Saturday, October 25, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pace Three __._d., Otbr.5 17 TEMCHGN ~L .,_.__. "a' all week long COMMERCIAL CINEMA Hearts of the West - (The 'Movies, Briarwood) - Young would-be Western writer heads for Hollywood of the early 1930's in hopes of perfecting his talent soon finds himself immersed in the cranking out of seedy Grade B Western flicks of the time This charming, incredibly gentl comedy is more than just a nostalgia piece-it is a reflection of the positive side of the Ameri can Dream. All the dead-en types of The Day of the Locus are present here as well, onl more likeable. As you watc them coping with the economi< desperation of the time, you fin yourself rooting for them un abashedly. As the young writer Jeff Bridges finally achieves th stardom he has flirted with fo several years; he is compliment ed nicely by Andy Griffith a an aging former Cowboy sta who is a tragic but by no mean hopeless figure-a reflection o of the film itself. *** Tommy - (The Movies, Briar wood) - The wretched excesse of director Ken Russell cras head-on with The Who's hard rock opera-and the result is surprisingly effective film. Rus sell's dime - store garishnes seems for once to have stumble' onto a malleable product; th subsequent collaboration drives drives, drives unrelentingly an often unpleasantly at the audi ence, but the onslaught of sigh and sound is never dull an often is undeniably compelling Reluctantly, one must conced that Tommy is an absorbin film, even if its success is b and large a lucky accident. ** Fantasia - (State) - Fo those who don't mind cartoon set to classical music, Fantasi remains the definitive Disne creation and aptly demonstrate the cartoon medium's potenti as a legitimate art form. Th "Rite of Spring" and "Nig on Bald Mountain" sequence are like nothing seen on fil before or since. **sr Rhinoceros - (Campus) - Horrible, ,blotchy adaptation f fonesco's famous play abo the beasts in all of us. Probab the weakest offering of th American Film. Theatre serie -director Tom O'Horgan (Hair employs the cinematic style an color of a porno movie, the li erary sensitivity of a cla Zero Mostel looks bored an bloated in what was his mo celebrated role, but he is ou done by Gene Wilder as th one human in the play wh clings to his humanity. All thos who thought Wilder incanabl of a bad performance shoul beware: He is so embarassingl awful that one must assume th gifted actor placed his artisti internretation and faith utteri in the hands of the untalente Mr. O'Horgan. Definitely a fil that everyone-and esneciall) Wilder fans-should walk acros the street to avoid, least the find themselves trampled b those running screaming froi the theater. * A Woman Under the Influenc - (The Movies, Briarwood) - John Cassavetes' searing, merc less study of non-communicativ marriage, with Gena Rowland and Peter Falk working the d rector's improvisational te nique to an almost unbearabl intensity. **** 3 Days of the Condor - (Mich gan) - Obscure CIA de-coder i New York City innocently un covers a Middle East code, h subsequently hurtled into terror when his six co-workers at gunned down - apparently bj other CIA oneratives. The film': murky political angle come: across as a warmed-over ver sion of The Conversation, and preposterous romantic subplo further gums up the proceed ings, but when it concentrate: on its thriller aspects, Condo is a superior product. Rotber Redford is sufficiently harries and inventive as the hunter hero intent on discovering tl mysteries of his parent con pany, and Max Von Sydowi outstanding as a paid assassi who is both humanistic an amoral at the same time witi to him, no seeming inconsist ency. ** safurday SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25 CINEMA The Decameron - (Cinen, Guild, Arch. Aud.,. 7 & 9:05) - Pier Pasolini's adaptationo ,Boccaccio is adequately obscen+ and tremendously funny. Beauti fully directed and acted, t1 film does for Sex Without Guil ei I past,, present and future, bring- ing to Billy's story the scope and dignity that Kurt Vonnegut's indulgent, self-conscious novel so painfully lacked. As Billy, Michael Sacks portrays both youth and age with equal dex- terity, and a uniformly excel- lent supporting cast helps make this a memorable film adapta- tion. * intentioned but so imme '60's civil rights fervor now seems almost lau creaky in these sad,i times. Appealing as a n trip only, although one achingly wish it was mo that. ** Slaughterhouse-Five - rix, 7 & 9:30) - See S Cinema. rsed in that it ughably cynical ostalgia might re than - (Mat- aturday a S S :, - i- California Split - (Cinema II, MUSIC Angell Aud. A, 7 & 9) - Robert Ark - Bob Whyte, folk, 9, Altman's film about compulsive $2.50. gamblers in Las Vegas is typi- Cobo (Detroit) - War, 8, tick- cally long on mood and short ets $7.50 and $6.50. on plot, but this time around Baker's (Detroit) - Lonnie the atmospheric qualities are Smith, jazz, 9:30, $3.50. engrossing and true enough that Loma Linda - Mixed Bag, they make the picture a success jazz, 9:30-2, no cover. all by themselves. In the leads, Del Rio - Jazz, 5:00-9, no George Segal is excellent as a cover. desperate born-loser, E ll i o t Gould somewhat less effectivel as his more worldly chum. *** Fritz the Cat - (Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7, 8:30, 10:00) - MONDAY, OCTOBER 27 Middling, only intermittently CINEMA funny cartoon version of Robert Richard III - (UAC Shake- Crumb's immortal feline. Crumb speare Cinema, Arch. Aud., 7 himself disowns the film, and & 9:30) - Laurence Olivier's upon viewing it, it's not too masterly portrayal of the hunch- hard to understand why. ** backed king is the main virtue, Dial M for Murder - (Couzens f this rather confused, strange- Film Co-op, Couzens Caf., 8 & ly-structured film from Shake- 10) - Evil husbandmarranges speare'sdconfused, strangely- to have his wife murdered, ,structured play. Entertaining subsequently manipulates the ough, although it might help unexpected results to his ad- to bone up historically before- vantage. Unusually talky Mitch- hand so you can figure out just cock film betrays its stage play who's offing who during the origins, but remains a reason- bloody, perplexing proceedings. S00 the other aging cinema giants. Sometimes a Great Notion - (Matrix, 7 & 9:30) - See Mon- day Cinema. MUSIC Blind Pig - Ann Arbor Ex-1 perimental Jazz Band, 9:30, $1. Baker's (Detroit)-Betty Car- ter, jazz, 9:30, no cover before-9. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29 CINEMA The Killing-(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Angell Aud. A, 7 only) - A group of crooks plans a daring and complex robbery. An im- pressive early film from Stanley Kubrick that manages to main- tain a sharp pace and delicate construction of plot throughout. As an early work of a major director, the film is a minor masterpiece. *** Dr. Strangelove - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Angell Aud. A, 9 only) - Even the newlyfound chic of detente fails to dim the timeless 'timeliness and brilliance of Bomb-paranoia study. Obviously S t a n l e y Kubrick's ultimate more than a period piece,, this hilarious and terrifying film will be played and replayed as long as mass hysteria and brute force are employed as substitutes for human intelligence and human UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF Irmv NA7ARENE one - involving a ventriloquist -See Thursday Cinema.'409N.ADisiaso and his less-than-subservient MUSIC 4 . Division dummy-has become a classic Bimbo's - Gaslighters, rag- M. Robert Fraser, aor of the genre, inspiring many time, 6-1:30, 50c after 8. Church School--9:45 a.m. subsequent adaptations. *** Blind Pig - Tribe, jazz, 9:30, Morning Worship-7:00 .m. The Birds - Mediatrics, Nat. $1.50. Sci. Aud., 7:30 & 9:45) - Prob- Ark - Diana Markovitz, folk, FIRST UNITED METHODIST ably Hitchcock's most famous. 9, $2.50. CHURCHN . film, but not really one of his Golden Falcon - Headwind, StatRt Huron and Washngton best. Filled with deliciously ter- jazz, 9:30, $1. Worsh HServices rifying moments, but too many Casa Nova - Susan Michaels, Comunion Serv- of the bird effects are sloppy bleus, 9-1, no cover. 8ice:30 a.m. Cha el in their phoniness, and the un- Loma Linda - Mixed Bag, 9:30 & 11:00 aim.-CWorship relentingly dull performances by jazz, 9-1:30, no cover. Service-Sanctuary. the lead actors make it some- Heidelberg Rathskeller-Mus- 9:30 & 11:00 a.m. - Church what difficult for the viewer to tard's Retreat, folk, 9:30, no School. get involved in their terror. cover. Sermon: "The Magnificent Still, Hitchcock's final shot is so Baker's (Detroit)-Betty Car- Minority" by Donald B. Strobe. beautifully droll and unexpected ter, jazz. 9:30, $3.50. Worship Services are broad- that it redeems most of his Bimbo's On The Hill - QSF, cast over WNRS-AM (1290) each earlier laziness. *** rock. 8:30, no cover. Sunday froni 11:00 to 12:00. A Clockwork Orange - (Ann Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys, WESLEY FOUNDATION NEWS Arbor Film Co-op, Angell Aud. bl"e'r sS, 10, $1.50. Sunday, Oct. 26: A, 7 & 9:30) - Kubrick's fas- Rubtiyat - Strutter's Ball, 5:30 p.m.-Celebration, cinating, imperfect adaptation, ton 40's, 9:30, no cover. Lounge. of the Anthony Burgess novel. .6:15 p.m.-Dinner, Pine Room. One of the most thoroughly un-.7:30 p.m.-Grads and Single pleasant films ever made- r : (N:V.,.:P , Young Adults will have a Hal- which was obviously what the.loween Party at Fran Feather- director intended. For all its ston's, 1035 Wall, Apt. 4. i nastiness, the picture clearly Saturday, October 25 Monday, Oct. 27: strikes a profound chord with Day calendar 7:45 a.m. - Basic Christian WUOM: From the Midway - L. Concepts, class and breakfast, many people, or ese we H. Weisgall, "Chamber Opera & Its 'P R wouldn't see the jammed-packed Production in the US:" ii. E. ine oom, audiences every time Clockwork Blackwood, "Composers as Mathe- Thursday, Oct. 30: plays here. ***maticians?" 10 am. 7:30 a.m. - Breakfast Club, pUAC : Bicycle Race, central cam- PieRom MUSIC pus. 7 am-noon: Mudbowl, Sigma P Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys, Alpha Epsilon, 10 am. :30 p.m.-Grads and Single bluegrass, 9:30.$1. Football: Homecoming, UM vs in- Young Adults will have dinner Bblugrs. 9:30 u nel, diana. Stadium, 1:30 pm. and a Halloween Party at Bimbo's - Grievous Angels, WCBN: "Saturday Graffiti" inter- George Jabol'se1405 Henry. f country, 9, no cover. view, Al Wheeler, 89.5 FM, 5 pm. I Blind Pig - Silvertones, blues, Chinese Students' Assoc./East you need a ride, call 668-6881. 9:30, $1. Wind: "How to Make and Enjoy 7:30 p.m.-Divorces and Sepa- Bimbo's On The Hill - QSF, Jiao-Tze," Ning House, 508 Pack-|rated Group, Green Room. rock, 8:30, ilo cover. Dekers Club: Scholarship Hockey ST. MARY STUDENT CHAPEL Baker's (Detroit)-Betty Car- Game, Yost Ice Arena, 7:30 pm. ter, jazz, 9:30, no cover before 9. Music School: Degree Recital, Ava ' (Catholic) Casa Nova - Susan Michaels, Ordman, trombone, Recital Hall, 8! 331 Thompson-663-0557 blues, 9-1, no cover. F C Players: The Poor of New Weekend Masses: York by Dion Boucica it, an au-p.m. thentic melodrama & best enter-, Sunday - 7:45 a.m., 9 a.m , ainment value i ntown, 8 pm, E 10:30 a.m., noon, and 5 p.m. Quiad APodctin.El(ph's 9:30 a. m. North Campus). T7TP: Showcase Production, El Hajj Malik, Trueblood Theatre. * * * FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31 Frieze. 8 pm. ANN ARBOR CHURCH CINEMA Musical Society: Moscow State OF CHRIST Secrt Aent(CiemaG~ildSymphony. Evgeni Svetlanov, con- ductor. Hill Aud.. 8:30 pm. , 530 W. Stadium Blvd. Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - An ex- UAC: Circus Maximus All Cam- (one block west of cellent, generally overlooked pus Dance, Coliseum, 8 pm. U of M Stadium) early Hitchcock film involving Career Planning & Placement Bible Study - Sunday, 9:30 3200 SAS, 764-7456 the director's favorite theme of Recruiting on campus: a.m.-Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. an innocent man who must can- November 3, 1975 - Georgetown Worship-Sunday, 10:30 a m. ture the real culprit before he Univ. Law Center and 6:00 p.m. himself is caught by the authori- November 4, 975 - American. Need Transportation? C a 11 ('rnd ntetanmet, s:Grad. Sch of International1 Mngt. ties. Grand entertainment, aS & Howard Tniv. & GAP Stores & ' 662-9928- only the master of suspense can Wayne State Univ./Med Center. * * serve it lIP. **** November 5, 1975 - Roosevelt UNIVERSITY REFORMED The HauntingM (Mediatrics, Univ. & Aetna Life & Cas,,lty & CHURCH, 1001 E. Huron Nat. Sci. And., 7:30 & 9:30) - November 7. 1975 - Upjohn & ' Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, Snecialist in paransvcholoQv ac- Univ. of Penn./Wharton Grad. Di- j Ministers comanies two vsychicllyre-visionfl~o ,, 9:30 a.m.-Church School. WI ~ E~ W W 7 I ~e-t~vcsubjctsto Nw Enlan EVENTS AND ENTERTAINMENT FOR BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph, 665-6149 Minister: Orval L. E. Willimann 9:00 a.m.-Chapel Service. 10:00 a.m.-Worship Service. 10:00 a.m.-Church School. Child care at 10:00 a.m. serv- ice. Service- broadcast on WNRS (1290 AM). * * * UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. 663-5560 Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday Morning Worship at 9:15 and 10:30 a.m. Sunday Morning Bible Study at 9:15 a.m. Midweek Worship Wednesday at 10:00 p.m. * * * LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (ALC-LCA) (Formerly Lutheran Student Gordon Ward, Pastor Chapel) 801 S. Forest Ave. at Hill St. Sunday Service at 10:30 a.m. CANTERBURY HOUSE (Episcopal) 218 N. Division-665-0606 Sundays at"noon-Holy Eucha- rist with a meal following. * 4 FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw-6624466 Worship - Sunday, 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Holy Communion-Wednesday, 5:15-5:50 p.m. Young Aedult meals -Sunday, 12:30 p.m.; Wednesday, 6:00 p.m. ($1.00). Study and discussion- 11:00 a.m. Sunday-Adult Bible study. 8:00-9:00 p.m. Monday-semi- nar on Dietrich Bonhoeffer's "The Cost of Discipleship." 12:00-1:00 Thursday - Thurs- day Forum (includes lunch, $1). Chancel Choir - 7:00-8:30 Thursday. For other information on the Young Adult Program call the Rev. Peter C. Budde or Jo Ann Staebler, 662-4466. UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST Presently Meeting at YM-YWCA, 530 S. Fifth David Graf, Minister Students Welcome. For information or transpor- tntinn n ,h2-494 Church igenrice4 THE WEEK OF OCTOBER 25 -31 5 t 0 ably engrossing thriller. Ray Milland and Grace Kelly apply just the right touch to the un- blissful couple, and Robert Cummings is only intermittentlyt ridiculous as Kelly's boyfriend. I The Parallax View - (Ann Arbor Teach-In, MLB 3, 7:30 & 9:30) - Young newspaper jour-' nalist (Warren Beatty) attemptst to uncover the key behind the1 American assassination phe-t nomonon. Potentially sensatinalt conspiracy film is boosted by1 strong performances and hair-t raisingly tensedirection by Alan Pakula, but the solution tat eventually eerges to the1 script's premise seems so irre- deemably far-fetched that the whole undertaking ultimately dissolves into an exercise in foolishness. Despite the talentsa involved, Parallax not only lacks the courage of its convictions, but seems in grave doubt as 'to what those convictions were in the first place. ** MUSIC Casa Nova - Susan Michaels, blues, 9-1, no cover. Ark - Bryan Bowers, folk, 9, $2.50. Bimbo's on the Hill - Dia- logue, rock, 8:30, no cover. Blind Pig - Dave Workman Blues Band, 9:30, $1. Golden Falcon - Headwind, jazz, 9:30, $1. Heidelberg - Guenther, Ger- man, 9-1:30, no cover. Heidelberg Rathskeller-Mus- tard's Retreat, folk, 9:30, no cover. Loma Linda - Mixed Bag, jazz, 9-1:30, no cover. Pretzel Bell-RFD Boys, blue- grass, 9:30, $1. Rubaiyat - Strutter's Ball, top 40's, 9:30, no cover. Baker's (Detroit) - Lonnie Liston Smith, jazz, 9:30, $3.50. sunday SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26 CINEMA Paper Moon - (New World,. MLB 4, 7 & 9) - Downtrodden "con man and his ten-year-old femaleward hustle their way across the plains states during the depression. Peter Bagdono- vitch's film captures a nice feel- ing for the 1930's countryside and sports an enjoyably gentle, low-key plot - if this is all you're looking for, then recom- mended. As the kid, Tatum O'Neal consistently outdoes papa Ryan both as hustler and actor. Lancelot du Lac - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - Ann Arbor premiere of Robert Bresson's interpretation of the days of King Arthur. The film was the recipient of critical raves for its straightforward storyline and exquisitely beauti- ful photography, and, although unseen hereabouts, is probably a good bet. Nothing But a Man - (Cinema II, Angel Aud. A, 7 & 9) - This 1964 study of a black laborer and his family in Alabama seemed much better a decade ago than it does today. Well- Sometimes a Great Notion - (Matrix, 7 & 9:30) - Indepen- dent-minded family of lumber- men in Oregon refuses to join in a state-wide lumber strike, earns the hatred and violence of the surrounding populace as a result. Ken Kesey's novel has been accused of both left and right-wing undertones, but this Paul Newman-directed adapta- tion is characterized mainly by the distinct overtone of boredom. Notable for some remarkably bad performances by both cast and director, who operate as though neither their heads nor hearts were really in this opera- tion at all. * MUSIC Golden Falcon - Ann Arbor Experimental Jazz Band, 9:30, $1. Blind Pig - Boogie Woogie Red, blues, 9:30, $1. tue. day TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28 CINEMA The Hunchback of Notre Dame - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 only) - This is easily the most lavish of all the productions of the Hugo novel, but also by far the worst. Charles Laughton's Hunchback is converted into what amounts to a minor char- acter; he wears Walt Disney makeup and jumps around mugging furiously for the cam- era, but catches none of the pathos and humanity beautifully conveyed by Lon Chaney years earlier and Anthony Quinn years late. This time around, Holly- wood's moguls decided to put the minor love story aspects of the novel front row center, and also tacked on a ludicrously phony happy ending (We can't send the public home miserable, folks). The movie's giant sets and cast of thousands notwith- standing, all lovers of literature and of film are advised instead to seek out the far more modest -and far truer-Quinn/Chaney versions.* Buchanan Rides Alone-(Cin ema Guild, Arch. Aud., 9:0 only) - Obscure Randolph Scott Western said to be a neglected masterwork - if so, then it's been awfully neglected. An en- tirely unknown quantity. Love and Anarchy - (Ann Ar- bor -Film Co-op, Ankell Aud. A 7 & 9) - One of the finest films of recent years, created by the gifted writer-director Lina Wert- muller. A selemn, almost Christ- like Italian peasant-anarchis sets out on a mission to assas- sinate Mussolini, while a young prostitute who meets and loves him tries to persuade him to abandon his quest. The film builds and builds in heroic, al most grand-opera style, then suddenly reverses gears com- pletely in one of the most ironic and remarkably unexpected fi- nales in film history. An ex quisite work which firmly estab- lishes Wertmuller in the van guard of new young directors and perhaps as the heir ap parent to Fellini, Bergman and love. A work of genius. ** The Hunchback of Notre Dame -(Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 only) - See Tuesday Cinema. Fury - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 9:05 only) - An innocent man struggles desperately to escape death at the hands of angry townspeople. This lynch- mob justice drama make a star out of Spencer Tracy and firmly established Germany's Fritz Lang as a major American di- rector. A tough, brutal film, but splendidly done by any stan- dards. **** Sometimes a Great Notion - (Matrix, 7 & 9:30) - See Mon- day Cinema. MUSIC Casa Nova - Susan Michaels, blues, 9-1, no cover. I Baker's (Detroit)-Betty Car- ter, jazz, 9:30, no cover before 9. 1 Blind Pig - Aldaberan, jazz, 9:30, $1. Bimbo's On The Hill - QSF, rock, 8:30, no cover. Bimbo's - Grievous Angels, country, 9, no cover. IArk - Hoot night, folk,. 75c. nentive subjects to New England CINEMA mansion in attempt to crnm- Cabaret - (Matrix, 7 & 9:30) minicate with siernturn len- - Bob Fosse's masterful im- ie in house. Director RThart provement on the Broadway 'ise constructs this horror play could easily be called the drama fromthe very solid nre- best movie musical ever made, .tv g except that it really isn't a consists not of overt ghoills and musical at all anymore. The monsters but in the imiversnl blending of every song into the th man fear of the ruknown and natural dramatic flow of the the inseen. The resulting pro- film is an achievement unprece- duct might have ben the de- film s anfinitive work of horror. but dented in film history; no more ,fntve'soiktoflicrrore hilt of those awkward moments when a Julie Andrews type sud- i't fail him, his imagination denly and unaccountably bursts d'ftn .does. What emerges is a i de nd ntosnuhieeeyneelse nrofimient, workmanlike stidy in into song while everyone e tprrnr, but lacking in the sheer stands around uncomfortably. . . Fosse's wholesale revision of the crative thrust needed to jolt stage original works to his ad- a'dinces out of their seats. fvantage almost every time. 0- longs to kow what Polv'ski what results is an unsentimen. or lunnel would have done with tal razor-sharp portrait of an the same material. *4 talanrzsr-ritually The Testament of Dr. Cor. economically a delier - (Cinema IT, Angell bankrupt society hurtling itself And. A, 7 & 9) - Jean Ponoir's willingly, almost joyously into adtation of Dr. Jekyll and the abyss of Nazism. Hardly the Mr. Hyde, in which a scientist thematic pablum normally found rehtes a perverse alter ego out in musical comedy, but then of his own so. there is very little that is typical cabaret - (Matrix, 7so9:Q) in this remarkable landmark of modern cinema. *** 5 daA Knl THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30 CINEMA Pandora's Box - (Cinema -Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 only) - Silent, surrealist German film psychologically probing the ef- fects of a strange, amoral being and the harm it does to othersl around it. Unseen in this corner, t but sounds well ahead of its time and probably quite inter- esting. Dead of Night-(Cinema Guild Arch. Aud., 9:05 only)-Famous but inconsistent British horror - film. A small group of people gathered at an isolated mansion - relate various stories of the supernatural, which comprise the bulk of the film. There isn' t - much thematic unity to these - episodes-some are frightening, - others are stodgily old-fashioned, one is blatently and jarringly - comic. Still, the best segments I are juicily spine-tingling, and S or liberal arts graduates who 1 :0pm-tdn upr want a teaching certificate in Eng- 3:30 p.m-Student Supper. lish, Social Sciences, Math, or Biol. 10:30 a.m.-Morning Worshi' Sciences. Duke Univ. has a MAT. Paid teaching internship of $6000- CAMPUS CHAPEL $8000. Tuition is $1500. Good place- ment record for the graduates of 1236 Washtenaw Ct. this program. Apply before Feb. 1, Pastor: Don Postema 1976 to Director of Coop. ProgramCP stian Reformed Worshi in Teacher Education, Dept. of C Educ., Duke Univ., Durham N.C. Sunday Worship-10 a.m. an 27708. 6 p.m. Univ. of So. Calif. offers MA in * * * |Judicial Admin. to prepare for FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, court administration or research. Write Center for Admin. of Justice, SCIENTIST 3601 S. Flower St., Los Angeles' 1833 Washtenaw 90007. Sna evc n ud Andover Teaching Fellowship Sunday Service and Sund ' pays $4500 pius room & board, for School-10:30 a.m. liberal arts graduates desiring a Wednesday Testimony Mee year of teaching experience. Con- ing-8:00 p.m. tact Phillips Academy, a private Child Care-Sunday, under residential college prep school, An- E dover, Massachusetts. years: Wednesday, through Summer co,,rse in "Publishing years. Procedures" at Harvard, to prepare | Midweek Informal Worship. h for a career in book & mag. pub. I R a R Write Mrs. Diggory Venn, 10 Gar- Reaing oom--306 E. Li den St., Cambridge, Massachusetts i erty, 10-6 Monday and Frida '- 02138. |10-5 all other days; closed Su Graduate Public Sercice Intern- i days. ship Program at Sangamon St. Univ. for preparation for State Civil Service careers in Ill. M.A. de-I ST. ANDREW'S EPSICOPAL gree and work experience. Write Dr. CHURCH, 306 N. Division Randolph Kucera, Dir. GPSI Pro- 8:00 a.m.-Holy Eucharist. gram, Public Sector Program 14:00 a.m.-Morning Pray Univ., Springfield, Ill. 62708. . and Sermon. p. p. nd tmuon: oo-33 or ozvt% 10:00 a.m. - Sunday Worship Service. Crush all smokes dead out ay et- 2 6 rb- ty; ns r rer - lm help prevenlt forest fires. SUSSCLL flLK $TAIROIHG ERO DALTPtY PRESENTING THE RETURN OF: SGT: PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND A,60 song anthology of all the great Beatles hits, com- Diete with B e a t I e costumes and Beatle history. An SARA [ LAPAUL HKMLAS0n5fl HA L WS FD uest tars M O O A H f I\ vi \cF \AseUSAHOT pI b I r'd ud T6 f bAMI D and LIA ID PU Ti h 1 -Written and Direted b