420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Mich. Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials orinted in The Michigan Doily express the individual ooinions of the author. This -must be noted in all reorints. I Tuesday, July 21, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY cinema Catch-22': It's a- diaster IBS SI ...GER. 0-HIITS I TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1970 News Phone: 764-0552 Cars and more cars FOR THE PAST two Saturdays, New York City authori- ties have banned automobiles on Fifth Avenue and turned it into a mall. The nation's leading journals have seen fit to cover this noble experiment's influence on busi- ness, but few, if any, of the newspapers have delved into the larger implications of the experiment - whether the U.S. can do without the automobile entirely? The answer to this question must be an unequivocal yes. Even if the gentlemen who run the automobile in- dustry do solve the automobile's pollution problem, there will still be a plethora of troubles inherent in the contin- ued use of the automobile. Congestion due to the automobile is one problem that would remain after the car became pollution free. Often this problem is limited to minor inconveniences, but it can be worse. Boston has often been crippled by massive traffic jams in the center of the city - a daily sorespot for the commuter, who spends enormous amounts of time in traffic jams. Noise pollution will also be heightened by continued use of the automobile. The high cost of maintaining the automobile will, as everything else, continue increasing. All this in addition to the large sums of money pumped into highways. THE QUESTION is what should be done. Obviously the individual car owner can not be expected to yield the automobile without a suitable replacement. And, too fre- quently the alternative to the car has been a combina- tion of types of public transportation which run poorly, with long delays and built-in inconveniences. One genuine solution would be the adoption of a mass comprehensive transportation system, emphasizing con- venience and accessibility, throughout the United States. Of course, one is bound to ask about the cost of such a massive project. There is no doubt that it would be quite expensive, but the cost would not be as prohibitive as one might think. Especially if one considers the enor- mous amounts of finances directed at the maintenance of the automobile. Undoubtedly, the costs would be compensated for by the freeing of lands, heretofore conceded to automobiles, for use by the populace; in the freeing of finances which would have been directed at repairs of vehicles, purchases of new cars and the building of highways to accommodate the four-wheeled monster; and in the freeing the na- tion's commuter from the long waits behind the steering wheel. It is not difficult to say that a majority of the U.S. would benefit from the abolition of the car, but it is hard- er to foresee the adoption of such a plan as long as the auto industry feels it will lose by it and lobbies against its adoption; however, one can hope that, for a change, General Motors could see the value of this statement: "What's good for America, is good for GM." - P. ROBERT HERTZ A j ho, ho, ho THE MAYOR OF CALCUTTA has changed the name of Harrison Street in the central part of the city to Ho Chi Minh Street. It is believed in some diplomatic circles that his de- cision was influenced by the presence. of the U.S. and British consulates on the street. -JONATHAN MILLER NIGHT EDITOR: ERIKA HOFF Summer Editorial S/aff ALEXA CANADY ......... ..................... Co-Editor MARTIN HIRSCHMAN.....................................Co-Editor SHARON WEINER.......................Sumer Supplement Editor SARA KRULWICH.......... ........................... Photo Editor LEE KIRK ...... .......Summer Sports Staff NIGHT EDITORS: Rob Pier, Nadine Cohodas. Erica Hoff" ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITOR! Bill Alterman. Lindsay Chaney, Phil Hertz, Debra Thai Sitinmer !3siness S/aff IAN WRIGHTB..................................... usiness Manager PHYLLIS HURWITZ............... ....Freshman slpplement BARBARA SCHULZ ...............................Display Advertising RICHARD RADCLIFFE .... ... .., ......... Classified Advertising. DAVID BELL............ ...............................Circulation ASSISTANTS: Suzi Boschan, Debby Moore By DREW BOGEMA Catch-22 has just made it's world premiere or whatever they call it in culture-vulture land and is playing in some of the bigger cities along the East and West Coasts. Everybody that I know has been waiting for this movie so long that their beards have grown nearly a foot in the mean- time, if they have beards, and why would anybody really want to have a beard? Anyway, it's really dis- appointing to report that the movie was a disaster. I can remember first reading Catch-22 in the eleventh grade and staying up all night reading it through. It was just incredible, probably one of the most mean- ingful things I've ever experienced. I mean, like it took me another two times to really understand what Heller was trying to do with the book, and, like, who knows whether I've grasped it yet? Weller was a verbal magician with humor for sure and his dialogues were the most outasight things ever in- vented. Anyway, like I was saying, the movie was a disaster and you're wondering why, as if it makes any difference because you'll probably go see it anyway. First of all, Catch-22 is a tragedy of miscast- ing and only one character, Gen- eral Dreedle, played superbly by Orson Welles, offers any good act- ing. Alan Arkin as Yossarian, you say, Alan Arkin wasn't he any good? The answer is no. He wasn't any good. He wasn't especially ex- pressive and by the time the movie is over I was really glad Alan Ar- kin wasn't Yossarian anymore. When it comes down to the real essential thing about the book - that beautiful, diverse communitys of freaks that flew and lived on the base with Yossarian, that of- fered Yossarian an audience to figure the whole war game out- Mike Nichols has failed miserably. Dunbar isn't even included with- in the cast. ' Art Garfunkel plays Nately, and as you might imagine, isn't too familiar or comfortable with acting. Orr is almost okay, but not especially great shakes, just okay. In case you are delirious with anticipation to see the great crab apples versus chestnut debate, quickly grab hold of a chair and sit yourself down, because the Mike Nichols directorial team didn't even bother to film it. On with the miscasting. Anthony Perkins plays the Chaplain and he too, like virtually all the rest, is pretty bland and unexciting. It's a wonder after his last movie -the one about saboteuring build- ings with Tuesday Weld, that he hasn't been voluntarily retired from the business. The two guys who play the mad colonels who are always raising the number of missions to fly are good, but Bob Newhart who plays Major Major is really bad. Well, you're probably gonna go see it anyway, so good luck to you, but maybe' you oughta get real wrecked beforehand for it to be any good. There's probably lot's more that needs analyzing, but please excuse me, because since it was so bad, I'm not even going to think about it any more. Royals drop Tigers four back CAIN FAILS, 3-0 LOS ANGELES (1R) - Bill Sir blazing fast ball in the smoggy 1 hitter against Philadelphia as th the Phillies 5-0 in a twi-night gam The 6-foot-4 righthander, wl with hepatitis between April 22 two base-runners-Oscar Gamble out in the first inning and Dc Singer's wild throw with one out it He struck out 10, walked non from Maury Wills, who came in tc of the eighth inning and made Hisle's leadoff smash and threw h Letters tot te Editor July 4 apparent. Who can blame them? Such a joke! Such a travesty of To the Editor: patriotism! I HAVE BEEN a summer intern "Oh, but no," you say, "I saw in Washington D.C. for over a it on TV, and it was peaceful, en- month now. I came to the Capital tertaining, and nice." What irony! with great hopes, ideals, and a An entertainer sings "On a Clear belief that with all the wrong, Day You Can See Forever," and there was some good in our na- I could not see, much less breathe, tion. After the spectacle of "Hon- for the tear gas and smoke in the or America Day" I am sadly dis- air! illusioned. We all seem to have become July 4 is a day out-of-the-or- part of a political game. The rules dinary, a day of relaxation and of state that you have to shout and being with family and friends- flagwave to win. If you win you a holiday. It is important that are a true American. Who wants each person realizes why there is to win that way? a July 4, but patriotism is a per- A slogan at the rally said: Hon- sonal emotion. No one has the or Lives Not Symbols. That is so right to make it into a political true, yet it seems that people are tool. No one group has a monopoly forgetting how important are com- on patriotism. munication and compassion and "Honor America Day" flaunted how precious are all human beings. patriotism and unity. What hypo- Do you really believe that we are crisy! Red, white, and blue but- "indivisible with liberty and jus- tons saying "Love It or Leave It!" tice for all"? do not even begin to "bring us -Sara Brown '72 together." The lack of blacks was July 15 Zy The Associated Press KANSAS CITY - Jim Rooker cooled off red-hot Detroit with a seven-hitter and drove in one run as the Kansas City Royals beat the Tigers 3-0 last night. Rooker's sixth victory against nine losses ended Detroit's five- game winning streak and the Royals' six-game losing string. He outdueled Les Cain, 9-3, who had a personal eight-game win- ning skein snapped. Lou Piniella d o u b l e d and scored on Bob Oliver's single for the first run in the fourth inning and -Rooker singled in Ellie Rodriguez, who doubled in the fifth. * * * Orioles win CHICAGO - Ellie Hendricks hit the first grand slam homer of his major league career and knocked in six runs last night to lead the Baltimore Orioles to a 14-5 victory over the Chicago White Sox. "g M~ajor League - Stondings $ Center fielder Willie Davis momentarily misjudged Denny Doyle's liner with two out in the sixth, but recovered and caught In the ninth inning, T e r r y x Harmon, a pinch-hitter, hit a high bouncer to first baseman >Wes Parker, whose throw to Singer covering first barely got the runner. Davis then flagged down 4 Doyle's liner into left center, qand with the crowd quiet with tension and Singer working carefully, Byron Browne foul- ed off three pitches before pop- ping out to catcher Jeff Tor- borg. The victory was the fourth in a row for Singer, 7-3, who flirt- ed with a no-hitter against At- lanta on June 23 when he had -Associated Press the Braves blanked for 7% innings before his spell was Singer en route to immortality shattered. TO CRISLER ARENA Cazzie, Knicks coming theatre 'Of Mice': Nice experience AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pct Baltimore 57 36 .61 Detroit 52 39 .571 New York 50 42 .54 Boston 47 43 .53 Washington 43 50 .46 Cleveland 42 49 .46 West Minnesota 57 30 .65 California 55 37 .59 Oakland 49 44 .521 Kansas City 34 57 .37 Milwaukee 33 61 .34 Chicago 32 63 .33 Results Oakland 3, Boston 2 New York 6, California 1 Washington 2, Milwaukee 0 Baltimore 14, Chicago 5 Minnesota 4, Cleveland 2 Kansas City 3, Detroit 0 Today's Games Detroit at Minnesota Baltimore at Kansas City Chicago at Cleveland California at Boston Oakland at Washington Milwaukee at New York NATIONAL LEAGUE East t. GB 4-- 1 4 3 6 3 71 2 14 2 14 6 9 27 3 9 6 4Y2 11 25 29 By MICHAEL S. HOOKER WITH THEIR second perform- ance of John Steinbeck's fas- cinating play, Of Mice and Men, the University Players Michigan Repertory '70 Company, under the direction of James Coakley pro- duced tears in the eyes of their audience. Coakley magnificently utilized the magical aura of the theater to pump life through Steinbeck's drama about two mi- grant farmhands who held a dream which to them seemed as far away as the stars. -The two are evicted from one of those small southern hick towns, Weed, because Lenny seems to have no sensitivity in his relation- ships. with others. We is just too big and strong for his desires to come true. With his strength, he destroys everything which to him is beautiful. He strangles mice, puppies, and is exiled from Weed for holding on to a girl's dress which he thinks is soft. It is here that the play un- furls, moving on to Salinas. There they meet a motley assortment of characters, including Slim, the mule driver, played with superior finesse by Michael Hardy, the boss, and other laborers. Here too they meet Curly and his wife, a pair that manages to "gum up the works" for George and Lenny. The Michigan Repertory Com- pany has assembled from its stu- dents a company of fine perform- ers to produce their summer sea- son. Ron Beebe as Lenny Small and Arthur McFarland as the per- secuted black farmhand are the two most outstanding. These two, with their superb sense of timing- and the reality of the stage bring the audience to their feet. Beebe, a huge man, blunders around the stage leaving a swath of dead mice, seems to have had a frontal lobotomy for the role. As the pro- tagonist, Lenny's flaw is stupidity., And that is the way Beebe plays it. His magical moments are well worth any time spent at the theater. McFarland as the Negro worker not only superbly reveals the plight of the black in America, but seems to tell a little about all of us. These two are an amazing pair. and are responsible for much of the meaning, and emotional pas- sion to be experienced by t h e audience. Add to this a superior company including Cammille Hardy as Cur- ly's wife, Cris Root as Curly and Mark Metcalf at George, and you get a sense of conviction and real- ity that many of our television performances lack. Coakley's direction is very visi- ble in the beautiful stage pictures and the driving beat that this play of words must have. The timing which he has driven into his act- ors shows a great sensitivity for his script . Dr. Alan Billing's setting. which also doubles for the sister play, Shakespeare's Merchant of Ven- ice, works in an exciting way for this play. However, much of the lighting is too dark, and several chances for exciting special light- ing were missed. In sum total this production of Steinbeck's stage version of Of Mice and Men is one of the finest theatrical experiences in A n n Ar- bor in several seasons, and any- one who considers himself a, theater-goer should definitely not miss it. Vt % / Pittsburgh *New York Chicago Philadelphi St. Louis *Montreal ChicagoW L 52 42 49 42 45 46 ia 41 50 41 51 39 53 Cincinnati Los Angeles Atlanta *San Francisco Houston *San Diego 'We: 66 38 54 38 46 46 43 46 40 53 37 58 Pct. GB .554 - .538 1 .494 51, .451 9?7> .438 10 .424 12 .J64 - .587 11 .500 19 .483 20: .429 251, -.389 291~ It'll be homecoming on the night of Thursday, Sept. 24, for Cazzie Russell, the greatest basketball player in the history of the University of Michigan. Announcement was made yes- terday that Russell will return to Ann Arbor with the world champion New York Knicks to face t h e Detroit Pistons in a National Basketball Association pre-season game. It will mark the first time Alabama suit postponed TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) - A federal court hearing on a suit charging the University of Ala- bama with racial discrimina- tion in' athletic recruitment was postponed indefinitely yester- day, court sources said. The hearing, set for yester- day, was postponed for the third time since the suit w a s filed earlier this year .on behalf of the Afro-American Association, a Negro group on the Tuscaloo- sa campus. The suit charges Alabama with excluding black h i g h schools from its athletic recruit- ment program.- University officials have de- nied the charges. '70: Of Mice and Men by John Stein- beck: Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. 8 p.m. that Russell has played a game in the new Crisler Arena, which many describe as "t h e house that Russell built" with his brilliant performances for three years as a Wolverine. "I have worked out in the ar- ena a few times, but this sure will be a great moment for me finally to get to play there," Cazzie said after learning that arrangements had b e e n com- pleted for the game, which will be sponsored under the auspices of the U-M athletic department. "We have looked forward to Cazzie coming back and playing here, too," declared Michigan athletic director Don Canham who worked out the details for the game with Ed Coil, the Pistons' general manager. Russell, who led Michigan to three Big Ten titles and 2nd place in the 1965 NCAA tourney, will come to Ann Arbor with other illustrious members of the' Knicks who beat Los Angeles, four games to three, this spring in the NBA playoff f inals after the Knicks had set a regular- season record by winning 18 straight games. Leading the Knicks- will be their all-star center, Willis Reed, generally acclaimed as the player-of-the-year in 1969 - 70. He was voted the most valuable player in the mid-season All- Star game, the MVP for the reg- ular season and also the MVP during the playoffs. Programs: to be distributed at Hill Aud. Announcements: Limited number of graduation anniouneents for sale at Info.Desk, First Flor.Lobby, I.S.Aj Bldg. The Knicks' roster also in- cludes Dave DeBusschere, the ex - University of Detroit and Piston great; Bill Bradley, who played against R us s e11 and Michigan when an All-America at Princeton, and Walt Frazier, considered one of the top guards in pro basketball today. For the Pistons the game in Ann Arbor will mark their first visit ever to the University City and also will kick off an 11- game pre-season schedule after more than two weeks of train- ing at nearby Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti. A li-Fraz.1ier fight KO'd DETROIT I(A' --Michigan's boxing commissioner said yes- terday a proposed heavyweight championship boxing match in Detroit between Cassius C 1 a y and champion Joe Frazier is off. "The fight is dead in Michi- gan at least," Commissioner Chuck Davey said Monday from his summer h o m e in Oscoda, Mich. Fight promoters, who w e r e represented by former Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh, planned to stage the fight at Cobo Arena Sept. 21. t n t] IF F 0 fl e n p I E s p d v 0 n c c i 1, 1 1- . 1 I _ Results Los Angeles 5, Philadelphia 0 Atlanta 3, Chicago 1, Ist Atlanta 5, Chicago 0 Cincinnati 4, St. Louis 3, Ist Cincinnati 4, St. Louis 0, 2nd Houston 5, Pittsburgh 4, 12 inn. Montreal at San Diego, inc. New York at San Francisco, inc. Today's Games Cincinnati at St. Louis, day New York at San Diego :Montreal at Los Angeles Chicago at Atlanta Philadelphia at San Francisco, day Pittsburgh at Houston Daily Official Bulletin The Daily Official Bulletin is an of- ficial publication of the University of; Michigan. Notices should be sent in General Iofices Fs '. L.S.A. Bldg., before 2 p.m. of the day --- Candidates who qualify for a doctor- preceeding publication and by 2 p.m. Regents' Meeting: September 17 and aW degree from the Craduate School and Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items 18. Communications for considerationjWho Attend the Commencement Ex- appear once only. student organiza- 'at this meeting must be in the Presi- ereises will be presented a hood by the tion notices are not accepted for pub- dent's hands no later than September niversity as part of the ceremony. lication. For more information, phone 3. S9?70. summer Commencement Exercises cente (t I gII(' 9c Day Calend r August 9, 2:00 p.m., Hill Aud All graduates of 1970 spring-summer term (General lnivisson VIO FREE Service c ---NO DEPOSIT CALL: 662-5( SERVING BIG 10SCH may attend '3200 S A.B Tuesday, July 21 Reception for graduates, relatives & Current openings in SE. MTich. areas, Audio- 'iual Ed.Ce n t er Films: friends in Michigan League Ballroom othtrs nationwide: Stream-Cosmopolis &. Redwoods, Mult:immediately following ceremony. Please, Catholic Social Services. Ann Arbor. Sulrecsmp.,UndergradwoLb., 7 p.m. enter League at west entrance, social worker. need car. BA in psych. Music for the Disadvantaged Student Tickets: Four to each prospective soc. wk., educ., et, exper. in soc. wk. Concert & Dialogue: A. white, Jr., Con- ;raduate, to be distributed from Mon.. not requiired . ductor, All State Intermediate Orch., July 27 to Aug. 7, at Diploma Dept., No-Chem project with Radiation Lab- Interlochen, lecturer, Concert by Chad- 1518 L.S.A. Bldg., except Sat., Aug. 1. . oratory, Ann Arbor, lab. scientist, hour- sey High Orch., Rehearsal Hall, Sch. of1 Asembly for Graduates: at 1 p.m. in ly or fAll time, talent at phys. sci., lab. Music, 7:30 p.m. Nat. Science Bldg. Signs w ill direct work necessary, soursework and some Dept. of Speech, Michigan Repertory graduates to proper stations. lab exposure in phys., sci. areas. The Great Train Robbery