EMW w w w V V mmmm -lw_ Wr PERFORMANCES w How I Spent My Summer Vacation byHillel-CAYSofChicago MEN=-% w J c he A rit g rn 3 tt t - Ef-_ I Fdpc Sport Leagues Co-ed: Softball Volleyball Men's: Basketball Floor Hockey Call now: Daniel Harris (312)328-5605 Adventure Programs Sailing Canoeing Camping Or write: Hillel-CAYS 1 S. Franklin Chicago, IL 60606 M A G A Z I N E VOLUME 5, NO. 23 APRIL 10, 1987 $ Police Academy 4: Citizens on Patrol draws crowds despite less than charitable remarks from the critics. It's reviewed on Page S. 0 ~ &LOI~tiofl! INOd1000s0*9 xa" Contact Lntuctions from C m lete instr T chnician--.... Conrtact Len .... a Co Convenien e Kit..-- Start-UPUP Carefrom Copete Falliow-Up Sionai,.- Complte Lens Profes a Contacesed ., ther in MUSIC The Del Fuegos, John Lennon, Club Nouveau FILM 'Police Academy 4: Citizens on Patrol' COVER STORY Using animals as tools of scientific research UNIVERSITY CONTEMPOR - ARY DIRECTIONS ENSEM- BLE - School of Music, 8 p.m., Rackham Auditorium (7634726). Performances of Roger Reynold's The Palace, Pierre Boulez'sEclat, and Dashow's Mnemonics will be featured. J. PARKER COPLEY DANCE COMPANY - Dance Gallery Foundation, 4:00 p.m., 111 Third St. (761-2728). See Friday's listing for more details. TOM PAINE - Performance Network, 2 p.m., 408 West Washington (663-0681). See Friday's listing for more details. BARS & CLUBS THE ARK (761-1451) - Uncle Bonsai, folk-pop. THE BLIND PIG (996-8555) - Trees, popular harmony. I NECTARINE BALLROOM (994-5436) - Megafunk Dance Party, DJ the Wizard. WOMEN'S ACTION FOR NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT MEETING - 7:30, First Baptist Church, 512 East Huron. FU RTHERMORE PSYCHOLOGY & RELIGION DISCUSSION: INTERFAITH RELATIONSHIPS - Hillel, 7:30 p.m., 1429 Hill St. (663- 3336). Dr. Hank Greenspan of Counseling Services will lead dis- cussion of romantic relationships between Jews and members of other faiths. ISSUES IN LIBERATION THEOLOGY DISCUSSION GROUP - Guild House, 7:30 p.m., 802 Monroe St. (662-5189). Rev. Don Coleman will lead this discussion investigating the issues presented by Christian Based Communities. 8TH ANNUAL BOOK FAIR AND SALE - Ann Arbor Antiquarian Booksellers Association, noon-7 p.m., Michigan Union Ballroom (995-2300). More than thirty dealers will feature rare, and oldsmanuscripts, books, prints, and maps. FIRST RUN FILMS ANGEL HEART A complex and provocative thriller in which a sleazy P.I. (Mickey Rourke) is hired by the Prince Of Lies (Robert De Niro) to find a missing person. At the Fox Village. BEYOND THERAPY A mousy neurotic (Julie Hag - garty) and an overbearing homo - sexual (Jeff Godblumstrike up an odd relationship with a backdrop of psychotherapy. At the State Theater. BLIND DATE Bruce Willis smirks through this comedy as a man who falls in love with his blind date while dodging her psychotically possessive ex. At the Fox Village. BURGLAR Whoopi Goldberg and Bob Goldthwaite are a pair of zany thieves in this zany tale of larceny and zaniness. At the Movies At Briarwood. CHILDREN OF A LESSER GOD William Hurt is a teacher for the deaf who falls in love with a hearing- impaired girl in this technically perfect adaptation of the Broadway play. At the Movies At Briarwood. CROCODILE DUNDEE An Australian adventurer tries to make it 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. HOOSIERS A by-the-numbers sports feel- good movie about a washed-up basketball coach who gets one last chance when he signs on as the head of a miniscule Indiana high school team. At the State Theater. LETHAL WEAPON Mel Gibson is the ultimate killing machine, and Danny Glover is his partner in this buddy-buddy tale of two copsdwho sometimes have to work outside the law. At the Fox Village Theater. MANNEQUIN Andrew McCarthy is a lonely stock boy who falls in love with a mannequin... a mannequin who comes to hellish life only for him! Ahhh, she looks so good. Ahhhh, she's made out of wood. Just wait and see. At the Fox Village. MORGAN STEWART'S COMING HOME After seven years in boarding school, a young man comes back and attempts to turn his parents into loving, caring people in spite of themselves. At the State Theater. NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET II: DREAM WARRIORS Freddie's back in the latest installment of the horror epic about the gray line between dreams and reality. At the State Theater. POLICE ACADEMY 4: CITIZENS ON PATROL What could possibly be said about the fourth installment of this much- malinged comedy premise? Only that it's at the State Theater. OUTRAGEOUS FORTUNE Bette Midler and Shelley Long are an unlikely duo who team up to find the man who was cheating on both of them, and get caught up in a plot of damn-near apocolyptic pro - portions. Peter Coyote and George Carlin round out this screwball comedy. At the Fox Village Theater. PLATOON Oliver Stone's explosive, gripping Vietnam action epic is every bit as good as you've heard it is. An idealistic young man finds his illusions shattered when he volun - teers for duty in 'Nam. At the Movies At Briarwood. RADIO DAYS Woody Allen's latest is a biteless, disjointed reverie about his childhood in Rockaway and the magical part that radio played in his life. At the Movies At Briarwood. A ROOM WITH A VIEW Warm, funny, and suprisingly accessable tale of a young Victorian girl who must decide between a practical marrige to a real dead fish and a fling with a morbid but exciting young swain. At the Ann Arbor Theater. ROUND MIDNIGHT Jazz legend Dexter Gordon pretty much plays himself in this tale of ex-patriate musicians in France. At the Ann Arbor Theaters 1 & 2. SOME KIND OF WONDERFUL The occasionally brilliant but often patronizing John Hughes churns out another tale of teens trying to cut through the conformist pressures of high school to find themselves. At the Movies At Briarwood. TIN MEN A warm, nostalgic comedy about small-time con men in the '50s who know the world is about to end. Richard Dreyfuss, Danny De Vito, Barbara Hershey. SEND ANNOUNCEMENTS of upcoming events to "The List," c/o The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Include all pertinent information and a contact phone number. We must receive notice of Friday, Sat - urday, and Sunday events (for Weekend Magazine) at least two weeks before publication; notice of weekday events is due two days before publication. ti S ae 5 ' Free Adn Sponsored by the. : Antiquarian Book D Vol~ C57t MICH-ELLANY for o n d! Woo thO . 0 (UP to 6 diOptersY G ,,.r,.p o d,,an.s size.Plastic O or g ans ad oh erico "e* onyadiiilp5~ld ieofrad.insnglenoincuded' Thils is OPTOMETRY eye care centers ARBORLAND CONSUMER MALL 973-7035 .' 8 Interview: Union director Frank Cianciola THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor this weekend 1U EDITOR .................... ............,......... Bill M arsh FILM EDITOR ...---------.-- ...... ................ Kurt Serbus MUSIC EDITOR................................ Beth Fertig ASSISTANT EDITOR............................. Rebecca Cox LIST EDITOR...... .................Marie Wesaw ASSOCIATE LIST EDITOR.............Brook Snyder Cover photo by Andi Schreiber. i f Don't forget to pick up your Michigan Daily DENON - fine au at affordable price: Corm pact disc players audibly Denon DCD 500 Compact unbelievable sound of digital tech with over a decade of digital mus laboratory to the studio. the ere OPP4 Weekend Magazine is edited and managed by students on the staff of The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Phones: Weekend Magazine, (313) 763-0379; News, 764-0552; Circulation, 764-0558; Display Advertising, 764-0554. Copyright 1987 The Michigan Daily. PAGE2 WEEKEND/APRIL 10, 1987 WEEKEND/APRIL 10, 1987