The Michigan Daily-Thursday, October 6, 1977-Page , RS L ove for Sale DETROIT - A 33-year-old love letter from Ernest Hemingway is the prize jexhibit at an upcoming Detroit auction of rare bocks and literary memorabilia. 9 Hemingway wrote the four-page ,missive to his fourth wife, Mary, by 9flashlight from a battlefield in northern 'France on July 31, 1944. He told her about a Mercedes staff car that had ibeen captured and the recovery of a 4good supply of cognac. "Hey, Small 'Friend,"'he wrote, "I wash I could talk tto you preferably in bed ..." Appraised at $4,000 to $5,000, the let- ter was a gift from the writer's widow rafter the president of the Friends of the betroit Public Library wrote Mrs. Hemingway requesting something for the auction. Other Hemingway items-to be auctioned Oct. 28 are a cut glass punch bowl, ladle, and 34 cups used at a party to welcome him home from the ,ar -- valued at $400 to $600 - and a *group of letters from famous writers praising his The Old Man and the Sea. ARCADE ... a weekly roundup V- f '-n told this week he must leave by Oct. 5. Urin was active in the "young guard" poetry group of officially recognized young poets at the end of World War II and later wrote for leading newspapers and journals. The peper Literaturnaya Rossiya published his letter in verse to then President Lyndon B. Johnson when an American nuclear bomb was reported lost in Greenland. Urin began in recent years to demand that more Soviet poets should be per- mitted to travel overseas, and early this year wrote a poem dedicated to the American Bicentennial. He said he hopes to live in the United States. The Soviet Union has permitted a series of political dissidents and cultur- al figures disenchanted with the Soviet regime to leave the country in recent months. Hot times in Stockholm STOCKHOLM, Sweden - The Swed- ish Academy of Letters announced it will award the annual Nobel prize for literature today to start off eight days of Nobel honors also covering science, peace and economics. Writers mentioned in speculation on the literature award included Turkish author Yasar Kemal, English novelist Doris Lessing and Guenther Grass of West Germany. Kemal, a 55-year-old epic writer and an often jailed active Marxist, was un- officially reported to have been the chief alternative to American author Saul Bellow as last year's winner. Ke- mal spent several months living in Sweden this year. Others said to be in line for the prize included such standbys as Graham Greene of Britain or France's Simona de Beauvoir. Also mentioned were Belgian Flemish writer Luis Paul Boon and V.S. Naipaul of Trinidad. If a woman receives the award, worth $145,000 this year, it will be the first time in a decade. The last woman win- ner was Nelly Sachs, a Swedish poet who shared the prize in 1966. s - Soviets flip-flop on play MOSCOW - Yuri Lyubimov, one of the Soviet Union's most innovative di- rectors, has received an award for his staging of a play that just four months ago drew official criticism. Lyubimov, director of the Taganka Theater, received the Red Banner of Labor award on his 60th birthday Thursday and "for his services in the development of Soviet theatrical art" ,the officialTass news agency reported. It cited his work on four plays, in- cluding "The Master and Margarita," a production that had been attacked by the Communist Party newspaper Prav- da. The play, based on Russian writer Mikhail Bulgakov' once-banned 1938 novel, satirized Soviet life, used religi- ous symbolism and even brought a nude on stage. But it was the hit of the 1977 theater season. When the play was not closed, Soviet theatergoers began predicting more ex- perimental dama in Moscow. Totie roti NEW YORK - It was the first time that women were in the audience and that the Friars Club ever "roasted" a woman - Totie Fields - who fought back from a leg amputation to resume her career. Some of the country's best-known comics gathered at the luncheon here Wednesday to pay tribute to the comedy and the courage of Miss Fields and to zing her with one-liners on an in- frequent topic for humor, amputation. Noting that the roasters had to tone down their ribald humor because of the KUROSAWA'S 1957 THRONE OF BOOD Kurosawa's brilliant and original version of Macbeth set in the 16th century Japan and enhanced by the exhuberant performance of Toshiro Mifune, star of RASHOMON and THE SEVEN SAMURI. FRI: PAT AND MIKE CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 &-9:05 OLD ARCH. AUD. ADMISSION $1.50 women in attendance, toastmaster Jan Murray said, "And if that wasn't enough, we'll get a woman with one leg - now let's see how funny these clowns are." "That's what I like, a woman who can stand on her own foot," said Milton .Berle. "This bionic yenta, this Short John Silver, I love you," he told the laughing comedienne. "Just watch the termites." Comic Pat Henry told the crowd, "They love her in Las Vegas. She could do anything there. She could run for mayor - well, maybe hop." the show's theme music no longer fea- tured the plaintive cry, "Mary Hart- man! Mary Hartman!" But producer Lear's split-level vision of daily soap opera - comic and cosmic - remains happily intact, as gently surreal as ever. And it's mighty good to see everyone back, at least for a 26- week trial run. 0 Ol' Red-fangs is back NEW YORK - With a slick bit of hocus-pocus here and a campy laugh there, The Passion of Dracula turns old lia Pagano with apt winsome pallor un- til finally safe in the arms of her jour- nalistic beau, portrayed by Samuel Maupin. Also on the commendation list are Elliot Vileen, a local looney with an ap- petite for flies; and K. Lype O'Dell, who has a tricky task as the scientist-ex- orcist who must keep audience disbelief suspended although encombered with a ridiculous accent. " Jailhouse Rock AMARILLO, Tex. - Inspired by a harvest moon and mild Panhandle nights, members of the T. Cullen Davis jury have formed a three-piece band with vocals to enliven their sequestra- tion in Texas' longest murder trial. In a downtown hotel, two blocks from the Potter County jail where the 44- year-old Fort Worth millionaire is held, as many as seven jurors gather before dusk to improvise the half-forgotten words of hymns, ballads and Western songs. The repertory of the Fourth Floor Balcony Band, like the freedom of its members, is limited. Its enthusiasm, however, is unbounded. Designer dies BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. - A funeral for Robert Luthardt, one of Hollywood's most prolific art directors who earned an Academy Award nomination for The Fortune Cookie, will be held Thursday at the church of religious Science. Luthardt, 60, was killed Saturday in a four-car accident in San Diego along with his daughter, Marjorie, 30, and a friend, Adelaide Clyman, 55. A womqu in another car was also killed. Luthardt was art director for Carn'ar%; Knowledge, The April Foods, Hearts of the West, Funny Girl, and Lipstick. * " Arts Arcade was compiled throug the wires of AP, UPI, and by arts staffers Wendy Goodman, Dobilas Matulionis, Mark Johansson, Auf- tin Vance, Renee Shilcusky, an d Jeff Selbst. reduced icef on itcberr of beer fe'om 3p.m -6P.m. -AP Photo* Michael Tilson Thomas, music director of the Buffalo Symphony Or- chestra, acts as bartender during a benefit party for that orchestra. He ap- pears to be having a good time. Fern wood last night LOS ANGELES - When last seen, Mary Hartman had run off with Police St. Dennis Foley. Then Barth Gimble came from Miami to Fernwood to host a 13-week summer talk show, Fern- wood 2-Night. Tuesday, Barth held a telethon to buy furniture for' his show and raise legal defense funds. He then split for Miami to face vague charges, sonething about young girls. Last night, life in tiny Fernwood re- turned to abnormal as Forever Fern- wood, Normen Lear's syndicated sequel to Mary Hartman, Mary Hart- man began seeking its place in Ameri- can' tube history. True, 'Louise Lasser, who played' Mary for 325 episodes, was gone. And vampire melodrama into bewitching off-Broadway lark. The play, which opened one week ago gonight at the Cherry Lane Theater, is an adaptation by Bob Hall and David Richmond of Brain Stoker's classic chiller, although that credit has inex- plicably been omitted from the pro- gram. With a nice assist from Director Peter Bennett and a mostly satisfac- tory cast, the yarn balances archly between hokum spoof and midnight scare. Christopher Bernau, clad in caped black splendor and rigid leer, stalks quite convincingly as the incarnation of the Evil Undead, come to an English manse to claim another bride-victim. The imperilled lady is played by Giu- t et hnn arbor tirm cooperative . Tonight! THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1977 43 CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON (Jack Arnold, 1954) 7,8:40, 10:15-AUD. A There ore some things humankind was never meant to know-among them, this merman from the . ~ 43 upper reaches of the Amazon whose peace is interrupted by a scientific expedition. One of the mile. stone sci-fi movies, this film made a sensation in drive-ins nationwide and is as much a part of the ) sensibility of the fifties as Marilyn Monroe, tail fins, and Chuck Berry. To take you back, we present a special 3-0 print (green/red cellophane-cardboard spectacles provided). Defy your optometist , Sseeee itt''! ADMISSION $1.50 - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - presents SALEM WITCHCRAFT SPECIAL Thursday - No cover NEXT WEEK: THE ROCKETS 327 E. MICHIGAN-YPSILANTI-482- 7130 Capp Al Capp, 68, for years a nationally- reknowned cartoonist and author of the famous Li'l Abner strip, will retire next week with the publication of his last strip. Above Capp's picture is a self- caricature. The Queen sells big COPENHAGEN, Denmark - A de- luxe edition of J.R.R. Tolkien's trilogy Lord of the Rings, with illustrations by ;.the Queen of Denmark, has sold out, the book's publisher said Tuesday. The 37-year-old queen, Margrethe Alexandrine Thorhildur Ingrid, belongs .o the worldwide following of Tolkien, the late Oxford professor who created a .cult with his tales of medieval myths and legends. He is best known as the creator of The Hobbit. The queen, using the pssudonym Ingahild Grathmer, drew 80 black and b white illustrations for the 1,500 num- bered copies of the special edition that sells for $165, the Forum Publishing Iouse said. A spokesman insisted that the true identity of the artist was leaked acci- ,dentally but he did not deny that the queen's link to the book helped boost prepublication sales. . Sources said the queen did the draw- ings "just for the fun of it" before as- cending to the throne in 1972. She mailed them privately to Tolkien, with whom she corresponded until his death n 1973. Poet splits y MOSCOW - Viktor Urin, author of -,more than 15 collections of poetry and creator of an experimental "poet's the- ater" in Moscow in the 1960s has re- ceived permission to leave the Soviet Jnion, he told reporters today. Urin said he applied to leave the country about six months ago and was CELEBRATION MIME THEATRE PRESENTS THE CELEBRATION TRIO IN "PINOCCHIO" an original adaptation of the classic Italian folktale directed by TONY MONTANARO TRUEBLOOD AUD. U-M Campus, State & Huron SUNDAY, OCT. 9 2:00 & 7:30 p.m. TICKETS: 1.50 children, 2.50 adults Advanced Sales alt Logos BENEFIT CLONLARA SCHOOL Mediatrics WEEKEND SCHEDULE: THE DAMNED Fri. Oct. 7 7 and 9:45 "The Damned," by Italian director Luchino Viscontis, probes the soul of Germany on the eve of Nazi Power. SEVEN PERCENT SOLUTION Sat. Oct. 8 7:30 and 9:30 Pure entertainment with Sherlock Holmes. Natural Science Auditorium $1.50 vpv 4 1?p I AC SOPH SHOW 1977 announces I AUDITIONS: FOR THE MUSICAL APPLAUSE Directed by NAFE KATTER Featuring WILLIAM R. LEACH Guest Artists in Residence Wed.-Sat.,Oct.12-15, 8pm. Sun., Oct.16, 2pm. only Power Center - E s