—The Daily Collegian Friday, October 1,1976 Candlelit conversation difficult Cellar's food Restaurant *^r AKaT Review By KATHLEEN PAVELKO Collegian Staff Writer The Wine Cellar jfr • w 1 lit S. Atherton St., open daily from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m The Wine Cellar is the most intimate restaurant in State College a place for lovers, where soft conversation goes well with the candlelight but not with the soft rock insistently played on the radio. Is there no place to escape canned music? If the music could be ignored, the Wine Cellar would be a very attractive restaurant. It is pleasantly dim—but not so murky the menu cannot be read—and the service is unfailing ly courteous The problem is the food. The Wine Cellar’s rather extensive menu is almost ex clusively Italian. Although New York steaks and T-bones ($6.95) are included, the menu consists mostly of pasta sauces served with a choice of fettucine, linguine or vermicelli (spaghetti). Most entrees range from $3.95 to $6.95. On a recent visit, we sampled the chicken cacciatore ($5.25) and the veal parmigiana ($4.95). The parmigiana turned out to be a lukewarm ground-veal patty covered with melted cheese and,the Wine Cellar’s übiquitous red sauce. My companion FREE DUS TO THE NITTANY MALL SAIOCT ? Graduate Research Assistantships In Civil Engineering The Department of Civil Engineering at Princeton University invites applications for graudate study and research in the areas of Structures and Mechanics, Transportation, and Water Resources leading to M.S.E. and Ph.D. degrees. Annual re search stipends start at $4,240 plus tuition and are offered to all admitted students requesting sup port. For details and applications write: Professor Peter Lee Director of Graduate Studies Department of Civil Engineering Princeton University Princeton, N.J. 08540 mofiiiir saimiffir 4 ffofvesf iVom *ilflaivfvc Ma*ilicUtc*t < I>ui*tile/i COMING OUT raipn’s Nittany Mall 10-9 Mon.-Sat. HAPPINESS IS BEING WITH THE SPDNNipS On Sale October 1 -21 Record Bar 'non bene' called it a disaster. My chicken cacciatore was only slightly better: a half chicken breast, overdone, in a sauce of canned mushrooms and tomatoes. Both entrees were served on cold platters which made the already cool dishes colder. Each entree at the Wine Cellar includes a side order of spaghetti with red sauce and a choice of salad or soup. The pasta was not overdone although it was not as firm as I jjrefer it and the sauce, with a touch of sugar and tartness, was quite good. The only thing wrong with the sauce is that it appears on everything. Dessert Mama Theresa’s ricotta pie turned out to be ricotta filling in a pre-fob crust with frozen strawberries and ersatz whipped cream (1.25). The other choice, cannoli, was no better: a very hard roll of crust stuffed with an unidentified filling that had been sprinkled with hard chocolate nuggets. Both the espresso ($.60) and cappocino ($1.75) were served in espresso cups, making the cappocino almost impossible to drink. More ersatz whipped cream on the cappocino. Despite its name, the Wine Cellar has a very limited wine list, with about 100 per cent mark-up on the State Store prices. Very few of the many inexpensive, good Italian wines available in this state are on the list. Wine is also available by the carafe, however: 17 ounces, $1.75; 34 ounces, $3.25. The Wine Cellar’s no stars-one waiter rating reflects the unacceptable food served by a courteous, efficient waitress in generally pleasant surroundings. Restaurant Ratings Service Food Acceptable Acceptable i i' Good ★★ Qood Outstanding if if if Outstanding O.D. FREE AND CONFIDENTIAL 24 hours a day drug & alcohol crisis information & dispatch hot line information & referral 237-5855 236 A South Allen St. (a service of, for, and \ by people / 350 East College Ave. 10-9 Mon-Sat. $4.99 LP; $6.99 Tape Harry Chapin: 2-LP Set 'Man By LEAH BOZEN Collegian Staff Writer “The Man Who Fell to Earth,” the latest film by director Nicholas Roeg (“Performance” and “Don’t Look Now”), is symptomatic of his work: It’s complex, striking, provocative and it falls apart two thirds of the way through. Now playing at the Movies, “The Man Who Fell to Earth” is a frustrating film. You spend the first two thirds of the film ‘ fascinated * and in trigued by the unfolding plot of an alien (David Bowie) from another, planet who has arrived on Earth. Then suddenly, without warning, the film changes directions Is pregnancy really "Worth'it? CHICAGO (UPl)—Many a bright and pretty 17-year-old unmarried high school girl has become pregnant before but tell her story in a comic strip? Allen Saunders, the writer, and Ken Ernst, the artist, have set out to do just that in the comic strip “Mary Worth,” and their presen tation is believed to be the PURCHASE TWO PAIR GET ONE PAIR Choose from over 2000 pair of stylish pierced earrings Select two pair the average price of the two will be credited toward the third pair. FREE EAR PIERCING WITH YOUR PURCHASE OF s 7*° STARTER EARRINGS. Sorry, sale earrings cannot be counted on earring club cards. who Fell' baffling radically and it is almost impossible to figure out what in hell is going on. movie review Although there are unan swered questions and bewildering clues in the first part of the film, these are nothing compared to those in the final section. The alien travels to Earth to get water for his planet, which is suffering from a severe drought. He has brought the plans for some amazing inventions with him and sets up a giant corporation to manufac ture them, raking in the money. It seems that his ultimate goal is to build a rocket first of its kind in that form for general circulation newspapers. Expected to last three months, the sequence tells the story of Karen Cooper, 17, a “very attractive” high school senior, winner of first place in a national scholarship con test, potential midyear graduate with plans to accept PIERCED E4*. 1 moyer jewelers ONE HUNDRED EAST COLLEGE AVE ship to take him back to his planet and wife and children. He builds the rocket but never gets to take the trip, remaining doomed to an earthly existence. Director Roeg has com plained that he was forced to make unwanted cuts in the film. This may be so, but one gets the feeling that it probably wouldn’t have made complete sense even before the cuts. Roeg is a strong, pur poseful director. His films are extremely cinematic. Even when he to com pletely clear the obstacles he sets up for himself, it’s the course of the film that’s fascinating. Bowie, in his movie debut, proves effective as one of many scholarship offers. She also is pregnant—and some young girl who would refuses absolutely to name be otherwise tempted to be the father of her unborn child, promiscuous... we have a She never will, Saunders said, great many young and he never appears except readers and we thought it was l casually, “in , a flashback, I a healthy thing for them to! believe.”^ “We felt that showing the r~ i ; First and Best in Service for your Volkswagen and Audi ■ Carrying a Complete Line of Parts and Accessories 3280 W. College Ave. PHONE: 237-5756 ©1 AUTHORIZED I J OEAICft I J the alien because he is such a strange fellow anyway. With his hair dyed a deep ” orange and his skin possessing, an unhealthy pallor, he projects the loneliness and dissatisfac tion the visitor feels. „. Candy Clark is ab solutely (before she is called upon to act) as the mortal with whom he sets up housekeeping. Looking very much like a young Ellen Burstyn, she seems,* touchingly vulnerable. .. Because so much of “The Man Who Fell to Earth” is so good, its final failing is all the more maddening since there is more that’s right woth it than wrong# and it’s definately worth seeing. 1 A / college ' tragedy that results from the new promiscuity that we might just possibly make read about—to show them the] foolishness of ignoring the consequences. MIERLEY VOLKSWAGEN-AUDI INC. £ r m