Friday, September 28, 1 73 I HE MICHIGAN DAILY racge Ihree Ex- Chilean fl~ '7l governor AP Photo Soldier's pet A monkey sits on the shoulders of two Cambodian government soldiers taking a break during opera- tins aimed at reopening Route 1 southeast of Phnom Penh. Meanwhile, at least 20 communist and non-aligned countries yesterday were planning to ask the United Nations General Assembly to oust the Cambodian delegation and replace it with one loybit to Prince Norodom Sihanouk who heads a Peking- based government in exile. The action followed Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim's refusal to comply with a request by the prince to submit an item on the question to the assembly agenda. NA RROW VOTE: shot SANTIAGO, Chile (P - ing squad executed the leftist governor of Talca day after he was convic killing a policeman and a ing to blow up a dam. The victim was identif themilitary government man Castro Rojas. He w' first high official of the regime of President Sa Allende to go before a squad. MEANWHILE, military ities relaxed a strict leaving Chileans free fo first time since the coup eveningmstrolls and go dinner. The curfew, enforced b iers and police with subn guns, had emptied S streets daily at 8 p.m., than the normal Chilean hour. Yesterday it was back to 10 p.m., a maj toward normalizing life battered capital. The military governme tinued to raid homes, offi factories in a hunt for poc leftist resistance. But the junta sought to assure C that everything is in ord "LABOR ACTIVITIES 'tally normalized in the co said a communique issued junta's Labor Ministry, The junta, which seize er violently from Marxis dent Salvadore Allende, Iannounced that beef wi. available in Santiago shops this weekend. Santiago residents ha - -r - 4 -s -f by firing squad A fir- been able to buy beef, except on ciency and corruption in Allen- former the black market, for months. de's government were the cauie>, yester- Long lines formed daily for buy- Carlos Hohmann, a retired gov- cted of ing other scarce items such as ernment employe who opposed ttempt- bread, cigarettes and cooking Allende, said that since the coup oil. there has been a "fundamental :ied by THE OUSTED ALLENDE gov- difference in the distribution of as Ge- as the eminent had blamed the short- food. There is more abundance." former ages on right-wing sabotage, But breadlines still can b_ lvadore while anti-Marxists said ineffi- seen around the city, firing author- oie Union lanches curfew,SoitU inlu ce r the out to l to ed space isstoy , 4 1 F v sold- nachine antiago earlier dinner moved or step in this nt con- ces and ckets of ruling hileans der. are to- untry," I by the d pow- t Presi- also ill be butcher ve not MOSCOW i - The Soviet Un- ion launched its first m a n n e d space flight in more than two years yesterday sending t w o cosmonauts on a testtmission in a new Soyuz craft that was powered into earth orbit. The Soyuz 12 spaceship was launched on a two-day flight from the Soviet space center at Bai- konur on the Kazakhstan plains in central Asia, Tass news agency announced. THE CRAFT IS an "improved" version of the Coyuz ship in which three cosmonauts were killed at the end of the last man- ned Soviet mission in 1971. The previous Soyuz 11 mission ended in disaster on June 30, 1971, when the three-man crew died on return to earth because the craft's hatch failed to close properly after undocking from the orbiting Salyut space laboratory. The Soyuz craft was sent back for redesign. Last April the Sov- iets launched another space lab and planned to send a new man- ned Soyuz vehicle to dock with it. BUT THE ORBITING labora- tory broke up in space and the manned mission was scratched. Tass said the cosmonauts would make spectrographic studies of various sections of the earth to obtain "data for the solution of economic problems." It did not i i Navy bi WASHINGTON R) - The Sen- ate refused yesterday to block the Navy's full speed ahead schedule' for development and production of A $13 billion fleet of Trident sub- marines. By a 49 to 47 vote, the Senate turned down an amendment to a $21 billion weapons authorization bill to stretch out production two yeart and delay completion of the first of 10 of the larger vessels by tw6 years. TlE NAVY proposes to get the, first of the 540-foot submarines, 'equipped with a new longer range Lidget cuts nixed IF elaborate. CYY.YYYY]YYY Y Y Y Y Y s.Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y YY Y Y cYYYYYYYYYYYYYYli *****x* 4,000-mile Trident missile, ready for launching by 1978. At the White House, deputy pressl secretary Gerald Warren s a i d1 President Nixon was "extremely, gratified" with the rejection of the Trident amendment. Warren also restated the President's delight with the defeat of a move Wednes-, day to cut U.S. troop strength in' Europe. The Trident slowdown was pro- posed by Sens. Thomas J. McIn- tyre, (D-N.H.), and Peter H. Dom- inick, (R-Colo.), senior members of the Senate Armed Services sub- committee on research and de-! i) ,i t t :l s i , 1 Sen. Henry M. Jackson, (D- Wash), defended the accelerated Navy schedule as justified both from the standpoint of cost and the threat of recent Russian suc- cesses in nuclear weapon t e c h- nology. On the roll call, 19 Democrats and 30 Republicans supported the Trident speedup - a high priority item in this year's Nixon adminis tration military budget. Ten Re publicans and 37 Democrats voted for the slowdown. The McIntyre-Dominick amend ment would have trimmed $885.4 million from this year's $1.5 bil lion budget for the Trident sys tem. hio THPL MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 20 velopnment. Friday, September 28, 19at THEY ARGUED that the Navy ii editid And managed by students At plan to pull all 10 Trident sub- t.t Uiiverstty of Michigan. News phone marines under construction before *0-6362. Second class postage paid atmaneudrcosutinbfe Anti Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published; the first one can be tested in oper- daily Tuesday through Sunday morning ation risks, without military jus- during the University year at 420 May- tificatiop, costly engineering er- 40id Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. !u69cr1ptiOn rates: $10 by carrier (cam-; rors. 1us arti); $11 local mail (Michigan and McIntyre referred the Senate to 7ki,); $12 non-local mail (other- states *Ad 16rtign). cost overruns on the abandoned' umtntr session published Tuesday Cheyenne Helicopter and the F111 thrbu b Saturday morning. Subscrip- and C5A militar aircraft as ex tiod rites: $5.50 by carrier (campusa itei); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and amples of proceeding with pro- 6iW); $7.00 non-local mail (other duction before research, develop- stiteS and foreign). ment and testing is completed. 2nd HIT WEEK! Fy. Open 6:45. Shows at 7 & 9. Sat. & Sun. at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9_ _ * TT +TTF Ff F F F ++aa1 K K F ++FF i F + F # +fF a+afiF aF * NEW WORLD MEDIA * * INTERNATIONAL FILM SERIES * * Program No. 1 * k y *4k *A * 4K FEATUjRING" * THE DISPOSSESSED LITTLE WHITE * .S.. 1370. Produced by George Rallis, Maia Sorotor, * JudyWhalley and Peter Rand; songs and music byS Buffy Saint Marie and Talbert Wilson. 33 minutes, * color and sepia. English language. SETTLEM ENT * a visually and sociologically powerful film 'F . . , highlights the two most basic problems facing U.S., 1372. Directed by Harry Dawson, jr.; written by * almost all of the Indian tribes in the contemporary Leo Alexander (Yakima Indian tribe); narrated by * UnitedStates: super-economic exploitation by a Deni Leonard (Warm Springs Indian tribe). 30 min- * parasiti, corporation-controlled economy, and pow~ tes, color. English language.°k * eriessness before the police and legal apparatus of A documentary on American Indian life, past and k * the state and federal governments. A daring night present, in the Pacific Northwest. Produced, in co- ' * assault of two hundred Pit River Indians on native lands 'illegally occupied' by the Pacific Gas and opersast ioithaimaeIn ianthrepfilminte * Electric Company in Shasta County, northern Cali- Ind ian s rs n a y terulwih ae ps o r tsonth * fomfrsteseai nwihteetee nias rsn-a tugeoe ihn ihso K ar devostdn..h s h s the Columbia River between Oregon and Washing- Ston. Although the Indians have lived by the river *for thousands of years and practiced natural con- k nervation, they are now fighting attempts by Oregon I *and Washington to regulate Indian fishing rights, giving economic advantage to commercial fisheries. SPEAKER LITERATURE MUSIC TONIGHT ONLY UNDER GRAD LIBRARY NO ADMISSION MULTIPURPOSE ROOM, 3rd floor 8 aa U of M Central Campus CHuAlRGE * . . h~t ihights he t wo most bas~rinr>r~ ic p rob #> ing U r* 1 s.' r t1972. Dk* *ir tl y HkarykDawson jrk , w ritenylr'kyi# THE NEW YORK TIMES, TH URSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1972 "a dream of exotic beauty" -LEO LERMAN, --Mademoiselle "impossibly beautiful . . . visually exquisite!" -BERNARD DREW, Gannett News Service Ig I' II ~: Ii I A NOVELBY HERMANN HESSE / A FILM BY CONRAD ROOKS :4 w universly I From COLLMA PTUR[S5 IRISH SONGS AND HUMOR 1411 Dill STRHET WK1458 I U '- ,~ I mediatrics presents THE GRADUATE 7:00 and 9:30 Fri. Sat. Nat. Sci. Aud. $1.00 Coming Thurs., Oct. 4-BULLITT THE FELLINI FESTIVAL IVITELLONI As with his other early films, Fellini explores the meaning under the real- ity in I Vitelloni. Of it, he said, Life must have meaning beyond the an- imal" He portrays five such animals-young men who live on the physical level- and reveals their foolish ambitions as NOW SHOWING 7, 8:20, 9:40 "See the Movie! 'Heavy Traffic' is the most ingen- ious combination I've ever seen, an amalgam of cartoon and live film. A highly subjective view of New York low life as seen by brilliant young car- toonist Ralph Bakshi. It's fascinating and high spirited." - Kevin Sanders, WABC-TV "Ralph Bakshi's idea of merging real characters into cartoons and vice-versa is done with brilliance! Visuals of undeniably stunning power." Archer Winsten, New York Post "'Heavy Traffic' may be one of the greatest Amer- ican films in years! It is, undeniably, a history mak- ing film. It's rated 'X,' baby, but so is life!" Tony Russomanno, WXLO "This is an artist's use of animation to the Nth_ power, expressing social viewpoint. Bakshi molds animation to new heights of social comment. More moments of brilliance, power, and depth than in 'Fritz The Cat.' " ---William Wolf, Cue Magazine w e Spice...from the makers of Fritz The Cat" .rw4- .. .Heavy 4.BEd 04ai By VINCENT CANBY Francois Truffauts "Two Eng- lish Girls" is a film of such beautiful, charming and comic discretion that it isn't until the end that one realizes it's also immensely sad and even brutal, though in the nonbrutalizing way that truth can sometimes be. The film was shown last night at the New York Film Festival at Alice Tully Hall and opens its commercial engagement Sunday at the Fine Arts Theater, where. I trust, it will remain through Thanksgiving. Christmas and be- yond. The source material is "Les nux Anglaises et Le Continent." the second novel by Henri-Pierre Roche, who didn't get around to wri'ing his first until he was 74. That was "Jules et Jim," which Truffaut adapted into his finest film in 1961. A bit too much will probably be made of the fact that "Two English Girls" reverses the cen- cntral situation- of "Jules Sand Jim," in which the twoheroes spend their lives being turned on and off by the liberated Catherine. The new film, like the earlier one, is set largely in an unde- fined past-that is, sometime in pre-W~orld War I. Paris. though the exact time is left fuzzy, as tines usually are in fables. In- stead of two young men, the victims (who are in great meas- ure the mistresses of their fates) are two propereEnglish girs, sis- ters, who share a profound at- tachment for the same young Frenchman. In many wave, however. "Two English Girls" is more closP'v linked to such lateri-and ' similar) Truffaut films as'" Soft S k i n." "Mississippi Mer- maid" and 'Stolen Kisses," each a variation on the conflict be- twten a love that is obsessive sometimes called pure) and a Film Festival: A Gem From Truffaut a film in color by Francois Truffaut AREA PREMIERE! Auditorium "A", Angell Hall LAST THREE DAYS! Evenings 7 & 9 p.m -Admission $1.50 Weekend Motinees 1 & 3 p.m--Admission $1.00 ANN ARBOR FILM COOPERATIVE CINEMA I THE CAST TWO ENGLISH GIALS (I.ES DEUXEANGLAISES ET LE CONTINENT), directed by Francois Truffaut; screenplay in French (with English sub- titles) and English by Mr. Truffaut and Jean Gruault, based on the novel by Henri- Pierre Roche; music, Georges Delerue: director of photog- raphy, Nestor Almendros; pro- duced by Claude Miler: a Films du Carosse-Cinetel production. released by Janus Films. Run- ning time: 108 minutes. Shown last night at the New York Film Festival at Alice Tully Hall; opens Sunday at the Fine Arts Theater, 58th Street near Lexington Avenue. This film has not been classified. Claude Roe .. Jean-Pierre Leaud Anne Brown .... Kika Markham Mrs. Brown .... Sylvia Marriott Mine. Roc .... Marie Mansart Diur'a .... Philippe Leofard Ruta............Irene Tune Mr. Flint.....Mark Peterson The Palmist .... David Markham occupied by not only the ex- tremely complicated moral bar- riers to love, but also by the physical impediments. manages to look like both Queen Elizabeth and C a t h e r i n e De- neuv, rbehaves like a princess in a fairv tale. She hides behind dark glasses. as if she had suf- fered a wicked enchantment, and says such things as "I want all of Claude or nothing. If it's no, let it be like death." ''he film covers seven years in the lives of the curious trio, muen of it as if the film were the daily our n a I that was Roche's favorite literary form. The s c e n e s are sometirnes so sho'vt they are almost subliminal, with the voice of the narrator tTruffaut) often supplying a text. Purists, I expect, will again object to this tampering with the accepted relationship be- tween image, which the purists think is paramount. and word, which has always been thought to be a lesser tool in cinema. The effect. nevertheless, is lovely. and even appropriate, since fables begin with spoken 'vords The performances are fine. Leaudi may well be - as Truffaut cells hin--the greatest Fren:J'i actor of his generation. At least I thinlk that explains why he seemed so off-putting-- w h i c h he was supposed to-in "Bed and Board" and here, as the earnestly free-loving rake, so appealing. The film is filled with wonder- Sinend an cheapnnight (or afternoon) with Woody I i I