Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 18, 1976 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 18, 1976 "..I - , THE ENTERTAINMENT STARTS TONIGHT I SHOWS AT 7:00 & 9:00 C > ode u -aJ'. (nOtN . -45 The greatest entertainment since "That's Entertainment!" i~ ~r STARTS TONIGHT P% a I A I COMPLETE SHOWING AT 7:00 OPEN 6:45 EAST MEETS WEST In One of the Most Bizarre Spectacles Ever Filmed The Fastest Gun In The West Joins With The Most Brutal Hands In " The Et O uIh M NiM PRENSENIS FRED ASTAIRE GENE KELLY I THAT'S ENTERTAINMENT, PART 2 Nar toot Women i, IINNAS LRSNE -Addiional ,\Iu N Arranged&ConduedBy NNL.SON RI 11 New m . In- , liN ( ,NEI KI Y h oducrdBy SAIL.CIA'IiNandDANILI. 511AICK G GENERAL AUDIENCES 'inIH' IwIN INN MM a s .. ooo United Artists Happenings Continued from Page b) mately successful struggle for independence against French rule. One - sided but brilliant cinema."**** Take a Letter, Darling - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7:30 & 9:35) - Comedy involv- ing the reversal of male-fe- male job roles, with Rosalind Russell and Fred MacMurray. MUSIC Blind Pig - Larry Mander- ville, Jazz, $1.00. Mr. Flood's Party - Country Folk, Country, $1.50. Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys, bluegrass, $1.00 if you purchase dinner, $1.50 otherwise. Second Chance - Chopper, Rock, $2.00 students, $2.50 non- students Saturday JUNE 19 CINEMA Giant - (Cinema Guild, Arch Aud., 8 only) - George Stevens' sprawling, generation- spanning Texas saga is prob- ably the most epic-scale soap opera ever concocted, and is redeemed solely by James Dean's last performance. Giant is one of the best examples of the increasing maturity of films and their audiences: Twenty years ago, the picture was hailed as moviemaking su- preme, but is generally recog- nized today as the piece of lard is always was. But then there is Dean - his amazing evolu- tion in Giant from poor cow- hand to tyrannical oil baron dis- pelled fr all time the notion that'his*range was limited to alienated teenager parts. But he's only in about a third or so of the film; the anguished viewer is forced to sit through the endless boring domesticities of cattleman Rock Hudson and Maryland belle Liz Taylor, pa- tiently waiting for those few magic scenes when Dean's gen- ius brings the whole dreary mess to life. In a negative sense, Giant couldn't be a more appropriate tribute to a single actor's ability, and should be seen for that reason alone - but it will be a maddening or- deal for the viewer. *** Lucia - (Cinema II, Ang. And. A, 7:30 & 10:10 - A 1972 Mexican film which depicts, through three dramatic epi- sodes, Cuba's evolution from Colonialism to the present day. MUSIC Blind Pig - Larry Mander- ville, Jazz, $1.00. Mr. Flood's Party - Country Folk, Country, $1.50. Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys, Bluegrass, $1.00 if you pur- chase dinner, $1.50 otherwise. Second Chance - Chopper, Rock, $2.00 students, $2.50 non- students. Sunday JUNE 20 CINEMA Sherlock, Jr. - (Cinema See HAPPENINGS, Page 7 STUDENT BIKE SHOP 6Q7 S. FOREST 662-6986 ONE DAY REPAIR SERVICE ON ANY BICYCLE L jj |E | - A WALTER MIRISCH PRODUCTION GUEST STARS CHARLTON HESTON HENRY FONDA JAMES COBURN -'GLENN FORD'- HAL HOLBROOK - TOSHIRO MIFUNE'- ROBERT MITCHUM -'CLIFF ROBERTSON ROBERT WAGNER aSL 0STARRING ROBERTWEBBER- EDNELSON JAMESSHIGETA CHRISTINAKOKUBOandEDWARDALBERT WRIT TEvNBY -C--DRETDBy POUCDB DONALD S. SANFORD' -JOHN WILLIAMS' JACK SMIGHT 'WALTER MIRISCH wiNcuco O5ERN5L PItANUR STARTS TONIGHT -THRILLING WW 11 ACTION THAT WILL SHAKE YOU UP! SHOWS TONIGHT AT 7:00 and 9:15 OPEN AT 6:45 I