L =Collegian arts oobie Brothers set for PSU this month The Doobie Brothers have officially consented to appear in concert here Sept. 23, University Concert Committee chi rman Bob Coppenhaver announced ThUrsday. Although the concert has been ten tatively arranged for weeks, it could not .be,tconfirmed until the contract was sigted yesterday by the seven band members. Their fee for the per forinance, according to William Fuller, • fiager of student activities at the Hip, is $30,000. Tickets for the concert will be $8 apiece, Coppenhaver said. The show will be in Rec Hall, which seats 5,000. Coppenhaver said the concert com- ciittee has also made an offer to the 19 . sette-Dart Band for All-U Day, moved up to Sept. 30 this year. Cop .,. Boston Pops Monday through Friday, 2 to 6 p.m., ,Wturday and Sunday, 1 to 6 p.m. SVDFM, 91 FM) "Arts Showcase." :Today, 2:05 to 4 p.m. (WDFM) The gilladelphia Orchestra; Stanislaw akr_owaczewski cond., Garrick Ohisson (piano). Weber: Der Freischutz: Overture; Liszt: Piano Concerto No. 1 in Special ROSES $3.77 a dozen cash & carry ~.° ) 6249difint94 gloweA f 14 5 S. Allen St. Dershems Sports Center Preseßts . FREE ARCHERY CLINIC Public Invited 'Learn all about one of America's Fastest Growing Sports. This Clinic designed ad idorsed by Fred B World Featuring Gene Wagner winner of South , Central Indoor Re gional Archery Champion hip 1977 and 4 S#ecial During this clinic: §ear Compound bows drastically reduced. 20% •ff Archery Accessories Register during clinic to win free Compound Bear Bow Drawing at 9 PM penhaver said he had originally tried to reach an agreement with Santana to appear here on that date. That band is starting a tour on Oct.l in Michigan, and Coppenhaver said he tried to arrange for the band to start its tour here one day earlier, but another Michigan promoter making the same request won the contract. The Doobie Brothers concert is the . first one Coppenhaver has booked as chairman of UCC. He was elected late last spring term by members of the HUB Policy Board. The board, comprised of represen tatives from various student organizations on campus, is the decision making unit for UCC. performance on Sunday E flat major; Shostakovich: Symphony No. 5, Op. 17. Sunday, 6 a.m. to noon (WXLR, 103.1 FM) "The Living Classics." Sunday, 8 to 9 p.m. (WPSX-TV, Ch. 3) "Evening at Pops"; Boston Pops Orchestra, Arthur Fiedler cond., Clam ma Dale (soprano). Code Reg. Pr. $ 1 59 $2" GREASE $799 COMODORES NATURAL HIGH $ 4 85 FOREIGNER DOUBLE VISION $485 FILLER PAPER COLLEGE RULED 250 SHEETS $17 9 by Lynne Margolis Sale Pr. 5125 $199 G.C. MURPHY Co. Pink Panther back for while 'Animal House' By JOHN WARD Daily Collegian Staff Writer Downtown i "Revenge of the Pink Panther" Peter Sellers returns for his fifth, and allegedly last, performance as fumbling Inspector Clouseau. Herbert Lom is back from the dead as Clouseau's ex boss Dreyfuss. (He was supposedly killed in the last "Panther" movie.) To be reviewed Monday. The Garden "Heaven Can Wait" Warren Beatty makes it three hits in a row with this one, one of the most satisfying comedies in a long time. (Beatty previously produced "Bonnie and Clyde" and "Shampoo.") It's about a man who dies before his time, so the angels put him back on earth in another man's body. Screening Room . "National Lampoon's Animal House" Where "Heaven Can Wait" scores through general good taste, this one pulls in the crowds out of sheer wildness. John Belushi stars as one of the brothers of a rule-breaking fraternity set in a mythical Pennsylvania college. If Wednesday, 8 to 10:30 p.m. (WPSX TV) "Great Pgrformances"; Puccini: Tosca. New Philharmonia Orchestra, Bruno Bartoletti cond. Raina Kabaivanska, Placido Domingo, Sherrill Milnes, Giancarlo Luccardi, Alfredo Mariotti, Mario Ferrera. Filmed in 1976 on location. —By Sam Levy ECORD SALE Reg. Pr. Code $387 '4" ROLLING STONES WORLDS AWAY SHADOW DANCING 4 SUBJECT NOTE BOOK 180 SHEETS Reg. $1.79 $ 1 59 . SALE RUNS SEPT. 5 THRU SEPT. 16 EVERY ALBUM IN THE STORE ON SALE Code Sale Pr. $305 $372 SOME GIRLS $ 4 85 PABLO CRUISE $485 ANDY GIBB 4 4 85 you haven't seen this one yet, check it out. Cinema One "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" The latest promotional gim mick to come from the Robert Stigwood camp. Over two dozen Beatles songs provide the framework for this pointless musical starring Peter Frampton, the Bee Gees and George Burns. If you're a Beatles lover, skip this one you'll probably never play their songs again. Cinema Two movie capsules "Grease" Most critics have panned this one, but they can't deny its crowd pleasing appeal. John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John star in this adap tation of the hit Broadway musical about life in the 50's. The Flick On campus "The Spy Who Loved Me' Roger Moore returns as the indestructible superagent James Bond, this time out to stop Curt Jurgens from taking over the world. Of interest: currently they're filming "Moonraker," the eleventh Bond flick. ill Forum "Night of the Living Dead" One of the most popular cult films around. George Romero filmed his story about zombies entirely around the Pittsburgh area." Friday and Saturday only. 102 Forum "Oh, God!" George Burns and John Denver supply enjoyable performances to this breezy Carl Reiner comedy about God's appearance before a lowly Reg. Pr. $396 $5" '6" '4" revenge still zany Code Sale Pr. 1<:I; SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER $799 BOSTON DON'T LOOK BACK $ 4 85 TEDDY PENDERGRASS LIFE IS A SONG WORTH SINGING 6 4 85 3 SUBJECT NOTEBOOK COLLEGE RULED 150 SHEETS Reg. $1.59 $ 1 39 131 S. ALLEN ST. supermarket manager." 121 Sparks "Looking for Mr. Goodbar" Diane Keaton is sizzling as the self-destructive schoolteacher in this shadowy Richard Brooks film, based on the Judith Rossner bestseller. 108 Forum "The World's Greatest Lover" Gene Wilder is better off as an actor because, if you use this film as an example, he hasn't got much future as a director. It's about a nationwide search for a Rudolph Valentino replacement, and Wilder tries out for the job, much to the chagrin of his wife (Carol. Kane). The laughs are very few. Pollock Rec Room "Suspiria" An Italian-made horror film, designed to cash in on the likes of "Exorcist" and "Psycho. Warnock Lounge "Vixen" If you've never seen a Russ Meyer flick, you should know his stuff isn't hard-core. Meyer•goes in for big breasted women and lots of violence, evidenced in such films as "Super Vixens" and "Up." Ho-hum. FUB Rec Room "Romeo and Juliet" Leonard Whiting and Olivia Hussey play the title roles in this Franco Zefferelli tear jerker. It sticks pretty close to Shakespeare, and the photography is nice, but the film is boring at best. 119 Osmond "The Gauntlet" --: Although Clint Eastwood doesn't play Dirty Harry in this picture, his films are starting to look as if they were stamped out of the same mold. The plot is something about ex traditing a hooker so she can testify against the mob, but who ever notices the plot in an Eastwood movie?los Forum 'Reg. Pr. $6" $777 The Daily Collegian September 8, 1978- Code Sale Pr. $5" $6 22 SGT. PEPPER LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND 808 SEEGER STRANGER IN TOWN $485 $ 1 00 OFF REG. PRICE OF ANY TAPE IN STOCK PENN STATE NOTEBOOK COLLEGE RULED 100 SHEETS Reg. 1.19 99C Photos Zoller Kern Graduate Commons: An exhibition of paintings by University professor David Rubello will run from Sept. 9 through Sept. 30. Rubello is an assistant professor of art and director of the Zoller Gallery. Zoller Gallery: "American Snapshots: Photographs With a Capitol P From't Family Albums," a collection of photographs from family albums selected by University instructor Kenneth Graves and the late Mitchell Payne will be on exhibition through Sept. 30. Galleries Pattee Library Running through Oct. 10, in the East Pattee Gallery are six acrylic paintings by George Kleiman. Running through Sept. 27 is an exhibit by the Renaissance Gallery, a number of local artists and craft: speople. The exhibit includes woodworking, batik, prints, ceramics, stained glass and weaving., Black Cultural Center: Batik and sculptural paintings by Liani Foster, of Washington, D.C., will be on exhibit through Sept. 13. On Sept. 8, Pearl William Jones, ti concert pianist, will present a free concert of the Music of Black America at 8 p.m. in Eisenhower Auditorium. Immediately following the concert, a reception for both Foster and Jones will be held at the Cultural Center. —By Kathy Kimber Reg. Pr. 5 8 77 $967 $943 Sate Pr. s6BB $744