Wage Two THE SUMMER DAILY Tuesday, June 19, 1'973 Page Two THE SUMMER DAILY Tuesday, June 19, 1973 tonight 6:00 2 11 Baseball-Detroit at Cleveland- 4 7 13 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father "0 Stagecoach wet 24 ABC News-Smith/Reasoner 50 Flintstones 56 Chan-ese Way-Cooking 6:30 4 13 NBC News-John Chancellor 7 ABC News-Smith/Reasoner 9 I Dream of Jeannie-Comedy ?4 Dick Vans Dyke-Comedy 50 Gilligan's Island 56 How Do Your Children Grow? 7:00 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 13 What's My Line? 20 Nanny and the Professor 24 Bowling for Dollars 50 I Love Lucy-Comedy 56 French Chef 7:30 4 You Asked for It 7 Price Is Right 9 Wacky World of Jonathan Winters 14 Truth or Consequences 24 Adventurer 50 Hogan's'Heroes-Comedy 56 Naturalsts-Profile :00 4 13 Movie "GrandPrix," conclusion 7 24 Roberta Flack ... The First Time Ever-Music 9 Travelin'-special 20 Buke' Law-Crime Drama 511 American Odyssey The Railroad 50 Dragnet-Crime Drama 8:30 2 11 HawaiI Five-O 7 24 Movie "The Heist" (American; 1972) 50 Merv Griffin 9:00 9 News-Don West 20 There Is An Answer-Religion 56 International Performance 9:30 2 11 Pilot Films 9 Countrytime 20 Seven Hundred Club 10:00 4 13 NBC Reports 7 24 Marcus Welby, M.D. 9 Ascent of Man-Documentary 50 Perry Mason 56 Detroit Black Journal 10:30 56 Project 360 11:00 2 4 7 11 13 24 News 9 CBC News-Lloyd Robertson 50One Step Beyond-Drama 1:30 2 11 Movie "They Ran for Their Lives" (195)! 4 13 Johnny Carson 7 24 American Bandstand's 20th Anniversary Special: Dick Clark salutes 20 years of dancin, fads and fash- ions on the Bandstand. Includes Cheech and Chong satire 9 News THE SUMMER DAILY, summer edi- tion of The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXIII No09- Tuesay, Jute 19, 1973 I edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone '64-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published aly Tuesday throgh Suday moning surig the Uniesity year at 40 May- nard Street, Ano Arbor, Mihigas 48104. -Subscriptiono rats: $10 by carrier lan pus area; 11 local otail (M'ichigan and Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- lion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus trea); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and )hio); $700 non-local mail (other tates and foreign). 1214 S. University Dial 668-6416 Sat., Sun. & Wed. at 1, 35 7 &9 P.M. Mon ues Thurs, Fr: "THEATRE OF AMAZING bar utfes By GLORIA JANE SMITH Sunday night, we dropped by the Pretzel Bell for a nightcap, and on stage a male singer/ guitarist was soloing his w a y through old Beatles and Airplane tunes. An amplified minstrel of sorts, Rhone Bourdages is also a mem- ber of "Leaves of Grass" (you must remember them from your 'mixer' days). THE GROUP, which has been playing locally for over six years, is keeping busy doing gigs f or orientation freshies twice weekly. And if you make it down to the Art Fair this July, you'll pro- bably hear them there. We walked in on the end of Rhone's set, so I'll save any in- depth comments for later. He tells me though, that most of his material is original and that his sets usually wind down (or up, if you prefer) with more famil- iar favorites. Catch this recent addition to P-BELL fare n e x t Sunday . . For tonight: TATE BLUES BAND (formerly Terry Tate and United Supply) play at Mr. Flood's Party; OKRA (jazz) play at the Blind Pig; MOJO BOOGIE BAND play at Flick's; POOH (light rock) play at Bimbo's Ypsi. 20 New Directions 50 Movie "Tower of Terror." (English; 12:00 0 Movie "O s ind of Woman."(1951) 1:00 4 7 13 News 1:7072 Movie "Cavalry Command." (1965) 11 News 2:50 2 News JERRY BUCK: Television in LOS ANGELES (P)- - It seem- ed inevitable that television in its insatiable hunger for success- ful formulas would return to one of the most successful of all time - "Perry Mason." "Perry Mason," which ran for nine years on CBS and probably will run forever in syndication, is being revised, revamped and re- cycled for the fall season. THE ERLE Stanley Gardner creation, a lawyer who never los- es a case - at least not on the air, will be played by M o n t e Markham. Markham left t h e Broadway production "Irene" af- ter winning out over 300 other actors in- a nine-month talent hunt, The other parts are still being cast Ernie Frankel, who is coproduc- er of the show with Art Seid, professes not to be concerned that Raymond Burr may be in- delibly stamped in the minds of most viewers as Perry Mason. "With all due respect for Ray, he did not create Perry Mason. Erle Stanley Gardner did," said Frankel, who was story consult- ant the last year of the old ser- ies. "I THINK what Monte Mark- ham will bring to the role is an interpretation of Gardner's work for 1973." 231 S. State Dial 662-6264 "AN INCISIVE, WELL - BAL- ANCED FILM . UNIQUE AMONG MOVIES BY OR ABOUT BLACK PEOPLE." -Susan Stork. Detroit Free Press in Clor 1:15-3:10-5 7 Fr 9 p.m. -NEXT- Dennis Hopper, Warren Oates "KID BLUE" Soon: 007 in "LIVE & LET DIE" In structure the show will be the same. There will be no tam- pering with that. Mason, aided by Della Street and Paul Drake, will confront Dist. Atty. Hamilton Burger and Lt. Tragg in the courtroom climax. His client will be wrongly accused of murder and each week Mason will sift through the clues to determine the real killer. "We're going to preserve the Gardner concept," said Frankel. "HE WAS the most successful mystery writer in the world. That formula works. "But this is 1973 and if Gardner were alive today he would be the first to say let's make it real. His philosophy always was to be with it and reflect the world. review Mason will' be a contemporary figure." In the original series Della spent most of her time answering the telephone. She will be a little more liberated now, serving as an assistant to Mason. FRANKEL SAID, "We'll be able to do things in the show we couldn't do before. As long as it's done in good taste. "You won't see Della a n d Perry getting out of bed togeth- er, but you will see that they are devoted to each other." ASKED ABOUT Mason's win- ning streak, Frankel said, "Gard- ner s answer to that was he al- ways won because he always de- fended an innocent man. Mason will lose cases - but not on CBS on Sunday nights." SALE at New Morning Books? NO. NOT REALLY. -IN THE COMMUNITY- 124 East Washington Street Just the best EVERY-DAY DISCOUNTS in Ann Arbor. New Morning is opposed to "all the traffic can bear" and "the public be damned" attitude of the major corporate publishers and distributors that are driving book prices steadily into the stratosphere. We wish we had a ready solution. But all we can do is put our profit-margin on the line and hope that people can recognize a non-profit cooperative bookstore when they see one: 15% OFF ALL Hardcover Books 10% OFF ALL "Quality" Paperbacks and/or 15% OFF LIST on all purchases of $10 20% OFF LIST on all purchases of $20 OR MORE A non-profit publishing industry will depend on people's power, but in the meantime, we are doing what we can to bring down the cost of good reading. And if we don't have a book you wont in stock, we'll special order it if we can at the same discount. f- * tyVuINY HIE Because it's my country. ,' ,~ And it's getting dirty. '5 "'z That' why. KeThe Kee~meicaCanana uteru S lhpa ogd U.*uine sioom inherupr ainnig peiooaso i .AIU flouse"1 -COMING- "LAST TANGO IN PARIS"