The-
Representation," and Diane
Kirkpatrick's "Paths of Abstraction
in Twentieth-Century Art."
CANTERBURY HOUSE MU-
SIC NIGHT-Canterbury House,
10 p.m.-2 a.m., 218 North Division
(665-0606).
Folksinger Hugh McGuenness
along with others will perform
traditional folk and modem political
songs.
SATURDAY
What's happening
in Ann Arbor this weekend
CAMPUS CINEMA
FRIDAY
CAMPUS CINEMA
SUSPICION (Alfred Hitchcock,
1941), CG, DBL/7:00 p.m., Aud A.
Cary Grant marries Joan
Fontaine, butrdoes he love her or the
large inheritance he may get should
she suffer an untimely demise?
NOTORIOUS (Alfred Hitchcock,
1946), CG, DBL,9:00 p.m., Aud A.
Ingrid Bergman and Cary Grant
must outwit Nazi Claude Rains.
JOURNEYS FROM BERLIN
(Y. Rainer, 1980), AAFC, DBL/
7:00 p.m., MLB/4.
The Baader-Meinhof group in West
Germany is used to examine the
effects of violence on individuals and
society.
A JOKE OF DESTINY (Lina
Wertmuller, 1984), AAFC, DBL/
9:30 p.m., MLB 4.
Black comedy.
STOP MAKING SENSE (John-
athan Demme, 1984), MTF, 7:00,
9:30, & 12:00 p.m., Mich.
Dave Byrne and Talking Heads
burn down the house in one of the
best concert films ever made.
TURTLE DIARY (John Irvin,
1986), Alt Act, 7:15 & 9:00 p.m.,
Nat Sci.
Two lonely people meet at the
city aquarium and devise a plan to set
the giant sea turtles free.
PERFORMANCES
JAMES DAPOGNY'S CHI-
CAGOANS JAZZ TRIO -
Merrill Lynch Winterfare '87, 7-9
p.m., Kerrytown Concert House,
415 Fourth Ave (769-2999).
The Grammy-nominated band will
bring their own style to the
performances of artists such as Duke
Ellington, Fats Waller, and Benny
Goodman.
RICHARD II - University
Drama Department, 8 p.m., Men-
delssohn Theater (764-0450).
John Russell Brown, University
drama professor and associate director
of the National Theater of Great
Britian will direct the theater in a
workshop production of the
Shakespearean play.
PEOPLE DANCING - Per-
formance Network, 8 p.m., 408
West Washington (663-0681).
This local modem dance troupe,
choreographed by Whitley Setrakian,
is known for its offbeat per-
formances.
BARS & CLUBS
THE ARK (761-1451) - Golden
Ring, solo folk performers en-
semble.
BIRD OF PARADISE (662-
8310) - Jeff Kressler Trio with
Patti Richards, jazz.
THE BLIND PIG (996-8555) -
Map of the World, rock 'n' roll.
THE EARLE (994-0211) - Rick
Burgess Trio, jazz.
MAINSTREET COMEDY
SHOWCASE (996-9080) - Scott
LaRose.
NECTARINE BALLROOM
(994-5436) - Top 40 Dance Party,
DJ the Wizard.
RICK'S AMERICAN CAFE
(996-2747) - (Bop) Harvey, reggae.
SPEAKERS
ROBERT PORT - "Speech Re-
cognition as a Linguistic Problem,"
Program in Linguistics Distinguised
Lecturer Series, noon, 3050 Frieze
Bldg.
DAVID MARPLES - "Col-
lectivizationmin the Western Ukraine
after World War II," Ukrainian
Students Association, 4 p.m., Lane
Hall Commons, 204 South State.
DAVID MARPLES - "The
Economic Effects of Chernobyl,"
Ukrainian Students Association, 8
p.m., Room 200, Lane Hall.
JIM LOUDON - "A Year after
Challenger: Where Do We From
Here?," Exhibit Museum of Natural
History/ University Aerospace
Engineering Department, 7:30 p.m.,
Auditorium 3, MLB.
FURTHERMORE
"ARTICULATING THE AB-
STRACT" CONFERENCE -
Institute of the Humanities, 7 p.m.,
Rackham Amphitheatre (764-6330).
The weekend conference will begin
with opening remarks by deans Paul
Steiner and John D'Arms and will
continue with W.J.T. Mitchell's
"Space, Ideology, and Literary
MONTY PYTHON AND THE
HOLY GRAIL (Terry Jones &
Terry Gilliam, 1975), Alt Act, 7:00,
8:40 & 10:20 p.m., MLB 3.
The funniest movie ever made,
bar none. King Arthur and his
knights search desperately for the
Holy Grail.
HAROLD AND MAUDE (Hal
Ashby, 1971), Hill St., 7:00, 9:00,
& 12:00 p.m., Hill St.
A teenager obssessed with death
(Bud Cort) and a geriatric full of life
(Ruth Gordon) act out a strange love
affair in this cult classic. Despite an
uplifting theme, this film is tainted
with an aura of melancholia.
BODY DOUBLE (Brian dePalma,
1984), Med, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m.,
MLB 4.
dePalma once again rapes
Hitchcock in this occassionally
interesting but mostly muddled film
about a voyeur who witnesses a
murder.
REPULSION (Roman Polanski,
1965), C2, DBL/7:00 p.m., Nat Sci.
Catherine Denueve plays a wo-
man repulsed by men and sex. When
left alone for the weekend, her mind
slowly unravels to the point of
murder.
THE TENANT (Roman Polanski,
1976), C2, DBL/9:00 p.m., Nat Sci.
Polanski directs himself in the
tale of a file clerk who begins to
suspect that his fellow tenants are
trying to drive him to suicide.
THE LAST WAVE (Peter Weir,
1978), AAFC, DBL/7:00 p.m., Aud
A.
An apocalyptic thriller about a
lawyer in Australia (Richard
Chamberlain) who begins to suspect
that an ancient Aboriginal prophecy
may be coming true.
THE CARS THAT ATE
PARIS (Peter Weir, 1976), AAFC,
DBL/9:00 p.m., Aud A.
Cars suddenly come to life and
start to... well... eat Paris.
PERFORMANCES
CLARK COOLIDGE AND
CLAYTON ESHLEMAN -
Border's Book Shop Poets and
Authors in Performance, 8 p.m.,
Kerrytown Concert House, 415
Fourth Ave. (769-2999).
Clark Coolidge, author of 19
collections of poetry, including The
Crystal Text and Solution Passage,
will join Clayton Eshelman, editor
of Sulfur magazine and author of
over 40 books, in a reading of their
works.
PETER NERO - University
Musical Society, 8 p.m., Hill
Auditorium (764-2538).
Peter Nero, celebrating his 25th
year as a pianist, composer, and
arranger, will perform in a trio with
drums and bass.
KRONOS QUARTET -
Michigan Theater Foundation, 8
p.m., Michigan Theater (668-8397).
The criticallly acclaimed San
Francisco-based string quartet will
perform this century's best music
from Bartok and Shostakovich to
Philip Glass and Jimi Hendrix.
RICHARD II - University
Drama Department, 8 p.m.,
Mendelssohn Theater (764-0450).
See Friday's listing for more
details.
PEOPLE DANCING - Per-
formance Network, 8 p.m., 408
West Washington (663-0681).
See Friday's listing for more
details.
BARS & CLUBS
THE ARK (761-1451) - Golden
Ring, solo folk peformers ensemble.
BIRD OF PARADISE (662-
8310) - Jeff Kressler Trio with
Patti Richards, jazz.
THE BLIND PIG (996-8555) -
Map of the World, rock 'n' roll.
THE EARLE (994-0211) - Rick
Burgess Trio, jazz.
MAINSTREET COMEDY
SHOWCASE (996-9080) - Scott
LaRose.
NECTARINE BALLROOM
(994-5436) - New Music Dance
Party, DJ Robert LeLievre.
RICK'S AMERICAN CAFE
(996-2747) --(Bop) Harvey, reggae.
FURTHERMORE
ATHLETIC MOUTHGUARD
FITTINGS - School of Den-
tistry, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Dental School
(763-3300).
Faculty and students of the School
of Dentistry will custom make
athletic mouthguards at no charge for
both contact and noncontact sports.
"ARTICULATING THE AB-
STRACT"CONFERENCE -
Institute for the Humanities, 9 a.m,
Rackham Amphitheatre (764-6330).
The continuation of the weekend
conference opens with Rudolf
Arnheim's "What Became of
Abstraction?," and Kendall Walton's
"Abstraction on the Arts: The Very
Idea." The program continues with
responses by Susan Gelman, Marion
Jackson, Glen Most, and an open
discussion.
3RD ANNUAL MARTIN LU-
THER KING, JR. CHARITY
DINNER AND BALL - Na-
tional Association of Negro Business
and Professonal Women's Club,
7:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m., Ann Arbor
Sheraton Inn (663-0201).
All are welcomed to dinner and
dancing to the Fabulous Checkers, a
R&B band, with proceeds going to
the Ann Arbor chapter's scholarship
fund and community projects.
SONG OF THE SOUTH (Perce
Pearce, 1947), MTF, 6:30 p.m.,
Mich.
Yes, it's Brer Rabbit, Uncle
Remus, and, of course, the
inimitable Tar Baby in this classic
Disney re-release.
EASY VIRTUE (Alfred
Hitchcock, 1927), CG, DBL/7:00
p.m., Aud A.
Silent film about a young woman
trying to break into high society.
From a Noel Coward play.
BLACKMAIL (Alfred Hitchcock,
1929), CG, DBL/8:20 p.m., Aud A.
A young woman kills a would-be
rapist, and is blackmailed by a bum
who's got the evidence.
THE MAD ADVENTURES
OF "RABBI" JACOB (Gerard
Oury, 1974), Hill St., 8:00 p.m.,
Hill St.
An anti-semetic buisnessman
dresses like a rabbi to dodge the
mob, and ends up learning a valuable
lesson. French with subtitles.
THE SEDUCTION OF MIMI
(Lina Wertmuller, 1971), C2, 7:00
& 9:00 p.m., Nat Sci.
A Sicilian escapes from the mob
and becomes a liberal, except where
his wife is concerned.
PERFORMANCES
KEITH BRYAN AND KAREN
KEYS DUO - School of Music,
4 p.m., Rackham Auditorium (763-
4726).
This internationally acclaimed
couple will perform works by
Beethoven, Donizetti, La Montaine,
Dutilleux, and Feld for the piano and
the flute.
PEOPLE DANCING - Per-
formance Network, 4 p.m., 408
West Washington (663-0681).
See Friday's listing for more
details.
BARS & CLUBS
THE ARK (761-1451) - Bill
Morrissey, original music.
BIRD OF PARADISE (662-
8310)-- Dave Wild Trio, jazz.
THE BLIND PIG (996-8555) -
John Hammond, country blues.
MAINSTREET COMEDY
SHOWCASE (996-9080) - Open
Mike Night.
NECTARINE BALLROOM
(994-5436) - Megafunk Dance
Party, DJ the Wizard.
RICK'S AMERICAN CAFE
(996-2747) - The Fugue, "space
boogie."
FURTHERMORE
'ISRAELI DANCING AT
HILLEL - Hillel, 7:30-10 p.m.,
1429 Hill St. (663-3336).
One hour of instruction will be
followed by request dancing. All
levels are welcomed.
SUNDAY
I 1 "
i
OLOO
CAMPUS CINEMA
Let Them Know
How You Feel!!
DAILY PERSONALS 764-0557
208 S. First, Ann Arbor 996-8555
January specials:
16-17 MAP OF THE WORLD
18 JOHN HAMMOND,
Blues Guitarist
19 CULT HEROES,
20 COLORS
21 DIFFERENCE
22 STEVE NARDELLA
R&R TRIO
dinksealso,
MON $1 SHOTS
TUE $3 BEER PITCHERS
WED $2 MARGARITA MUGS
THU $1 WATERMELONS
JOSEPH
HELLER
AUTHOR OF
CA TCH-22,
GOOD AS GOLD, GOD KNOWS
& SOMETHING HAPPENED
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 1
8 P.M. POWER CENTER
PRESENTED BY
HILL STREET FORUM GREAT WRITERS SERIE
1
N
Fine Dining
IS
I
0
I
I
V
GRANMA LEIS
U 3TANUMWLKM
" Fresh Bakery
" Homemade Soups
" Sandwiches made to order
" Hot Entrees Daily
120 E. Liberty, Ann Arbor
668-8299
HRS. M-F 7:30 a.m.- 8 p.m.
Sat.9a.m.-8p.m. Sunday9a.m- 6p.m.
Ann Arbor's Only Rib h
5 The Chef
5 5 recommends,
louse
Ribs
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Arbor, Casual Dining
Prime Ribs
Beef Ribs
BBQ Chicken
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Spare Ribs
Short Ribs
Baby Back1
The Oldest Pizzeria
in Ann Arbor, with Delicious
Italian Dinners & Salads.
"VOTED BEST PIZZA IN
ANN ARBOR BY
THE MICHIGAN DAILY"
Restaurant & Bar
512 East William, Ann Arbor,
663-3379
Vegetarian, Seafood an
Sandwich Menu A vailab
114 E. Washington, Ann
663-3900
1 j
1
0
I
Italian Restaurant
BEST ITALIAN FOOD
(Ann Arbor News, '85).
HOMEMADE PASTAS
665-0444 - Take out
300 Detroit St. at Catherine
1100E. 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.
PARTHENON
RESTAURANT
FINE GREEK FOOD
" Gyros & Shish-kabob sandwiches
" Mousaka - Pastistsio - Dolmades
" Spinach pie - Gyros plate
" Liquor, Beer Wine
" Special Cocktail Menu
COMPLETE CARRY OUT SERVICE
226 S. Main at Liberty, Ann Arbor
Hrs:M-Thur II a.m.-10 p.m. Fri-Sat 11 a.m.-lI p.m.
Sun 12 noon-10 p.m.
Free Delivery
(Limited Area)
761-611
BROADWAY
FRIED CHICKEN
& BARBEQUE
All Dinners $1.00 Off
All Sandwiches .50 Off
With This Ad
1151 Broadway
I, I
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DINING PIZZERIA
* AND 665-5800 iSZE CHUAN WEST
SAVE $3.00WTH OUR(A Premier Deli Since 1896)
DRINKING SEMESTER SPECIAL: " Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner MICHIGAN DAILY'S #1 CHOICE
" Pizza, Salad Bar, Homemade Soups OF CHINESE FOOD
sare still for a large Deli Deluxe & Submarine Sandwiches
paeae tl vibl.(1i4 wih Free Delivery 2161 W. Stadium
Sontact your account any 2 items " Complete Catering Available 769-5722
executive today at Come visit us inside (Party Trays Our Specialty)
* 764-0554. Dooley's or we'll deliver 211 S. State, Ann Arbor, MI
1 FREE 662-9611
WEEKEND/JANUARY 16, 1987
PAGE 10 WEEKEND/JANUARY 16, 1987