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June 15, 1973 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-06-15

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Page Two

THE SUMMER DA L"Y

Friday, June 15, 1973

PaeToTESME.AL. rdy ue1,17

t~v.
tonight
6:00 2 4 7 11 13 News
9 Courtship of Eddie's Father
20 Land of the Giants
24 ACBNws-Smith Reasoner
50 Flintstones
56 Sewing Skills
6:30 2 11 CBS News-Walter Cronkite
4 13 NBC News-John Chancellor
7 ABC News-Smith/Reasone
9 IfDream of Jeannie
24 Dick Van Dyke
50 Gilligan's Island
56 Bridge with Jean CoxBW
7:00 2 Truth or Consequences
4 News
7 To Tell the Trth
9 Beverly Hilbilles
11 To Tell the Truth
13 What's My Line?
20 Nanny and the Professor
24 Bowling for Dollars
50 1 LoveLucy
56 World Press
7:30 What's My Line?
4 Hollywood Squares
7 Wait Till YureFather Gets
Home
9 Lassie
11 You Asked For It
13 tTru or Consequences
20 Good News-Relgion
24 Wait Till Your Father Gets
Home
50 hogan's Heroes
56 Thirty Minutes With
3:00 2 11 Movie
"Goodbye Mr. Chips," Peter
O'Toole.
4 13 Sanford and Son
7 24 Brady Buch
9 TheMusical World of urt
Bacharach
20 Burke's Law
30 56 Washington Week in
Review
50 Dragnet
,:30 4 13 Little People -
7 24 6144 Couple
50 Merv Griffin
56 Off the Record
9:00 4 13 Circle of Fear
7 24 Room 222
9 News-Don West
20 DOie and Harriet
56 Turning Points
Problems caused by Federal
housing cutbacks insouth-
eastern Wisconsin.
9(4 7 24 Love Thy Neighbor
9 Sport Scene
20 Seven Hundred Club,
56 To Be Announced
0:00 4 13 Bold Ones
7 24 Wlat About Tomorrow?
"Tte Young Scientists"
9 TommyHunter
50 Perry Mason
50 The Toy That Grew Up
"Love, Speed and Thrills"
(1915) "Our Daredevil Chief"
(1915); and "Teddy at the
Trttle" (1916).
1110 7 24 U.S. open Preview
11:00 2 4 7 11 13 24 News
9 CBC News-Lloyd Robertson
50 One Step Beyond
130 2 Movie
"Hofman." (English; 1970)
Peter Sellers
4 13 Johnny Carson
7 24 Dick Cavett
9 News
11 Movi
"Operation Disaster" (English;
150)
20 Right On-Music -
50 Movie
"'h rie Jackpot." (1950)
12:00 9Movie
"Mary of Scotland." (1936)
Katharine Hephurn
.00 4 13 Midnight Special
Little Anthony and the Im-
perials, Wishbone Ash and
Savoy Brown
7 "Desert Legion." (1953)
Alan Ladd
130 2 Movie
"Blondie Bings Up Baby."
(1939)
9 Wrestling
11 News
2:30 0 13 News
3:00 2 Divorce Court-
7 News
3:30 2News
THE SUMMER DAILY, summer edi--
tion of The Michigan Daily
Vol. LXXXIIINo. 27-S
Friday, June 15, 1973
is edited and managed by students at
the University of Michigan. News phone
764-0562. Second class postage paid at
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published
daily Tuesday through Sunday morning
during the University year at 420 May-
nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104.
Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam-
pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and
Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other sates
and foreign).
Summer session publshed Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-
tion rates: $5.50 by carrier caomps
area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and
Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail (other
states and foreign).

RELIABLE
ABORTION SERVICE
Clinic in Mich.-1 to 24 week
pregnancies terminated, by li-
censed obstetricion ynecolo-
gist. Quick services will be or-
ranged. Low rotes.
CALL COLLECT
(216) 281-6060
24 HOUR SERVICE

Cinema
T h e r e are an extraordinary
number of notable movies this
weekend; normally my descrip-
tions of recommended films will
be longer and fewer.
RECOMMENDED:
Notorious-What makes Notori-
ous such an exciting film, I think,
is something a bit more than sim-
ple plot twists and turns. To be
sure, there are enough of those
once Ingrid Bergman decides to
r e v i v e her relationship with
Fascist ex-beau Claude Rains in
order to serve the U.S. as a
Mata Hari. But more important-
ly, there is a personal dimension
here that adds depth and signifi-
cance to those close calls and
near brushes with death. Ingrid
Bergman is talked into becoming
a spy by American agent Cary
Grant: her acceptance of the task
and her subsequent involvement
in her "duty" are results not of
an extreme patriotism, but rather
of the ups and downs of her ro-
mantic relationship with Grant.
And Grant, on the other hand,
finds himself encouraging a wo-
man with whom he is in love to
seduce another man for the sake
of Freedom, Country, and all
that. Consequently, those Hitch-
cockian peaks of suspense - in
particular the scene in the wine
cellar, a build-up of tension over
a cup of poison, and that final
walk down the stairs-have an
unusual depth of emotional im-
pact. One of Hitchcock's best.
The Conformist-Bernardo Ber-
tolucci sees movies with fresh
eyes. His sweeping, dynamic,
flamboyant v i s u a 1 style here
seems to tue to be the most cre-
ative sense of cinema since
Welles. The Conformist, in a
dazzling manner, follows an Ital-
ian Fascist on his mission to
murder a left-wing professor liv-
ing in France, all in the early
years of the Second World War.
The film's connecting of political
liberalism with sexual liberation
seems to be a direct answer to
Luchino Visconti's opposite equa-
tion (Fascists are sexually per-
verse) expressed horribly in The
Damned. Bertolucci's is the more
mature equation, to be sure, but
equations in films do tend to
oversimplify things abit.
Medium Cool - Ace American
photographer Haskell Wexler's
first stint in the director's chair
is concerned with a matter the
FREE ADMISSION
ENTERTAINMENT
EVERYONE WELCOME
LIGHTHOUSE
COFFEE HOUSE
Every Friday and Saturday
8:00-11:30 PM.
In the basement of
First Presbyterian Church
on Washtenow between
South University and Hill

Weekend
man knows very well: the amo-
rality of the media. Medium Cool
is basically a McLuhanesque idea
movie. But utilizing as it does ac-
tual footage of the Chicago Dem-
ocratic National Convention of
1968 to raise its issues, the film
has a jolting, frightening effect
and a sense of immediacy.
On the Waterfront-Many very
talented people worked on this
1954 film about corruption among
dock unions: Leonard Bernstein,
Elia Kazan, Budd Shulberg, Eva
Marie Saint, Lee J. Cobb. Yet
it's interesting that, despite the
innumerable Academy Awards
the film won, what really draws
us to it today can be narrowed
down to a single element: the
utter brilliance of Marlon Brando.
-Richard Glatzer
PARTY TONITE
with the
ROCKETS
at the
AMERICAN LEGION HALL
S. Main at Pauline
$2.50 Adm.
Covers Bond & all the
Beer You Can Drink
Mixed Drinks Available
DOORS OPEN AT 8:30
A Life Energy Prod.
THE
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a
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231 S. STATE
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622-6264
TE

NTO HWINGT1

r

zei.. s "Crammed with meaning! An incisive,
well-balanced film about one man's
attempt to start up a numbers bank in
El Dorado, Ark.,,during the thirties.
: . . brings not only rage and sorrow but also humor in
its attack on racism. It is unique among movies by or
about black people produced to date."
--SUSAN STARK, Detroit Free Press

SOON: James Bond 007 in "LIVE & LET DIE"

James Coco, PETER O'TOOLE & SOPMHIA

M

DOUBLE FEATURE

"A stinging, zinging, swinging sock-it-to-them
doozey. Will leave you helpless with laughter."
-Westinghouse Radio
"PUTNEY SWOPE
The Truth and soul! Movie
"It's all as 'Mad Comics' would have it, humor in the jugular vein.'
It has the raucous truth of a cry from the balcony or the bleachers.
There's vigor in this vulgarity. 'Putney Swope' is a kind of 'Laugh-
In' for adults."-Richard Schickiel, Life Magazine

MEDIUM COOL
beyond the age of innocence...into the age ofawareness

..............
r

0rmount pictures prmnts r
medium coI
robert forster/verna bloom/peter bonerz
marianna hill/harold blanenship
iuly friedman&haskell wexle/hall waxier x .\+
Haskell Wexler also directed "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" and
"In the Heat of the Night."

w

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$ features hor onlyent $2.00 I

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