Friday, August 8, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Friday, August 8, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven happenings..0. (Continued from Page 6) Chances Are - Salem Witch- craft-see Friday music. Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys - country music. THEATRE Canterbury Tales - Michigan Rep '75-Mendelssohn, 3 and 8 p.m. EVENTS Bicycle Club-40-64 mile ride. Meet at the Diag at 9 a.m. Medieval Festival - Music School lawn. Starts at 10 a.m., ends at dusk. Poetry in the Park-Jim Zim- merman, R o y Freirich, Jim Robins. Poetry readings start at 2 p.m. at West Park Band Shell. Sunday AUGUST 10 MUSIC Mr. Flood's Party - Stoney- creek-75 cents. Chances Are - Salem Witch- craft-rockand roll, $1110 for students, $1.50 for non-students. The Depot - Baroque D u o; Nancy Groce and Helene Rot- tenberg-75 cents. Del Rio - Sunday afternoon jazz-no cover. Loma Linda-jazz. EVENTS Outing Club - Hiking and/or swimming-meets at N. entry, Rackham 1:30 p.m. Summer Commencement - Mary Ellen Avary, Harvard University, speaker-Hill Aud., 2 p.m. Medieval Festival - School of Msic lawn-10 a.m. until dark. Music School - Eva Jesseye, "Vision '75-A Saluate to Green Country" - historical musical drama, C a d y Music room, Stearns Bldg., 3:30 p.m. -Bicycle Club-40-60 mile ride -Diag at 9 a.m. monday AUGUST 11 CINEMA The Last Picture Show-(Ann Arbor Film Coop, Aud. A An- gell Hall, 7, 9 p.m.) MUSIC Mr. Flood's Party-Eric Glatz -no cover. Chances Are - Mojo Boogie Band-boogie music, $1.50. Golden Falcon - Ann Arbor Experimental Jazz-jazz, $1.00. Carrillon Recital - B u r t o n Tower, 7-8 p.m. 9tuesday AUGUST 12 CINEMA Reefer Madness and The Mys- tery of the Leaping Fish-(Ann Arbor Film Coop, And. A, 7, 8:45, 10:30). Two films about the "dangers" of marijuana and cocaine. MUSIC Mr. Flood's Party-Gemini- Folk, no cover. Chances Are - Lightening - rock and roll, $1.50. Golden Falcon--All Directions --azz, $1.00. UAC Free Concert-Pat Hodg- son-blues, People's Plaza, 7:30 p m. wednesday AUGUST 13 CINEMA King of Hearts-(Ann Arbor Film Coop, Aud. A Angell Hall, 7, 9 p.m.) r MUSIC Bimbo's - Grevious Angels- country western, no cover. Chances Are - Lightening- rock and roll, $1.00 for students, $1.50 for non-students. Mr. Flood's Party - Stoney- creek-75 cents. Blind Pig - Melodioso-Latin jazz, $1.00. EVENTS Feminist Specialist Meeting- Corntree Coop, 1910 Hill at 7:30 p.m. Occupational Education Administrators In-Service Work- shop: Extension Service-Web- er's Inn. The Economics of Ag- ing: Toward's 2001-Extension Service-Rackham, League. thursday AUGUST 14 CINEMA On the Waterfront-(Ann Ar- bor Film Coop, 7, 9 p.m. And. A Angell Hall) Marlon Brando triumphs over corruption. MUSIC Blind Pig-Rabbits-$1.00. Mr. Flood's Party - Mike Smith and his Country Volun- teers - country western, 75 cents. Chances Are - Mojo Boogie Band-boogie music, $1.50. Golden Falcon-Greek night. Bimbo's - Grevious Angels-- country western, no cover. Music School-Mozart's "Don Giovasni"-Mendelssohn, 8 p.m. EVENTS Open Hearth, Pendleton Arts Information Ctr. - Michael Sili- sky, m i m e. Pendleton Ctr., Union, 12:10 p.m. 'Lady Fingers': New cafe (Continued from Page 3) Although some items on the with bits and pieces of artwork, menu at Lady Fingers are a equipment, and supplies to show bit on the expensive side - a the old, thrifty do-it-yourself at- small glass of fresh lemonade titude of the Scot, who hates is SO cents - the atmosphere waste, is certainly conducive to a "I THINK Americans eat too much bread and filling things," she said. "Probably our food won't fill you up as much as McDonalds, but I'm primarily interested in flavor. At other places they give you a lot of food for your money, but then you can't eat it all." light lunch or vening snack for the weary student or business person. "Noon hour's pretty crazy," said waitress Chris McTiernan. "The rest of the day people just come in to drink coffee or write letters or something." "Sometimes people see the See LADY, Page 9 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Roger Daltrey is Tor ly A Columbia Pictures and Robert Stigwood Organisation Presentation[PGA' ' E776fl -700 SHOWTIMES: MONDAY-SATURDAY 7, 9; SUNDAY 5 7 9 The Daily Official Bulletin is an Invisible Empire, Lee. Rm. 1, MLB, official publication of the Uni- 8 pin. versity of Michigan. Notices General Notices: should be sent in TYPEwRIT- Entries in Marjorie Rapaport TEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, Award in Poetry Contest due in before 2 p.m. of the day pre- Hopwood Rm., 1006 Angell, by 4 p.m. ceding publication and by 2 Student Accounts: Att. to follow- p.m. Friday for saturday and ing rules passed by Regents at their Sunday. Items appear only once. Meeting Feb. 28, 1936: "Students Student organization notices are shall pay all accounts due the Uni- not accepted for publication. versity not later than the last day For more information, phone of classes of eachsemesterrorosum- 764-9270. mer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are subject to this regulation; however, stu- FRIDAY, AUGUST 8 dent loans not yet due are exempt. Any unpaid accounts at the close of business on the last day of class- Day Calendar: es will be reported to the Cashier wUOM: M. Feiheim, "The Tradi- of the University and tion of the New in America: The "(a) All academic credits will be Arts," 9:55 a.m. withheld, the grades for the semes- A-V Ctr.: French humor films, ter or summer session just com- Aud. 3, MLB, 7 p.m. pleted will not be released, and no UAC: Protuberance, free concert, transcript of credits will be issued. People's Plaza, 7:30 p.m. "(b) All students owing such ac- Michigan Rep. '75: Canterbury counts will not be allowed to reg- Tales, Mendelssohn, 8 p.m. ister in any subsequent semester or African Film Series: Faulkner's summer session until payment has Mississippi; The Ku Klux Klan: The been made." MICHIGAN PERTORY'75 AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN THIS WEEK CANTERBURY TALES August 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 Mendelssohn Box Office Hours 12:30 5:00 weekdays 12:30 - 5:00and 6:00 - 8:00 on performance days. PHONE 763-1085 PEFORMANCE TIME-8:00 AUGUST 9 MATINEE -- 3 :00 Tickets also available at Hudsons Recommended for Mature Audiences 0I e HOWARD HAWKS' NIGHT 1936 COME AND GET IT (at 7:30) Co-directed with William Wyler, this film is an adaptation of Edna Fer- ber's best-selling novel about a Wisconsin lumber dynasty. A ruthless "Timber Wolf" craves the romance he threw aside in his youth and faces his own son as a rival. TIGER SHARK 1932 E. G. Robinson plays a tuna fisherman who becomes an ahab after a shark severs his arm. Sharp acting. A fishy Menage A Trois and high sea adventure are featured in this JAWS of 1932. SAT: Bogart and Hepburn in THE AFRICAN QUEEN Cinema Guild TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH AUD. 7:30 & 9:30 ADM. ONLY $1