Page Two THE SUMMER DAILY Thursday, August 23, 1973 Page Two THE SUMMER DAILY Thursday, August 23, 1973 tonight 6:00 2 4 7 11 13 News Courtship of Eddie's Father 20 Stagecoach West BW - 24 ABC News-smith/Reasoner 50 lnttones 56 Lilas, Yoga and You 8:30 2 11 CBS News-Roger Mudd 4 13 NBC News-John Chancellor 7 ABC Ness-Smith/Reasoner 9 I Dream of Jeannie 24 Dick Van Dyke-Coioedy BW 50 Giligan's Island 56 Making Things Grow 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 New, 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies It To Tell the Truth 13 What's My Line? 20 Nanny and the Professor 24 Bowling For Dollars 50 I Love Lucy 56 Course of Our Times-History 7:30 2 What's My Line? 4 Circus!. 7 Michigan Outdoors 9 Movie-Adventure "Tarzan and the Lost Safari" (1957) 11 Parent Game 13 Truth or Consequences 20 Rieman-Western BW 24 Circus! 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Inner-City Freeway 8:00 2 1 The Waltons-Drama 4 13 Ironside 7 24 Mod Squad 20 Wrestling 30 56 Playhouse New York Biography 50 Dragnet 8:30 50 Merv Griffin 9:00 2 Movie-Drama "Where Love Has Gone" (1964) 7 24 Good Vibrations From Cen- tal Park-Music 9 News-Don Daly 11 Movie-Drama "The Sergeant" (100) 20 Lee Trevino's Golf for Swingers 9:0 9 Happy Though Married 20 Seven Hundred Club 56 Ask The Lawyers 10:00 4 13 Music Country 7 24 Streets of San Francisco 9 MS!-Interview 50 Perry Mason BW 56 Masterpiece Theatre 10:30 9 Singalong Jubilee 11:00 2 4 7 11 13 24 News 9 CRC News-Lloyd Robertson 50 One Step Beyond-Drama BW 11:30 2 11 Movie-Drama BW "The Rse Tattoo" (155) 4 13 Johnny Carson 7 24 Jack Paar Tonite 9 News 20 Walters Family-Music 50 Movie-Musial "Summer Stock." (1950) 12:00 0 Movie-Western "Whispering Smith." (1948) 1:00 4 7 13 News 1:50 2 Movie-Comedy BW "Stand-in" (1937) 11 News 3:20 2 MayberyIRF. 3:50 2 News THE SUMMER DAILY, summer edi- tion of The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXIII, No. 68-S Thursday, August 23, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48100. Published daiiy Tuesday tough Sunday ocing during he Unisecsiy ya at 420 May- nard Steer, Ann Acbo, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: ,$by carie (cam- pus area; $11 ilocal mail (Michigan and Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreigni. Summer session 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 mail (other states and foreign). THE NUMBER ONE BOOK OF THE YEAR! NOW-THE SUSPENSE FILM OF THE YEAR! Violence continues in Santiago streets SANTIAGO, Chile (P) - Uni- dentified terrorists hurled home- made bombs at the North Ko- rean Embassy and at several stores and homes yesterday in strike - troubled Santiago. Five persons were wounded in, shooting incidents, officials said, and one woman was reported in- jured in a bombing. THE INCIDENTS f o11 o w e d street violence Tuesday that was the worst outbreak in a month- long transportation strike that has crippled distribution of con- sumer goods in the Chilean economy. Eight bomb attacks were re- ported before dawn yesterday. The homemade devices, hurled from passing vehicles, smashed plate glass windows and splin- tered doorways. A liquor store and a butcher shop were among the targets. A woman was hit in the legs by fragments from a bomb thrown at the home of Francisco Padin, parliamentary secretary for Allende's Socialist party. AT THE NORTH Korean Em- bassy, officials said a bomb was hurled into the grounds and caused some damage, but no one was hurt. The embassy, in a sub- urban mansion surrounded by high walls, asked the Chilean Foreign Ministry to arrange a special police guard. No one in authority professes to know the reasons behind the violence. But tensions are run- ning high over the long trans- portation strike and strike-con- nected antigovernment activity by opponents of Allende's social- ism program. The last few days have seen the worst violence in the capital since an abortive army revolt in June. Twenty - two people were killed and 34 wounded in downtown Santiago on June 29 when men and tanks from an ar- mored regiment staged a rush- hour rebellion. Loyal troops crushed the revolt. FOR MORE than five hours Tuesday, hundreds of youthful leftists and anti - Marxists ram- paged around downtown streets surrounding the national con- gress, battling with fists clubs and guns. Riot police with tear gas and water cannon trucks restored or- der after crowds burned heaps of garbage in the streets and set several automobiles afire. Allende later told cheering sup- porters from his balcony at the Moneda presidential p a I a c e Tuesday night that "Fascists and lumpen" were to blame for the violence. LUMPEN means a degraded section of the proletariat. Transportation leaders re- ported that their nationwide strike was on the way to being resolved. T r u c k e r s have been out since July 26 and have been joined by most bus and taxi owners. Their strike prompted numer- ous sympathy walkouts across Chile on Monday which left vital sectors of the economy paralyz- ed, including retail sales. Shops and stores remained shuttered Wednesday. T H E TRANSPORT leaders said one stumbling block remain- ed. They reported that the gov- ernment is balking at dissolving MOPARE - the patriotic recon- struction movement. This is a parallel trucking system set up by the state to compete with the private confederation of truck owners. The truckers -want guarantees that they will not be nationaliz- ed under Allende's socialization program. Regarding their other de- mands for new vehicles and spare mands for new vehicles and spare parts, the report was op- timistic. JUAN JARA, president of the Ground Transport Confederation, said the government agreed to immediately provide 2,000 auto- mobiles for taxis; 25 luxury bus- es for interprovincial bus com- panies; 700 buses for city oper- ations; $12 million for importing spare parts; and 500 new trucks immediately, plus more ship- ments totalling 1,333 vehicles by June 1974. LAST 1l CH ANCE artfl 0 ADULTS ONLY /PLAYBOY t r. Judith Crist, NEW YORK MAGAZINE Coming Saturday and Sunday GI~r00VGn0 Un0 REMARKABLE. - oseph Morgenstern, Newsweek BEAUTIFUL. - Pauline Kael, The New Yorker BRILLIANT. - Sew York (mad SUPERB. -Playboy Magazine $j5-MILLER R : Modern Languages Auditorium 7:15 and 9:30 $1.25 Cont a NEW MORNING presentation by the friends of newsreel -{ F 2 4 S. UNIVERSITY IL6861 Wed Sat Sun. at 1:15, 3:45 6:15, 8:45 M-T-Th.-Fr at 7 p~m &9 5 5 $250 all shows No passes No Bargain Dy Rated X U "1'd rather die fighting than die getting fat." DENNIS HOPPER as Acclaimed since its release as one of the few great war films ever made, this early film by the director of Clockwork Orange, stands alone as one of the savage, most stunning, and most moving studies of men armed conflict ever made, STANLEY KUBRICK'S OPEN 12:45 SHOWS: 1 P.M.-3:35-6:10-8:45 603 E. LIBERTY etio as Modern e . DIAL 665-6290 THE AMERICAN DREAMER THURSDAY & FRIDAY, AUGUST 23 & 24-$1.25 8 & 10 P.M.-AUD. 3 MODERN LANG. BLDG. (E. 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