Page Three Saturday, February 22, 1969 C&ili BILD0 Saturday and Sunday Directed by AKIRA KUROSAWA, 1961 (JAPANESE, ENGLISH SUBTITLES) TOSHIRO MIFUNE From the great Japanese director of IKIRU, THE SEVEN SAMU- RAI, and RASHOMON comes another masterpiece, an Eastern in the style of an American Western, except, "Kurosawa slashes the screen with action, and liberates us from the pretentions of our 'serious' westerns." Mifune, "a Galahad with lice," won the Venice Film Festival award for his performance in YOJIMBO. "YOJIMBO is not a film that needs much critical analysis: its boisterous power and good spirits are right there on the surface. Lechery, avarice, cowardice, coarseness, animality, are rendered by fire; they become joy in life: The whimpering, maimed, and' cring- ing are so vivid they seem joyful; what in life might be pathetic, loathsome, offensive is comic and beautiful. Kurosawa makes us accept even the most brutish of his creatures as more alive than the man who doesn't yield to temptation." --Pauline Kael 662-8871 ARCHITECTURE 7:00 &9:05 I CAUDITORIUM THE MICHIGAN DAILY HEAD START, JOB CORPS Senators criticize OEO changes WASHINGTON (P) - A lead- ing congressional antipoverty warrior has attacked President Nixon's plan to remove two key agencies from the Office of Economic Opportunity. But de- spite the harsh words, the ad- ministration's program appears in no danger. Chairman Carl D. Perkins of the House Education and Labor Committee said the administra- tion plan to shift OEO's show- case Head Start and Job Corps programs to other agencies was a "tragic mistake" that would leave OEO "to defend less popu- lar programs." Another House source s a i d that by taking away OEO's most dramatic and appealing programs "we simply won't have the goodies to get t h e votes" if it comes to a show- down next year on whether to wipe out the antipoverty agency altogether. IntheSenate, however, Wis- consin Democrat Gaylord Nel- son said that the programs han- dled by OEO covered only 10 Program Information 665-6290 TMDAY-Showso 1 :00-3:00- per cent of the government's over-all poverty attack. "We need some kind of new job creation program, fitted into a comprehensive manpower pol- icy," Nelson said in a favorable reaction to Nixon's plan. The Wisconsin Senator is the new chairman of the Senate subcommittee on employment, manpower and poverty which handles OEO legislation. Nixon announced Wednesday he would keep OEO alive but would turn Head Start and the Job Corps over to old-line de- partments. Both Democrats and Republi- cans at the Capitol praised the message although there w e r e dissenters besides Perkins. Some Democrats said t h e y felt it marked a considerable re- treat from GOP statements in the 1968 campaign that OEO should be downgraded or 'abol- ished. Nelson said that, "By request- ing an extension of the present poverty program, and by avoid- ing any proposals to wreck or abolish the program, the Nixon administration seems to have set the stake for a working part- nership with the Congress to at- tain these common goals." Sen. Jacob K. Javits, (R-N.Y.), senior Republican on the Labor Committee, which is the parent of the Nelson subcommittee, said the message shows t h a t fears about dismantling of the anti-poverty program were un- founded, Loss of Head Start and the Job Corps will remove f r o m OEO about half its $2-billion annual budget. Nixon, in his message to Congress, said he wanted OEO to remain as an "incubator" for new and inno- vative programs. During the presidential cam- paign, Nixon indicated he fav- ored retention of the popular Head Start program, but de- scribed the Job Corps as a fail- ure that should be eliminated. Nixon, in his message, g a v e no current appraisal of the Job Corps but recommended it be continued until June 30, 1970 while the Labor Department tried to develop a comprehen- sive manpower program. At the same time, White House sources were saying Nix- on was not expected to reduce budget requests for OEO. But it was learned that Bertrand M. Harding, acting head of OEO, told a staff meeting Tuesday that the Job Corps faced an immediate 15 to 20 per cent cutback. Controversy widens over Bolivian oil I 5:00-7:05-9:10 P.M. rnomi3 IELIN fila LA PAZ, Bolivia (A')-A car- toon in the newspaper Presen- cia shows President Rene Bar- rientos gently patting the head of an octopus labeled "Gulf Oil." A tentacle entwines Bar- rientos' leg, The cartoon is a sign of what promises to be a continuing no- litical controversy over the Gulf Oil Co.'s $140-millionninvest- ment in Bolivia. Another sign is the interest in 769-1593 605 E. William neighboring Peru's seizure of properties belonging to the Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey. The expropriation by Peru's ruling military junta climaxed years of nationalist and leftist- fed opposition to the operations of Standard's Peruvian subsidi- ary, the International Petrole- um Co. Observers see Gulf's presence in Bolivia as potentially a simi- lar long-term political irritant. They note Bolivia easily can match Peru in a continuing sup- ply of politicians suspicious of foreign investors. Nothing suggests any govern- ment plans to seize Gulf's ex- tensive oil and gas holdings, however. . Barrientos, an enthusiastic backer of Gulf investments, has declared its operations cannot be touched because the Boli- vian Gulf Oil Co. is operating within the law. His statement answered an undercurrent of opposition to Gulf. Some of Barrientos' op- ponents question the propriety of a recent deal between Gulf and the government for sale of natural gas to Argentina. They claim Gulf has conces- sions to develop oil but not na- tural gas deposits in eastern Bolivia. A joint Gulf-Bolivian govern- ment company hopes to start construction by May 1 on a 334- mile pipeline from eastern Bo- livian natural gas fields to the Argentine border. Completion is set for May 1, 1970. The pipeline will cost at least $45 million. Sthe, I nws today by The Associatcd Press and College Press Seri -ce FREE FOOD STAMPS will be given out in two South Carolina counties in what the Nixon Administration calls an unprecedented move. Agricultural Secretary Clifford Hardin told a news con- ference yesterday that a free stamp program would be set up in Jasper and Beaufort counties as an experiment to help needy persons previously not covered by federal programs. Normally, recipients must pay a small portion of their income for the stamps. * . A POWERFUL EXPLOSION shattered Jerusalem's largest supermarket yesterday killing two university stu- dents. The blast also wounded nine other shoppers. Police re- portedly have taken into custody 150 Arabs in the city follow- ing the incident. Ten minutes before the blast, police discovered and det- onated several pounds of dynamite at the city's British con- sulate. Later, police set up roadblocks between the Israeli and Arab sectors of the city to prevent reprisals against the Arabs. Police Minister Eliahu Sasson claimed the attack was ob- viously linked with the attack on an Israeli airliner in Zurich, Switzerland, Tuesday. GEN. CREIGHTON ABRAMS said yesterday the Viet Cong will attack Saigon again. Speaking to infantrymen south of Saigon, the general said there was massive evidence in the form of captured doc- uments that the Viet Cong planned another offensive. He ad- mitted, however, that his staff could pinpoint neither a inas- ter plan for the offensive nor a specific time to expect the attack. In Tokyo, meanwhile, a -Japanese news service quoted North Vietnam's a r m y newspaper as predicting a general Viet Cong offensive against Saigon and southeast Vietnam this spring. PAKISTANI PRESIDENT Mohammed Ayub Khan an nounced yesterday he will not seek re-election next Jan- uary. The announcement, which came early in the wake of four months of bloody anti-government rioting, reportedly caused rejoicing crowds to surge through the streets of Kar- achi and other cities. In stepping down, Ayub warned that if no agreement could be reached between himself and ten opposition parties on constitutional reforms, he would impose his own solution. He did not specify what his proposals would be, however. Meetings concerning the reforms are currently stalled because six of the opposition parties refuse to attend the talks. Ayub did promise, however, that genuine student griev- ences would be met, that enfranchisement would be expand- ed, and that the people of East Palistan would be given a greater voice in running their own affairs. THE SENATE LEADER of the fight for electoral re- form yesterday called President Nixon's electoral pro- posals a "retreat to expediency." Senator Birch Bayh, chairman of the Senate constitu- tional amendments subcommittee, charged that Nixon had taken a weaker stand than the committee, which had pro- posed a popular vote amendment, because Nixon didn't be- lieve such a proposal could be ratified by 1972. Nixon suggested an amendment abolishing individual electors, and allowing a candidate with a plurality of forty per cent of the electoral votes to win. He also suggested the votes in a state be divided in a manner that might "more closely approximate" the popular vote than does the present system. 44 CHRISTOPHER and SARA Contemporary and Original Folk Music FEB. 21, 22 FRI. and SAT. 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 $1.50 ii t 1 I. -. Am i a r -1 401 000I II r'-" I L I r I 1\i1 1 AMERIC.AN INTERNATTONAL sn W ,ETTE KANMIEUX .BURY PAC- MAGiETHRlETT- NON~ MATIN4 I I 0iw i El". February 21, 22 MAGNIFICENT SEVEN SHOWS AT 1,.3, 5, 7 & 9:05 P.M. Feature - 25 Min. Later I NEXT! A Love story that begins with an incredible experiment: CHARLY Cliff Robertson Claire Bloom Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning University year. Sub- scription rates: $9.00 by carrier, $10.00 by mail. 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