Page Two THE SUMMER DAILY Safurday, July 14, 1973 t.v. tonight 6:00 2 4 11 13 News 9 Irish Rovers 20 Temple Baptist Church 50 Star Trek 6:30 2 11 CBS News-Roger Mudd 4 13 NBC News-Garrick Utley 7 24 Reasoner Report 9 Singalong Jubilee 20 Ozzie and Harriet 56 Philadelphia Orchestra in Rehearsal 7:00 2 Superstars of Rock 4 George Pierrot 7 News 9 Untamed World 11 50 Hee Baw 13 Lawrence Welk 20 Movie-Thriller BW 24 Call of the West 30 Changing Music 7:30 2 Young Dr. Kildaie 4 Johnny Mann's Stand Up and Cheer 7 Town Meeting 9 It's Up to You-Quiz 24 Johnny Mann's Stand Up and Cheer ,6 To Be Announced 8:00 2 11 All in the Family 4 13 Emergency! 7 24 Partcdige Family S Alt Around the Circle 50 That Good Ole Nashville Music 8:30 2 11 Bridget Loves Bernie 7 24 Paul Lynde-Comedy 9 lin Chne 20 Movie-Drama BW "Dancetllal." (English; 1950) 30 56 Playhouse New York Biog- raphy Movie: D. W. Griffith's "Ab- raham Lincoln" 50 Nitty Gritty 9:00 2 11 Mary Tyler Moore 4 13 Movie 7 24 Burns and Schreiber Coedy Itour 5t 0lack Omnihus 9:30 2 11 Bob Newharit-Comedy 9 Portrait of a Coach 10:00 2 11 Mission: Imposible 7 24 tigsaw 9 Gatllery 20Seven Hundrei Club 30 5 6hetre for the eaf 10:30 9 Document 11:00 2 7 11 News S CBC Scos-George Finstad 24 ABC News-Sam Donaldson 56 Alexis Weissnberg-The Piano 11:15 9 A Look Back 24 Canadian Pro Football 11:30 2 Movie-Western "The Magnificent Seven" (1960) 4 13 News 7 Movie-Western "Stagecoach." (1966) 9 Encounter 11 Movie-Western "Rio Cotthos." (1964) 50 Movie-Thriller BW "The Last Man on Earth." (Italian; 1964) 12:00 4 Johnny Carson 9 Movie-Drama "Eye of the Cat." (1969) 13 Movie-Adventure BW "Treasure of Monte Cristo." (1949) 1:30 2 Movie-Thriller BW "Black Dragons." (1942) 4 11 13 News 7 Movie-Western "Quantez." (1957) 3:00 2 Divorce Court 7 News 3:30 2 News BEATLES' BUDDY A little help from his friends LONDON (/P) - 'King-Size" Tay- lor, an old buddy of the Beatles, has a 11-year old tape of the lads from Liverpool he made when they were a group of un- knowns playing for peanuts in a Hamburg dive: Music industry people believe it could be worth as much as $20 million. Taylor says be bought t h e rights to the tape from the Beatles for "the price of a few drinks." Now he hopes to get them to market it and make him a fortune. ONE WRTTRuhn h dr it sounds I've ever heard from them. Their hard driving rock 'n' roll from the golden period of 1962 is all there and more." One show biz source comment- ed: "There doesn't seem to be any chance of the Beatles get- ting together to record again in the near future, so the stuff on this tape would be a surefire bet. It's historic." BURLY 6-FOOT-PLUS Taylor, who led a band that played along- side the Beatles in their early days, made the tape during the har i a of 1 ' tt a n stage for a few dollars a night. Taylor, now a butcher,- offered the tape soon after he made it'to the late Brian Epstein, then the Beatles' manager. Epstein, Vio engineered the group's- rise to stardom, told him it had no com- mercial value and offered him 20 pounds for it, or about $49 then. Taylor said no. The tape iay forgotten in a cupboard in his home until a few weeks ago. "I WAS THINKING about this rock 'n' roll revival going 3n and suddenly remembered I had this tape from the old days," he said, "and I reckoned it must be worth something." Taylor took the tape to Alan Williams, the Liverpool c 1 Ia b owner who was the Beatles' first manager. They plan to approach Apple, the Beatles' company, about releasing the tape. Taylor wants $250,000 down and a per- centage of the royalties. But the Beatles would have to agree 10 release of the tape. vinw[l 'nwn neare i, ard winter of i!962 at the Star William Marshall of the D a it1 y Club in Hamburg. The group, Mirror, said: "The financial po- short-haired and living in a Dial 662-6264 tential is tremendous. There's squalid apartment with no heat, 231 S. State St. enough material for two albums. was just starting on the road to "It's one of the most exciting stardom with 12-hour sessions on NO SHORT SUBJECTS ----- - - STATE BOND PROMPTLY AT -M.-3 P.M -5 P.M.-7 P.M.-9:05 Politics means trouble ROGER asgJAMES in world beaut ycontest' MOE in, }eau yIIAN FLEMING'S ATIIENS (2) - The photographer aimed, the shutter clicked and the flap traveled all the way to Beirut. Miss Lebanon and Miss Israel, whose governments are poles apart, were close together in the iT United Artists same picture. "I never knew. I never would have allowed it," said Marcelle ~ 'Herro, a' dark-haired Beirut beauty, on Friday. Miss Israel, tall, blonde Limor Shreibman of Tel Aviv smiled and shrugged. "I love 210 S. FIFTH AVE. the idea of having a picture together, but she doesn't," she com- 7619700ANN ARBOR mented. -- )761-9700 PERHAPS pursuing a visual political essay of the eastern Medi- terranean, the unidentified photographer squeezed Miss Cyprus and Miss Turkey into the same picture. Greek and Turkish Cypriots have . - been at loggerheads for years over the issue of union with Greece. An All four girls, pictured in bikinis on an Athens beach, are here - for the Miss Universe contest, in which 64 beauties are participating. The photographer caused an uproar in some Beirut newspapers. o a I V Ie One, Al Bayrak, said that if Miss Lebanon had posed with Miss Israel supo b gand enthralling, of her own free wil, she should be recalled from the contest, because 'Lebanon is still the target of repeated Israeli attacks . . ." Safa, a uforgttable filmt French-language daily in Beirut, displayed the picture with the caption: "Miss-Understanding." g g 3g E &b Igg TITLE SWITCH HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Warner Bros. has retitled "Super Fly Two" to "Super Fly T.N.T." THE SUMMER DAILY, summer edi- tion of The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXIII, No. 40-S Saturday, July 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-48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- rard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 Vy carrier (cam- pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states aind foreign). Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail (other states and foreign). I NTER-CHANGE: Directed Analysis a n d Self- Treatment of Proble msof Ad- iustment to Avodemic Life F O C U S Program, Counseling Services, O f f i c e of Student Services Inter-Change is for students who have problems relating to academic life, especially diffi culting in studying. IT IS NO COST The Inter-Change group will teach a self-change technology based on the principles of hu- man behavior modification. The group will meet 14 times on Mondays and Fridays, July 16 through August 26. The meeting time will be 1:00-3:00 p~m Interested students s h o u I d call Terry Boothman, 764-8437 for an interview. ci nema guild presents Alfred Hitchcock's Foreign Correspondent This is Hitchcock's follow - up to Rebecca (despite w h -t our schedule says) and it is another fine suspense story. An American journalist is sent to Europe and becomes involved in a Nazi plot to steal secret information from a Dutch diplomat. Features Hitchcock's favorite special effects. TONIGHT-July 14 8 & 10 p.m. ARCHITECTURE AUD. $1.00 BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND! THE FUNNIEST PICTURE ... ANYWHERE! "An uncommon cinematic wit. Hilarious.' --N.Y. Times