Poge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, July 10, 1976 Page Twa THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, July 10, 1976 Hapenings... $2 bills a bust Saturday CINEMA Firesign Funnies - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7:30 & 9:30) - A collection of filmed Fire- sign Theatre skits. The products of the reigning geniuses of aural comedy, who proved a lot less funny visually in the one seg- ment of this group I've seen, Martian Space Party. I think it was a little disissusioning to find that the complex and enveloping universes of the group's recordings were really just the product of four guys standing around making weird noises. If you cherish the quali- ty of imagination, perhaps you'd best avoid this presentation al- together. Dr. Strangelove - (Ann Ar- bor Film Co-op, MLB 3, 7:15 & 9) - The recent chic of detente does nothing to dim and, in fact, only illuminates the timeliness and brilliance of Kubrick's ultimate Bomb para- noia study. Obviously more than a period piece, his hilarious and terrifying film will be played and replayed so long as mass hysteria and brute force are employed as substitutes for hu- man intelligence and human love. A work of genius. ** Sunday CINEMA Trouble in Paradise-(Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 8 only) - 1930's comedy of manners, di- rected by Ernst Lubitsch. Ad- mission is free. Monday CINEMA Nothing scheduled. Tuesday CINEMA Images - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9) - A prime example of how Rob- ert Altman in his early direc- torial career ripped off left and right from other filmmakers and still received perpetual credit for being daring and orig- inal. This surrealistic study of a young woman's psychological disintegration carps liberally from Polanski's Repulsion and Fellini's Juliet of the Spirits, but still comes across as a rea- sonably absorbing, frightening film - which is hardly surpris- ing, considering its exceptional, (if uncredited) sources. Much of the credit for Images' effec- tiveness should go to star Su- sanna York, whose portrayal of the tormented protagonist con- tains far more innovation and insight than anything dreamed of by her golden-boy director. "% Wednesday CINEMA The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie - (Ann Arbor Film Co-np, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9) - Lois Bunuel's intricate, often hysterically comic fantasy of a group of French aristocrats who are forever sitting down to din- ner and fovever being inter- rupted by various wildly "bizarre but determinedly deadpan oc- curences. The film is an im- mense dream-within a dream- within a dream absurdity that lacks the bite of some of Bunuel's earlier savages on the privileged, but is at the same time considerably funnier. **** Thursday CINEMA Five Easy Pieces- (Ann Ar- bor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 10:30)-I don't think films can tackle a more important theme than the difficult, often implacable gulf separating the intellectual and the physical in human relations. One wants to root so hard for the makers of Five Easy Pieces for their sim- ple willingness to grapple with the subject, but the sad fact remains that their finished pro- duct fails dismally to provide even an initial insight to the dilemma, much less offer a solution. As one watches the oil field labors of brainy, self- spurned underachiever Robert Dupea, one can't help reacting to him more as a self-indulgent brat than an alienated aesthete, and it thus becomes rather dif- dicult to sympathize with his admittedly universal hangup. Much of the problem lies in Jack Nicholson's performance, which is so unrelentingly nas- ty that after a while you just want to punch him in the nose. Psych-Out-(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 8:45 only)- A quite dreadful little film about life among the hippies, Holly- wood style. The only interesting item about this low - budget orphan is that .it was the last salad film made by Jack Nich- olson before his leap to fame a la Easy Rider, and makes you realize how much he must ap- preciate being a full-fledged star. * Queen Elizabeth II, the great- great-great-great granddaugh- ter of King George III, is also a second cousin seven times removed of George Washing- ton. Battles between guards and strikers resulted in 10 deaths at the Carnegie steel mill at Homestead, Pa., in 1892. It was Chief Tecumseh who urged the Creek Indians to fight the whites in Louisiana in 1812. A Nike missile explosion May 22, 1958, at Leonardo, N.J., killed 10. WASHINGTON (AP)-There's a lot of buck-passing when it comes to the $2 bill. Despite government predictions that "the two" would be warmly re- ceived by the public as a par- tial substitute for the $1 bill, it so far has been a flop - hoarded but not spent. More than 210 million twos have been delivered by the gov- ernment to banks, but relative- ly few have found their way into general circulation, officials say. MILLIONS of dollars worth apparently are being hoarded as collectors' items, especially those issued April 13, the first day. Although officials aren't giv- ing up on the $2 bill yet, there's a lot of finger-pointing on who's to blame for the poor recep- Clarence Selin, the Treasury Department's project director for the $2 bill, said, "We have no problem in saying the bills are being accepted by people. They are not being distributed by banks and retailers as fast as we would like to see it done" BUT AN OFFICIAL of the Riggs National Bank, the larg- est in the nation's capital, said yesterday that most customers won't accept two. He called on the government to do something to promote them. "When our tellers give them out, most people return the twos and ask for two ones," said assistant Riggs vice presi- dent Tom Brooks. "People don't want twos be- cause they are afraid they will get them mixed up with ones,' said a teller at Madison Na- tional Bank here. Television viewing tonight 6:00 2 4 9 11 13 NEWS 50 STAR TREK 56 UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRtS 62 GINO WASHINGTON 6:30 2 11 CBS NEWS 4 NBC NEWS 7 ABC NEWS 9 POLICE SURGEON 20 MOVIE "The Evil Eye" 30 WALL STREET WEEK 7:00 2 TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES 4 PROFILES IN BLACK 7 DETROIT 9 SPACE: 1999 56 EVENING AT POPS 7:30 2 $25,000 PYRAMID 4 DAVID NIVEN'S WORLD 7 MICHIGAN OUTDOORS 8:00 2 11 JEFFERSONS 4 13 EMERGENCY! 7 MOVIE "Friendly Persuasion" 9 THIS IS THE LAW 50 MOVIE "Friendly Persuasion" 9 THIS IS THE LAW 50 MOVIE "Dallas." 56 TRIBUTE TO JOHANN STRAUSS 8:30 2 11 DOC. 9 FAWLTY TOWERS 20 DANIEL BOONE 9:00 2 11 MARY TYLER MOOBE 4 13 MOVIE " The Lives of Jenny Dolan" 9 DAVID COPPERFIELD 9:30 2 11 BOB NEWHART 20 TEMPLE BAPTIST CHURCH 10:00 2 11 MISS UNIVERSE PAGEANT 7 BERT D'ANGELO 9 KOPYCATS 20 LESSON 50 LOU GORDON 62 MOVIE "The Night Has Eyes" 16:20 30 DANCE FOR CAMERA 10:30 20 CHARISMA 10:35 56 MOVIE "Major Barbara" 11:00 4 7 13 NEWS CBC NEWS 2S WARREN ROBERTS 11:15 7 ABC NEWS 9 NIGHTBEAT 11:3' 4 MOVIE eThe Key" 7 MOVIE "Chuka" 13 MARY HARTMAN, MARY HARTMAN A meeting between Martha's real and adopted fathers takes place; everything goe wrong in the Hartman household while the TV cameras are there filming the "Typical Consumer House- wife. 50 TEAM TENNIS 11:500 MOVIE "The Comancheros" 12:00 2 11 NEWS 12:30 2 MOVIE "Willard" 1 MOVIE "Flight to Tangier" 1:30 7 MOVIE "Mozambique" THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVI, No. 43-S Saturday, July 10, 1976 is edited end managed by students at the University of Miehigan News phone 784-058?.. Second clss postage paidn t Ann Arbor. Michigan 48109. Published d a i l y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters) ; $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day t hrou g h Saturday morning. Subsceription eaten: $601 5in Ann Arbor: $7.11 by mailnutside Ann Arbor. the ann arbor film cooperative TONIGHT IN BEAUTIFULLY AIR-CONDITIONED MLB 3 PHILLIPPE de BROCA'S KING OF HEARTS Starring Alan Bates and Genevieve Buold 7:00 AND 9:00 SUNDAY & MONDAY "All You Can Eat" FRIED CHICKEN includes unlimited trips to our famous salad bar, choice of potato or vegetable and loaves of hot home baked bread. ADULTS .. .3.44 CHILDREN (under 121. . . . $1.95 Served Sunday Noon 'Til 8 P.M.-Monday 5 P.M.-11 P.M. Wed Bank at the Holiday Inn West fes 2900 JACKSON RD. 6544 AUGUST GRADS! COMMENCEMENT WILL BE HELD ON AUG. 22, 1976. ALL CAP & GOWN ORDERS MUST BE PLACED BY JULY 23. LATE ORDERS ARE SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY & $2 LATE FEE. RENTAL RENTAL DEPOSIT TOTAL Bachelor $6.50 - 2.00 $8.50 Master $7.25 5.25 2.00 $14.50 Doctor $7.50 5.50 2.00 $15.25 All Orders Must Be Prepaid IN FULL When Placed Mon.-Fri. 9:30-5:30; Sot. 12-5; Closed Sundav