Page Two THE SUMMER DAILY Thursday, July 26, 1973 Page Two THE SUMMER DAILY Thursday, July 26, 1973 t.v. tonight 000 2 4 7 11 13 News Courtship of Eddie's Father 20 Stagecoach West 24 ABC News-Smith/Reasoner 50 Flintstones 56 Llias, Yoga and You 6:30 2 11 CBS News-Roger Mudd 4 13 NBC News-John Chancelor 7 ABC News--Smith/Rteasoner 9 1 Dream of 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 1 Beverly Hllbillies 11 To Tell the Teth 13 What's My Line? 20 Nanny and the Professor 24 Bowling for Dollars 50 I Love Lucy 56 Course of Our Times 7:30 2 What's My Line? 4 Circus! 7 Michigan Outdoors 9 Movie-Adventure "Tarzan's Peril." (1951) 11 Parent Game 24 Circus! 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Inner-City Freeway _ 8:00 2 11 The Waltons 4 13 Helen Reddy 7 24 Mod Squad 20 Wrestling 30 5 Playhouse New York Biography 50 Dragnet 8:30 50 Merv Griffin 9:00 2 Movie "Jesse James." (1939) 4 13 Ironsid 7 24 Kung Fu-Drama 9 News-Don Daly it Movie "The Moon Is Bie." (1953) 20 Lee Trevino's Golf for Swingers 9:309 Happy Though Married 20 Seven Hundred Club 30 56 Just Jazz 10:00 4 13 Music Country 7 24 Streets of San Francisco 9 MS!-Interview 50 Perry Mason BW 56 Masterpiece Theatre 10:30 9 Countrytime 10:30 5 Countrytime 11:00 2 4 7 11 13 24 News 9 Cl3C News-Lloyd Robertson' 50 One Step Beyond 11:0 9 News 1:302 2 Slovie-Drama "They Ran for Their Lives" (1965) 4 13 Johnny Carson 7 24 Jack Paar Tonite 20 Walters Family-Music 50 Movie-Western BW "Colorado Territory." (1949) 11:40 9 Canadian Open Report 12:00 9 Movie-Musical "Rainbow Island." (1964) 1:0004 7 13 News 1:20 2 Movie-Drama BW "The Walls of Jericho." (1948) it News ?:50 2 News THE SUMMER DAILY, summer edi- tion of 'he Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXIII, No. 48-S Thursday, July 26, 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 mornng during the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11 ocal mail (Michigan and Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Strbsrp- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier l(ampus area); $6.50 Foal aail (Michigan and Ohio); 07.00 non-local mail (other states and foreign . The Place To Meet INTERESTING People BACH CLUB Thurs., July 26-8 p.m. presentin BRUCE GUSTAFSON & ARTHUR LAWRENCE performing MUSIC FOR TWO HARPSICHORDS Works of Soler, Couperin, Leroux, Byrd, & Johann Ludwig Krebs (Bach's best student) 730 TAPPAN Memorial Christian Church cornerof Hill REFRESHMENTS AFTERWARDS (Oatmeal Cokes with Buttermilk Sauce) - No Musical Knowledge Needed. Everyone Welcome Admission 50c Watkins Glen gets ready WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. UP) - Joe Conley will take in the chaise lounges in front of his motel this weekend, but will leave the American flag flying. There is going to be a rock concert in this town of 3,000 people, probably the biggest since 1969 when more than 400,000 peo- ple assembled at Woodstock, N.Y., and an estimated 300,000 gathered at Altamont in Califor- nia. THE ALTAMONT festival de- picted in the movie "Gimmie Shelter" was thought by many to signal the end of the large rock festival. At that event, H e I1s Angels, hired as guards, killed at least one festival goer. People in this community are willing to put up with nearly any- thing, but they want it orderly," said Mayor Bill Simiele. "We are sweating this one out. We don't want to become known as another Woodstock." THE CONCERT will be held Saturday at the Watkins Glen Grand Prix race course, an auto- mobile track a few miles outside of town. The concert promoters say tick- et sales will stop at 150,000. State police will stop people without tickets 20 miles down the road. But Sheriff Maurice Dean expects at least 200,000 people in the area. "Everyone in town is a little apprehensive," Dean said. "At the same time, the local people are all talking to me about how to get tickets for their kids." RACES AT THE track have often attracted more than 100,- 000 people. It's a scene people in Watkins Glen have learned to cope with. "This is different," said Sim- iele. "It's something new and nobody knows what to expect. It's an unknown. Everybody is deeply concerned, but nobody is talking much about it." Conley, the motel owner, spent Tuesday collecting the signatures of 37 businessmen on a petition sent to Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. SINCE THE state has granted the permit for the concert, said the petition, "the undersigned businessmen and taxpayers do solemnly and respectively request that our property and well being be preserved and protected." "The petition speaks for it- self," said Conley. "But I'll tell you this, I don't expect all those kids to go to sleep Saturday night when that concert is over." A vanguard of several hundred people with back packs and sleep- Have a flair for artistic writing? If you are interest. ed in revies, tno poetry, and music or writing feature stories a b o u t the drama, dance, film, arts: Contact Arte Editor, c/o The Michigan Daily, ing bags has arrived in town, shore of Seneca Lake and tourism Barefoot, cut-off jeans, long hair, is major business. Siemiele runs it's a sight that some residents Capt. Bill's Boat Rides on the find disturbing. lake. NORMA ROGERS now sleeps at night in the food stand she manages since someone broke in and cooked hamburgers an the grill. "If it gets too bod, I'll just close up," she said. "The prob- lem is not the people, it's the number of people." The town is nestled on the "I CAN'T understand w h a t good it is going to do for the town," said Simiele. "It is go- ing to kill our regular tourist business. We gain nothing from it. It could ruin us." But Simiele is hopeful. "Mon- day morning we will just sweep the streets and go on, I hope," he said. MON., TUE., THUR., FRI. SAT.,SUN. &WED. ot 1:15, 3;05-5-7-9 P.M. DIAL 668-6416 THE MOST RE"D 0OMOCA CMPUS IS NOW ON SCREEN THE EXPERIMENT. (MI OO R~ %IN COlOR oEiSI Starting Wed., August 1st: "LAST TANGO IN PARIS" Dil662--62645t 231'S. State t.H I NO SHORT SUBJECTS ST A TEBOND PROMPTLY AT 1 P.M.-3 P.M.-5 P.M.-7 P.M.-9:05 ROGER JAMES M OREAMBOND iIAN FLEM INGS - OLIVYE AND L rDWE" j