Page 10-Friday, July 30, 1982-The Michigan Daily William Powell turns a crisp 90 years old HOLLYWOOD (AP)- "I may be 90 years old, but I feel like 190," actor William Powell grumbled Thursday as he markedhis birthday. The star of the Thin'Man series, Life With Father, My Man Godfrey, The' Great Ziegfield and a hundred other movies spent the day quietly at the Palm Springs desert home he shares with his wife of 43 years, actress Diana "Mousie" Lewis. Speaking by telephone, Powell soun- ded like the same crisp-spoken perfor- mer who delighted film audiences for 35 years. His last movie was Mister Roberts in 1955 with Henry Fonda and Jack Lemmon. "I feel all of 90," he remarked. "I practically live indoors, but I do sit out on the porch and yoo-hoo to people as they go by." "People are congratulating me, and for what? For being alive? That's a peculiar kind of achievement," he said. "But I admit I was born on July 29, 1892, in Pittsburgh, Pa." His wife said the birthday would be celebrated with her sister, Maxine Lewis, and brother J.C. Lewis. "Bill is just amazing, marvelous," said Mrs. Powell. "He has a hearing difficulty and he doesn't get out of the house. But he is in good spirits." She added, "He watches television. He reads a lot. He takes his own shower. And he enjoys our two darling dogs, a pug and a combination Australian shepherd and collie that someone threw in our bushes as a pup- py six months ago." Powell still has a clipped white mustache and has defied the actuarial tables that indicated he should have been dead of cancer long ago. Forty-five years ago, he refused an operation for rectal cancer and instead submitted to a colon bypass operation. After six months of radiation treat- ment, the cancer was cured and his colon restored to normal. "I was one of the lucky ones," Powell said in an interview at his 75th birth- day. "Fortunately for me, they caught the cancer before it could spread through the lymph glands and the bloodstream." Mrs. Powell reported that her husband had received a congratulatory resolution from the Pennsylvania Senate and a letter from the governor of that state. She said Powell also received "a darling note" from his Thin Man co- star, Myrna Loy, who lives in New York. Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Tubular Securely locked in place, a bicycle provides a circular frame for E. Liberty storefronts. 'Offier& Gentleman' full of tired clichesc (Continued from Page 7) Hackford. By downplaying Stewart's monstrous cliches the cast and director actually create some clever moments. For instance, in one scene at a bar when Zack is thinking about dumping Paula, Gere and Winger are forced to bandy lines like, "Zack don't do this to yourself." To which comes the witty reply, "But Paula, I know what I'm doing. It's my life." Gere and Winger are able, by underplaying the melodrama of their Harlequin Roman- ce script, to make their characters sound like sincere lovers whose only mistake is having watched one too many episodes of "General Hospital." Powell ... feels like 190 IN' * r O Unfortunately, these refreshing, un- campy moments are rare and the film is most often dominated by a script that has all the originality of Texas In- strument's solid-state circuit #1,378,298,566. Hackford's directing compliments Gere's and Winger's sincerity, for he too tries to down-play the melodrama and thereby add a touch of true-to-life pathos. In the dance scene when Zack and Paula first meet, Hackford has the background band playing "Tiea Yellow Ribbon Round the Old Oak Tree" and "Feelings." The camera angles and movements also remain cooly unobtrusive. No Fellini here, but then any fancy shooting wouldn't have meshed with this Hollywood-style realism. Hackford lets the actors carry the weight of the audience's attention, using mostly still- camera shots. Hackford even takes care to make sure the makeup jobs on the lead actors don't turn them into an Ultra-bright couple. In one of their love-making scenes Gere and Winger actually look a bit tussled after they've had a quick gallop on the mattress. One of the frightening things about An Officer and a Gentleman is that it joins last summer's Stripes and Taps in glorifying the modern army, be it through humor, or through selective positioning of the white hats and the black hats. In An Officer and a Gentleman, the black hats. rest upon a gang of long- haired "peace-makers" who try to chase Zack, Paula, and their two frien- ds out of a bar, but Zack lets loose with some streetwise karate that gives you a morally righteous spinal tingle you probably haven't felt since "Kung Fu" taught late 19th century California the merits of "inner peace." So, if you think being, or marrying, a Naval Aviation Officer is the zenith of life, this is the movie for you. On the Patio at the Michigan Union Cover 75c beginning after 9:30 LDIES Records donated by Make Waves