Page 6-Wednesday, August 9, 1978-The Michigan Daily 'SGT. PEPPER': A lousy By OWEN GLEIBERMAN George Burns doing a cigar-in-hand rendition of "Fixing A Hole"? A villian named Mean Mr. Mustard who hates love and loves money? Peter Frampton singing "The Long And Winding Road" while wandering down a long and win- ding road? Have the '70s come to this? But enough beating around the bush. Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, as Leonard Pinth-Garnell would so suc- cintly put it, is veddy, veddy, bad. Ted- dible. Producer Robert Stigwood's magnum opus is a wildly amateurish pastiche of Yellow Submarine, The Monkeys, and a thousand movie- musical anachronisms. Its one dubious attribute is the resplendently campy sensibility it shares with the AIP mon- ster pics and assorted Ann-Margaret flicks. On the other hand, at least the people responsible for those movies knew what potboilers they were. THE "PLOT" of Sgt. Pepper is ap- time is guaranteed for all propriately incoherent, but I gathered it involved a second-generation incar- nation of Sgt. Pepper's Band (the Bee Gees), who Billy Shears (Peter Fram- pton) leads on a crusade against the aforementioned Mr. Mustard, an up- dated Blue Meanie. He steals some in- struments, the concert halls close down for some reason, and Aerosmith plays "Come Together" and kills Fram- pton's girlfriend, Strawberry Fields (I guess it makes a bit more sense than calling her I Am the Walrus). Some of this takes place in Heartland (shades of Ulm- ults S .25 NOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:30 SUN. & HOLS.12 Noon til 1:30 P.M. Pepperland), a cheap-looking studio backlot that's supposed to be a happy little town. There are, of course, obviously awful moments, like the one where Billy Preston gets down and helps Frampton "get back" to the balcony where he on- ce belonged, but many will savor the more sublime idiocies: Barry Gibb, during a sorrowful rendition of "The Long And Winding Road," in- congruously brushing back his blow- dried mane like David Cassidy in his prime; Frampton, losing his girl and putting on his sad face like a kid who's just lost the big game. Frampton's aura is a bit pallid even for the composer of "I'm In You," and his unrelenting dorky grin looks to be the result of his having been heavily drugged. INCIDENTALLY, don't go to Sgt. Pepper hoping for even the most vague spiritual evocation of the' Beatles. Despite George Martin's Beatle- albumish arrangements, the Fab Four never even come to mind. Martin, the deservedly hailed "fifth Beatle" who produced the group's records from day one, should have his knuckles slapped for being involved. Robert Stigwood, who's very rapidly becoming the Mean Mr. Mustard of the "rock"-film craze, seems intent on proving that pop icons can be national folk heroes. Come on, Bob. Peter Frampton may have sold 10 million albums, but he's never going to be bigger than Jesus. Court fines Times as Farber serves term DAILY EARLY BIRD MATINEES - AdL DISCOUNT IS FOR SI MON. thru SAT. 10 A.M. ti I13b P.M. EVENING ADMISSIONS AFTER 5:00, $3.50 ADULTS Monday-Saturday 1:30-5:00, Admission $2.$0 Adult and Students Sundays and Holidays 1:30 to Close, $3.50 Adults, $2.50 Students Sunday-Thursday Evenings Student & Senior Citizen Discounts Children 12 And Under, Admissions $1.25 TICKET SALES 1. Tickets sold no sooner than 30 minutes prior to showtilne. 2. No tickets sold later than 15 minutes NEW YORK (AP)-A subpoena ordering New York times reporter Myron Farber to turn over his notes on a murder investigation appears to be "sweeping in its extreme," a high- ranking JusticesDepartment official said yesterday. Farber has been imprisoned in New Jersey since last week for failing to release his notes to the judge in the trial of a doctor accused of murdering three hospital patients. In addition, The Times is being fined $5,000 each day it refuses to hand over the requested material. "A CONTEMPT sanction should not be imposed prior to full appellate review ... but it is troublesome when you're in the middle of a trial," said Philip Heymann, assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Depar- tment's criminal division. Farber's reporting three years ago led to murder charges being filed against Dr. Mario Jascalevich in con- nection with patient deaths in 1965 and 1966 at Riverdell Hospital in Oradell, N.J. Jascalevich currently is standing trial, accused of killing three patients by administering curare, a powerful muscle-relaxing drug. HEYMANN SAID he was concerned that Jascalevich's lawyers, whose request for the materi'il sparked the judge's subpoena, have not yet been asked to show they need Farber's files to adequately defend their client. "The demand for thousands of pages is sweeping in its extreme, on the sur- face," Heymann said as a participant in a free-press panel discussion at the American Bar Association's national convention. Another panel participant, Times executive editor A. M. rosenthal,,called the Farber supoena "ludicrously wide," and indicated that The Times was prepared to continue refusing to honor it. "FIVE THOUSAND dollars is a lot of money," he said of the daily fine facing the newspaper. "We can afford it because wewill it to afford it." The panel's two-hour discussion, which played to a packed room of lawyers, centered on the Farber case and the Supreme Court's recent decision giving police the right to obtain warrants to search newsrooms. One panelist, CBS News president Richard Salant, said, "Lawyers and police don't belong in the newsroom and most reporters, most of the time, don't belong in jail." Fiarber The Census Bureau says the popu- lation of New York in 1703 totaled 20,665, of whom 51 per cent were under 16 years of age. 10:15 12:45 4:15 7:15 9:45 Drum corps marches on (Continued from Page 3) when you're gonna takea shower," said bugler Sandro Dicarlo. "Nothing else matters anymore." Some Lancers get nervous before a b,. it ptpam clim the "ronkies" don't have time to get nervous," added Dave Morgan, who plays in the brass section. The Lancers' visit was co-sponsored hv the Iniversity and McCormick En-