The Michigan Daily-Saturday, May 29, 1982-Page 9 Cannes festival awards 'Missing,' Lemmoi CANNES, France (UPI) - The A- merican movie Missing was named a co-winner of the Golden Palm award today and its star, Jack Lemmon, was named best actor at the 35th Cannes In- ternational Film Festival. Missing, based on the true story of the abduction of an American in Chile, and directed by the Greek-born filmmaker Constantin Costa-Gavras, shared the festival's top prize with the Turkish film Yol. The Grand Prix of the festival went to Italy's Michelangelo Antonioni for "his spirit of seaching and the constant timelessness of his work." Missing traced the kidnapping of Charles Horman in Chile during the overthrow of the leftist regime of President Salvadore Allende, and the efforts of Mrs. Horman (Sissy Spacek) and her father-in-law (Lemmon), to locate Horman, who was later found dead. Yol was produced by Yilmaz Guney, who was convicted of murder in Turkey and escaped from a Turkish prison. It protrays the life of Turkey's Kur- dish minority. Its screening during the two-week festival touched off a noisy, chanting demnonstration by Turkish youths who congregated in Cannes. The festival's best actress award went to Jadwiga Jankowska-Cieslak of DETROIT (UPI)- Four 17th century sometime between Tuesday evening paintings, including a Rembrandt and Friday morning but was not valued at $200,000, were stolen from the discovered until Friday, was Rem- Detroit Institute of Arts, museum of- brandt's "A Woman Weeping" (above) ficials said Friday. and Frans Hals' popular "Laughing Taken in the theft, which occurred Boy," valued at nearly $60,000. Entertainment briefs from Hollywood )n t actor Poland for her performance in the Hungarian film Another Look. West Germany's Werner Herzog won the prize for best director for "the power of his inspiration and the bold- ness of his enterprise" in the movie Fit- zcarraldo. " HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Last year's surprise comedy hit, Airplane, will be followed by a sequel later this year. with the redundant title Airplane 11, The Sequel at Paramount Pictures. Producer Howard W. Koch has signed Robert Hayes and Julie Hagerty to reprise their roles in the original caper. Writer-director Ken Finkleman's script finds the Hays- Haggerty duo assigned to a space shut- tle. Hays recently completed Trenchcoat, a comedy-thriller co-starring Margot Kidder. Hagerty will soon be seen co- starring with Woody Allen in A Mid- Summer Night's Sex Comedy. " HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Tom Selleck and Sam Elliott, most promising successors to Robert Red- ford and Paul Newman in the macho heart-throb department, will so-star with Katharine Ross in The Shadow Riders. Ross, it will be remembered, co- starred with Redofrd and Newman in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Like Redford and Newman, Selleck and Elliott are close personal friends. The Shadow Riders is a two-hour Columbia Television-CBS adaptation of Louis L'Amour's western novel. The adventure drama, set in the post Civil War era, is scheduled to be produced this June in Northern California. " HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Hal Holbrook will head the cast of 20th Cen- tury-Fox's contemporary urban drama, Star Chamber, co-starring with Michael Douglas, Sharon Gless and Yaphet Kotto. Holbrook will play the pivotal role of a highly respected Los Angeles superior court judge involved in one of the most shocking conspiracies ever conceived in civilized society, accor- ding to enthusiastic Columbia press agents. Holbrook starred most recently in The Kidnapping of the President. " HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Four superstars of the past - Katherine Hepburn, Bette David, Barabra Stan- wyck and Lana Turner - will be honored Aug. 19 at the 1982 Montral Film Festival. Festival director Serge Losique an- nounced that homage will be paid to each actress with the screenings of two each of their films. Losique said he hoped at least two of the long-time stars would appear at the festival. All showings will take place at the five-screen Le Parisian complex alon- g with those movies entered in the sixth annual cinema competition. " HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Bambi, Walt Disney's animated cartoon, will be re-released this summer for the fifth time since its debut back in 1942. The Disney Studios recycles at least one of its classic feature-length car- toons every year, including Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Pinocchio, Jungle Book, Fantasia, Cinderella, The Aristocats, 101 Dalmations, and The Lady and The Tramp. Based on Felix Salten's children's story of a young deer and his friends, including such Disney touches as Thumper the rabbit and a skunk named Flower, Bambi was five years in the making. America may turn into apoisoned land (Continuedfrom Page7) country. PCBs, which are stable com- pounds, may last in the environment for hundreds of years. No one knows what the long term results of this will be." Already, though, he contends that in the U.S. the milk of many mothers is so contaminated that it would be illegal to sell in supermarkets. "97 percent of Michigan residents have PBB in their fat tissue, he con- tinued, referring to the chemical that inadventently found its way into Michigan's food over a decade ago. "No one knows its effects," he added, because "it takes decades between ex- posure to the chemical and the onset of cancer." According to Regenstein, the chemicals don't even do what they're supposed to. "Massive use of chemical pesticides in the long term is counter- productive," he said. "Insects develop immunity, and pesticides drive off the natural enemies of insect control." He added that "there has been a tenfold in- crease in the use of pesticides in the last thirty years, but crop losses to insects have doubled. "We can grow more food more cheaply without poisoning the en- vironment," he continued. "The United States government has published studies showing how consumers and farmers can use integrated pest management techniques (which may call for some, but much less, spraying) to reduce pesticide use 80 percent in ten years with no reduction in current crop levels." However, the Reagan administraton has not been very cooperative, said Regenstein. "Industry has not had the incentive to comply with the law," .he said, citing a two year "hiatus in enfor- cement and prosecutions" by the En- vironmental Protection Agency (EPA). "Throughout EPA and other regulatory agencies," he said, "the Reagan administration is taking the same people who fought against in- dustrial regulations and putting them in charge of them. The proverbial fox is in charge of the chicken. Regenstein believes that most in this country disapprove of this turnaround. "Any poll shows," he said, that "clear air and clean water" are near the top of Americans' priorities. "People have always wanted increased environmen- tal protection regardless of cost." In fact, he said, "a recent Harris poll shows that 80 percent of the population want the Clear Air Act (now up for renewal) strengthened or kept the same." "American people have to speak up," said Regenstein. "The system does work," he continued, pointing out that increased involvement in environmen- tal groups spurred by reaction to ad- ministration policies has begun to pay off. "The administration is beginning to back off on certain things. The more pressure, the more that can be done. "We can turn the situation around and prevent 'America the Beautiful' from becoming 'America the Poisoned.' "