Page Two THE SUMMER DAILY. Tuesday, July 17, 1973 Hearings, the early morning place to be WASHINGTON iPi - At the White House these days, the tourist line starts around 9 a. m. Across the street at the Washing- ton Monument, visitors queue up about 7:30. But to be first in line most days at the Watergate hearings, be there before 6 a.m. And un- less you're chummy with a sen- ator, related to a witness or sec- retary to his lawyer, once in- side, it's standing room only. SINCE THE televised Senate Watergate hearings bega almost two months ago, they've become Washington's latest tourist at- traction, drawing almost 1,000 persons a day. Students, housewives, business- men, tourists come in droves, dressed in everything f r o m shorts and blue jeans to design- er dresses and three-piece suits. Some profess a genuine interest in the workings of government. Others are just curious or want to say they've been there. There is an ornate marble hearing room in the Old Senate Office Building, just across an intersection from the Capitol. Once the regulars are packed in -Watergate committee staffers, the witness and his entourage and the press - there's space for 250 spectators, as the guards say, "all the way to the rear please." TIlE REAR location offers an excellent view of the backs of 300 heads. Rarely does the pub- lic get close enough to view Comedy of Errors to be shown The University Players' Reper- tory company will open its sum- mer season this evening by pre- senting Shakespeare's The Com- edy of Errors at the Power Cen- ter. Ctrtain time is 8:30 pm. Tickets are available at the Power Center box office Monday through Friday from 12:30 to 5 pm. and until showtime on eve- nings of performance. Tickets cost two and three dollars; some season tickets are still avail- able. TOMORROW the company will perform Mrs. Warren's Profes- sion, George Bernard Shaw's play about women's liberation and prostitution. These plays will alternate in repertory at the Power Center through July 28. Shakespeare's classic comedy of mistaken identity promises to provide a fun-filled evening for all. Director Fred Ollerman has chosen to give the play an un- usual twist. The production will view the world as a gigantic toybox com- plete with fireworks, teetertot- ters, tin soldiers, and little red wagons. MRS. WARREN'S Profession combines some of Shaw's light- est comedy with telling remarks concerning women and their role in society. Other works to be staged by the repertory company this sea- son include Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and The Roar of the Grease- paint, The Smell of the Crowd. RELIABE ABORTION SERVICE Clinic ir Mich.-1 to 24 week pregnancies terminated, by li- censed obstetrician osnecolo- gist. Quick services will be ar- ranged. Low rotes. CALL COLLECT (216) 281-6060 24 HOUR SERVICE Chairman Sam Ervin's dancing eyebrows or close-ups, such as the flush on John Mitchell's fleshy face. But it's not unusual to find crowd - pleasers mixing with the public. Singer John Lennon and his wife, Yoko Ono, have been there. So have entertainers Carol Channing and Ginger Rigers. Few tourists, however, recogize cur- ly - haired author Norman Mailer who can usually be spotted lean- ing against one of the white mar- ble columns at the side of the room. For ' exhibitionists and demon- strators, the hearing room is a natural forum. One man announc- ed his candidacy for president of the United States during the first week. < BUT DESPITE inconveniences, the crowds come, many declaring they want to be a part of history in the making. "It's very historical," said Howard Kupferberg, 28, a real estate man from Commack, N.Y. "That's really why I wanted to come. But the only way you could see Mitchell or whoever is testify- ing is if Ervin would hold up a mirror." "You can't see anything," said Olga Pingor of Rahway, N.J. who was attending the hearings with her husband, Frank. "We got here at 5:45 a.m. and we're in the last row. It's very unfair." Was it worth it? tov. tonight 6:00 2 4 7 11 13 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father 20 Statecoach West 24 ABC News-smith Reasoner. 50 Flintstones 56 Chan-ese Way-Cooking 6:30 2 11 CBS News-Roger Mudd 4 13 NBC News-John Chancellor 7 ABC News-Smoith/Reasoner 9 I Dream of Jeannie 24 Dick Van Dyke 50 Gilligass's Island 5' How Do Your Children Grow? 7:002 Trath or Consequences 4 Nes 7 To Teil the Truth 9 Beverly Hilbhillies 11 To Teli The Truth-Game 13 What's My Line? 20 Nannyandithe Professor 24 Bowling for Doliars 50 I Love Lucy 56 French Chef 7:30 2 What's My Line? 4 You Asked for It 7 11 Price is,Right 9 Wacky World of Jonathan Winters 13 Truth or Consequences 20 ifleman-Western 24 Adsentuer 50Hogan'sHerroes 56 Changing Music : 00 2 11 Maude 4 12 Movie 724 icagoIn the Rockies 9 Kate Smith Special 20 Burkes Law 30 56 Evening at Pops 501 Dragnet 8:s0 2 itHawali Five-O 7 24 Movie-Drama Revolutionary Mexico, circa 1900: " erd ase" 50 Merv 1rff in 9:00 9 News-Don Daly 20 There Is An Answer-Religion 9:30 2 11 Pilot Films 9 It's A Musical oWrld 20 Seven Hundred Club 10:00 4 13 NBC Reports 7 24 Marcus Welby, M.D. 9 Ascent of Man-Documentary 231 S.SleSt. Wd T W EEK! ^- --NO SHORT SUBJECTS STATE BONO PROMPTLY AT 1 PM.-3 PM.-5 PM.-7 P.M.-9:105 R ERasJAMESz M OREHBND o D:e b GUY HAMILO UntIed Artists "OH, WE'RE glad to be here," 50 Perry Mason BW Pingor said. "It ishistory. And 56 Detroit Black Journal we'veseenall he pincials.10'30 50Legacy we e sen al th pricipls. 11:00 2 4 7 11 13 24 News Mitchell looks smaller to me. '9 CBC News-Lloyd Robertson Sam Ervin looks younger than he 50 one Step Beyond does on television and very spry. 11430 2 10 Movie y4 13 Johnny Carson And we enjoy it so when Sam 7 24 Echo of Theresa tangles with a witness." 9 News Like the Pingors, most spec- 20 New Diretions tators are delighted when the "Parachute Jumper." 19331 hearings' tenor is broken by an 12:00 9 Movie-Comedy BW occasional outburst. "Dear Ruth." (1947) 1:00 2 Movie-Drama BW "Johnny Come Lately" (1943) THE SUMMER DAILY, summer edi- 4 7 11 13 News tion of The Michigan Daily 2:30 2 News Vol. LXXXIII, No. 41-S Tuesday, July 17, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Hove aoflair for Ann AboMichigan4010. Pushed" ily Tuesd y throu '0Sunday ornsng artistic writing? during the University year at 420 May- ipy areinterest nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. I Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- ed in. r e v i e i n g pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and poetry, and . Ohio); $013 non-loal mail (otherstat o f and foreign).sorios.ado etfilm Onmme essionpublished Tuesday 0da0: dcitesArtm, throsgh Satuday ori ng. Subscrip- artot/0thert lion raes: 03.50 by criec ampus EMitOson, 0olip. area)1; $0.30 locleil ( Michi~ga0nad McignDiy Oho)si; 07.00 usn-lsol' mail (other stateo nO sreign).- 3rd H IT WEEK r ci nModern Gali " RODGERS., HAMMERTE l - WSE Rreleaed byTWENTMTHCENYUWY-OX SHOWS AT 1:15, 4:30 & 8:00 P.M DIAL 665-6290 NOW SHOWING 761-9700 7 & 9:15 TONIGHT! From the Master of Shock A Shocking Mosterpiece! July 17th Alfred Hitchcock's 7:30 & 9:30 PM. "FRENZY" The master is back in form with this his latest about necktie stronglings which find a young man falsely accused. With John Finch ("MacBeth" in Polanski's film of that play). TOMORROW NIGHT-Woody Allen's BANANAS Shows at 7:00, 8:45 and 10:30 P.M. THURSDAY NIGHT-Ken Russell's WOMEN IN LOVE All Showings in AUDITORIUM "A" Angell Hall-Admission $1 tickets for all of each evening's performances on sile at 6:30 p.m. Michigan Repertory '73 0?pens Tonight in the air-conditioned POWER CENTER WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE'S THE COMEDY OF ERROR PLAYS IN REPERTORY THROUGH JULY 27 POWER CENTER BOX OFFICE OPEN 12:30-5:00 P.M. MON. 763-3333 12:30-8:00 P.M. DAYS OF PERFORMANCE Season Subscriptions $7.00-$10.50 INDIVIDUAL Tickets $2.00-$2.00 OPENS TOMORROW GEORGE BERNARD SHAW'S MRS. WARREN'S PROFESSION PLAYS IN REPERTORYTHROUGH JULY 28 I - - - - - - - - - Dial 668-6416 1214 .S"Unive sty pAMPUS ENDS WEDNESDAY! Tuesday "WILD BUNCH' at 7 P.M.; BULLITT at 9:15 Wednesday continuous from 1 P.M. STARTS THURSDAY! THE MOST READ BOOK ONA CAMPUS IS NOW ON SCREEN! "I'm delighted that at long last 'The Har- rod Experiment'i a movie ROBERT H. RIMMER, Author of the book. ___THE__ EXPERI ENT Harrad College... where free, liberated relations between coed students are encouraged! STARTS AUGUST 1ST: "LAST TANGO IN PARIS"