Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 7, 1971 _aeSx H ICA DIYWensay uy ,17 TONIGHT ONLY!_ HOWARD HAWKS' THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD (RKO, 1951) Ranks with Invasion of the Body Snatchers for sheer virtuosity on a shoestring budget--i.e., SCARY. "The story interested me as an adult treatment of an often infantile subject." -Howard Hawks ALSO CHAP. 10 FLASH GORDON AUD. A 7 and 9 P.M. 75c Jazz king Armstrong dead at 71 NEW YORK (AP) - Lou "Satchmo" Armstrong, below troubadour of the jazz trumpe with a delightful rasp to his voi and roll to his eye, died yesterd: his heart worn out, his golde horn silent at last. He was 7 years old Sunday. A spokesman for the fami said Armstrong died in his sle this morning at his Queens hon and attributed the cause of dea to heart failure. "Me and my horn, we core long way together," Armstror once observed. Together, they came out of waif'srefuge in New Orleaus, i river to Chicago along the trs of jazz itself, then on to t h show business pinnacles of Ne York and Las Vegas, and t motion picture studios of Hoh wood. And before they were throng Armstrong and his born, gether, had fascinated millior on five of the earth's confinert enthralling royalty smng w: the humblest of jazz fans. "In Africa," Armstrong on. reminisced, "the local tib'ie ca ried in their chief to where 1 w, playing. All he did sec's ji ed at, ce ay, en 71 ly ep te th c! ng look down and say just one word. 'Satchma!' Man, they knnw roe even out there." But ill health made progressive inroads on the ebullient a1 tist with the unforgettable grimace and grin. He was in and o.t ci hospitals during the past liv( years, as liver and kidney ci- ments took their toll on his heart. Armstrong's last public appe&- ance was at the Waldorf-A s Hotel here, where he opened a two week engagement Mareni. From there, he went into Beth Israel Hospital for heart tree ment. At the time, he was desc--bed as frail, with halting gait, his 5- feet 6 figure wasted down from 226 pounds to 15. To thank the many, st.iIic who had relayed best wishes to him in the hospital, Armstr ng gave an intreview at his hone June 23. He played his trenet and promised, "I'm going tack to work." He never made It. Libera e (Continued from FP w liberation, in that it h he man to know her own: a woman, she also t women's liberation ma h. man unfeminine. She o- some women try to pl ns role, and at the same , putting men down." h should never put a m she says. cc Sheba feels that co r- of her dancing made a: mean more to hert t made by men. "It isd marbleized colors are the news y 1B in Garland knits for Miss J Light and dark tones knit together add keen variety to fall wardrobes in four close-fit ribbed Acrilan acrylic separates. Brick or navy. ;# y Pants, S-M-L. Tops, 36-40. A. Cardigan in brick/black or navy/beetroot. $14. Shortcut pull-on pant $9. B. Rolled-neck sweater. $13. Pull-on flare pant. $15. AIL ted belly moves age 5) a woman not to feel jealous of elps a wo- the dancing with the men watch- identity as ing." If a woman comes up to thinks that her and compliments her, Sheba akes a wo- feels, it takes a lot of courage. feels that "Hut really," Sheba says, "tin ay a man's time, are really a together chick, letting it "A woman all hang out." an down," ompliments Arts exploited than those (Continued from Page 5) difficult for foundation improperly executed by a lazy construction crew. All this is not to knock the generally high quality of many performances of these discs: top-notch conductors (B e r n- stein and Szell) and pianists (Andre Watts and Ivan Davis) unwittingly contribute their talents to this suspect "artistic" endeavor while Andre Kosta- lanetz oozes along in his typ- ically Muzakian orchestral transcriptions. The worst seems yet to come, however, as other companies challenge Columbia in a race for the lowest common denon- inator of taste. Upon first sampling United Artists' "Sin- foonias" (containing the "ori- ginal hit version" of "Mozart Symphony No. 40"), I didn't know whether to laugh at the insipid rhythmic strumming of electric guitars recorded over orchestral movements by Beethoven, Mozart and Schu- bert, or to cry at the sense- less despoliation of great mu- sical masterpieces. In addition, RCA has just initiated a series of "Greatest Hits" (which its ads dub "In- stant Collections") that resem- ble Columbia's so closely that about the only way to tell the two companies' releases apart is by their trademarks DIAL 8-6416 TODAY ATth 7, 9 P.M. nigM visitor a 4, 4' HIGHEST RATING! SPELLBINDING!" K. Y. Daily News "A CAPTIVATING THRILLER!" N. Y. Times "A CHILLING, VIOLENT SUSPENSE THRILLER!" Women's Wear Daily "IF YOUR FLESH DOESN'T CRAWL, IT'S ON TOO TIGHT!" Look Magazine V- SHOP THURSDAY & FRIDAY NIGHT TO 9D00 P.M-CtOSED ALL DAY SATURDAYS THROUGH AUG. 7