Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Bosesn roeseane Bia OFssccmhss eoruscs onvoOcms tes neneoneca SO el ww OEE ee een ' |___AT THE Eastern Critics Wax Enthusiastic on Film No motion picture ever filmed has ever received the acclaim awarded the Max Reinhardt production of “A Midsummer Night's Dream,” which Warner Bros. will present at the Cap- itol Theatre on Friday, Saturday and Sunday for the first time at popular Prices. Critics in New York, Chicago, Phil- | adelphia, Boston, Cleveland, Detroit, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, Los Angeles and other great metropolitan centers in the United States, where the “Dream” was shown at prices ranging from $1 to $11 for the best seats, joined with reviewers in Montreal, Can., London, -Eng., Vienna, Austria, and key cities in Poland, Finland, India, Australia, Italy and France in declaring it the greatest picture ever produced. Before its public premiere, Louella Parsons, America’s most famous mo- tion picture critic said of it: “‘A Midsummer Night's Dream’ is the most beautiful picture I have ever seen. It comes nearest to perfection of any motion picture yet produced.” ‘The London “Telegraph,” one of the hardest papers to please, declared it “dazzling, magnificent, overwhelming, with moments of visionary beauty such as the screen has not seen before. It charmed and amused and aston- ished tie audience by turns.” ‘The conservative New Yors “Times” sald: “The ‘Dream’ is a beautiful and interesting effort—achieves perfection in the clowns—a work of high am- Bitions and unflagging interest—a credit to Warner Bros., and to the mo- tion picture industry.” Japan has an average of four earth- @Muakes every day. MOVIE | All-America Cast in Swing Football Film Half-backs, laugh-backs, tune tack- lers, co-ed cuties, Boola-Boola boys and gridiron heroes clown on the campus, swing on the football field, dance on the sidelines and romance in the stands in “Pigskin Parade,” the uproarious Twentieth Century Fox musical football hit that opens today at the Paramount Theatre. Featuring a cast hand-picked for entertainment, including Stuart Er- win, Johnny Downs, Arline Judge, Betty Grable, Patsy Kelly, Jack Haley, the Yacht Club Boys, Dixie Dunbar, Anthony Martin and Judy Garland, the film. is a flip, fast football frolic, punctuated with torch tunes and highlighted with campus romances. Merrier than “Thanks a Million” and swingier than “Sing, Baby, Sing,” “Pigskin Parade” scores a smashing entertainment touchdown as it tells the hilarious story of a small back- woods college, invited by mistake to play Boola-Boola in a big intersec- tional game. The Yacht Club boys, remembered for their sensational success in “Thanks a Million,” stop the show with their hilarious numbers as they turn the tiger loose. Yea! for youth! Laughing, singing, dancing, swinging, in this rollicking comedy of laughs, laughs, laughs. Columbus Day apparently influ- enced the conversation of the boys at the tavern. Some could be heard mentioning a “Pinta” this and that. If a politician lets the chips fall where they may, its only because he ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1986 INSTRUCTIONS }was ONLY A AND RAN AROUND MIRACLE THAT SURROUNDED BY A GROUP needs the soapbox. It's hard to get a Spanish loyalist |to agree that the Moor, the merrier. "I can’t think of anything in our home that does as much for so little as the Telephone” seys Mou. K. E. Kelly y —One of our customers—= “The many every-day uses I have for telephone service make me appre- . ciate its high quality and I am more than satisfied with what the tele- phone does for me,” says Mrs. Kelly. “It is a great convenience in or- dering food and ether household necessities and I can reach so many of my friends and accomplish so many things that might require trips that I have more time for myself and family.” | Fer every-day errante, for iiendly chcts or for belp . im emergencies, turn to your telephone. It maked + life safer, fuller and happier. . . FEET AGAIN TOUCH GROUND AND SHE QUICKLY IS OF HOSTILE TROOPS. WASH TUBBS LOOK AT US$ AFOOT IN TH' MIDDLE OF A DESERT, ALL BECAUSE THE GREAT MASTERMIND PULLED A BONEI2, WHAT _I_KNOW? OH, SO THATS } LISSEN, STRANGER-OFTEN TH’ YOU KNOW I WUZ ( TELL YOU HOW AND | |IT! YOU'RE ‘ EARS ARE BETTER SERVANTS TH: MOOVIAN ) THAN TH’ MOUTH -YOU SHOULD THE GUMPS— SOUP’S ON! Pe tahoe : Sean toe nara ND PVE BEN WASING HES WITH ‘SOUP? “er DIDN'T You ARRANGE WITH OSSIE TO CARRY SIGNALS DID Nor! To US FROM i THE BENCH ? ENLIN LEAPS 70 MYRA'S SIDE... AT THIS GESTURE, THE SOLDIERS FALL BACK RE- SPECTFULLY. IT SAW FROM THE. SKY... T'S ING? ae = POOR STEVE T : i NOW, CORA CONFOUND : eias etre area iT, SAMES ANO t WERE HAUING A SPLENDID GAME OF CHECKERS = L. wee NOT MUST GET OUT OF TRE HABIT OF HANGING AROUND a AND HE O\ONT MIND! LYK we EN Se ‘ THE DEN THEY \N FACT, HE ENSONED % BoA THREE aye roa T THOROUGHLY IE AMD) caves SURE, THEY PUSHED YOU, AFTER THE WAY }STOP-GROW! SOU FLASHED MONEY IN ‘THEIR FACES, IT'S NDER THEY DONT CUT YOUR; ca CRACKPOT! YOU DROPPED YOUR. BOOT, WITH A $20 - A WO! By HAMLIN Our Boarding House With Major Hoople UMFHAR-RUMF ~AH-UM—.) TH! LAST TIME JAS MY PLAN ISTO LETA 9% YOU PLAYED 2 SAM, SELECTED FEW IN ON OY TWAT TUNE J MY BONANZA—BEFORE *% .ON MYEAR ) TAILOR, SUBMITTING MY INVENTION { DRUMS, T CALLED TO BIG MANUFACTURING < LIFTED TH’ INTERESTS, IL WILLNEED SISO ) LATCH, BUT TO OBTAIN MY PATENT~FOR OPPORTUNITY O APIECE, 1 WILL CUT Youn ) HELD ME UP ON 10% OF THE PROFITS DERIVED FROM SALES/ OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS GRAND. REMEMBER THAT /I DIDN'T WIZER, EH?) SAY I AM, 1 SAID, 1 WUZ “TH GRAND WIZER-I'N NOW EX-GRANO WIZER --- WHO ARE YOU? HE'D GIVE