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Classics numerous amusing situations leaves the viewer in a state of laughing hysteria. High Sierra (1941), to be shown April 14, was the film that changed Humphrey Bogart's career and boosted him to stardom. Bogart rfit'OC AnA Kic? *v? ^ ^ ?11 < vo vruv ui i no iiiviOl LdiclUHJ conceived performances as "Mad Dog" Earle. a sensitive gangster who is busted out of prison after eight years by his former gang sc that he can mastermind the big holdup they are planning. While making preparations, he falls in love with a young girl (Joan Leslie) with a club foot who will eventually be his undoing. As one critic stated, "High Sierra is the saga of a man marked out for death by an extrinsic fate, and thus is living cut his death in his life. In that life, he sees what other dying men see; those close to him gradually fall away, the inevitable darkness approaches. The last is a Malrauxesquemoment: Roy Earle gives meaning to his life by insisting on individualizing his death, in the end a man's only true private reserve." IVMHWB C/OWNUi P.O. 8?c 4648 Women's Educal 1 non-profit ag? Fret Pre Problem Free A1m IV vuuu ate Family 1 If you're a woman ai I Weaaea's Educational sMieone who cares. The tmiwaj MEN'S SI ONLY $58.88 r WARM-UP SI j $12.88 WITH MEN'S ANI RUGBY SHIR PAINTER'S ONLY $1 f- l-"'-""*? I ALL NEW JI filler? TADC CALCUTTA S] USE YOUK MA BELK AND BA AMERICARD < H( IW) 'tmtM. A. T ? 1113 LADY ST. From Page 7 James uagney stars in a classic crime drama in White Heat (1949) on April 18 in the theater. In one of i x a 1-- *- - * i ins lust, anu surety nis Desi, 1 gangster pictures, Cagney porl trays Cody Jarrett, a dangerous killer with a psychopathic ob' session for his mother. i rrom nis nrst virtually unmotivated murder of a witness to a train robbery, to his seizure of > convulsive rage as he learns of his [ mother's death, to the cosmic paranoia of his own fiery, suicidal t death atop an exploding oil tank, it i is clear that Jarrett has a [ derangement of immense proportions. Haoul Walsh directed White Heat while Max Steiner provided the musical score and Virginia Mavo and Edmond O'Brien the supporting cast. There are other excellent movies on the Cinematic Arts Committee's remaining schedule that should be seen, whether for a diversion, relaxation or the gratifying contentment of having viewed some of the finest films of Hollywood's greatest vears */ Gnat Swim, 9kc.| CittHftff s.C. ional Services is a I iicy that offers: ignancy Testing pregnancy counseling MrUon Referrals rptive Clinics Planning nd need assistance call Services to talk with number to call is 779-8355. urs l jits ;-$66.88 pits \j?M use ID | ^Tfif iURST I|| ;TS $8.00 7M T% A lvirrci I Aw rAil 1 ?3 l'J? S.88 r* JNIQRDEPT.] $11.00 $16.00 LACKS $17.00 lSTERCHARGE, lNK r>g-*w A ? JHAWiKS Llll/ (J 1300 ASSEMBLY Entertain Arthur Knight, author of Playboy magazine's Sex in the Cinema series, will lecture at 8 p.m. today in the Campus Room of Capstone. Sponsored by the Russell House University Union's Ideas and Issues Committee, Knight will also answer questions at 1 p.m. in the Russell House Theatre. His presentation includes more than 45 minutes of film clips. Knight discusses the historv of 9ftth W / w- -wv" century America from Thomas Edison's The Kiss (1896) to Deep Throat (1972). The film critic deals with censorship, freedom of expression, pornography in the arts, the courts and film as a barometer of changing American mores. Andrae Crouch and the Disciples \17111 norfnrm of Q rv - - ff 11A pvi lUt 1U U I U p.III. I" 1 lUCt^ III 5 | lAruw / H J .author of "Playboy I I Swilk | 9 Isex in | I IM ilhu || la film 1 j ANEW LINE PRESI | 1:00 QncNtii V 8:00 Film i ment brief Township Auditorium. As one l magazine wrote, "Crouch's music | takes gospel a step closer to pop I than Edwin Hawkins has and does l it without having to go to the ' rti l A- f? ] i- ? ? 1 ? - - riayuoy ^iuu to una nis auaience. ; It is polished, professional and ; utilizes harmonic structures and ' rhythms previously foreign to ] gospel." ( At 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Russell House Theatre the German Club will present Hangmen Also Die. Directed by Fritz Lang, and based on the script by Bertolt Brecht, the film deals with an underground resistance movement during the Nazi years. The hero, active in a group which is planning to overthrow the Nazi rulers, endangers a Jewish family by hiding in their house. i The University Union Con \ r knight 's"Sex ih the Cinema series) i (he cinema Med history ilk mutiAMlikliiKi it * wi r prnrwmiti A ENTATIONS THURSDAY, APRIL ] >n Answer ScsNlon, -Lecture, Cnmjtus Roon presented by RHVl ldeus and IsNuei temporary Sounds Committee will nrpeont Thnrmnc f-rdninimnrl on/1 vwx/iav IMVW W1IVTWU UI1U the Colored People from 4 to 7 p.m. today on the Russell House Patio, rhe rain location will be the Golden Spur. The Colored People are an aggregation of Atlanta musicians, rheir music will include soul, Latin, Hawaiian, African and athers. The University Union Cinematic Arts Committee will present Federico Fellini's Amarcord in the Russell House Theatre Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. for $1. Amarcord, which won an Academy A ?1 n?' " ?* nwcuu as nesi r oreign film of 1974, is Fellini's childhood interpretation of life in a coastal Italian town. I I R-H. Theater / Hf fe / IT-w 0 M vajiNiuilt' / :_J