if tuJ *Eli 1. rma . 1 ion f fat of a joint "1o iricrii;iii ctup. ***Of MA:tint has .all e4 ii diiiil li .111 American publishing venture that joined in the venture with the Pit- will prodUce scientific, textbooks in man Publishing Corp. of New York Israel, for export, was announced I City, an educational publishing HOLLYWOOD — Leonard Free- in Tel Aviv. The Hevrath Ovdim, I house. man, producer and co-author with Mel Goldberg of United Artists' high budgeted Western, "Hang 'Em High," invited the foreign The Most Honored Picture of Our Time! press last summer to the location at Las Cruces near the Rio COLUMBIA PICTURES presents PP Grande River in New Mexico to FRED ZINNEMANN'S tom. witness the shooting of some key sequences with Clint Eastwood, Pat Hingle, academy-award win- ner Ed Begley and Swedish actress Inger Stevens. The action-packed drama marks the American debut in a feature film of Clint East- wood, today's Gary Cooper, who rose from 71/2 years of TV work in "Rawhide" to world stardom in F pin .yti t; ROBERT BOLT mai kV "Italian" Westerns, mostly made in Spain, starting with a "Fistful 'WHOM of Dollars" which was made for WINNER OF 6 ig (ED the exceptionally low budget of ACADEMY AWARDS $200,000 and grossed in Italy alone NOW! including $4,000,000. "BEST PICTURE"! It was a brilliant move of Leonard Freeman to sign the LA PARISIEN/PUNCH & JUDY/ 'TOWNE "hot" Western hero for his first gercheyal at Fisher Rd, Ford and Mlddl.Mlt Greenfield North of ION Mlle Garden City U.S. motion picture, an assign- Grosse FolMe at Lincoln Center GA. 14210 U. 54010 393-6603 ment which will pay off with an- other pocketful of dollars, or rather thousand dollar bills, though the start alone today demands a sal- ary in the neighborhood of half a million dollars. * * "Hang 'Em High" deals uniquely PREMIERE THURS. JANUARY 25 8:30 with the theme of vengeance as told through the eyes of a man EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT who survived his own hanging in the period following the Civil war A man too big to track down and bring to justice MIRA/4a the nine men who "lynched" him. for legend — Heretofore, writer- producer A motion picture ROBERT SHAW Freeman has functioned on more too big CrrEilrE.Ft, than 100 film projects; scores of d7lF? BE original teleplays, including 13 for any screen hours of "The Untouchables;" 30 except hours of "Route 66;" producer on CINERAMA ' all of the "Mr. Novak" television series: Alcoa Goodyear Theatre; winner of many Enimy and URE Writers Guild Awards nominations Vrea0MEHMIWEII IIIMIEY...IROBERT —though he is still in his mid- SCHEDULE OF PRICES AND PERFORMANCES thirties. !t , 'A= Hollywood Personalities- 1WAN FORALL SEASONS" / Sun. Main Floor & Mezz. $3.00 - Bolc. S2.00 Tickets at all Sears Stores & Auto Club Branches & J. L. Hudson's Downtown —Northland— Eastland & Westland Free Parking After 5:30 P.M. Box Office Open Daily Noon to 9 I Sunianit CINERAMA WASHINGTON BLVD AND LAFAYETTE SPECIAL ATTENTION TO THEATRE PARTIES. For intaimahon Can Di:=Ynisiniti.,4 , :nORiie. • wo. 1.370 6 "..iyx: We are proud to mountaire the fortlyrnintog imittit Exclustut fresentatiott — of one of the most fltotitti antatuteti Odom of alt Mors ... Once again the screen explodes with rage and.passion and greatness! "A LUSTY, BOLDLY, PROVOCATIVE FILM" , LIFE Magazine BUNION O'TOOLE NMA100111 PICTURES Pore WALLLT L DUCTION HA PRO TROiNICOLOR*113ECKET IPANAV00014, KIRA EON IVA•DCMD W111T- IACTITA =NSW wawa p MEM AWAIT anis on •.• arig HAN A/$00118 ass SCHEDULE OF PERFORMANCES , Men. Ow Fri. BAO Set. 200.11,30 Sea. 3,00.740 DOORS OPEN ONE HOUR BEFORE SHOWTWEI NOW SHOWING BIRMINGHAM • • airmittghalm , . • . MI 4-3533 t POSSIBLY THE BEST FILM OF THIS YEAH! NOW! EXCLUSIVE Bonnie and Clyde Weekdays: 7:30, 9:30. Sat.: 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 Sundays , : 5:30, 730 , sao [11 1 STUDIO NEW CENTER I 3rd at the Blvd. • DI 4-0025 FREE PAIRING • Entrance on 31d app. Mutts B '16111111121111 CARLO PONTI and SELMUR Productions Inc . present r Ted Post, who bows as feature film director with the high-pitched, "Hang 'Em High," is known to us from his work with the University of Judaism in Los Angeles, Ben- Ari's drama classes, and the pageants staged for "Bonds for Is- rael" at the Hollywood Bowl. He has directed numerous television films, such as the recent NBC special Lawrence Ferlinghetti pro- gram, "A Coney Island of the Mind," which has lauded for camera effects, sharp closeups and color application. 'The Graduate' Joseph E. Levine's current, "The Graduate," which racked up at its world premiere during the very first week in two New York art houses alone a cool $108,000 dol- lars, is not only the year's top moneymaker, but also the slickest and most brilliantly conceived and executed screen comedy of 1967. Dealing with the coming-of-age of a spoiled brat from the social set, the satirical yarn was guided in visual terms by young Mike Nichols and introduces to the screen an amazing youngster by the name of Dustin Hoffman, a Jewish boy from Los Angeles who had made himself known in such off-Broadway shows as "Journey on the Fifth Horse" and "Eh?" Levine, however, currently is un- able to enjoy at the fullest his greatest triumph in years. Return. ing from Ireland from a visit to the Dublin location of his multi- million dollars historical spectacle, "The Lion in Winter," starring Peter O'Toole and Katharine Hep- burn, he flew to Boston to enter the Peter Ben Brighton Hospital for treatment of a knee injury. 'Live for Life' Claude Lelouch, t h e French director of last year's "A Man and A Woman," has added another cinematic masterpiece to his credit ntitimitT U'Aebtir (Copyright 1968, JTA Inc.) with his current, "Live for Life," umphant demonstrations of Hitler's again a triangle-love story told by party formations a quarter of a the camera with delicate color vig- century ago, are quite understand- nettes which breeze a sense of , able as recollections of filmmaker poetic wistfulness and wonderment !Claude Lelouch, himself a Jewish heretofore unbeknown to the movie- boy who spent his youth in Vichy- goer of the Western hemisphere. French confinement and in a Ger- Yves Montand, Candice Bergen man concentration camp. and Annie Girardot portray the leads in the film produced by Jack Gold, British documentary Messrs. Alexandre Mnouchkine and film director whose pictures have Georges Danciger, with the musi- covered subjects ranging from the cal score once more supplied by famine in India to the life of bil- Francis Lai. The inclusion of frag- lionaire John Paul Getty, has been ments from the Congo struggle for signed by producers Robert A. supremacy the conflict in Southeast Goldston and Otto Plaschkes (of Asia with scenes of utter brutality, "Georgy Girl") to guide for UM- seems somewhat frivolous when versal Pictures in London filmiza- seen against the background of a tion of "The Bofors Gub," set in a love story. Yet the staged inter- British army camp in Germany 10 views with the "white" mercen- years after World War II, and star- aries in Africa, which reveal the ring David Warner, Nicol William- Nazi background of some • of the son and Ian Holm, three distin- professional warriors, the docu- , guished stage actors from Westend mentary footage involving the tri- and Broadway. It's Worth A Trip To DETROIT! Evenings at 8:30 (Sunday et 7:30) Main Floor & Mezz. $3.00 Balcony $2.00 Matinees at 2:00 p.m. Wed. Main Floor & Mezz. $2.25 - Bole. $1.80 Sot. Main Floor & Mezz. 52.50 - Bole. 52.00 By .0.. SO OEM MB ApV4ikkiti RITA TUS/fo, p SMASHING Nei* ALSO 51.17.G VICHAELYORec.AN A (UAYIE IRENE HANDL IA CARVICHAEL CA wRAPONTI 2.6c:241GMAN IncuTK ""u"R :D G f E IG M EI way pate CD er DESMOND DAVIS • HN ADDISON • COLOR :.-' 4 .PARAMOUNT Release . JO nrizt. 5 j3oloo SUN. 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS -Friday, January 19, 1968-391 • EXCLUSIVE STUDIO-8 DETROIT PREMIERE Greenfield at 8-Mile • LI 2-8827 ACRES OF FREE P4Fililt40 NOW! ENGAGEMENT