Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, June 4, 1974 Cinem tonight (Continued from Page 2) the Beatles' pictures. tie had stepped out of this a r e a of strength -- comedy - and the lackluster nature of his films showed it. Then last year the f o r tn e r Philadelphia TV writer who left in the early '50s for .ntlard and the Goon S h o w managed to drum up financial sitpport from producer Ilya Salkind and some Panamanian interests for another Richard Lesterr coedy. The product, The Three 'Mus- keteers, is hilarious. Lester hasn't ironed out all of the problems that plagued l im in his Hard Day's Night era - Musketeers is plagued be some slow pacing in a few places. But his subtle, witty 'o'i:hes are just magnificent. Michael York stars a; D'Ar- tagnan, the apprentice Nluske- teer, and turns in a fine per- formance. Simon Ward, !Zasluel Welch, and Geraldine Chaplin round out the cast (and by the way Raquel can act). -David Blomqui't What's Up, Doc? Campus Peter Bogdanovich takes no chances when it comes to .rak- ing a comedy. The ingredients for his slap-happy and slightly hysterical What's Up Doc? in- clude filming a partial remake of Howard Hawe's screwball Bringing Up Baby (1938), en- listing the penmanship talents of not only Buck Henry (who did the screenplay for Mike Ni- chols's smash The Graduate) but David Newman and Robert Benton as well (they wrote Arthur Penn's cenebrated Ron. nie and Clyde), and finally, as- sembling a cast with spectacu- lar stars like Barbra Striesand, Ryan O'Neal, Madeline Kahn. and Kenneth Mars. Having realized what appears to be the ultimate in comedy production, Bogdanovich t h e r hired every out-of-work Holly- wood stuntman he could find tc, make his dream come true. The result is sheer p'iysizal chaosn fromstart toIfh s guarantee the laughs baecazuse nobody makes good smash-em- up comedies anymore, a n d young Bogdanovich seems to compensate for this gap all by himself during the course of one picture. What's Up Doe? may not be very funny, but it at least brings meaning to the w o r zany again. Many feel Striesand and O'Neal are mere pupputs and hinder the film. Believe me - nothing could hinder What's Up, Doe?" -Michael Wilson Thunderbold and Lightfoot The Movies, Briarwood Just what we all needed to get through the summer - an- other dull, predictable, and to- t a ll y absurd police - bad guys melodrama. Breaking windshields, fish fights, pulp- novel - quality dialogue, a n d wailing sirens abound in t h i a latest in a string of complete- ly forgettable nothings from United Artists. Clint Eastwood and J e f f Bridges head up the cast, but who really cares? After all, how watchable can a police film be when the plot calls for tone bank robbers to use a cannon to break into the vaults? Daley gets competition for Dem. mayoral ticket GROUP GUITAR LESSONS 6 Consecutive Weeks, Materials Included, ONLY $12.00 We also teach flute, bonio, recorder, bass, sax, drums, piano, oboe, and clarinet. FOR ENROLLMENT, CALL 769-4980: ANN ARBOR MUSIC MART 336 SOUTH STATE Oen 10:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri.; Sat. 'til 6:00 CHICAGO (A - William Sing- er didn't count on Mayor Rich- ard Daley's health breaking down. And he's still campaigning as if Daley hadn't suffered a mild stroke last May 6-a stroke that might require surgery for the 72-year-old mayor. EIGHT MONTHS ago, Singer, a Chicago alderman, announced that he would challenge Daley in the Democratic party mayor- al primary next February. Since that announcement, Singer's campaign has become t h e strongest challenge in years against the party organization which has kept Daley in charge of Cook County politics for two decades. If he runs, Daley will be after a sixth four-year term. "We'll have to assume that Daley will run," Singer says. And if he doesn't run? Then any candidate designated by the Democratic party organization controlled by Daley "would be strong." IT IS NOT the first time that the 35-year-old Singer has taken on the mayor and the regular Democrats. In 1972, Daley and 18 of his delegates to the party's national convention in Miami Beach were denied their seats because they violated quota rules in selecting delegates. The man whose delegation was seated in place of the Daley regulars was William Singer. Singer says he took no great satisfaction in winning the head- on fight with Daley at the con- vention. "I wanted a compro- mise. I knew the way they se-, lected their delegates was wrong, but all of ours weren't right either. "BUT WHEN the push comes to shove, you try to win it all." Daley's ouster from the con- vention, combined with the election defeats of candidates he backed in 1972 and the con- victions on bribery charges of PHOTO gtatoaoq such longtime allies as former Gov. Otto Kerner and Cook County clerk Edward Barrett prompted observations that per- haps the Daley organization was crumbling. "That's self-delusion," Singer scoffs. "I'm not running be- cause I think the machine is falling apart. They're going to go out and knock on all the doors just like they've always done, but we're going to knock first." WHAT MAKES Singer, a Jew- ish lawyer with two aldermanic victories in partially liberal, af- fluent wards, believe he can break the organization grip on City Hall? Before Daley, two other mayors of Irish descent, Martin Knelly and Ed Kelly, ran the government for nearly half a century. "This is not going to be an election about Vietnam or space or energy or anything else. This is an election the people can feel, can touch," Singer says. "The people will be deciding how their city is going to be run. I know what they want." On a marathon schedule ful- filling his first campaign pro- mise to visit each-of the more than 600 schools in Chicago, Singer-has been in more schools than Dick and Jane. HE JAMS in as many as eight school visits a day except for time out when he must attend a council meeting or committee session. "There are one million people in this city directly affected by schools," he says. "When you visit schools, you learn about the neighborhoods and the im- pact the schools have on neigh- borhoods." "I know the city, I know the neighborhoods," he says. "I was born on the West Side, I went to high school on the South Side and I live on the North Side. I've spent five years in the council learning about fi- nances and now I'm in the schools. I have to show people that Singer can make this city work." TALKING ABOUT neighbor- hoods and the White Sox and the Cubs are some of the folksy tactics that Daley has used suc- cessfully for many years. Even before the mayor's re- cent illness, Singer said, "I'm not running against Daley ..." "Any machine candidate would be strong," he said. "The machine can get about 200,000 or 250,000 votes for any candidate. With Daley running, you make it about 300,000 or 350,000. We need to have a turn- out of more than 600,000 to have a chance, and we'll get it." IN THE 1971 primary Daley received 36,000 votes. Four years earlier his primary vote was 421,000. Both times he ran unopposed. Singer estimates the army of precinct captains and workers at the organizations' disposal numbers about 10,000 doorbell ringers. "We'll have twice that many," Singer promises. "We'll spend $1 million and we'll have the most impressive election this city has ever seen." HE SAYS many contributions have come from persons who always have sweetened Daley's campaign treasury. "I suppose some of them are hedging their bets and are going to give to Daley, -too." It is nearly midnight when Singer gets home. He must be up at six to hit the schools again and he has to hunt atennis op- ponent for his regular Saturday morning game. He hasw kept up the almost daily pace for eight months. "It seems like it's only been GRADUATE STUDENTS The Pilot Program is seeking graduate students for Resident Fellow Positions We need people working toward personal and-social change, who want to teach and participate in an EXPERIMENTAL EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM ROOM AND BOARD PLUS G.S.T.A. STIPEND APPLY NOW THROUGH JUNE 15 CALL 764-7521 ALICE LLOYD HALL