Page 6-Thursday, February 2,1978-The Michigan Daily RTS ARCADE. .. a weekly roundup i i S Polanski skips town a SANTA MONICA, Calif. - Film di- 'rector Roman Polanski fled the country .;,yesterday rather than appear in court _Y for sentencing on a charge of having 0sexual intercourse with a 13-year-old girl. Superior Court judge Laurence J. ,-Rittenband immediately issued a bench % warrant for Polanski's arrest and said 1P he would give the director ten days to c. surrender. +k -Attorney Douglas Dalton stunned a packed courtroom when he announced, "Your honor, I received a call from Mr. Polanski this morning, advising he would not be here this morning." Dalton said "I do not believe he is in the United States," and asked the judge to allow him time to persuade the director to return for sentencing. The 44-year-old Polanski, whose film credits include Chinatown and Rosemary's Baby, was released from the California Men's Institute at Chino last Friday - 48 days short of the 90 days alotted for a diagnostic study. He faced sentences ranging from being re- leased on probation to a maximum of fifty years in prison. Polanski had begun work on a new movie, Hurricane, during the litigation. But last month, while he was impri- soned, producer Dino De Laurentiis an- nounced he was dropping Polanski as director of the multi-million-dollar Ta- hitian epic. Amin too rotten to be waxed LONDON - Elvis Presley was his- tory's biggest hero to the Christmas crowds at Madame Tussaud's. and Ugandian dictator Idi Amin the most hated and feared man, although the world-famous wax museum doesn't have a statue of either one. Presley re- placed Joan of Arc and Amin ousted. Adolf Hitler in the popularity- unpopularity poll taken each Christ- mas. The museum is going to install a statue of Presley this year, but not one of Amin. It said he can't get into the chamber of horrors because he hasn't been executed, and most visitors would object to having him among the world's political leaders. Look what they started LONDON - "We didn't really know what we were getting into with this Adam and Eve thing," said Eric Lister. "Although after last year we should have known." Lister is co-owner of the Portal Gal- lery, which for 19 years has specialized in naive and primitive painters. He has just written the first book about Britain's Grandma Moses-style artists. Not long ago he told some of these Sunday painters he would mount a show on "The Story of Adam and Eve." Then came the flood. "We started off with about 45 art- ists," Lister said, standing among Adam and Eve paintings hung three and four deep, stacked on the floor, leaning against tables and cabinets. "But the artists kept saying, 'Look, my friend wants to do one, too.' Now we have about 70 artists, many with more than one painting. John Allin over there didn't decide to paint one until after the show opened." Allin's painting, showing no signs of haste, depicts the "First Couple" as modern English teen-agers. Adam is hoisting a'gartered Eve on his should- ers to pick an apple from the tree. In one garden of Eden we find Adam and Eve sprinting across a lawn toward a present-day English canal boat. In another they are two doleful senior citizens outside a country cottage. There are Adams in top hats, gaily dressed Eves, Adam as a pipe-puffing farmer with his Eve a little girl in a yellow dress. Royal relics on PBS NEW YORK - The stars of the latest PBS British television import are things, not people - and an incredible and priceless collection they are. In a series of nine hour-long programs check local listings PBS is presenting "Royal Heritage," with former BBC managing director Sir Huw Wheldon leading the audience ,through the- British.-Royal ~Collection, hich is the-largest private. art collec- tion in the world. Its treasures range from Rembrandts and Titians to stam- ps to what may be the world's most fabulous doll's house. The programs were assembled by a team that included Sir Huw, producer Michael Gill and J.H. Plumb, professor of modern English history at Cam- bridge University from 1966-74. ordinance. The Golden Banana's owners main- tained the ordinance violated their Fir-. st Amendment right of free expression. In rejecting the owners' arguments, Garrity said dancing is not "any more or less artistic - in the First Amend- Pseudo Elvis Chicagoan Rick Saucedo practices his moves while rehearsing for the upcom- ing New York production of "Elvis: The Legend Lives," have embarked on such foreign adven- tures only to return home without pay. Laugh, dummies, it'sfunny! LOS ANGELES - Why must TV comedies have a laugh track? George Schlatter, of, "Laugh-In," offers this theory: "The laugh track is now used to such a degree that the home audience really expects it," says the quick-to-laugh pro- ducer. "Without a laugh track, they're just sitting there hanging... "The trick is to under-use it. Many times we even take out laughs because they go on just too long and overlapthe dialogue." Schlatter, whose "Laugh-In" specials this season had studio audiences rang- ing from 25 to 300 fans, has more of a laugh track -problem than sitcom- makers. For starters, his skits and gags aren't taped in sequence. The work 'is stop- and-go. Some is outside the studio. And it's all literally pieced together in the editing room. Each show, he says, averages 1,100 tape edits, 300 film edits and 300 sound effects. On occasion, as when the audience has left but the producer needs to re- shoot a scene, "Laugh-In" laughmeis- ter John Pratt will add some ho-hos from his stock of cassettes containing 1,200 laughs of varied length and in- tensity. But, like Schlatter, he feels that when using either imported or domestic studio laughter "less is best. In the 1950s, when capned chuckles came to TV, he said, producers treated it like a new toy, demanding a full- volume roar for even the Most feeble joke, but they're in the minority now. "Generally, it -- the laugh track - is more in true context now with what's happening on the screen because of the criticism it's gotten," he says. "People are a lot more wary about it now." Recent deaths * Gregory Herbert-A saxaphonist for the jazz-pop group Blood, Sweat and Roman Polanski ANN ARBOR LIBERTARIAN LEAGUE PRESENTS 'Il LAISSEZ FAIRE DAY Hear 3 Provocative Speakers tell it like oup Steve r Heard it Before...pies 2pm ROY CHILD pn The Druq LAW Disaster 3 ETTE ERWIN PhD "By modern history, we mean the last 1,000 years," Sir Huw said, smiling broadly. "They gave us a million pounds $2.4 million then and told us to come back in two years. It's the only way." The royal family were almost as help- ful as the million pounds. "The Queen and the Duke of Edin- burgh decided to'give us freedom to go where we liked, choose what we liked," Sir Huw said. "Firstly, it's the policy of the palace nowadays to make these col- lections and buildings more available, more accessible, and television was a marvelous method of helping make that possible." Is it art or is it dirty? BOSTON - A federal judge, determ- ining nudity doesn't make dancing any more ar\istic, says communities have a right to impose restrictions on such ac- tivities in bars. U.S. District Court Judge W. Arthur Garrity Jr. heard legal arguments and watched a videotape of a nude dance routine before deciding Thursday to deny a preliminary injunction sought by the owners of the Golden Banana nightclub of suburban Peabody, Mass. The nightclub, which alternately features nude dancing and boxing mat- ches, sought the injunction against"thE city of Peabody and the state to block enforcement of a recently passed city ment sense - by taking one's clothes off. That is not part of the artistic con- tent." Qu'est-ce tu dit? HOLLYWOOD - Observes Peter Graves: "When things went wrong on a movie set, an actor used to be able to call his agent and say, 'Come on down and fix it.' But what do you do when you're filming in the middle of Iran." Graves expresses the perplexity of his fellow actors in dealing with totally new film business. No longer is the movie world controlled by eight Holly- wood companies with direct lines of au- thority. Films can now be financed by a network of consortiums and/or govern- ments, with locations in far-off lands. Consider Graves' recent film, tenta- tively called Cruise Missile. It was shot in Iran with these elements: 1. An American producer, Yugoslav- born Ika Panajovtavich, who supplied director Leslie Martinson, the screen- play and U.S. actors Graves, John Car- .i II i I s Self - Liberation 4pm WALTER BLOCK PW D Defending The Undefendables Pushers, Pimps, Slumlords, Libelers Blackmailers, Scabs, Profiteers, etc "STARTLING AND ILLUMINATING" Robert Nozick Friday, February 3rd. Henderson Room * U NOON LUNCHEON * Homemade Soup and Sandwiches 50C FRIDAY, FEB. 3 Heather Booth Director of Midwest Academy "Women Organizing Change" at GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE (corner of Oakland) i Im mm- ---mm-mm -m mm mm m mm mmmm mm. m mm mmmm mm m . mm m m m 3rd Floor, Michigan League. Adm Free. l AP Photo Betty, brass, and jazz Betty Alridge appears with members of the Harold Dejan Olympia Brass Band in "Fat Tuesday and All That Jazz," to be aired on most PBS stations at 8 p.m. next Tuesday, the night New Orleans breaks loose for Mardi Gras, The show, not just for serious people, is a brassy, sexy, bluesy celebration of the dance and music of black New Orleans, taped at the performing arts center of Wolf Trap Farm Park in Virginia. radine, and Michael Dante. 2. German financing, actor Curt Jer- gens, an actress and production per- sonnel. 3. Spanish financing, an actress and a cameraman. 4. Italian money, cameraman and production personnel. 5. Iranian money, an actress and workers to fill out the movie crew. "Now I know what the Tower of Babel was like," said Graves. Many Ameri- can actors, including some big names, . The Universityof Michigan pl.) Professional Theatre Program SAVES (A FlAy yElo BoniD) Februady 1-4et Spm Trueblood Theatr Universiy Showcase oduc*ons General admission $2.00 Tickets at Trueblood Box Office 6-8 pm Tears, Herbert died in Amsterdam ear- ly Wednesday morning. A spokesman for the group said that he was found dead in his hotel room, and that the sus- pected canse of death was an overdose of drugs. A concert the group was to give in The Hague Tuesday night has been cancelled, and a European tour is now uncertain. " Tim McCoy - Cowboy star Tim Mc. Coy, whose career spanned the Wild West shows, silent movies and talkies, died Sunday in a hospital in Fort Huachuca, Arizona. McCoy, 87, had been under treatment for a heart ail- ment for several months. Featured in 89 pictures, McCoy won an Emmy for the "Tim McCoy Show," and was in- ducted into the Cowboy Hall of Fame in 1974. His last movie role was in Around the World in 80 Days. " The Arts Arcade was compiled from the AP and UPI wires by Arts staffers Owen Gleiberman, Mark Johanssen, Peter Manis, Alan Rub- enfeld, Mike Taylor, and Tim Yagle., Don't Miss the Annual W EWAs N16 SALE