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Show Loren and Matronianni in love three times, three ways in movie : vy o -irrinrrwinfyr"fi0aJ"w,J1" Miss Loren first conquered Italian audiences, then those all around Europe . . . then turned American moviegoers into one huge Loren Fan Club. The trained eye of a master showman is quick to pick the winners. Levine was among the first to mark Marcello Mastroianni for popularity with American audiences and "Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow" Tomor-row" is his fourth film which Embassy Pictures has released. First Garbo and Gilbert, then Harlow and Gable. No screen team has come along with the same cinematic sizzle until now, and now the picture causing all the excitement is playing at the Pioneer Drive-in Drive-in Theatre. Joseph E. Levine's "Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow," Tomor-row," an Embassy Pictures release re-lease in color and wide screen, stars Sophia Loren and Mar-cello Mar-cello Mastroianni, making their first appearance together since individually achieving international interna-tional stardom. Vittorio De Si-ca Si-ca directed the romantic comedy, com-edy, which Carlo Ponti produced. Creah or Lemon? Susan Ilayward stars in "Where Love Has Gone," the new Joseph E. Levine production for Paramount, which opens Friday at the Paramount Theatre. Miss Hayward plays a sculptress whose man-hungry ways caused her marriage mar-riage to hit the rocks and her husband to hit the bottle. bot-tle. Along with Miss Hay-ward, Hay-ward, the cast includes Bet-to Bet-to Davis, Michael Connors and Joey Heatherton. 5 1 " U v . S r? ft f? - lik ' 1 " "f A 'I 1 Henry Fonda as the President Presi-dent must make the most awesome decision of all time, in "Fail Safe," Max E. Youngstein-Sidney Lumet production release by Columbia Colum-bia Pictures. The new suspense sus-pense drama is based on the best-selling novel by Eugene Burdick and Harvey Wheeler 4 u ;f 1 Carroll Baker, star of Allied Artists "Station Six-Sahara," caught in a reflective mood in one of the scones from the sizzling and suspenseful desert des-ert film, starting Friday at the Uinta Theatre in Provo. In 1955, the federal government govern-ment owned just under 408 million acres of land in this country 21.4 per cent of the total acreage. Last year it owned almost 770 million acres or 33 9 percent of all the land. |