Page Two tv toniaght 6:00 2 4 7 11 13 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father 20 Land of the Giants-Adventure 24 ABC News-Smith/Reasoner 30 Hodgepodge Lodge 50 Flntstones' 56 Erica-Crafts 6:15 56 Theonie-Cooking -:30 2 71 CBS News-Walter Cronkite 4 13 NBC News-John Chancellor 7 ABC News-Smith/Reasoner 9 1Dream of Jeannie-Comedy 24 Dlick Van Dyke-Comedy 50 Gilligan's Island-Comedy 56 Bridge with Jean Cox 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 Newt 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly IllIbillies 11 To Tell the Truth 13 What's My Line? 0 Nanny and the Professor- Comedy 24 Bowling for Dollars 50 I Love Lucy-Comedy -5 Wtrld Press 7:30 2 11 Baseball-Tigers-Yankees 4 Hollywood Squares 7 24 Wait Till Your Father Gets 9 Lassie 13 Truth or Consequences 20 Good News-Religion 50 lHagan's lheres-Comedy 56 Thirty Mintes with 8:00 4 13 Sanford and son 7 24 BradyBunch 9 Pig and Whistle 20 Bure's Law-Crime Drama 56 Washington WeekinReview - 50 lragnet-Crime Drama 8:30 4 13 Little People-Comedy 7 24 1144 Couple 9 David Frost Ievue 50 Merv Griffin 56 Oft the Record 9:00 4 13 Circle of Fear-Drama 7 24 oot 222 9 News-Don West 20 Ozzie and Iarriet-Comedy 50 Turning Points :30 7 24 Loe Thy Neighbor-Comedy 9 sports Scene 20 Seven Hundred Club 5 To Be Announced 10:061 2 A Happy 'Thig 4 13 Iod tnes 7 24 Burns and Schreiber Comedy Iour Special 9STommylltunter 11 To Be Announced 50 Perry Mason 56 The Toy That Grew Up-Movie "Code of the Sea" 10:30 11 tOutdoors with Jim Thomas 11:00 2 4 7 11 13 24 News 9 CBC News-loyd Robertson 50 One Step Beyond-Drama 11:30 2 Movie "Secret of the Incas" (1954) 4 13 Johnny Carson 7 24 In Concert-Music 9 News 11 Soie TonyRandall is behind the "7 Faces of Dr. Lao" (1964) 20 Right On-Music 50 Movie 'Psychomania" (1964) 12:00 5 Movie - "One Minute to Zero," (1952) 1:00 4 13 Midnight Special 7 Movie 'Black Horse Canyon." (1954) 1:30 2 Movie "Blondi for Victory" (1942) 9 Wrestling 11 News 2:30 4 13 News 3:00 2 Divorce Court 7 News 3:30 2 News RIGHTS SERIES HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - The Bill of Rights will be the sub- ject of a new television series presented by The Reader's Di- gest which will produce hour-long episodes dramatizing the first U. S. Supreme Court decision of the first 10 Amendments. THE SUMMER DAILY Friday, June 22, 1973 THE SUMMER DAiLY Friday, June 22, 1973 Cinema weekend... Battle of Algiers-Cinema It (And. A) on Sat. Twentieth Century--Cinema Guild (Arch. And.) on Fri. Juliet of the Spirits-MLB on Sat. and Sun. Mickey One-Cinema Guild on Sat. The Thing-Cinema II on Fri. 200 Motels-MLB on Fri. Wizard of Oz-MLB on Fri. Stroke-MLB on Sat. and Sun. RECOMMENDED: Battle of Algiers (1966)-When Gillo Pontecorvo and Franco Solinas decided to make a poli- tical film about the 1954-57 Al- giers rebellion, they chose to ignore any existing newsreel footage and to simply recreate scenes as they themselves en- visioned them. Not a surprising decision, yet one that seems ab- solitely astounding when one considers the end result. Battle of Algiers is a movie of such incredible verisimilitude that I often find myself thinking of it not as fiction, but as a docu- mentary. Yet this is no Neo- Realistic film. Battle of Algiers has a distinct sense of urgency to its pacing, and its interests are as much politics and revolu- tion as simple human realities. At any rate, the movie has quite an impact: its deiction of an onressed neole rising against the French establishment is re- otted to have started riots when it was shown in urban America. JIlliet of the Snicits (1965)-It is a Door weekend for movies: Juliet of the Spirits, grossly flawed though it is, seems to me to be more worthwhile than a lot of its campus alternatives. Jlliet is an almost Freudian psychological study of a re- presed, lonely bourgeois wife (Gillietta .Masina) who is drawn more and more into her private world of spirits and memories as she becomes increasingly in- secure. This element of surreal- ism enables Fellini to do some THE SUMMER DAILY, summer edi- tion of The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXIII, No. 32-0 Friday, June 22, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-use2. Second class postage paid at Ann ArhoeMichgan 4810 Publihed daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- eard street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11llocal mail (Michigan and Ohio): $13 non-local mail (other states aod oegs). Summer sesion published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-local mai (other states and foreign). very striking things with com- position and sets (this is Fel- lini's first color film). Still, Juliet doesn't manage to sustain itself for its two and a quarter hour length. Its main character is simply neither compelling nor complex enough to- merit this long a study. f Twentieth Century (1934)-Glit- tering Broadway star Oscar Jaffe (John Barrymore) makes aspiring Mildred Plotka (Carole Lombard) both a glittering Broadway star and his mistress, overnight, of course. But Mildred, now dubbed "Lily Garland," eventually tires of egotistic, nar- cissistic Oscar and takes off for the West Coast, where she in due time becomes a glittering star of the Hollywood variety. Is this couple never to be reunited? No- at least not until they encounter each other on a cross country train, the Twentieth Century. Ben Hecht and Charles Mac- Arthur's plot line (taken from their stage play) is an interesting one, and the movie is directed in a snappy, precise manner by Howard Hawks. Many people think Twentieth Century is a comedy classic. I personally find it a bit of a disappointment. Why) Probably because I find $2.00 8:30 Electra Record's Paul Siebel singer-songwriter "One of the best of our times. wrote-Any Doy Woman Louise, etc. 1-4-11 l -lRET 7'1n-4s1 John Barrymore's overacting dull. True, he's parodying him- self, but Barrymore's straight acting style always struck me as something of a parody in, the first place. The Wizard of Oz (1939)-If you've never seen it in a theater, here's your chance. -Richard Glatzer FREE ADMISSION ENTERTAI NMENT EVERYONE WELCOME LIGHTHOUSE COFFEE HOUSE Eery Friiday and Saturday 8:00-11:30 P.M. In the bosement of First Presbyterian Church on Woshtenaw between Soath University and Hill Join The Daily Staff Effective Through the Summer Months Will Be Open )~o undany from 12 noon 'til 9 p.m. Before rst After Fellini. Thereisnivhen.inl.passio of lie.," An ALBERTO GRIMALDI Production "FENI SATYRCON staing MRIPOTR"HRMKLE" Mrtni i AnXtu Hn O r mRN"SL O NONEt " MAGAIiNOEL ALAIN CoN s UCIsRuSE"TAAts o PieRO.r ("DON MITocoL i ,t mroCIs Outo* FEDERICQ FENIanaIBERNARDINO ZAPPONI COLOR by DeLuxe' PANAVNON' United ArtIst SPECIAL LATE SHOW 'r r "Fri. £&rSat. Not Continuous roops Open 11:15 with regular 7 6 9700 One ShOw feature at 11:30 -1 t I -TONIGHT- "MNif AMANCHA" Starring PG PETER O'TOOL E SOP HIA LOREN and JAMES COCO NOW Held Over for a Third Hit Week! Shows at 1:15-3:45-6:15-8:45 EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION-ROLLING STONES SHORT ecis er603 E. LIBERTY 0 DIAL 665-6290 i AUD. 4-8:15 & 10:00 p.m. Modern Languages Building Also "WIZARD OF OZ" Aud. 3,8:15 & 10 p.m. NEW WORLD FILM COOP