Page 6-Tuesday, Z'ecembef 4, 1979-The Michigan Daily Arthur Penn's 1976 MISSOURI BREAKS MARLON BRANDO and JACK'NICHOLSON in Penn's dicursive but dreamy- as-dandelions western. A hired killer is out to get a cattle rustler. "What actors and director have created is a fascinating tale of complex characters, and an engrossing duel between men of multi-layered personality against a multi-dimensional time in history." With RANDY QUAID and KATHLEEN LLOYD. In color. Wed.: Arthur Penn's THE CHASE CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00O& 9:15 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at Aud A: $1.50 Tuesday, December 4 THE MEMORY OF JUSTICE (Marcel Ophuls, 1976) 7 only-AUD A This epic documentary focuses on war atrocities committed in Vietnam and elsewhere. The definitions of war crimes established at the Nuremburg Trials provide the moral, ethical and legal frames of reference. THE SORROW AND THE PITY, an earlier documentary by Ophuls which examined French collobra- tion with the Nazis during WW II, was widely praised. THE MEMORY OF JUS- TICE, which strikes closer to home, has proven more difficult to deal with. After all, Vietnam was our war ... wasn't it? If you've seen THE DEER HUNTER, you owe it to yourself to see this film. Some four and one-half hours long, it probes deeply and avoids facile conclusions. Ophuls "attempts nothing less than an investigation of the nature of war guilt."-NEW YORKER. Tomorrow: Radio comedy with THE GRACIE ALLEN MURDER CASE and BUCK BENNY RIDES AGAIN, alon with Three Stooges shorts at Nat. Sci. THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Christmas Dance Concert Fri.& Sat.December 7 & 8 at 8pm n c e Sun. December 9 at 3pm Power Center A ~ ehren(1v of Carols Muicb pBniamifl Britten LARGE-CALIBER bullet holes pierced the driver's window of the U.S. Navy bus that was ambushed yesterday by terrorists in Toa Baja, Puerto Rico. Officials said two soldiers were killed and ten more wounded in the attack, which took place ten miles west of San Juan. TERRORIST GROUPS CLAIM RESPONSIBILITY Two sailors slain in Puerto Rico . TOA BAJA, Puerto Rico (AP) - Terrorist gunmen ambushed a U.S. Navy bus on a lonely country road early yesterday, killing two sailors and wounding 10 other servicemen and women in the bloodiest attack ever against the military on this U.S. com- monwealth island. A statement left with a news agency said the Armed Forces of Popular Resistance, the Puerto Rican Popular Army, and the Organization of Volun- teers for the Puerto Rican Revolution were responsible. THE THREE groups andthe'Armed Forces of National Liberation, which is based on the U.S. mainland, took responsibility in October for coor- dinated bombings of federal.property in Puerto Rico and in mainland cities. The FALN's name did not appear in yester- 'ay's statement. The statement described the ambush as "a military attack against the naval intelligence base."-It said the ambush was a response to the deaths of two pro- independence youths killed in a shootout with police a year ago near a communications tower in Puerto Rico, and to the death of an anti-Navy activist in prison in Florida last month. "The clandestine organizations are not playing at war," the statement said. IN WASHINGTON, White House press secretary Jody Powell said DASCOLA STYLISTS Arborland--971-9975 Maple Village-761-2733 E. Liberty-668-9329 E. University-662-0354 ~iappg President Carter deplored the attack as "a despicable act of murder" incon- sistent with the political attitudes of most Puerto Ricans. Three of those wounded in the dawn attack were Navy enlisted women, the Navy said. It said two of the wounded were in critical condition, five were in serious condition and three others were treated and released. The identities of the victims were withheld pending notification of the next-of-kin, but police said the bus driver was one of the dead. THE YELLOW bus was taking 18 Navy communications technicians - all enlisted personnel - from the Sabana Seca Navy Base in this town 10 miles west of San Juan to work at a transmitting tower about a mile away, across non-Navy land. At a spot where a narrow'4wo-lane asphalt highway passes a factory and a driveway, police said, a van' blocked tie path of the bus and terrorists opened fire, apparently with a shotgun and pistols. One survivor, who did not give his name, said the driver was killed instan- tly by a shot under the right eye, and a passenger took the wheel and drove the bus back to Sabana Seca. Survivors told police the terrorists' van sped away af- ter the attack. THE WINDSHIELD and front side windows of the bus were riddled with bullet holes - police counted 41 - and shards of glass lay in a pool of blood beneath the first passenger seat to the left of the aisle. The critically wounded were taken to the Veterans Administration hospital in San Juan, and those in serious condition were hospitalized at the Roosevelt Roads Navy Base. The anti-Navy radicals have now "escalated their cause from peaceful demonstrations to criminal felony," said Rear Adm. Arthur K. Knoizen, the Navy's Caribbean commander. The admiral, standing before the bullet- pocked bus, told reporters the attack on the unarmed sailors was "a well'- planned, well-executed ambush.", THE FBI, working with common- wealth police, took charge of ;the in- vestigation. Fatigue-clad Marines with M-16 rifles patrolled the entrance to the Sabana Seca base, and the admiral said security was being stepped up at all military bases on this Caribbean island. For years, various groups have protested the Navy's use of tiny Vieques, off eastern Puerto Rico, for Bomb threat em~p ties out local sorority target practice. The bitterness has in- tensified since the death in a Florida prison three weeks ago of Angel Rodriguez Cristobal, jailed on a charge of trespassing on Navy property during a Vieques protest. Prison officials say he hanged him- self, but anti-Navy protesters question that. One small radical group, the Ar- med Forces of Popular Resistance (FARP), had vowed vengeance. THE PUERTO Rican Socialist Par- ty's president, Carlos Gallisa, a vocal anti-Navy spokesman, called yester- day's attack "the product of the situation that the U.S. Navy has created in Puerto Rico." K ~1 (Continued from Page 1) The 'caller allegedly claimed the bomb would explode at 3 a.m. While several sorority members watched the house's white columned facade from temporary accommodations across Hill Street, the projected moment passed uneventfully. Concerned for their safety, sources from the sorority chose to remain anonymous in discussing the incident. "MY FIRST reaction was anger," one member explained. "It made me mad to think that sompeone could be so sick to do this to us - to hurt and scare my friends. I didn't believe there was a bomb in the house, but after discussing the situation with friends, I started to think, 'What if there really is a bomb.' "No one thought it was funny," she continued, "People were scared, really scared. Somebody had invaded our home and privacy - this is what made me so angry." According to the woman who received the bomb threat over the telephone, the callerthad an "apparen- tly British accent, and sounded somewhat older." He reportedly iden- tified himself in a. very "straight- forward" way, as a member of "some international organization." His statement was "brief and to the point,", the sorority member said, and "didn't leave room for discussion:" "THERE HAS been a bomb placed in your house," he allegedly said. "It is set to go off at 3 a.m. If you think I'm kidding, I'm not. There could be a lot of damage to the girls and your proper- ty." Lieutenant William Hoover, speaking for the police department, confirmed the members' account of the Sunday night incident, and defended the of- ficers' decision not to order an evacuation. 1 1 12 FREE 12 oz. CO ES 1 With Purchase of Any I1 item or More Pizza 11tm rMoePiz 1 (WITH THIS AD) 1 OPEN SUN-THURS 11am-lam; FRI & SAT 11am-2am 1 1 Now Delivering to the N. Campus Area 1 1 I BELL'S GREEK PIZZA r 995-0232 II 1 700 Packard at State Street1 Ii-mm - --------------------- mmUms British cabinet names new Rhodesian gover'nor (Continued from Page 1) Carter has declined to lift the san- ctions pending the outcome of an all- parties conference in London. SENIOR DIPLOMATS said Lord Soames, a son-in-law of the late Sir Winston Churchill, would be named Zimbabwe Rhodesia governor, but it was unlikely he would be sent there very quickly. The Cabinet action was seen as a move to press guerrilla leaders to accept Britain's proposals and not an effort to set up a new gover- nment immediately. Carrington's statement stopped short of declaring an end to the London peace talks between the Zimbabwe Rhodesia government headed by black Prime Minister Abel Muzorewa and the black nationalist guerrillas. Carrington said the order-in-council, a special decree the government can enact in urgent situations without going through Parliament, could be used to send a governor to Salisbury "when we wish to send one. The negotiations, now moving into their 13th week, have stalled over Britain's blueprint for a cease-fire, which Patriotic Front leaders say would place them at a disadvantage. "No doors have been finally closed," Carrington told reporters after Patriotic Front co-leaders Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe asked for more time to consider the cease-fire proposal. A Creative Christmas Bring Christmas cheer to your favorite artists and engineers with gifts like high-quality drawing pens, canvas, paints, sculpting tools, or drawing boards from Ulrich's. (A hint: Ulrich's has what they want-but if you don't know what it is, try a gift certificate.) We are offering 10% off all art & engineering supplies thru the new year. Applications Now 8eing Taken for the Position of Tresurer of MSA. i I I I I