, 8:15. CONCERT-Bette Midler sings tonight at Hill at 8. Cin emia-I . SATURDAY 31 MARCH SPICNIC ON THE G ASS Q i I~