OCR Text |
Show X i I i j j j Try Pay If You Sell Want Ads Discount Laundry & Dry Cleaning For oil students and faculty Pick up service at Student Housing Office s COLLEGE AMOCO 3685 Harrison Blvd I I here to protect I 1 1 your rights I I v xt 525 AMOCO Complete Automotive Service & Repairs Sin.li-i.i Dis. emit ,-.,lh be. I, raid qti ' ('''! This space for Sale This space could be YOURS! (See details) - l, As a special presentation of Spring Fever Week ASWDC will present a video tape concert of the late Jim Croce. This special showing is done in conjunction with the video tape network of New York. "This intimate, beautiful program featuring Jim Croce and his lead guitarist Maury Muehleisen was produced only months before their tragic accident in Natchitoches, Louisiana." This excellent concert will play continuously on the video television in the Union Foyer through special arrangement with Gordon Haun of Instructional Development. Free of charge to everyone it will be shown continuously before and after "Happy Days." No Red ford? Motion picture actor Robert Redford has been forced to cancel his participation in a Weber State College social problems conference Friday, officials announced today. The actor was called to Oregon for re-makes on a current film and found it impossible to" keep his Weber State appointment, announced Dr. Jerry H. ' Borup, chairman of the WSC department of sociology. The handsome actor was scheduled to address the Utah Congress on Contemporary Social Problems Friday at 2:30 p.m. Dr. Borup said a departmental meeting was being held to select a replacement speaker for Mr. Redford. Dr. Borup said Dr. Howard Higman, a scientifically-oriented speaker, will speak in place of Redford at 2:30 p.m., Fine Arts Center. Dr. Higman was scheduled to talk at a 9 a.m. session, but his slot will be taken by Dr. Helmut P. Hofmann, a former WSC vice J Equipment ft 1 Rental u T SPORT SHOPI Tn65Patteirson(i 5 J ! L I ( i . y v X ACnCP CTATC ana 7 ter M CnttKLtAUcK -si ' CLINICS: - Mnu 1 7 r m JIM mt,y yam- SSJCS ( Mavll.. 7a.m. May 13 6 p.m. May 15 9 a.m. TRYOUTS May 19 --6 p.m. Clinics and tryouts will be held in UB Ballroom. Four Rallymen and four cheerleaders' positions open. Pep squad is under a new program, so all interested come out ! QUESTIONS: Call 399-5941 ext 476 1 i president, now at Westminster College. "We regret this cancellation by Mr. Redford, but his producer ordered him back to the Oregon location for re-makes and he was unable to keep his appointment on the program," Dr. Borup said. China gets 'Big Mac' McDonald's. Part of the reason for his success is that the Chinese have yet to catch on to making burgers. One English-language paper, rhapsodizing over the arrival of the golden arches, said that the competition is a "stringy, rubbery ball of hash capped by a slab of bullet-hard bun that restaurants have the audacity to call a hamburger.!' With the exception of the buns, all food for the Chinese McDonald's is imported from the U.S. i 5t je "it Jt jc JC. ji. (CPS-PNS) Ronald McDonald is doing some traveling these days, introducing the Big Mac to China. The burger barons are selling about 7000 hamburgers a day in Hong Kong while apple pies are going at a faster rate than at any of the 3300 McDonald's scattered across the globe. Daniel Ng, whose friends now call him the "Hamburger Kingof Hong Kong," claims that his franchise is doing better business than 90 per cent of the American Movie revue Continued from page 3 Hoffman is nothing less than superb in his portrayal of Crabb as a man caught up in history unintentionally. His talents range from comic to dramatic and touch every emotion in between. Little Big Man allows him to use it all, and he does. Chief Dan George is another standout in a role that calls for him to be part biblical symbolism and part Jewish mother. Some of the other roles, most notably Faye Dunaway as a preacher's playful wife and Richard Mulligan's extremely hammy Custer, pale by comparison and they seem to lead into other difficulties in Penn's film; it is lacking in direction and in itsjust-under-three-hour length it seems to ramble on forever. If Penn has tried to hard to emulate his laugh-shift to shock success of Bonnie and Clyde, he has at least cast his two chief (no pun intended) roles excellently and allowed them to create all of the picture's honors. Marxian Madness A Day at the Races, released in 1937 when the Marx Brothers were at their peak of popularity, is absolutely hilarious with caution. That is, if you like the Marx brothers; all others beware. If you do like them, prepare yourselves with plenty of adhesive tape; you'll be splitting your sides over this one; it's one of their best. The plot hardly matters, but for the record it concerns a horse doctor named Hackenbush (Groucho) who is mistakenly called to a sanitarium. Aided by Chico and Harop who always just seem to appear when Groucho runs out of epithets, they, to understate, wreak havoc. Allan Jones (father of Jack) and Marueen O'Sullivan are here, too, to provide songs and romance (this was made in the days when Hollywood thought comedies were unable to stand on their own merit) and the long-suffering Margaret Dumont to take Groucho's insults, while he allegedly seeks her hand, but searches for her handbag. But the show belongs to the Marxes and it contains some of their best and most famous routines; most notably Chico posing as an ice cream vendor trying to sell racing tips to Groucho. iv- Free Food and Entertain ment Tues., 5:30, Union Cafeteria -f - - -- |