Page Two THE SUMMER DAILY Thursday, June 14, 1973 Page Two THE SUMMER DAILY Thursday, June 14, 1973 t.v. tonight NOTE: Coverage of the Senate Watergate hearings may pre-empt some reglarly scheduled programs on channel $6. . 6:00 2 4 7 11 13 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father 20 sagecoach West 24 ABC News-Smith/Reasoner 50 Flintstones 56 Liias, Yoga and You 6:30 2 11 CBS News-John Chancellor 7 ABC News-Smith/Raner 9 1lDreamof Jeannie 24 Dick Van Dyke 50 Gilligan's Island 56 Making Things Grow - 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell The Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 11 To Tell the Teth 13 What's My Line? 20 Nanny and the Professor 24 Bowling for Dollars 50 1Love Lucy 56 Course of Our Times The Irish Rebellion of 1916 7:30 2 What's My Line? 4 Circus! 7 Michigan Outdoors 9 Movie "Tarzan and the Green God- dess" (1938) 11 Parent Game 13 Truth or Consequences 20 Rifleman 24 Circus! 50 Rogan's Heroes 56 To le Announced 8:00 2 11 The Waltons 4 13 Ironside 7 24 Mod Squad 20 Wrestling 56 Playhouse New York Biography Socrates (470-399 B.C.) 50 Dragnet 8:30 50 Merv Griffin 9:00 2 Movie 'Son of Paleface.' (1952) BoS Hope and Jane Russell 7 24 Kung Fu 9 News-Don West 11Movie-Drama "Secret World" (French; 1968) 20 Lee Trevino's Golf for Swingers 9:30 9 happy Though Married 20 Seven Hundred Club 56 Just Jazz 10:00 4 13 Dean Martin 724 Steeets ofsancFrancisco 9 All Aound the Circle 50 Perry Mason 56 Masterpiece Theatre 10:30 5 Countrytime - 11:00 2 4 7 11 13 24 News S CC News-Lloyd Robertson 50 One Step Beyond 11:30 2 11 Movie "Love Is Better Than Ever." (1952) Elizabeth Taylor 4 13 Johnny Carson 7 24 Dick Cavett Simon Wiesenthal (Nazi hunter) S News 20 Walters Family 50 Movie "Miss Pacific Fleet." (1935) Joan Blondell and Glenda Farrell 12:00 9 Movie "stage Door" (1937) Katharine Hephrn, Ginger RKogers, Lcille B ,ll Eve Arden 1:00 4 7-13 News 1:10 2 Wagon Tamn 1 News 2:40 2 News THE SUMMER DAILY, summer edi- tion of The Michigan Dally Vol. LXXXIII, No. 26-S Thursday, June 14, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 410. Published daily Tueda through honday moning during the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 41104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier ctampus area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Order Your Subscription, Today 764-0558 JAY SHARBUTT: TelevIsion in review NEW YORK - Marlon Brando came out of seclusion Tuesday night to apear on ABC's "Dick Cavett Show," discuss the wrongs he feels have been inflicted on the American Indian and put up with Dick Cavett. That the 49-year-old actor was able to have his say was an bar notes By GLORIA JANE SMITH Earlier this week, I bopped on- over to the Blind Pig for an evening of wine tasting pleasure, complete with white linen and vases of fresh pink roses on the tables. On hand to explain the "mys- tique" of wine was Sal Viviano, statesmanager of Browne Vitners. Lesson numher one: appreciat- ing wine involves all five sens- es. In between swallows of wat- er, bread and cheese (to clear the taste bds), we tasted five white wines, learning to dis- cern the flavor (be it dry or sweet), to breathe in the bou- quet and aroma, to feel the texture (be it smooth or ubbhly) and to see the color. You may ask how we heard about our wine? By clinking glasses to- gether, of course, While we tasted, Viviano dis- cussed everything from the geo- graphical areas where the grap- es in our wine were grown, to the process of making champagne, to the correct way to open a bottle of wine. This week the number of invi- tations were limited, but The Pig plans to eventually open these gigs up to the general public, so get your taste buds ready ... Until then, you might just as well check out the list below and find yourself some good times and music tonight. MR. FLOOD'S PARTY f e a - tures Terry Tate and U n i t e d Supply; BLIND PIG features Fran and Sara and Snake; PRETZEL accomplishment. Cavett, norm- ally a good interviewer, generally acted like a Hollywood reporter who specializes in such piercing queries as: -'Did you dream that 'Last Tango in Paris' would be such a bombshell, that it would ex- plode all over the place the way it did?" -"Why do you downgrade the acting profession?" -"Were you happy with the way 'The Godfather' came out?" THE PROBLEM. was that Brando only wanted to talk about the plight of the Indian, a cause he's championed since the early 196ts. Cavett wanted to discuss other topics that clearly were of no interest to the actor. Brando, a study in quiet pas- sion and harsh words when dis- cusing the plight of the .Indians, grew visibly annoyed when Cav- ett kept interjecting questions about his movies or acting phil- osophy. At one point, he complained, "We have so little time to talk about Indians and there's so much to say about them that I hate to talk about movies . It's such a misuse of time, but then I'm your guest and I don't want to horn in on what your program is going to be about." CAVETT, often flustered, spent the last half-hour of his show with three members of Indian tribal councils and Dr. Wallace Heath, director of the Lummi In- dian tribe's acquaculture busi- ness in Washington state. While they talked, Brando gen- erally remained silent, listening intently. Cavett thoughtfully prob- . NEW YORK (UPI) - "CBS News Retrospective" is a special 32-week series that repeats out- standing documentaries of the network during the 1950s and 1960s. The one-hour programs will he aired from 6 to 7 pm. Sundays, July 1 through Sept. 20. ed the areas of their concern, their anger, their hopes for ac- tion by Congress. It wasn't easy to follow, but it got the message across, and that was Brando's concern in the first place. It probably was the only reason he didn't walk out when Cavett kept asking him ahot his movies. Peter O'Toole, Sophia Loren, & James Coco in the Greatest Romantic Musical Adventure of All Time! Please Note Special Times Due To Length of Film DAILY AT 1:15-3:45-6:15-8:45 TONIGHT! June 14th--Only! 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. INGMAR BERGMAN'S jeweled horror tale THE MAGICIAN MAX VAN SYDOW, the doubting knight of THE SEVENTH SEAL, here leads a brilliant attack on modern rationality and cynicism. This deeply startling work is a thinking man's horror film and a symbolic self-portrait by Bergman, one of the great film artists. A wandering magician comes bearing a bag of tricks that turn him from magician to savior, then to con man, and finally to artist extroordinaire. SUBTITLED. "Thoroughly excellent."-The New York Times "A superb motion picture."-The New Yorker Cast also includes INGRID THULIN and BIBI ANDERSON COMING TUESDAY-Alan Bates in deBroca's THE KING OF HEARTS NEXT THURSDAY-Anouk Aimee in A MAN AND A WOMAN TUESDAY, JUNE 26-Animated Beatles in YELLOW SUBMARINE ALL SHOWINGS IN AUDITORIUM A, ANGELL HALL-$1 Tickets for all of each evening'sperformances on sale outside the auditorium at6:30 p.m. "A stinging, zinging, swinging sock-it-to-them doozey. Will leave you helpless with laughter." -Westinghouse Radio beyond the age of innocence....into the age of awareness "PUTNEY SWOPE" The Truth and Soul Movie "It's all as 'Mad Comics' would have it, 'humor in the jugular vein.' It has theeraucous truth of a cry from thebalcony orthe bleachers. There's vigor in this vulgarity. 'Putney Swope' is a kind of 'Laugh- In' for adults."-Richard Schickel, Life Magazine medium cool r6bert Forster/vernabloom/peter bonerz mariannahill/harold blankenship tally friedman sklell wesler/lhaskell weale _ \s.t I ttd-kokx j para a -. tue"a Haskell Wexler also directed "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" and "In the Heat of the Night." 8:30 & TONIGHT Modern Languages Bldg. AUDa 4 *8:00& S 10:00 & E. Washington at Thayer 10:00 .2 P.M. FRIDAY See both e.ellent$ features for only $2.00 PM