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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 20

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

20 Boston olobe Wednesday, March 31, 1976 Nils Lofgren's high-powered rock EXETER The Seven Beauties," 2, 4, 6, 8. 10 OALERIA 'The Story of Adele 2, 4, 6. 10 GARDEN "All (he President's Women" 1, 2:40, 4:20, 6, 7:40, 9:20 OARY "The Man Who Would Be Klng," 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:45 RENMOrI "The Seagull," 6, 10; "The Idiot," 7:50 MUSIC ALL "House on Skull Mountain," 1:30, 2:45, "The Man From Hona Kona." 3. 6:15. B-45 'Cuckoo' author sues producers United Press International PLEASANT HILL, Ore.

Ken Kesey, author of the novel "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," says there should have been an additional item in the envelope containing the best picture! award for the movie the, subpoenas in his suit against' the producers. Kesey, who got only $20,000 for the screen rights to his novel, has filed suit in U.S. District Court in Portland, seeking a -share of the profits from the movie. "There's a great difference in the $20,000 I received and the $50 million the movie has I earned," Kesey said. FILM TIMES ALLSTON "Swept Away." 2,4.6.8,10 ALL4TOM "Dog Day Afternoon" 2:45, 5.

7:30, 9:45 ARTS I "Clockwo.k Banana," 10, 11:25, 12:50, 2:15, 3:40, 5:05, 6:30, 7:55, 9:20, 10:45 ARTS II "Class 10, 11:55, 12:50. 1:45. 2:40, 3:35, 4:30, 5:25, 6:20, 7:15, 8:10, 9:05, 10 A8TOR "Chlno." 11, 2:30, 6, "Supertly," 12:35, 4:05, 7:35 BEACON HILL "Gable and Lombard," 12, 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10 CHARLES CINEMA "Hester Street." .2:15.4:15,6,7:45.9:30 CHARLES EAST "The Sunshine Boys," 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 CHARLE8 WEST 'The Magic 2:20, 4:50, 7:20, 945 CHERI "Taxi Driver," 1:30, 3:40, 5:50, 8, 10 CHERI COMPLEX "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," 12, 2:30, 5, 7:30, 10 CHERI "Robin and Marian," 1:30. 3:45, 6, 8:15. 10:15 CHESTNUT HILL "Magic Flute." 1:30.

4:20, 7:15, 9:45 CHESTNUT HILL "Gable and Lombard," 1:30, 4:20, 7:25, 9:55 CINEMA "Dog Day Afternoon," 1, 3:15,5:30,7:45,10 CINEMA 57 "Next Stop Greenwich Village," 1:15, 3:30, 5:45, 8, 10 CIRCLE CINEMA "The Duchess and the Dlrtwater Fox," 2, 3:50. 5:35, 7:40. 9:50 and driving, pausing occasionally to let the crowd breathe. Eventually it was' tiresome (how much power boogie can a person take?) but Lofgren proved he is a force to be reckoned with. He has certainly paid some dues.

A Chicago native, he was brought up on jazz and classical music (plus playing accordion to Italian ballads) before discovering rock. He eventual-" ly joined Crazy Horse, Neil Young's backup group, playing both guitar and keyboards. His piano was a highlight of Young's memorable "After the Gold Rush" album. Lofgren then became a fixture in Grin, a group that released four albums, and now has two LPs out as a solo act on the label. Original material fills" these sole albums, with two exceptions: "For Your Love," the old Yardbirds classic, and "Goin" Back" by Carole King and Gerry Goffin.

"Goin" Back," with Lofgren on piano, was a highlight of his set Sunday night. So was "It's Not a Crime," with Nils bending notes wildly in a joust with his brother Tom on organ. The band jammed extensively (the drummer's shirt was off early) but, unfortunately, often drowned out Lofgren's vocals. Yet per--haps this was for the best because strength is instrumental, not vocal. His lyrics are standard rock fare.

Opening act was the Cate Brothers, a group whose recent debut album is getting a lot of push from Asylum Records. From Fayetteville, they are led by Earl Cate on lead guitar and brother Ernest on keyboards. They started with a heavy opener, "I Just Want to Sing," with saturation screech soloing from Earl, but the promise this song suggested was never fulfilled. The band suffers from a sameness of material, and their reliance on an insistent disco rhythm has a commercial, Top 40 ring to it. The Cate Brothers have toured nationally with Queen (a strange musical rjwtis "(jo 3one With the Wind," 2, 7:30 PARK SQUARE "The Last Hurrah," "All the King's Men," 6, 10:05 PI ALLEY 'The Felines," 1, 2:30.

4, 5:30, 7. 8:30, 10 PUSSYCAT CINEMA "Anyone But My Husband," 10, 11:35. 1:10, 2:45, 4:20. 5:55, 7:30, 9:05. 10:40 SAVOY "The Devil Within Her," 11:15, 1, 2:45, 4:30.

6:15, 8, 10 SAVOY "Beyond the 11:30, 1:15, 3, 4:45. 6:30, 8:15. 10 SAXON "llsa," 11, 1:05, 3:20, 5:35, 7:45, "Box Lunch," 12:50, 3:05, 5:20, 7:30, 9:35 SYMPHONY I "Fire In the Flesh." 1, 2:25. 3:50, 5:15, 6:43. 8:05, 9:30 SYMPHONY II "Roast Beef," 1, 2:55, 3:50, 4:45, 5:40, 6:35, 7:30, 8:25, 9:20 WEST END "Love Games," 11:45, 3, 6:15, "Danish Connection," 1:25.4:35,7:55 NILS LOFGREN combination) and their song, "Union Man," which ended their set, is shooting up the charts, especially in the Atlanta and Memphis films at Welles Meet a couple of experts.

Have you ever had one of those days? made a more successful artistic statement. Maybe that's because the valiant Yudie herself is closest to being what many women would very much like to become. Otile McManus OEPsigRAL ClfVEIVl ATHE ATRE S1.25'Tll 2:00 P.M. at STARRED CINEMAS I GEOBSE GOLDIE HAWN INBMAR BERGMAN'S "THE MAGIC FLUTE" 1:30.420,7:19,9:45 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER "DOG DAY AFTERNOON" 1:45. 4:20.

7:20, 9:40 ROBERT TAXI DRIVER" UtNIHV SEAN CGNNERY. MICHAEL CAIHE "THE MAN WHO WOULD BE PG JOAN COLLINS "THE DEVIL WITHIN HER" DOHALDflUSOKt "DEVIL WITHIN HER" 1:30.3:30,5:30, 7:30, 9:30 5 ACADEMY AWARDS "ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST" JAMES BROUN-JIU CLAYBURGH "GABLE LOMBARD" SEAN CONNERY-MICHAEL CAINE "THE MM WHO WOULD BE KINS" PR ACADEMY AWARD HIHia "DOG DAT AFTERNOON 1:45.420.720,9:40 A BLACKFOOT LEGEND! yijiUMUii; I VJUL THE A MELVIN FRANK FILM" ARLINGTON ST. 536-9477 NOW ON THE SAME BILL! UNA WERTMULLEh LOVE AND LANARCHY OS 1:30. 4:20,725,9:55 "GABLE LOMBARD" JAMES IR0UNJIU CUVBURGH ittUMt tWMl NMNEk-ttOiM HMKS "THE SUKSEM BOYS" SPl 5 ACADEMY AWARDS "ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOOS NEST" 1:30.4:30.720.9:45 wpasses R1 SB "TAXI DRIVER" HI ACADEMY AWARD WINNER "DOG DAY AFTERNOON" 1:30, 420, 7:15, 9:45 fi kamnnuDima "DOG DAY AFTERNOON" 1:45, 420, 7:20, 9:45 IK! JAMES BROUN-JIU CLAYBUR6H "GABLE LOMBARD" ICUUT AWARD WWKU HOME IUU3 f'THE SUNSHINE BOYS" 1:15, 3:20. 5:20, 725, 9:35 Vi; ACADEMY AWARD WINNER 'DOG DAY AFTERNOON" 1:45, 4:20, 7:20, 9:40 ACADEMY AWARD WUMEI "SUNSHINE BOYS" 1:19,320,5:20,7:25,9:35 Pr.

Bni 7:30, 9:30 MEL BROOKS' YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" r'iriWrTW'1" "GONE WITH THE WIND" CLARK 6ABLE 7:30 Ml "WINTERHAWK" 7:30, 9:30 PG MiMtnOT LKIUD "WINTERHAWK" 7:30 TMP ON C0U6M HT." 9:30 po "WINTERHAWK" 7:30 "TRAP ON C0U6AB MT" 955 PC HAWN Starts Th'Hau! US AND THE DIBTWATER DUGHE 'Produced and Directed Story by BARRY SANDLER PG nam cauct swisrti Music by MELVIN FRANK Screenplay by MELVIN FRANK, BARRY SANDLER. JACK ROSE and Sunbeams" Sung by BOBBY VINTON IN PERSON GEORGE SEGAL STARTS T01W by CHARLES FOX "Lemon Drops. Lollipops Panavision" Color by Deluxe' 2:00 3 50 5 35 740 950 THEATRE 1 1 Steve Morse Globe Correspondent A former accordion player, now doing punk-rock? Sounds implausible but that's only part of the story of Nils Lofgren, who spent last weekend making the walls shake at Paul's Mall. When he sang "Cry tough pull down your soulYou 'lust need another shot of rock 'n roll," he delivered just that. With the accent on heavy metal, the sound i reverberated around the club and must have carried down to Copley Square.

i ii On Sunday night, although hampered by endless technical difficulties, lofgren and his four-piece, backup band kept driving' Women's While there is little startling about the material presented in each of the three documentaries at the Orson Welles Cinema's weekend noon showings (Saturdays and Sundays through April 18), the women's film program can't be dismissed altogether. As a package, they make for an interesting, if somewhat disappointing, hour and a half. it While it may be startling to some to discover that women filmmakers have developed and polished fcheir technical skills, those familiar with the so-called women's issues treated in these documentaries the issues of work, self-image, health and age will undoubtedly come away with little new meat to chew on. tin "Woman to Woman," Donna Deitch lets her camera, ramble and her sound system eavesdrop. We see and hear prostitutes, housewives, prisoners, strippers and an occasional profes RICHARD DYER Shure's farewell When the first" two performers came onstage in the Boston University Faculty Chamber Music Series program in the BU Concert Hall Monday night, there was so much applause that it was almost impossible fpr them to begin.

This ovation was a tribute to one of them, the pianist Leonard Shure who resigned last week in a contractual dispute with Norman Dello Joio, dean of the BU School for the Arts; this concert, apparently, was his last appearance there. Shure is one of the BU performing-teachers who commands the greatest intellec-. tual prestige in the international music community (he was both a pupil of Schnabel's and his teaching assistant); the warmth of his reception, and a petition of protest that circulated before the performance, showed how much his stu-v dents love him. I All this said, this was not the ideal occasion for listening to Shure, befiause he was playing four-hand, music (the Brahms Waltzes and the Schubert Grand Duo) with another artist, Maria Clodes, whose tonal esthetic and warmly emotional approach to music and the keyboard do not make particularly suitable' match for Shure's flinty, rigorously intellectual, nerve-end pianism. There were several ways in which this ensemble was not precise.

Nevertheless there were several kinds of beauty in the playing of both musicians, and as the Schubert swung along Clodes altered her approach and by the end was playing as obstreperously and exhilara-tingly as her partner. sThe other item on the program was a song-cycle by Carlisle. Floyd, "The Mystery," on pretentious poems about the processes of pregnancy and motherhood. The music is closer in idiom to that in Floyd's opera "Wuthering Heights" than to his more familiar works; what all of them have in common is a very showy and effective way of exploiting the voice. The commanding soprano was Chloe Owen (what method there is in her singing!) and the difficult accompaniments were in the highly competent hands of Allen Rogers.

SATURDAY NIGHT IF I jrSW 1 THE INTEISECTKM OF tEAON ST AW CHESTNUT Hill ONLrittm. FROM EITHER RT 9 OR COMMONWEALTH WE VII CHESTNUT HILL WE sional talking about how they perceive themselves and their work. While the film has an occasional humorous moment, I was left feeling, so what else is new? In "Taking Our Bodies Back," Cambridge Documentary Films, Inc. explores the women's health movement in straightforward, matter-of-fact manner. The audience is confronted with a self-examination, an at-home birth, an abortion, interviews with a doctor and patients on the subject of hysterectomy and mastectomy, interviews with black women on their clinic experiences, high school students on their gynecological experiences, and so forth.

"Yudie," Mirra Banks's portrait of her aunt, an elderly woman living alone in New York City, is more personal than either of the other films and for me MUSIC HAIL 76a T'tmonl St 3300 $1.00 FOR TWO FILMS MAN FROM HONG KONG HOUSE ON SKULL MOUNTAIN 1HIF UCIS IEACOH Hill W-cf GABLE LOMBARD CHE2IM-3 W'iiO" Bos bJiWiVO ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST TAXI DRIVER LP ROBIN MARIAN CIMEMAJJ fiti'Pv So II? 00G DAY AFTERNOON NEXT STOP, GREENWICH VILLAGE CA2T hi siui'' si ojo THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING ri AILET in- ti '6 FELINES 8 IAVOT1-1 THE DEVIL WITHIN HER 151 BEYOND THE DARKNESS IAKOM WmoM Si ILSA, HAREM KEEPER OF THE OIL SHEIKS UtOAIN MATIN II $1.10 'Ml 7 p.m. mr Starred Theatres 1AHYE2V" IndKOlt Slrevt Kit TAXI DRIVER THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING THE DEVIL WITHIN HER GABLE 4 LOMBARD 5 9ANYE2S Hi 2H, mi WE FLEW OVER ffl! CUCKOO NEST 7 15-945 trryl Pmwi Oiictwnfl HAIKU 11 Ion Show Mono OK FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO "EST THE SUNSHINE BCYS PG) r- invi; "WINTERHAWK" 1:30, 3:30, 9:30,7:30, 9:30 PG 1 "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" 1:30. 3:30, 5:25, 7:30, 9:30 PG MEL BR00K5' if 1 1 ill 'ft "YOUNG FRANKENTEIN" 7:30 I "WHIFFS" 9:30 1CU mm 1 1 OEOHOC SEOAt GOLDIE nnflurcc 1 FHE1VVI1ICX9ANDTHE DIBTWATER FO- 5 35 740 9 50 SEE AD ELSEWHERE CIRCLE THEATRE CLEVELAND CIRCLE 5664040 LAV REHCE i Yi at ON ALL PICTURES BARGAIN MATINEES-ALL SEATS $1.25 UNTIL 2 SHOWN AT: CIRCLE CLEVELAND CIRCLE 566-4040 ACTOIV WIN CINEMA 263-8372 in. I. Glenda Jackson-Michael Caine "Romantic Englishwoman" (R) Cln.

II. "The Story ol '0' (X) 719 ARLINGTON CAPITOL 648-4340 'AMERICAN GRAFFITI" (PQ) 7 9:00 EGENT 643-1197 3 4 MUSKETEERS" Dbl. Feat. 7 pm Both Cinemas $1.00 Sun. thru Thuri.

BELMONT STUDIO CINEMA 484-1706 John Wayne Katharine Hepburn ROOSTER COGBURN" IPG) Shown at 7:00 81 9:00 pm i.uu si.so BOSTON CINEMA 733 266-0342 733 Boylston Boston 3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR" (R) PARALLAX VIEW" (R Cont. Mat. Dally S1 'til 5 pm KENMORE MOVIEKOUSE 262-3799 Boston Premiere of THE IDIOT' 7:50 From the Dostovevskv novel THE Both Films In Russian with English Subtitles Ends Thursdayl 'ARIS CINEMA 267-8181 641 Boylston St. Across from Pru Center 'Gone With The Wind" 2 7:30 till 5 $1 Other Times 51.50 PARK SO. M0V1EH0USE 542-2220 "1Mb LAST HURRAH 8:00 Spencer Tracy Directed by John Ford 'ALL THE KING'S MEN" Starring Broderick Crawford ENDS THURSDAYI BROOKLIAE CINEMA BROOKLINE 566-000 Hearthstone Plaza Rte.

9 Brookllne VIII. 4 Academy Award Nominations for Best Picture Best Actress "NASHVILLE" (R) 7:00 9:45 ALL SEATS ALWAYS 11.00 COOLIDGE CORNER 734-2500 M. Dante "Winterhawk" (PG) Jack Lemmon Walter Matthau "THE FRONT PAGE" 7:30 Sat. Sun. 1:30 "Wilderness Family" CAMBRIDGE BRATTLE THEATRE 876-4226 (Thru Tuesday) Chabrol's 'This Man Must Die" Michel Duchaussey Bresson 'MAN ESCAPED" 7:45 Weekend Mats.

3:55 Wed. Is $1 00 Day! IT APRIL 3rd AT AVE. MEDFORD MEDFORD TWIN DRIVE-IN 396-8800 ($4.00 PER CARLOAD) Well. "Reincarnation ol Peter Proud" "Hilack" plus "The Losers" (R) Circle "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore "Scarecrow (R) "Cave of the Living Dead" (R) MEDFORD SQUARE MEDFORD CINEMA 1-2-3 395-9499 7 9:00 'MAHOGANY" IPG) WINTERHAWK PG 6:45 IM "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" (PG) 749 MILFORD RTE. 495 CINEMA 478-3399 Cln.

1. "Snuffs Mv 'Slaughter Hotel (R) complete snow 7 Cin. 2. "Wilderness Family" (G) 7 4 9 Cin. 3 "Man Would Be King" (PG) Monday Nlgnt Si.uu am seats EAST MILTON MILTON CINEMA 698-2335 Glenda Jackson Michael Caine 'THE ROMANTIC ENGLISHWOMAN" (R) 7 9 pm NEEDIIAM NEEDHAM CINEMA 444-6060 ALL SEATS .1.00 "WINTERHAWK" (PG) 7S9 A very unusual mm! NEWTON CORNER PARAMOUNT IS II 332-7833 "Love Anarchy" (R) "Seduction of Miml" (R) 7 9 pm 7:15 9:15 II.

"Winterhawk" (PG) WEST NEWTON WEST NEWTON CINEMAS 964-6060 1. "Seduction of Mlml" Love inarchy" (R) 2. "WINTERHAWK" (PG) 7:00 9:00 3. "Mrs. Barrlngton" (X) 78:45 COUPLES NITE $3.00 NORWOOD NORWOOD 1 2 762-8320 ALL SEATS ALWAYS $1.00 1 "Lies My Father Told Me" (PG) 2.

"Three Musketeers" (PG) 7:00 "Four Musketenrs" (PQ) 8:00 Sal. Sun. 2 pm "Dtgby" "WIMwneis Family" WEST PEABODY WEST PEABODY TWIN I. "WINTERHAWK" (PG) II. "Young Frankenstein" 1 (PG) 535-0600 7.30 and 9:15 BIG ENTERTAINMENT ONSFUWOIO mmr GEORGE BURNS SUNSHINE BOYS 130 720 940 NORTH READING NORTH READING CINEMA 664-2211 "WINTERHAWK" IPG) Sat.

Sun. "Bobble Jo 4 The Outlaw (R) 7:15 4 9:15 WEST ROXBURY VILLAGE CINEMA 325-0303 Robert Redford Fave Dunawav "3 DavsOl The Condor" P. FREE PARKING! SOMERVILLE SOMERVILLE 625-1081 "Bananas" "All About Sex" (PG) 7:30 BROADWAY 625-5316 "3 4 Musketeers" (PG) Dbl. Feat. 7 pm Sun.

thru Thurs. Both Cinemas $1.00 QUINCY STRAND 472-1424 9 pm 7:10 WINTERHAWK" (PG) FRONT PAGE PG Sat. Sun. 1:30 "Wl 'llderness Family" STOUGHTON CINEMA 344-4566 "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" IPG) Shown at 7:00 9:00 TONITE IS DOLLAR NITEII SWAMPSCOTT SURF CINEMA 598-0071 ALL SEATS $1.00 Double Feature at 7:00 Onlyl "LOVE ANARCHY" (R) plus "SEDUCTION OF MIMI" (R) Sun. "THE WAY WE WERE" WELLESLEY HILLS COMMUNITY PLAYHOUSE 235-0047 ALWAYS S1.00-ALL SEATSI "Lies My Father Told Me" (PG) 7 9 Mat.

Sat. Sun. at 2 "The Adv. of the Wilderness Family" (G) WINCHESTER E. M.

LOEW'S WINCHESTER 729-2500 Adults 99c At All Times "4 MUSKETEERS" (PG) "3 MUSKETEERS" (PG) WOLLASTON WOLLASTON THEATRE 773-160 "Return of Pink Panther" (G) 9 "LOVE DEATH" IPG) 7 ADMISSION $1.00 PATRONIZE YOUR SUBURBAN THEATERS! CAMBRIDGE ORSON WELLES CINEMA 868-3600 Cinema I. Wertmuller's "Love Anarchy" 1 :00 Wertmuller's "The Seduction of Mlml" Shown at 5:55 9:25 Cinema II. Carol Kane In Wedding In White" 47:25 'LOVE" Cinema III. "GUN CRAZY Shown at "You Only Live Once" CHELSEA PARKWAY PLAZA TWIN 884-6557 Held Over 2nd Week Mel Brooks' 1. "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" (PG) Last 2 Days) "Nashville" (R) 1.30-8 Fri.

"Bobby Jo The Outlaw" DORCHESTER E. M. LOEW PARK 436-2100 1524 Dorchester Avenue "WINTERHAWK" (PG) 2:40 8:55 "Trap On Cougar Mountain" 1 7:15 FOXBORO ORPHEUM CINEMA 543-5612 Rte. 95 to Exit 7-Rte. 140 to Theatre Nominated for 4 Academy Awardsl Sean Connery Michael Caine Man Who Would Be King" (PG) 7 a 9:15 Sat.

Sun 1 3 "Wilderness Family" FRANKLIN FRANKLIN CINEMA 528-0620 ALL SEATS Mel Brooks' Comic Masterpiece Young Frankenstein" (PG) HYDE PARK NEW PIXIE CINEMA 361-6111 NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT "WINTERHAWK" G) Wed. Is Couples Nile! Per Couple LEXINGTON CINEMAS 1 4 2 862-3260 Sun. thru Thurs. $1.00 Both Cinemas 1. "American Graffiti" (PG) 7S9 2.

"Romantic Enqlishwoman" R) 7 9 LITTLETON TWIN CINEMA 486-8060 $1.00 ALL SEATS BOTH CINEMAS 1. Robert Redford In "3 Days ol the Condor" (R) 2. "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore (PG) 7:00 9:00 MAYNARD FINE ARTS I 897-2100 Elliott Gould Diane Keaton "I Will, I Will For Now" (R) FINE ARTS II. Lenny Baker Shelley Winters "Next Stop Greenwich Village" (R) 150 STARTS FhVcVWI" Lipstick Tha ttorvot woman's oulrao nil a woman sum mm uxxn I (DEDHAM 1 Rte.1Rte.128-exit60 326-4955 ALL PICTURES BARGAIN MATINEES-ALL SEATS $1.25 UNTIL 2 PM. iAixlmiy LiiiunlnsintT GNEFUWOVEB THEATRE PAGE! 1 it im intmiaFM of Mian si wo ensinui wu mt mm uoMiitmir emmtmun nicmnwiiHiitHi Routes 114 and 495 -686-2121 7 BEST PICTURE FEROCIOUS! mncr th critics agree! KUttl Kl 1)1 MKU TAXI DRIVER 150 7 30 950 7W950 -BEST PICTURE GEORGE 6U8NS ravMr mntTl IJUIVIH III L.

UVIJ I 1 155 730 9 55 "CI BtlCUIklC DPTVC" LAST 2DAYS I Sin Cumin ItelnWlio 130 740 1000 OPEN EVERY DAY mm i rem males BOXOFHCE QPtWS T6KS SHOW STARTS 7:00 LAST 2 DAYS 100 7M 945 ft" IIKtCUOiCOKNEST 130 7M 1000 145 710 940 (VyOBURN IJVi Rte.128eit39 Rte.38 -933-5330) STARTS FRIDAY "LIPSTICK" with ANNE BANCROFT JjH Tall pictures bargain matinees-all seats $1.25 until 2 rm.1 i liuarJCinncr Jl (AMES BROUN HUCUVMJRCH 140 7 950 BEST RCTURE MiMra runmawir 150 710 950 unive-tns DEDHAM File. 14128 326-3800 13 ELECTRIC IW-CAR HE ATER OPTIONAL NEPONSET D0 YOU 282-3500 VO SEE revere i C1y60 284-5700 rjgr Vr yu ohmim (Srsl Hotrhwk HAVE LEGAL RIGHT T- MURDER ON FILM? kll iJH' j'l cASE Hi i h'h vrj ilrrrfJjyLUJLij fa uiLiWrijL) wiyhs la.

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