100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

November 21, 1986 - Image 13

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1986-11-21
Note:
This is a tabloid page

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

0

I lmw

wr

- mr

lw

,w

E A

1w

mr

Th,

What's happening
in Ann Arbor this weekend

FRIDAY

CAMPUS CINEMA
THE DESK SET (Walter Lang,
1957), Alt Act, DBL/7:05 p.m., Nat
Sci.
It's the Battle of the Sexes, this
time with Hepburn as a librarian and
Tracy as a forward-thinking computer
scientist.
WOMAN OF THE YEAR (G.
Stevens, 1942), Alt Act, DBL/9:00
p.m., Nat Sci.
In this one, Hepburn's a political
columnist and Tracy's a sportswriter.
Oh no, they get married...
ZABRIESKIE POINT (M.
Antonioni, 1969), AAFC, 7:00
p.m., MLB 3.
A comment on youth in the
Sixties that moves from the student
revolt in California to Death Valley.
RETURN OF THE SE -
CAUCUS SEVEN (John Sayles,
1980), AAFC, DBL/9:10 p.m.,
MLB 3.
Seven former Sixties activists
meet at a weekend reunion. Yes, this
one preceededThe Big Chill.
CAREFUL HE MIGHT HEAR
YOU (Carl Schultz, 1984), MED,
7:00 & 9:15 p.m., MLB 4.
Highly claimed Australlian film
about a young boy caught in a
custody battle between his two
aunts.
TWO ENGLISH GIRLS (F.
Truffaut, 1971), CG, 6:45 & 9:15
p.m., Aud A.
A young Frenchman sets his
sights on two sisters. In a newly
restored 35mm print that adds twenty
minutes of original footage.
PERFORMANCES
ISOTORIIA S METRAN-
PAZHEM - Center for European
and Eastern European Studies, 8
p.m., Residential College Auditor-
ium, (747-4364).
The Alexander Vampilov one-act
comedy, set in a contemporary hotel
in Siberia, is performed in Russian
by University students and directed
by Janet Shier an4 Bin Rifkin. An
English summary will be available.
T HE TEMPTATIONS AND
THE FOUR TOPS - Prism
Productions, 7:30 & 10:30 p.m.,
Michigan Theater (668-8397).
Two of Motown's most popular

groups will be on stage together.
WOMEN'S GLEE CLUB
ANNUAL FALL CONCERT
- University Women's Glee Club,
8 p.m., Rackham Auditorium (665-
7408).
Directed by Rosalie Edwards, the
Women's Glee Club will perform a
wide variety of music including
Mozart, Paul Dunbar, some Irish
tunes, and a medley of favorites from
the fifties. Also featured will be The
Harmonettes, a vocal group with
choreographed pieces, and The
Madrigals, an acapella choir. The
Carl Alexius Trio will also be at
tonight's performance.
TOCCATAS OF JOHANN
SEBASTIAN BACH - Kerry-
town Concert House, 8 p.m., 415
North Forth Avenue (769-2999).
Recent University Music School
graduate Bradley Brookshire will
perform works by Bach for the
harpsichord.
CLEO LAINE AND JOHN
D A N K W O R T H - Office of
Major Events, 8 p.m., Hill
Auditorium (763-TKTS).
Singer-actress Cleo Laine,
accompanied by the jazz quartet led
by saxophonist John Dankworth,
will perform blues, popular music,
original material and more.
THE MAGIC FLUTE - Uni-
versityMOpera Theater, 8 p.m.,
Power Center (764-0450).
Jay Lesenger will direct University
opera students in this popular love
story/comedy opera by Mozart.
THE FANTASTICKS - UAC
Soph Show, 8 p.m., Mendelssohn
Theater (763-1107).
Ty Hreben will direct University
students will present this extremely
popular musical about two rebellious
lovers. The Fantasticks is longest
running musical in Broadway
history. The score is by Harvey
Schmidt and Tom Jones. "Try to
Remember" the last time you had so
much fun.
BARS & CLUBS
THE ARK (761-1451) - RFD
Boys, bluegrass.
BIRD OF PARADISE (662-
8310) - Bill Heid Trio with Betty
Joplin, jazz.
THE BLIND PIG (996-8555) -
Sun Messengers, blues and rock.
THE EARLE (994-0211) - Rick
Burgess Trio, jazz.
NECTARINE BALLROOM
(994-5436) - Top-40 Dance Party,

DJ the Wizard.
RICK'S AMERICAN CAFE
(996-2747) - Koko Taylor, blues.
U-CLUB (763-2236) - New
Music Dance Party, DJ Tom
Simonian.
SPEAKERS
DOUGLASS SCOTT - "His-
tory of Graphic Design 1450-1950,
Part III," 9:30 a.m., Room 2107-
08, Art and Architecture Building.
DIOGENES BALLASTER
AND JOSE MELENDEZ
CONTRERAS - "Perspectives
on Puerto Rican Art," Puerto Rican
Association, 7:30 p.m., West
Conference Room, Rackham.
TOBY HANNA-DAVIES -
"U.S. Presence in Micronesia:
Typical Exploitation of the Third
World," Guild House Noon Forum,
noon, Guild House, 802 Monroe.
MEETINGS
ACADEMIC YEAR IN
SPAIN INFORMAL MEET -
ING - Center for Western Euro-
pean Studies, 5:30 p.m., Room 229,
Angell Hall.
FURTHERMORE
ARMENIAN DANCE - Ar-
menian Students Cultural
Association, 8 p.m., St. Nicholas
Greek Orthodox Church, 414 North
Main Street (747-6442).
Hachig Kazarian and his ensemble
will perform Armenian and American
music.
BLOOD PRESSURE
SCREENING - School of
Nursing & Nursing Council, 8:30
a.m.-4:30 p.m., Fishbowl.
WOMEN'S TEA - Lesbian Net -
work and Women's Crisis Center,
5:30-7 p.m., 306 N. Division.
Informal feminist fun and social
support.

Japaneese printmaker of the late
1700's. Japaneese with subtitles.
WITNESS FOR THE PRO-
SECUTION (Billy Wilder, 1957),
Alt Act, DBL/7:00 p.m., Nat Sci.
Charles Laughton, Marlene
Dietrich, and Tyrone Power are
caught up in a sensational London
trial with a triple suprise ending.
Based on a story by Agatha Christie.
TREASURE OF THE SI-
ERRA MADRE (John Huston,
1948), Alt Act, DBL/9:00 p.m., Nat
Sci.
The corrupting power of greed is
shown through three men who
undergo unpleasant personality
changes while searching for gold in
the mountains of Mexico. Humphrey
Bogart.
DIM SUM: A LITTLE BIT
OF HEART (Wayne Wong,
1985), AAFC, 7:15 & 9:00 p.m.,
MLB 3.
The director of Chan Is Missing
uses almost documentary-like real-
ism to tell the simple tale of a
Chineese-American woman deter-
mined to learn English.
PERFORMANCES
ISOTORIIA S METRAN-
PAZHEM - Center for Russian
and Eastern European Studies, 8
p.m., Residential College
Auditorium (747-4364).
See Friday for more details.
THE MAGIC FLUTE -
University Opera Theater, 8-p.m.
Power Center (764-0450).
See Friday for more details.
THE FANTASTICKS - UAC
Soph Show, 8 p.m., Mendelssohn
Theater (763-1107).
See Friday for more details.
BARS & CLUBS
THE ARK (761-1451) - Johnny
Griffin Quartet, jazz.
BIRD OF PARADISE (662-
8310) - Bill Heid Trio with Betty
Joplin, jazz.
THE BLIND PIG (996-8555) -
Steve Nardella's Rock 'n' Roll Trio,
rock 'n' roll.
THE EARLE (994-0211) - Rick
Burgess Trio, jazz.
MAINSTREET COMEDY
SHOWCASE (996-9080) -
Taylor Mason.
NECTARINE BALLROOM
(994-5436) - New Music Dance
Party, DJ Roger LeLievre.
RICK'S AMERICAN CAFE
(996-2747) -Duke Tomatoe Band,
blues & rock.
U-CLUB (763-2236) - Surreal
Estate, progressive rock & new
wave.
FURTH ERMORE
PUERTO RICAN CULTUR -
AL NIGHT - Puerto Rican
Association, 7 p.m., Trotter House,
1443 Washtenaw Avenue (995-
9529).
This celebration of Michigan
Puerto Rican Week will include
'folkloric song presentation by
Miguel Rodriguez and the Puerto
Rican Association Musical Group, a
poetry lecture by Dr. David Labiosa
on black Puerto Rican poetry, and a
poetry reading by Antonia Sota.
Performances will be followed by a
typical Puerto Rican dinner.
ORNAMENTS FOR THE
HOLIDAYS POTTERY

WORKSHOP - Ann Arbor
YMCA, 1-4 p.m., 350 South Fifth
Avenue (663-0536).
Anat Shiftan will instruct this
workshop which focuses on creating
clay ornaments and gifts for the
holidav season.
SUNDAY
CAMPUS CINEMA
THE JAZZ SINGER (Alan
Rosland, 1927), Hill St., 8:00 p.m.,
Hill St.
The original (with Al Jolson, not
Neil Diamond) about a Jewish singer
who chooses a life in show biz over
the life of a cantor. The first major
release made with sound.
PERFORMANCES
THE MAGIC FLUTE - Uni-
versity Opera Theater, 2 p.m., Power
Center (764-0450).
See Friday for more details.
BARS & CLUBS
THE ARK (761-1451) - Shawn
Phillips, folk-rock.
BIRD OF PARADISE (662-
8310) - Larry Fuller Trio, Jazz.
MAINSTREET COMEDY
SHOWCASE (996-9080) - Open
Mike Night.
NECTARINE BALLROOM
(994-5436) - Megafunk Dance
Party, DJ the Wizard.
FURTH ERMORE
ISRAELI DANCING - Hillel,
7:30-10 p.m., Hillel, 1429 Hill
Street (663-3336).
Estee Lipenholtz will lead an hour
of instruction followed by request
dancing. All levels are welcomed.
THE BULLPEN - WJJX Radio,
650 AM, 6:30 p.m.
A show for sports lovers.
FIRST RUN
FILMS
CHILDREN OF
A LESSER GOD
William Hurt is a teacher for the
deaf who falls in love with a
hearing-impaired woman in this
technically perfect adaptation of the
Broadway play. At the Movies At
Briarwood.
THE COLOR OF MONEY
Twenty years later, Paul newman
returns as the Hustler, with a cynical
outlook and a new protoge (Tom
Cruise). Martin Scorsese directed
this pool hall drama. At the Campus
Theater.
CROCODILE DUNDEE
An Australlian adventurer tries to
make on the mean streets of New
York, attracting the interest of a
smart, independant female who
is-what else?- a journalist. At the
Movies At Briarwood.

. w

Dining and Drink

FINE DINING
. 3 (314 S. Fourth A ve.
Ann Arbor's favorite downtown haunt.
Specializing in B-B-Q baby back ribs,
large selection of chicken entrees, dinner
salads, hot and cold sandwiches, bur-
gers, beer, wine and cocktails. Open I1
a.m.-I 1 p.m. Mon.-Thurs., bar 'til mid-
night. Fri. and Sat. II a.m.-midnight,
bar 'til I a.m.; 4-10 p.m. Sunday, bar
'tif 11 p.m.
Real Seafood Co.
(341 S. Main St.; 769-5960)
Excellent fresh seafood dishes served in
a casual accommodating setting. Raw
bar and fresh catch featured daily along
with beer, wine and cocktails. Open
11:30 a.m.-11 p.m. Mon.-Thurs., bar
'til midnight; Fri. and Sat. 11:30 a.m.-
midnight, bar 'til- 1 a.m.; 4-10 p.m.
Sun., bar 'til 11 p.m.
METZGER'S BLACK
FOREST INN
(203 E. Washington at 4thAve.;
668-8987)
Ann Arbor's oldest restaurant. Serves
lunch and dinner daily except Monday.
Prime Rib-Prime Steaks-Seafood-
German Cuisine. Full service bar and a
delightful Bavarian atmosphere. Dinners
from $5.95 to $8.75. We will validate
city parking lot tickets for car port
adiacent.

ASHLEY'S

SATURDAY
CAMPUS CINEMA
THE FOUNTAINHEAD (King
Vidor, 1949), Hill St., 7:00 & 9:00
p.m., Hill St.
Based on Ayn Rand's conservative
mainfesto. An avant-garde architect
plots to destroy his own building
when it fails to live up to his
relentless perfectionism.
RUTHLESS PEOPLE (David &
Jerry Zucker, Jim Abrahams, 1986),
MED, 7:30 & 9:15 p.m., MLB 4.
Bette Midler is kidnapped, but
husband Danny De Vito doesn't want
her back.
RIGHT OUT OF HISTORY,
THE MAKING OF JUDY
CHICAGO'S A DINNER
PARTY (J. Demetrakas, 1980) and
GEORGIA O'KEEFE (Perry
Miller Adato, 1977), C2, DBL/ 7:00
p.m., Aud A.
A pair of documentaries con-
cerning two important and fas-
cinating women artists.
UTAMARO AND HIS FIVE
WOMEN (Kenji Mizoguchi), C2,
DBL/9:25 p.m., Aud A.
A sweeping epic about the great

0

CASUAL DINING

(Y)
d-
1.0
00
(N
0
z
WJ
Y.

Casual Dining
In the Heart ofthe U-M Campus.
FEATURING:
" charbroiled steaks
" seafood
" Mexican entrees
. / lb. Gourmet hamburger
* Largest Beer Selection Uptown
Ashley's, 338 S. State, Ann Arbor 996-9191
"BEST NEW RESTAURANT..."
-1986 Ann Arbor News Restaurant Poll
Located in the new
Holiday Inn West
2900 JACKSON RD.
665-Q444
Reservations Suggested
IV
" t 4

I

AFTERNOON DELIGHT PARTHENON
One of Ann Arbor's most popular break- RESTAURANT
fast spots featuring freshly baked muf- FINE GREEK FOOD D IN IN G
fins, Belgian waffles, Eggs Benedict, * Gyros & Shish-kabob sandwiches
blintzes and omelettes. Lunch and din- * Mousaka - Pastistsio - Dolmades
ner specialties include homemade soup, " Spinach pie - Gyros plate A N D
huge sandwiches, salads, stuffed baked " Liquor, Beer Wine
potatoes, lasagna, quiches and crepes. " Special Cocktail Menu
Also frozen yogurt shakes, sundaes and COMPLETE CARRY OUT SERVICE
ice cream specialties. Beer and wine.2DMa iIAG
251 E. Liberty, Ann Arbor, MI 665-7153 H s M aTh at p.mrty, A am p.m.
firs: M-F 8-8, Sat. 8-5. Open Sunday. Sun 12 noon-10 p.m.

South of the Border
on South Main Street.
Experience Brandy's -
Featuring Authentic Mexican
Specialties & American Favorites.
GREAT FOOD AT
AFFORDABLE PRICES.
Restaurant & Bar
326Snuh i, nSt. - Ann Arhr. 66-555

Free Delivery
(Ltmited Area)
7614611
BROADWAY FRIED
CHICKEN & BARBEQUE
All Dinners $1.00 Off
All Sandwiches .50 Off
With This Ad
1151 Broadway

MANIKAS
RESTAURANT
307S. Main St. - 663-7449

Serving breakfast, lunch and dinner.
Open daily 7:00a.m. to 9:00 p.m.; Sun-
day 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Beer, wine,
and liquor. Specials every day.

- a

UA

r BP!WS~u"
PZA

The Oldest Pizzeria
in Ann Arbor, with Delicious
Italian Dinners & Salads.
"VOTED BEST PIZZA IN
ANN ARBOR BY
THE MICHIGANDAILY"
Restaurant & Bar
r' -I:l:. A.L %

995-0232
700 Packard
UNDER NEW
OWNERSHIP

LEFKOFSKY'S DELI
(A Premier Deli Since 1896)
" Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner
* Pizza, Salad Bar, Homemade Soups
* Deli Deluxe & Submarine
Sandwiches
" Free Delivery
" Complete Catering Available
(Party Trays Our Specialty)
211 S. State. Ann Arbor, MI - 662-9611

1100 E. Catherine at Glen - 668-9538
Open 6 a.m.- 4 p.m. weekdays, 6 a.m.-3
p.m. Sat., 7 a.m.-2 p.m. Sun. Serving
breakfast all day, lunch, and dinner.
Featuring homemade bread and raisin
toast. Favorites for over 30 years.

I
5

Pizza - Pizza
Monday - Tuesday
Buy one pizza - get
the second pizza FREE

P F - WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 21, 1986

t'-~'

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan