1977-The Michigan Daily RTS ARCADE. . . a weekly roundup ouvre hosts Chagall RIS, France - The Louvre Mu- and President Valery Giscard aing paid an extraordinary trib- [onday to Marc Chagall, the shy ar-old master of soaring spirits. card d'Estaing formally opened 4ouvre's exhibition of some 60 nt paintings by the Russian-born t, who has delighted the world his gentle wit and boldly colored ns. Chagall looked somewhat whelmed at the pomp surround- the formal opening of the >ition, considered a rare honor living painter. e exhibition includes several asses from the painter's private ction, most in the deep blues, ant reds and luminous yellows greens that distinguish a Cha- r Chagall, the exhibition was her in a series of honors he has ved in his 90th year... r his birthday o July 7, world us musicians gathered at Nice e south of France to pay homage iagall, who attended despite his known reluctance to stray too -om his work. 11ow Russian exile Mstislav ropovich, American violinist c Stern and French flutist Jean re Rampal all performed separ- and then joined in playing py Birthday" for the reclusive t. the beginning of the year all received the Grand Cross of region of Honor, France's high- nedal, and this Christmas he will a distinguished list of guest rs at French Vogue. Knievel steps up to bat LOS ANGELES - Saying he ,believes in taking responsibility for what he does, motorcycle stuntman Evel Knievel has pleaded guilty to attacking the author of a book that Knievel didn't like. Knievel is accused of attacking television executive Sheldon Saltman. with a baseball bat Sept. 21 at 20th Century Fox Studios while another man Knievel refuses to identify held the victim. Saltman, 46, sustained a broken arm and wrist. Knievel said Thursday that he beat Saltman because "Mr. Saltman wrote a vicious book of pornography about me, insulting me, my wife, my grandmother, my children, my loved ones." Borge Bounces Back Victor Borge returns to Broadway Oct. 3-30 during a world-wide tour. When Borge walked out onto the stage of the .Imperial Theatre the audience started laughing in antici- pation. They didn't stop until he completed the latest version of his one-man show "Comedy with Mu- sic." Fans of the Danish-born comedian think he is the funniest man who ever lived and they may not be far from the truth. He is funny when he strolls around the stage with off-the-cuff remarks that show him to be master of the non sequitur. He is even funnier when he sits down at the keyboard of a grand piano, apt as not to start off with a soaring classic that ends up as a piece of soporific kids' recital programs .and report cards and paper doily Valentines. Vacationers save travel brochures, diners collect matchbooks. Saving paper pasts has a name, and if you're serious enough about what you save, you might qualify for membership in a recently-formed society for savers. Ephemera is-wastebasket archeol- ogy, the collecting of printed or hand written material meant to be thrown away. "The whole field," says Calvin P. Otto, "is intended to be those things which man normally does not keep." Product labels, bills, greeting cards, ticket stubs, menus, news- papers, posters, parking tickets, tour guides, honorary certificates, promo- tional material, to name a few. Why would anyone keep them? "Why does man keep anything in the sense of a historic nature," Otto re- sponds. "What we're really trying to preserve and what in fact has been preserved are historic records in print. It's a copy of that part of society." Otto is one of eight founding fathers of the two-year-old Ephemera So- ciety and chairman of its North American office headquartered in Bennington. "If you're a collector, you're probably an ephemerist but don't know it by its name," he says. The term ephemera has its origin as a Greek word, meaning about a day and relating to something that comes and goes in a very short period of time. The ephemerist in former times was concerned with the daily posi- tions of celestial bodies, but the contemporary use of the word as coined by the society represents a person who collects ephemera. "The Ephemerist" also is the title of the Journal of the Ephemera Society, published six times yearly at the international headquarters in Lon- don. Soviet spy flicks struggling MOSCOW - Pravda's movie critic laments the lack of good Soviet spy movies even though there are "excit- ing real life models." "A strange calm has descended on this theme - the theme of the invisible struggle of the bold undercover agent," V. Demin wrote Thursday in the Com- munist party newspaper. "As a lover of intrigue, I scan the movie listings in vain." Demin said histories, novels and stories about spies are being published all the time, but the imagination of film- makers seems to have run dry, even though there -are--exciting real-life miodels for therh to imitate. "It may sound paradoxical," De- min said, "but spy films, with all their fantasy, often present the real world much better than other kinds of movies." According to Demin, there have been three "waves" of spy films in Russia, during which periods they made up a large part of what he calls "adventure filmsi" Such films, cov- ering also detective and courtroom drama, sports and exploration, make :AP Photo Birthday Boy World-famous tnor Luciano Pavarotti holds a surprise birthday card presented to him after the Civic Opera's final per- farman e of L'Elisir d'Amore. I - POETRY READING with ELLEN ZWVEIG READING FROM HER WORKS Thursday, Oct. 20-7:30 p.m. at GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE (corner of Oakland) Refreshments popular music, with no change in his expression. It is not really a one-man show this time; now he has the services of coloratura Marylyn Mulvey in the second act. Miss Mulvey has a magnificent voice and probably will go on to be a star of the Metropolitan Opera, but with Victor Borge it is all fun. She hits an unexpected high C and Borge crashes to a halt in alarm. She leans against the piano and he stops to warn her against such lassitude. One is reminded of Groucho Marx and his persecution of Margaret Dumont in the old Marx Brothers series - and the audience never stops laughing. Save that junk For years, parents have saved Reaive free lessonsonour cat 91-4310 Peak Indoor Ski Deck. Plus ortopbyThePeak a free lift icet at Mt.o PbY ~4 Brighton and Sugarloaf. There s noobligation. 3150 The free skiing I+j Carpenter is yours.. on us. Ann Arbor up about one-fifth of total Soviet movie output, he said. The first wave of spy movies, in the 1950s, introduced the genre and developed the stock plots and charac- ters - "the searches, arrests and disappearances underground, the at- tempts to rescue friends and the bold, lucky escapes with the aid of an inter- national detachment of partisans."' in the 1960s the spy movie became more cosmopolitan, and moral ques- tions were introduced. In the early 1970s, spy films took on a documentary appearance, inter- twining fact and fiction. in realistic settings. The high point of this wave was the highly popular television ser- ial "Seventeen Moments of Spring." Trash collecting pays off IOWA CITY, Iowa - He doesn't speak, he doesn't smile, he doesn't even blink an eye. But he makes $25 an hour. He's "The Incredible Mr. Trash." Attired in top hat ringed with stars, Christmas tree lights blinking on his topcoat and Big Mac coveralls, John DeBrito, 25, stood motionless on a pedestal at the University of Iowa last week until a curious onlooker plunked some coins into his coinbox. Then his body jerked about, he started shaking hands, beckoning for more money and handing out cards which read: "There are two things in life to remember: the First and the Second." "I found most of the stuff for my act in a big trash can at a super market. That's why I call myself Mr. Trash," said DeBrito. He is trying to perfect an act to illustrate the need for recycling aluminum cans. Mr. Trash says he wants to be a corporate symbol. A ward-winning playwright NEW YORK - George Rubino has been writing unproduced plays for eight years - and now not only will one of his scripts receive a major television dramatic presentation, but he is $20,000 richer. Rubino, 45, who teaches English in a Brooklyn, N.Y., high school, be- came the first winner of the ABC Theatre Award, aimed at discover- ing new writers for television. - "This is myfirst television play," Rubino said at the ceremony in which Fred Silverman, president, ABC Entertainment, presented him with a check. The play is called "The Last Tenant," about an old man who must move from the apartment in which he has lived for more than 30 years and who winds up in a nursing home. Silverman said Rubinos script would be put on the air sometime next spring. Composer Raskin dies LOS ANGELES - Movie score composer and conductor Milton W. Raskin died Sunday in a Veterans Administration hospital. He was 61. Raskin wrote the music for Law- rence of Arabia and The Agony and the Ecstasy, among other films, and worked at Columbia, MGM, and Walt Disney studios. He also composed the theme music for the television series The Fugitve and Naked City, and conducted orchestras for singers Peggy Lee, Vic Damone, Dinah Shore, and Nat King Cole. As a pianist,he played in the bands of Gene Krupa, Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw, and Tommy Dorsey Funeral services were to be held at Mt. Sinai Memorial Chapel. Arts Arcade was compiled through the wires of AP, UPI, and by Arts staffers Jeffrey Selbst, Renee Shilcusky, Mike Taylor, and Tim Yagle. WANTED: CAMPUS STEREO SALES We are the east coast's largest distributor of Hi Fi, CB, TV,rand Car Stereo. We are looking to expand our Campus Sales Program. Set your own profit margins on equipment like Pioneer, Marantz, Sony, Sansui, Teac and Hy-Gain. Over 2-million dollar inventory. No minimum orders. SERIOUS SALES MO- TIVATED PERSONS ONLY NEED APPLY. it Megframes i less than an hour. 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