Friday, November 15, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three U. Japanese radicals protest Ford visit TOKYO () - Marxist radi- bent U.S. president, and thus cals in red helmets attacked the ourselves." U.S. and Soviet embassies on Massive anti-American de- Thursday with fire bombs in the monstrations by leftists forced first violent protest against officials to cancel the 1 a s t President Ford's scheduled visit scheduled visit of an American' to Japan next week. president, by Dwight D. Eisen- There was little damage to hower in 1960. Japanese and the missions. The government American officials say they ex- said three or four Soviet diplo- pect no protests comparable to mats and 11 policemen were in- those that kept Eisenhower jured, the latter in scuffles with away, but some already have attackers. Leaflets were drop- been held and more are plan- ped at the Soviet VEmbassy op- posing Ford's visit and alle g- ing that Washington and Mos- cow are trying to divide the world between themselves. PRIME MINISTER Kakuei Tanaka's government expressed regret and said it is mobilizing 160,000 Tokyo policemen, 60 per cent more than normal, to pro- tect the President next Monday through Friday. The security operation is Ja-1 pan's biggest since World WarI II. Riot police were reported coming to Tokyo from as f a r ned. SECURITY precautions a r e expected to keep Ford far from demonstrations, but Japanese radicals recently have shifted to small commando-type actions like Thursday's attacks on the two embassies. As three radicals of the Marx- ist Youth League used iron pip- es in scuffling with police guard- ing the American compound, two of their comrades tossed gasoline bombs into the com- pound from a hotel roof 30 floors up. Police said three helmeted radicals came down a slope behind the Soviet Embassy com- this WSOKOtD, $2.50 8:eO FRI..SAT.-SUN. RAGTIME, FUNK, and Goodtime Music WITH SPIDER JOHN KOERNER ANDj ANDY COHEN 141 Hill STREET This week, get Kenwood stereo systems for a song. Make a mental note: Tch Hifi has special savings on systems with Kenwood c~mpots; 8j I- Te 22 Eiias spals an gs ont Ann Arbor. I Paul Newman bugs the establishment in COOL-HAND LUKE in which Newman is incarcerated for cutting off parking meters and eats a lot of eggs. TONIGHT-Fri., Nov. 15th ONLY-7 & 9 p.m.-$1.25 at MODERN LANGUAGES BUILDING--Auditorium 3 -PLUS LAST TIMES TONIGHT!- 7 & 9 p.m.-$1.25-(BOTH FILMS for $2) MODERN LANGUAGES BUILDING-Auditorium 4 "One of the last great entertainments!" ROBERT STEPHENS, COLIN BLAKELY, GENEVIEVE PAIGE AND CHRISTOPHER LEE in The Piate Life Sherlock Holmes Director - BILLY WILDER Is The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes the best American film of the last five years? This 1970 Billy Wilder produc- tion, which opened as Radio City Music Hall's Christmas attraction but soon drifted into critical oblivion and com- mercial disaster, now qualifies as a maior rediscovery of the '70's. However, don't let its relative obscurity fool you-The Pri- vote Life of Sherlock Holmes is for from being an esoteric film. In fact, it may be one of the last greet entertain- ments-a film in which style, comedy, plot, and meaning are blended with the ease and assurance that character- ized the old Hollywood masters. In addition to its lively script, visual flair, and fantastic Miklos Rosza score, The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes is also one of the most ingenious mysteries ever written for the screen. A cage full of canaries, a mysterious woman saved from drowning, "a swan that really isn't a swan," four midgets at a lonely gravesite, a group of four Trappist monks, a "red runner" the code-word "Jonah", Kaiser Wilhelm, and Loch Ness: these are iust a few of the clues that unravel in an intricate chain of events leading to a truly surprising conclusion-perhaps too surprising, even, for the redoubtable Mr. Holmes. But, besides being a mystery, The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes also has mystery, if you know what I mean. And at the center of this mystery is the character of the legendary arch-decettive, Sherlock Holmes. The film opens with a safe-deposit box being opened and a series of dusty objects being extracted from it-a hypodermic, a violin concerto, a deerstalker, a pipe, and a Rosebud-like glass ball con- taining a bust of Queen Victoria. A handwritten manuscript narrated by Dr. Watson tells us that 50 years after Holmes' death, we will learn of this case, one of Holmes' few faiures Was Holmes really a supersleuth, or was he the creation of his sometimes overzealous chronicler, Dr. Watson? Was Holmes one of the last romantics; or an unfeeling thinking machine? Was he a homosexual, or the victim of a tragic love affair? At the end of all these questions is a syringe filled with opium, which allows Holmes to conquer the ag- onizing boredom that so often afflicts him and to smooth over the contradictions in his elusive character. Finally, the film is about myth-making. Sherlock Holmes, the Loch Ness monster. Romanticism, the Victorian age- these are some of the myths the film treats, myths that be- come real more than the reality that debunks them, just as World War I will debunk the Nineteenth Century that is dying at the film's end. The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes is a very funny film and a very melancholy one, very cyni- cal and very romantic. It is on. old-fashioned film and a very modern one. It is a film for all audiences, particularly that rather large audience that missed it the first time around, and perhaps now, five years after the fact, film so- cieties and revival houses will give it a well-deserved second chance. IN COLOR AND PANAVISION 71 i i ., away as Hokkaido, Japan'sI northernrmost maior island.rmOnepound a few blocks away, threw' 11°V L11G 1111VOL1l1 JV1 J1UtluV. oficial said: "We simply have to welcome Ford this time. Oth- erwise, it would be a second time we humiliated an incum- 1 f five or six fire bombs and triedI to dash inside. Police said they arested all eight of the Marxist attackers. AP Photo Workers at Tokyo's flag factory make U. S. fi gs L preparation for President Ford's visit to Japan scheduled for next week. The Japanese Foreign Ministry reportedly ordered most of the flags. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN LmAs%3sssssM2%rss23..iM sfd~%22%2sEN Day Calendar7 Friday, November 15 Opportunity Program O p e n, House: 1415 Mason, 9 am-3 pm. , WUOM: Live coverage, Senate' Rules Com. hearings, confirmation of N^'son Rockefeller as v-p. cont., 10 am. Regents' Meeting: Regents' Rm.,; Admin. B1g., 11 am. MERI: Shimon Gatt, Hebrew U.,' Hadassah Med. Sch., Israel, "Physi- cal Properties and Enzyme Utiliza- tion of Mixed Micells of Sphingo- myelin and Triton," 1057 MHRI, 11 am. Statistical Research: Wm. Ericson, "Sampling the 1880 Census of De- troit," E. Conf. Rm., Rackham. noon. Hosp. Commission for Women Meeting: W10410 Hosp., noon. Educ. Media Ctr.: Energy: Dilem- ma; 7nergy: New Sources, Schorl- ing Aud., SEB, noon. Guild House: Luncheon, Jack Bailey, "The University Effort to Meet the Challenge," 802 Monroe,1 noon. Astronomy Colloquium: A. Del-j semme, U. of Toledo, "Recent Ad- vances in the Stuty of Comets,"j P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 pm. African Film Series: African Ani- mals: History of Slavery in Ameri- ca, Aud. D, Angell, 8 pm. Music School: String dept., Re- cital Hall, 8 pm. UAC: Soph show, "Damn Yan- kees," Mendelssohn, 8 pm. PTP: Showease series, "The Redj Lantern," Trueblood Aud., Frieze;s "Seesaw," Power, both at 8 pm. Those Were The Days WITH A TOUCH OF MODERN CLASS 209 S. State Street (2ND FLOOR) JEANSj $2 off with this ad FLANNEL SHIRTS FURS SWEATERS Open 10-5 AU SPECIAL SEMINAR MENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH INSTITUTE SHIMON GATT Department of Biochemistry The Hebrew University-Hadassoh Medical School, Israel "Physical Properties and Enzyme Utilization of Mixed Micelles of Sphingomyelin and Triton" FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15 SEMINAR: 11:00 a.m., 1057 MHRI BURSLEY HALL ENTERPRISES presents CHARLIE CHAPLIN'S THE GOLD RUSH PLUS A Buster Keaton Short Fri., Nov. 15 9:00 p.m. (contrary to University Record) Bursley W. 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