The Michigan Daily-Thursday, January 19, 1 978-Pall 5 RTS ARCADE ... a weekly roundup inch here and in Munich. sweeping through the dress shop of de- which has an annual deficit of $400,000, after 23 years. try Singer; Or at least, to duel "Chances for optimal restoration are signer Ralph Laurens, where she Princeton said. " The Fantasticks-Off-Broadway now . Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty very good," said Hubertus Falkner von promptly bought out two whole shop After the performance, Gov. Brendan for almost 18 years. Will it never stop? Best Country Duo - MILAN, Italy -Italian movie direc- ' windows of dresses. That's what we call B.,., t, i c . ;,, g - _ - ,,,,,_ l tor Franco Zeffirelli says he may move from Italy because of what he calls con- tinuous attacks against him by leftist "I represent dissent in Italy ... Some- day I expect to be slapped in my face and I will be obliged to go into exile" Zeffirelli was quoted as saying in an in- terview with a weekly magazine. The 53-year-old director, who said once he voted for the Roman Catholic Church-backed ruling Christian Demo- crats, blamed Italy's worsening situa- tion on leftist parties. Sonnenburg, nead of iMumns Dmerner Institute. "A layman would scarcely be able to spot the repairs." Among the canvases expected to be restored by next fall under von Sonnen- burg's supervision is one of the most prized art works in West Germany - "Jacob's Blessing," completed by Dut- ch master Rembrandt van Rijn in;1656. It and about a dozen other paintings in eight museums across West Ger- many were damaged last year by Hans- Joachim Bohlmann, 40. "I must destroy what other men cher- ish," he told police before being com- Hot-mama- on-camp us Singer Pearl Bailey,'who has decided to get 'the real thing" in addition to the honorary degree she already has, en- rolled as a fulltime freshman at Georgetown University in Washington D.C'. on Monday. Here, Miss Bailey, 59, shows off her student identification card. Miasma in Moscow MOSCOW - Sviatoslav Richter, of- ten considered the Soviet Union's fore- most concert pianist, has pneumonia and has canceled all performances, a spokesman for the state concert organi- zation said Thursday. The spokesman said the perform- ances would be rescheduled when the pianist recovers. Richter, who also had pneumonia last winter, canceled his appearances in the Russian Winter Festival in Moscow last mitted to a mental institution. For seven months, police said, Bohl- mann used a syringe to spray a solution of 98 per cent sulfuric acid on priceless paintings. His spree began after, his wife was killed in a traffic accident, police said. Bohlmann was arrested in his Hamburg apartment hours after being seen during his last attack Oct. 7 in Kassel. Restorers were pleased to discover that the paintings had not been damaged as badly as originally thought because the colors were protected by layers of centuries-old varnish. responsive. What next? 'Samurai Strangler'? LOS ANGELES - A new exploitation film called The Surfside Strangler is be- ing readied for release at a time Los Angeles area police are still hunting the Hillside Strangler. A review released by the producer, Somma Films, said it would send out "shock waves." The film went into pro- duction before the current wave of mur- ders, but, like the real case, it in- volves the strangulation of prostitutes and innocent teen-agers. In the movie the strangler is a mid- dle-aged man who was abused as a child by his mbther, an alcoholic pros- titute, and her pimp. Nazi-nabbed art fetches $ NEW YORK - A collection of Dutch paintings, taken by Adolf Hitler as ran- som to let a Jewish family flee Nazi-oc- cupied Holland, is expected to bring hundreds of thousands of dollars in an art sale. The heirs of the family, said a spokes- man for Sotheby Parke Bernet gallery, had no idea of the value of the paint- ings, each of which bears a seal show- ing it was in Hitler's private collection. In January 1942, Hitler took seven pictures from the Alfred Cohens. The family owns department stores in Am- sterdam and The Hague. One bearing the Hitler collection number 2172, expected to fetch about $90,000, was recovered in 1946 from a salt mine near Salzburg, Austria, where Hitler had hidden it as he real- ized his downfall was near. It was re- turned to the Cohens. The picture is Jan Steen's A Village Wedding. Its survival in New York had been un- suspected until the Cohen family asked Sotheby to examine some old pictures which they thought might be valuable. They were. Also being sold is a collection, also unknown until now, which was brought to the United States during World War II by Alfred Zweig, brother of Austrian writer Stefan Zweig. The gallery said discovery of the collections show there may be other forgotten collections and important groups of.Old Masters brought to Amer- ica by refugees during World War II. The sale is expected to realize at least $1.4 million. Gallery president John Marion said dealers are flying in from all over the world. "Because of the decline in the dollar," he said, "holders of such hard currency as German marks, Swiss francs and Japanese yen can buy much cheaper here than anywhere else." New kind ofshow for Grace? PRINCETON, N.J. - Princess Grace of Monaco will deliver a poetry reading at Princeton University, McCarter Theater in two months. Tickets for the benefit affair will sell for$100 apiece. At the March 6 performance, the former movie star Grace Kelley, along with the Royal Shakespeare Festival's Richard Pasco, will give a series of readings, titled Birds, Beasts and Flow- ers, the theater said Friday. The program has been scheduled to raise funds for McCarter Theater, D wyrne wiii ost a reception in Law- renceville for the princess. A mere thirty days is no kind of record NEW YORK - The New York Ballet resumed its repertory season at the State Theater at Lincoln Center Jan. 7 " Grease - Can it be'? Six years on the Great White Way come April. " Beach Blanket Babylon - The pride of San Francisco. A solid month isn't so long, is it now? Best warblers SANTA MONICA, Calif. - The American Music Awards show held in " Ela Ftzgerald - Distinguishod Merit Award. Best scribblers NEW YORK - Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon is the best work of fiction published by an American writer in 1977, according to the National Book Critics Circle. The critics described Song of SOlo- mon as "the black experience in Amer- ica, from crawling to walking to run- ning to flying --into poetry and myth - jazzy and wondrous." The Morrison book won over fdur other fiction nominees -- John Cheev- er's Falconer; Joan Didfton's A Book-of Common Prayer; Philip Roth's The Professor of Desire, and John Sayles Union Dues. The circle gave its poetry award to Day by Day, the final work of the late Hobert Lowell; the general nonfiction award to Walter Jackson Bate's io- graphy, Samuel .Johnson and the award for a book of criticism to Susan Sontag's On Photography. Obituaries " Arthur Sheekman - Comedy writer Arthur Sheekman, 77, a longtime friend of the late Groucho Marx and a found- ing member of the Screen Writrs Guild, died Thursday. Sheekman wrote 25 screenplays including three well- known Marx Brothers comedies - Ani- mal Crackers, Coconuts abd Monkey Business. " Dorris Warren - Dorris Paul Wfr- ren, the blue grass fiddler who played in the band, The Foggy Mountain Boys. died Thursday at the age of 59. d- I The Arts A rcade was coin- posed through the wires of A P and UPI, and by Arts staffers Owen Gleiberman, Mark Johanssen, Jeffrey Seibst, and Ti/ Yagle. i Orson Welles' 1941 1CITIZEN KANEI This film stands apart as a * i masterpiece of cinematic tech- t nique.It rests at the top of more : A "top ten", liststhan any other u I motion pict It is one o *few example an uncompr work to emerge from Hollywoo - Neither time nor repeated view- ing can dull its impact. With * :WELLES, JOSEPH COTTON & THE * MERCURY THEATRE. i f Fri: SLEUTH I I Cinema Guild I TONIGHT at 7 & 9:05 ' I (FREE) AP Photo, The return of the King Benny Goodman, who with his "orchestra played thefirst janrolcert. in Carnegie Hall in)%38, is shown in three views during the Eing $of ing s return to Carnegie last Tuesday night for a 10th anniversary concert. after a solid month of The Nutcracker. The first night "back at work" saw Chislaine Thesmer of the Paris Opera Ballet as Odette in George Balanchine's one-act Swan Lake. NYCB and the Opera have a continuing artist ex- change system, an excellent idea with great possibilities. But this has by no means been the longest running production ever. It would have to run longer than: " The Mousetrap - Agatha Christie's mystery play, still running in London . . OPENS TONIGHT The University of Michigan Professional Theatre Program presents from Detroit greektown attic theatre STREAMERS N.Y DRAMA CRITICS AWARD Ir l W1111) RAIi Jan. 19,20 8pm, Jan.21 2&8pm Residential College Theatre PTP Ticket Office Mendelssohn Theatre Lobby Mon -Fri l0am-1p m. 2-5prm For information call 313-b764-0450 All seats $3.50 Santa Monica, California gave top honors to: " Fleetwood Mac - Best Pop group and Favorite Pop album, Rumours: " Stevie Wonder - Top Make Soul Singer and his Songs in the Key of Life was Best Soul album; " Loretta Lynn - Top Female Coun- CIVERSITY c7IUSICAL 8OCIETY present AP Photo Art for sail This ordinary sail was recently transformed into a $10,000 work of art by-Yugoslav artist Lazar Obican (standing on boat) for Vinton Sommerville, vice president of Bayliner Marine Corp. and an exhibit af the New York Boat Show. month. He also called off a tour of France in late January and early Feb- ruary. Restoration paintings? DUESSELDORF, West Germany - Priceless Rembrandt and Rubens pain- tings that appeared irreparably dam- aged by an acid-spraying vandal are being painstakingly restored inch-by- Apparently somebody listens to him Farrah Fawcett-Majors has picked up a new set of laurels - sort of. Holly- wood fashion designer Mr. Blackwell Tuesday put her name at the top of his list of the - world's worst-dressed women, saying she has "enough splits in her dress for an earthquake." Re- portedly, Fawcett-Majors was seen 0010 -,*,4 Showcasejazz Presents __ r' ANTHONY BRAXTON, --~~UA - ---- aa-a- aa m i