Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 7, 1974 Page EIIIII gIItII THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday , June 7, 1974111111111111=1=1mino o Falk BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. Y) -Peter Falk was a pool playing fool. "I can't do anything nalf way," the star of "Colombo, ' recalled. "I can't shoot pool from 11 to 1 o'clock. I'd come home at 8 o'clock in the m.rn- ing. "ONE MORNING I got into bed and my wife rolled over and said pleasantly, 'Why don't you grow up?' "If she'd been angry it wou'd reflects on 'Columbo' role not have had much effect." lie swore off and retired his pool cue about five years ago. But books on billiards still line the den walls of his S200O.00 Tudor mansion in Beverly Hills, just off Sunset Boulevard. IT LOOKS like one of the rich places he goes to in "Col- umbo," shambling in wearing a wrinkled raincoat and drib- bling cigar ashes on the carpet. Falk, 44, ordered a glass of HOUSING OFFICE IN-RESIDENCE STAFF APPLICATION FORMS FOR SUMMER TERM 1974 AVAILABLE STARTING JUNE 5,1974 IN 1500 S.A.B. FROM 7:30 A.M.-12:00 NOON & 12:30 P.M.-4:00 P.M. z POSITIONS INCLUDE-RESIDENT ADVISOR &,Ea RESIDENT DIRECTOR IN EAST QUAD Z Advisory positions generally require upperclass status for the Resident Advisors and graduate status for the Resident Directors position. Deadline for A pplicatins 3:30 p.m. June 12 ********************************** soda at a restaurant near his home and considered himself and Colombo. "In my personal life I'm not the best dressed guy," he said. "But I don't have Colunib)s insatiable curiosity. "I SHARE with him a zeroin obsessiveness. He doesn't quit. I don't quit either. "I think he's a happyellow. I think so am I. I think I pro- bably have a bigger ego than he does. He gets his satisfac- tion out of doing his job. He knows who he is and he has no need for superficial recogisi- tion." A woman in jeans and a blue work shirt came over and re- minded Falk of the time they had been together in a stailed elevator in New York. Falk said he couldn't recall. SHE KEPT talking about "you crazy guys in the elevator," and left only after she gave him her name and telephone num- ber. Falk shook his head and said, "The things you have to put up with when you're an actor. But a few minutes later Falk squinted across the room and did some celebrity spotting of his own. He spied Johnny (ar- son at a corner table. FALK'S FIRST series, "The Trials of O'Brien," ran for 22 episodes in 1965-66. "Colombo is a man of few words. Columbo defers to oth- ers. O'Brien was brash. him. He's a quiet man, extreme- HE PAUSED, then said: ly considerate of others." "That's why it took me so long to face the truth. I denied it FALK SAID that next season until I was 26 years old." he will make only six "Colum- Falk, who had earned a mas- 'in my personal life I'm not the best dressed guy. But I don't have Columbo's insatiable curiousity. I share with him a certain ob- sessiveness. He doesn't quit. I don't quit either.' -Peter Falk Dr...aere/ - .. - - . ,... ... .sacsa "'Columbo' was a change ot pace for me. It's the first time I had an opportunity to play someone who was as polite as at me funny . . It's foreign to a kid hanging around pool halls." Welfare Mother of 6 Meets Garbage Man. RESULT: A Heart and Soul Comedy ' CAN YOU DIG IT?? a Diahann Carroll and James Earl Jones in .. Ooen 12:45 Daily'! Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7~ 9 P.M. 603 east liberty Music by CURTIS MAYFIELD. . . TheatrePhn665-6290 Performed by GLADYS KNIGHT and THE PIPS bo" spisodes instead of eight. "The fewer you make the bet- ter they are," he explained. "And it gives me more time to make movies." Throughout much of his career Falk played characters who came on strong. In "Luv" he was a philandering husband who got Jack Lemmon to take his wife off his hands. TWO GANGSTER roles, "Murder Inc." in 1961 and "A Pocketful of Miracles" in 1962, won him Oscar nominations. At his home his two Emmys are stuck on ' a bottom shelf of a bookcase. He won the first in 1962 as the feisty truck driver in "The Price of Tomatoes" on "The Dick Powell Show" and his second in 1972 for "Colom- ho." Falk, born in New York City and raised in Ossining, N.Y., had acted much of his life, but resisted turning professional un- til 1955 when he was 26. HE WAS more interested in sports in school, lettering in track, baseball and basketball. "The theater wasn't on my mind," he recalled. "In high school I never did anything until the senior play. Another student got sick and I took his place as a detective. "COME TO think of it, he was a lot like Columbo. A shambling guy. "In college I went to the dra- matics workshop at the New School because I thought it was a delightful way to get credits. They offered me a scholarship to be a full-time acting student, but I turned it down. I had no intention of becoming an actor. "Acting just didn't seem mas- culine. I couldn't conceive of myself being an actor. I could not tell my friends on the street corners of New York I was go- ing to be an actor. They'd look ter's degree in public admin- istration at Syracuse university, worked as an efficiency expert for the state of Connecticut and at night performed with t h e Mark Twain Maskers, an ama- teur theater group. He went to New York in 1955 and got a role as the earthy bartender in a stage production of Eugene O'Neill's "The Ice- man Cometh." In rapid succession he appear- ed in four other plays and went into movies and television. supplies govt. Fwith advisors The Utiversity of Michigan ranks second in the nation in the number of university repre- sentatives on federal depart- ment and agency advisory com- mittees. There are 117 University staff members on the advisory bodies. Only Harvard University, with 129 persons, ranked higher. Trailing Michigan with 1103 per- sons each were Johns Hopkins University, Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology, and t h e University of California at Los Angeles. WASHINGTON University eco- nomist Murray Weidenbaum made the analysis of influences by the nation's universities on federal government operations. His study appears in the May issue of Change magazine, a leading opinion magazine f o r people in higher learning. Weidenbaum found that 50 top universities, out of some 2,700 higher learning institutions, ac- counted for 63 per cent of all academic memberships in ad- visory committees of federal de- partments and agencies. GENE HACKMAN A NIGHTMARE feelsA auilty, FULL OF LAUGHS! his tapes s -"LIVING DOLL MARRIES DEAD MAN aps .-CORPSE IS NOT AMUSED"-Wosh- caused in ton lurale "8 PEOPLE MURDERED - DEAD MAN Sordwh. GUILTY?"-Huron Tattler "GREAT FUN-A RIOTOUS SUSPENSE sn't COMEDYI"-Bacon, Associated Press STELLA STEVENS and RODDY McDOWELL in OP-6- 231 outhstate Fri., Man., Tues., Thurs. at 7 and 9 p.m. only Sat.Sun. and Wed. at 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m. Theatre Phone 662-6264 Coming1 1974 Grand Prize Wintser--Cannes Film Festival: "THE CONVERSATION"