Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, July 14, 1972 Mobsers take over TV By CHRISTOPHER PHILLIPS Joseph Losey's Accident may be an interesting movie for those who like psychological melodramas. It's the story about a married college professor who gets himself involved with one of his more attractive female students. The story gets more compli- cated when two other men enter the picture. Losey calls it: "the exploration of tensions arising from the three way conflict be- tween man's emotional desires and needs, his legacy of guilt from the morality of the past, and his responsibility - to his fellow human beings." It sounds like a soap opera- three men in love with the same girl, the tangled web of rela- tionships between Stephen and Rosalind, Charley and Laura- everyone suffering from sexual frustration. Peyton Place in a feature length film? Maybe for Pauline Kael, but few soapers are script- ed by Harold Pinter, have an unusually fine performance by Dirk Bogarde, or are made with the sophistication and technical finesse of Joseph Losey. And, although Ms. Kael calls the Pin- ter-Losey combination "incestu- ous", Accident should be inter- esting, at the very least. The next week's films also in- clude some notable gangster films. Two are classics of the genre, I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang and Roaring Twen- ties, and there is a more recent spin-off, Underworld, U.S.A. Gangster films were received Act,'ivities? ~' "But I want friends, diversity, action and something to keep my interest, too!" BUSINESS STAFF IS LOOKING FOR YOU! Come see FRAN M-F, 10-2 and M-W-F 2-4 at 420 MAYNARD Staff members needed in advertising, cir- culation, classified, and finance. with enthusiasm in the early 1930's, during the days of Al Capone and Prohibition. Peo- ple flocked to the theaters to see such big names as James Cagney and Edward G. Robin- son in their roles as vicious, hard core mobsters. The gang- ster was portrayed as "the ur- ban wolf", with his tough talk about "contracts" and "rub- outs" and his molls and flunkies. When bank failures wiped out life savings, and the stock market crash ate up fortunes, the resulting unemployment touched off a national concern for law and order. People felt satisfaction when the ruthless hoodlum qot what was coming to him. In a way, it was a vi- carious method of punishing those responsible for their mis- fortunes. Mervyn LeRoy's Little Caesar (1930) began the cycle of gang- ster films. Today you'll get a chance to see another of Le- Roy's films, I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang. The fugi- tive, played by Paul Muni, is unjustly sentenced for theft, tortured, and condemned to a life on the chain gang. LeRoy's unpleasant, but ac- curate portaryal of the brutal- ity and violence experienced by prisoners was moving enough to stir up public demand for re- form of the chain gang system. Muni eventually escapes from the gang, but spends the rest See TV, Page 9 MCAT-DAT-GRE LSAT-ATGSB NAT -BDS. " Preparation for tests required for admission to graduate and pro- fessonat schools " Six and twelve sess;on groups " Small groups * Vluminous material far home study prepared by experts in each field " Lesson schedule can be tailored to meet individual needs Summer Sessions Special Compact Courses Weekends-Intersessions STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER DETROIT BRANCH 21711 W. Ten Mile Rd., Suite 113 Southfield, Michigan 48075 (313) 354-0085 Success Through Education Since 1938 Branches in principal cities in U.S. The Tutoring School with the Nationwide Reputation Round two Boris Spassky of the U.S.S.R. leaves the Reykjavik chess hall - yesterday after winning the second game of the world chess championship. .Spassky won by forfeit when Fischer failed to appear. See story, page 11. CHINA, RUSSIA BALK: UN to endorse plan for pollution project By The Associated Press The U. N. General Assembly is expected to give its approval this fall to the wide ranging de- cisions reached by the United Nations Conference on Human Environment held last month in Stockholm. A key move is endorsement of a plan to monitor pollution levels around the world. Diplomats at U.N. headquar- ters in New York predicted that the Russians would protest de- cisions made by the 114'nations attending the parley, but that Moscow would finally give its blessing to the program which had received such universal ap- proval. The Russians and their clos- est allies shunned the June con- ference because the East Ger- mans were not accorded full representation. It was believed that Moscow would feel the need to sound a note of dis- sent against any actions in which they did not have a voice. Looking back on the confer- ence, many diplomats felt that it was more significant for the change in attitudes it symbol- ized than for the actual deci- sions taken. We Can Send You Abroad at Youth-Fare Prices, Even Though You Don't Fit the Youth-Fare Mold. We do not discriminate against people over 25, or non-students, or people who are not returning within 45 days, or anybody who just doesn't happen to fit the mold the big airlines have forged for those who wish to qualify for reduced fares. Even if you are only buying a one-way ticket, we can send you to Europe, Israel, Africa, or the For East at fores comparable to the youth fares, on scheduled airlines with confirmed reservations. Some examples of our fores from New York are: London, one- way, $130; Paris, one-way, $140; Nairobi, round-trip, $519; Tel Aviv, round-trip, $519. Special Detroit-London Thru Fare: $149 .W; $298 R.T. How do we do it? If you're really curious, check out an article in the New York Times of Sun., Dec. 5, 1971, entitled, "The Great Air-Fare War and What it Means to You." If you contact us, we can refer you to other newspaper articles detailing the kind of operation in which we are involved. But what the newspaper articles can't tell you is that we pride ourselves on giving everyone the kind of personal attention you rarely find any more. You tell us where you want to go and when, and we'll do everything humanly possible to see that you get there quickly, safely, and cheaply. If you're thinking about a trip abroad, contact us. We can help. EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS 240 W. 98th St., 6E New York, N.Y. 10025 (212) 749-0630 The parley endorsed a volun- tary fund to finance an inter- national pollution monitoring program. The project would set up 110 specially equipped monitoring stations of which 100 would keep check on regional atmos- pheric pollution. The United States would establish 10 of these stations at various loca- tions in the continental U.S. The remaining 10 stations would be established in some of the most isolated and pollution free parts of the world to pro- vide a standard for determining how serious pollution is else- where. The U.S. pledged $40 million to the project and Japan pro- mised $10 million. Toward the end of the par- ley, a special committee strug- gling to draft a declaration of principles became involved in bitter argument. China, billing herself as the champion of non- industrialized states, insisted that there are good wars and bad wars. Peking claimed that aggres- sion should be condemned but that defensive wars and wars of liberation were righteous. Peking objected to the parley's call for a halt in nuclear wea- pons testing, claiming her tests were defensive. U Huron River Canoe Rental 2 AND 4 HOUR RIVER TRIPS - We put in, we pick up, you paddle. 4325 JACKSON AVE. Phone 662-1270 Make reservations now. Groups welcome. MICHIGAN , REPERTORY 7 . Shakespeare's edward albee's LAOUSLOT IReVIRGINIA WOOLF? LABOUR'S LOST gelbert, shevelove, & sondheim brendan behan's July 18-29 * A FUNNY THING Aug. 8 HAPPENED ON THE Aug. * THE HOSTAGE WAY TO THE FORUM OPENING JULY 18 POWER CENTER SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS Box Office Open $7.00, $10.50 12:30-5:00 p.m. INDIVIDUAL TICKETS Ph.: 763-3333 $2.00, $3.00