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July 25, 1979 - Image 21

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1979-07-25

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The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, July 25, 1979-Page 15

TAKING A BREAK FROM THE ARTFAIR:

Free movies highlight city's night life

By SARA ANSPACH
Although art fair coordinators have
planned more than enough entertain-
ment for the next four days, when the
sun goes down, both tourists and
townies may find they have extra time
on their hands.
Here is a compact list of suggested
activities for those with enough energy
left to look for night-time fun and post-
pone their eventual return home or to
an air-conditioned motel room.
IF YOU ARE willing to stand in line
for a good 45 minutes there are some
excellent old movies showing this week
by the Ann Arbor Film Co-op and they
are free, to boot. Tonight features two
Burt Lancaster movies: Criss-cross at 8
p.m. and the classic prison riot Brute
Force at 9:30 p.m.
Thursday Jimmy Cagney stars in
Taxi at 8 p.m. and Humphrey Bogart in
They Drive By Night at 9:15.
Friday is horror movie night starting
with the original silent version of Bram
Stoker's Dracula, Nosferatu at 7 p.m.,
the Vampyr at 8:30 p.m. and Bela
Lugosi in Dracula at 10 p.m. All movies
are showing in Auditorium A of Angell
Hall.
Cinema II, another movie co-op, has
dubbed Friday 'disco night.' They'll be
showing Saturday Night Fever at 7:30
p.m. and 10:45 p.m. and Thank God it's
Friday at 9:05 in the Modern
Languages Building.
VOCALIST Roberta Flack will be
performing at the Power Center Friday
night. Anticipating greater-than-
average crowds, Major Events planned
two shows for the popular singer, at 8
p.m. and 10 p.m.
The Residential College Summer
Players, a group of University studen-
ts, faculty and community members,
will be performing Bernard Brecht's
Puntilla and his Hired Man, a folk
comedy and love story with music by
Peter Ferran of the Easy Street Jazz
Band. The play runs Thursday through
Saturday in the residential college
ART FAIR
SCHEDULE
Ann Arbor Street Art Fair-
Wednesday, Thursday and
Friday-
9 a.m. to 94p.m.
Saturday-9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
State Street Area Art Fair-
Wednesday. Thursday and
Friday-
9 a.m. to 10p.m.
Saturday 9 a.m. to 0 p.m.
Summer Arts Festival-
Wednesday Thursday and
Friday-
10 a.m. to 10P.M.-
Saturday i a. m to7 p.m.

auditorium. Tickets are $3.00 and will
be sold only at the door.
Ann Arbor has more than its share of
bars, but the onslaught of art fair
tourists may be too much for most
drinking establishments to handle. Bar-
goers should get there early as seats
are expected to go fast.
FAIR-GOERS -weary of art by the

weekend may want to check out
another annual celebration, the Ann
Arbor Medieval festival. Saturday the
festivities begin at 11 a.m. at West Park
on W. Huron Street. At 3 p.m. the action
moves to Burns Park, and Sunday the
Festival begins at 11 a.m. at the lawn of
the Ark on Hill Street, moving to the
Arboretum on Geddes at 3-p.m.

Medieval games, a unicorn hunt,
wandering minstrels and several
medieval plays are among the special
events planned for this festival.
If you have to miss the art fair, tune
your radio to WIQB-FM 103 and catch
the live broadcast from noon till 9 p.m.
July 25, 26, and 27, and from noon till 5
p.m. on July 28.

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PRESEflTS
Afl EVEfIOG WITH

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Friday, fJiy 27
TWO SHOWS:8 & 10pm
Tickets: $8.50 Reserved seats. Now on sate at the Michigan
Union Sax Office (11:30-5:30) and at Schoolkid's Records and
Falsetta's Market in Ann Arbor and the Huckleberry Party
Store in Ypsilanti.
FORINFORMATION: 763.2071

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