r eves ni1teries Second Chance - Rock with Village recording artists The Faith Band through Sunday. Monday features country rock with Travis. Mugsy be- gins an extended engagement on Tuesday, playing excellent rock and roll music. The cover charge for stu- dents varies from 50* to $1.50. Roadhouse -- Cost of Living rocks on Friday and Saturday. Struttin' will have them up and dancing on Wed- nesday and through next weekend. Cover charge is$2.00. Mr. Flood's Party - Native Sons will dust off their fiddles for some hot bluegrass on Friday and Saturday. Sunday, Joel Mabus of the Native Sons solos on guitar. Monday, Sharon Arch- ambeau sings country folk tunes. Tues- day, Mike Smith performs still more country music. The Silvertones hit town Wediieday and Thursday with their blues-orientated material and old R&B. The cover charge for the groups is $1.00 while the solo performers are free. Blue Frogge - Disco down and check out the show everyday except Sunday. Monday through Wednesday the cover charge is $1.00, Thursday through Sat- urday the admission is $1.00 for stu- dents and $2.00 for everyone else. Abigail's -- Sale~n Witchcraft, one of -. . r .my u. * I i~.Y , 'JCT0I the better bar groups around, rocks out this weekend. Not wanting to remain a "bar band" forever, Salem Witch- craft's emphasis is on their original material. They still play their fair share of rock classics, though. Cover charge is $2.00. Blind Pig -- The Bryan Lee Blues Band travels from Wisconsin to lay down some blues Friday and Saturday. A Club favorite, Boogie Woogie Red plays his natural blues every Monday this month. The cover is $1.00 Underground - Kicker kicks out the rock and roll through next weekend, except Sunday. The $1.00 cover charge is collected only on weekends. Suds Factory - The usual routine of this renovated cannery is disco Wed- nesday when the Suds has live bands. This week It's top 40 rock with Begin- nings and only for a $1.00 cover. Zelda's - Located in the Crystal House Motel, this club features music with Chantz this Friday and Saturday. Cover is $2.00. Tuesday through Thur- sday Caravan plays jazz. No cover is collected during the week. Ark - Margaret Christl, Ian Robb and Grit Laskin bring you the bonnie music of the British Isles at 8:30 on Fri- day and Saturday. Monday and Tues- day, Norman and Nancy Blake charm you with offerings from their flatpick guitar and cello. " Fine Arts Vladimir Horowitz comes to Hill Aud- itorium on Sunday, October 9, working his pianistic magic on the eighty-eight. Equus heralds the opening of the Guest Artist series at the Power Center on Wednesday, October 12 at 8:00. Wil- liam Leach and Nafe Katter star in the production through Sunday, October 16. Waltz of the Toreadors leads off the Ann Arbor Civic Theater's season. Jean Anouilh's play will open Wednesday at the Mendelssohn. The University Symphony takes to the stage at Hill Auditorium tonight, with an all-German program. The University Philarmonia per- forms at Hill on Tuesday, the eleventh. Komo: Japanese Art and Western In- fluence begins at the University Art Museum (Alumni Memorial Hall) on Sunday, the ninth. The Imogen Cunningham photo- graphic exhibit continues at the Union Gallery. John Brunsdons etchings are on dis- play at the Alice Simsar Gallery, 301 N. Main. Robert Vickers' Paintings, Draw- ings and bronzes exhibit opens Sun- day at Gallery. One, 113 S. Fourth. Vladimir Horowitz (Continued from Page 6) rehashing what the Norwegian master has said in a half-dozen other films. He is simply running out of ways to say it. The saving grace of the picture, however, is Liv Ullman, who turns in what must qualify as one of the best performances ever seen on the screen. Some splendid scenes, and well worth seeing, as long as one can ignore the feeling of deja vu. T ., EVENTS Football - The Mighty Wolverines meet Michigan State on the Spartan's home turf in E. Lansing. Catch the game on WUOM 91.7 FM at 1:30. - * s 0sunday October 9 s. CINEMA _ pen City (Old A & D, 7:00 and 9:05) A cornerstone of the Italian neorealist cinema, Open City is a vividly realistic *,account of the underground resistance to the German occupation of Rome. Di- rected by Roberto Rossellini. *** EVENTS University Club - Munch at "Brunch. on the Terrace," featuring a chamber trio from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Union. * * * V monday October10 CINEMA M (Old A & D, 7:00 only, free show- ing) Peter Lorre gives a bravura per- formance as a psychopathic child-mur- derer in Fritz Lang's exciting melo- drama. Well-paced and visually bril- liant, the film nevertheless belongs to Lorre, whose impassioned cries of ago- ny will pray on one's mind long after the mechanisms of the plot are forgot- ten. **** EVENTS Music School - Listen to some Bach, Beethoven, and Chopin played for you on the piano by Elzbieta Zajac in the School of Music recital hall at 8 p.m. * * * tues ay October 11 CINEMA The Long Goodbye (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:00) Robert Altman's hom- age-kiss-off to the Hollywood private- eye genre is chock-full of his laid-back humor and peculiar insight into the stuff of American myths. Taken from the Raymond Chandler novel, the movie follows the adventures of Philip Marlowe in modern-day Los Angeles. With Elliot Gould as a good-natured Marlowe and a cameo by Jim Bouton. Charlie Chaplin night (Old A & 1., 8:00 only, free showing) This presenta- tion includes a selection of early Chap- lin shorts, as well as his first feature film, The Gold Rush, in which Chaplin's tramp is out searching for gold in the frozen wasteland. In addition to the many memorable comic moments in The Gold Rush, including the scene where Chaplin eats his shoe for dinner, there is some of the most affecting pathos ever filmed. All in all, a thorough delight. **** EVENTS Ancient Aztec Dancing - Sponsored by the Office of Ethics and Religion, the Nahautl dancers will pick up their heels, aztec-style, 'on the Diag at noon and the Union Ballroom at 8 p.m, Music at Midday - Mark Sullivan will strum on his electric guitar in the Pendleton Center, second floor of the Union, at noon. * * * wednesday October 12 CINEMA Treasure of the Sierra Madre (Ang- ell Aud A, 7:00 only) Walter Huston, Tim Holt and the incomparable Bogart star in John Huston's classic tale of greed and suspicion. Bogart's seething macho paronoia is splendid to watch, as are a host of finely etched supporting characters in this western parable of sudden wealth. ***% Moby Dick (Angell Aud A, 9:00 only) Melville fans will be pleasantly sur- prised by Ray Bradbury's script, while action film goers will get more than their share as Gregory Peck battles the Great White Symbol. Bring your own fins. *** EVENTS Musical Society - The Beaux Arts Trio plays in Rackham Aud at 8:30 p.m. ** * thursday October 13 CINEMA Thieves Like Us (Old A & D, 7:00 and 9:00) Keith Carradine and Shelley Du- vall in love and on the run. One of Robert Altman's worst; an accurate period pieces and that's about all. ** Pierrot Le Fou and Masculine/Fem- inine (Angell Aud A, 7:00 and 9:00, re- spectively) Jean-Luc Godard is the most difficult and cerebral of all con- temporary film-makers, and it seems one either loves or despises his films. Of these two, only Masculine/Feminine, the story of two lovers simultaneously caught up in a world of advertisements and American culture motifs, is watch- able. Pierrot Le Fou is one of the many Godard films to incorporate elements of the American gangster genre that the director has such a perverse love for, and the result is pure tedium. ** EVENTS Harmonica Music - Peter "Madcat" Ruth lets loose on the mouth organ at noon in the Union's Pendleton Center. Guild House - A poetry reading by John Rienhard at 7:30 p.m. at 820 Mon- roe. Faculty Recital - School of Music professors perform chamber music in the school's Recital Hall at 8 p. m. School of Music - "Art Songs by Black Female Composers" at 8 p.m. in Rackham Aud. This week's Happenings were compiled by Owen Gleiberman and Andy Kurtzman (film), Keith Tosolt (Niteries) and Jeffrey Selbst (Fine Arts). A FILM "Brother Sun -Sister Moon" Directed by FRANCO ZEFFERELLI Music by DONOVAN DATE: OCT. 8 & 9 8P.M11. Friends Meeting House 1414 HILL SPONSORED BY POLARITY CENTER OF A2 DONA TIONS APPRECIA TED REFRESHMENTS SERVED Rflfl RRBOR COWE TRE presents: WALTZ FTIE T REA RI a comedy by JEAN ANOULLH Wednesday-Saturday Oc t.12-15 Curtain: 8 p.m. 3,.. Tickets Available at: TIXINFO Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Jacobson's Box Office "J" Shop (starting Oct. 10) Wednesday, Thursday-$3.00 Friday, Saturday-sold out CINEMA II AngellHall Aud. A . FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7 . LUMIERE * Director, JEANNE MOREAU (1976) Jeanne Moreau radiantly stars as the central figure, Sarah, in her first * direcorial effort. This feature length film takes a look at four Pari- *g * lan actresses: their successes, doubts, and friendships. Moreau ac- * knowledges a debt to lngmar Bergman by quoting his HOUR OF THE -X- * WOLF and presenting her characters somewhat obliquely. A campus debut. -X S 7 8 9PM $1.50 . the jinn arbor ft/rnco-operatv TONIGHTI Friday, October 7 THE PINK PANTHER (Blake Edwards, 1964) 7 ONLY-MLB Peter Sellers created his best role, Inspector Clousseau of the Paris Police, in this justi- ably famous comedy. Clousseau is the type of bungler whose wife is not only two-timing him, 1