7h reA Saturday; March 1, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page I Iaudy Mrh1 16IH ICIA IYPg ~ ~r' a? TONIGHT BOB 1421 Hill St. 8:30 P.M. 'M4 WHITE guitar, banjo, autoharp Sat- 1:00 p.M. Workshop 25c Sat. eve late "After Hours" "Something comes thru Bob White's songs that you don't find much these days, a deep felt optimism. Singing songs that capture the deepest feeling of people . . . He captures and keeps his audience."-Michigan Daily V - , Follow the Psychedelic Pied Piper to a "STON ED ANIMATION TRIP lasting nearly three hours An International Collection of AWARD WINNING experimental animated cinema including examples of BRITISH, CZECHOSLOVAK- IAN (spoof on American films), CANADIAN (Nor- man McLaren's "Mosaic" and "Blinkity Blank"), INDIAN and AMERICAN Cinematic Art (Scott Bartlett's spectacular "off-on") PLUS Mickey Mouse in Viet Nam, Betty Boop, Koko, Bimbo, Mr. Magoo, and Gene Autry, The Sounds of the Beatles, Cab Calloway, Ella Fitzgerald, the Oscar Peterson Trio. February 27, 28, March 1, 2 11:00 P.M.-Thursday-Sunday at THE FIFTH FORUM 210 So. Fifth at Liberty Search By The Associated Press In the t h r e e months since Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver fled arrest in California authorities report no trace of him despite numerous leads and a search that has reached into other countries. Officially, the FBI will s a y !only that the case is under in- vestigation. But it is known that authori- ties are uncertain whether the 33-year-old self-educated Negro author, considered extremely dangerous by the FBI, carried out an implied threat to leave the country. Just before dropping from sight Nov. 24, Cleaver said his only alternative to serving a jail sentence for violating parole was to "get out of the country." That statement, somesfeel, could have been a smoke screen to draw investigators off Cleav- er's path. It is pointed out also t h a t Cleaver's connections through the militant Black Panthers and his 1968 presidential campaign - he polled 36,385 votes -- give him numerous allies in his ef- fort to evade apprehension. Moreover, the financial suc- cess of his book, "Soul on Ice," could provide him with the mon- ey that a life in hiding requires. Added to these factors is Cleaver's natural intelligence, attested to by the fact that he rose during his years in prison from being a semi-illiterate to become a writer with critically acclaimed skill. Cleaver disappeared two days before Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall denied a re- quest for a stay that would have barred California officials from taking him into custody.' His wife, Kathleen, said Nov. 26 that the Black Panthers would keep her husband from going back to prison "by any -" means necessary." When some other top Black Panthers, including cofounder Bobby Seale, showed up in Mon- treal early in December for an anti-Vietnam war conference, speculation was that Cleaver. too, made the trip. So California authorities ap- pealed to the FBI for assistance, and the federal agency entered the case, charging the Negro leader with interstate flight to avoid confinement. A wanted flyer, widely dis- seminated by the FBI, was la- beled: "CautionhCleaver alleg- edly has engaged police officers in gun battle in the past. Con- sider armed and extremely dan- gerous." The apparent reference was to the Panthers' gun battle with Oakland, Calif., police last Ap- ril - the incident which trig- gered revocation of Cleaver's pa- role. Cleaver was wounded during ff1111 the fray, rearrested and ordered to finish the 14-year prison sen- tence he began in 1958 u p o n conviction for assault with in- tent to kill. He was freed on pa- role in 1967. During the time after his re- lease, he served as minister of information for the Panthers, wrote for Ramparts magazine and lectured occasionally to col- lege audiences. "Soul on Ice," a series of es- says based on Cleaver's person- al experiences, was written while he was in prison. It was pub-. lished last year. ,akes on academic life FBI BAFFLED for Cleaver continues K-- K: STEAK and EGGS with hashbtown potatoes, toast and jelly $1.10 STEVE'S LUNCH just west of SAB NOW OPEN SUNDAYS, TOO ST. PAUL, Minn. ()-Prof. Hubert H. Humphrey sits in his brand new office with its view of the snowy Macalester College campus andrsometimes ponders that but for a half a million votes his office would have a view of the Washington Monu- ment. "I must say," Humphrey ac- -- - news today by The Associalcd Press and College Press SerIice I 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor NOW SHOWING Alice's Restaurant DAVE JOHNS, Blues Singer 9:00 FREE FOOD 50c ii Feature Wed., Sat., Sun 1:30-3:45-6:15-8:30 Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 6:30-9:00 JOIN-IN THE DISNEY FUN-IN! 605 E. William 769-1593 COMMANDER CODY AND HIS LOST PLANET AIRMEN knowledges, "there are times when I think about what we should have done ' in different states. But I don't dwell on it too longebecause it just ruins you. Really, it can make you terribly morose and very upset." Although there may be mo- ments of sadness over what might have been, Humphrey ap- pears neither morose nor upset. Humphrey's last academic job before he was taken over by politics was at Macalester. In 1944 he conducted the longest class session in the school's history, on the strengths and dangers of fascism in America. On the second morning of his return to the campus, Hum- phrey faced another long meet- ing, a question and answer ses- sion with some of the more militant of Macalester's stu- dents. A similar affair-a "give Humphrey hell" session, accord- ing to one school official-was scheduled afterlunch, During the morning grilling he had been hit with many of the same issues he had heard from the young during the cam- paign: His praise of Mayor Richard J. Daley's handling of the Chicago convention rioting; his linking arms with Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox; the fail- ure, as some of them saw it, of the poverty program... Over cream of tomato soup Humphrey said, "All you have to do is agree with them, and then you're fine, but I didn't come to a campus to be a yes man to any demand that is made or any observation that is made." Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tuesdaythrough Sunday morning University year. Sub- scription rates: $9.00 by carrier, $10.00 by mail. ANTI-MERGER ANNOUNCEMENTS by the Justice Department yesterday sent stock prices of major con- glomerates nose-diving. Following an announcement by Richard McLaren, an as- sistant attorney general that the anti-trust division expects to take action under the Celer-Kefauver Act, prices of such large conglomerates as Litton Industries and Ling-Temco- Vought fell by as much as 50 per cent. McLaren said he believes the act can be used to bar mer- gers between unrelated corporations even though the John- son administration claimed the bill would have to be amended before the conglomerates could be affected. The Celer-Kefauver act is designed to prevent mergers "which may tend to lessen competition . . . in any line of commerce in any section of the country." THE SOVIET UNION yesterday suggested that East Germany take measures to halt West German military activities in Berlin. The announcement made by Tass and the East German news agency ADN followed West Berlin Mayor Klaus Sch- uetz's approval of the West German Presidential elections in the city scheduled for next Wednesday. The Soviet Union, which had earlier vowed that the elec- tions would not proceed in the city, charged that Berlin not only manufactured weapons but also supplied young men for the West German military. Observers see the charges only as further harassment of the elections which have never produced a direct confronta tion in the past. SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR Walter J. Hickel yesterday called for' new legislation to protect offshore waters from oil pollution. Testifying before a Senate public works subcommittee, Hickle urged that oil companies responsible for offshore pol- lution be held liable for the clean-up costs. Hickel also said he felt the government has not adequate- ly regulated large oil companies through the granting of off- shore drilling permits. Meanwhile another oil leak in the Santa Barbara Chan- nel widened yesterday, releasing oil at the rate of nearly 4,000 gallons per day. The leak was partly the result of the first offshore oil blow-out four weeks ago which squirted oil at the rate of 21,000 gallons per day onto California beaches. FINAL PROSECUTION ARGUMENTS in the con- spiracy trial of Clay Shaw were presented yesterday. Presenting final state rebuttal to the jury after the de- fense had lost its second motion for a court ordered verdict of innocent, the prosecution claimed it had proved beyond a doubt that there were three gunmen who killed the former President. As conclusive evidence, the prosecution used a home movie of the motorcade in which the President rode, the testimony of a housewife who watched the motorcade, and the nature of the President's wounds. AMERICAN AIRLINES strike negotiationswere sus- pended yesterday until next Monday afternoon. The break in the talks, which was called for the two sides to "spend their weekend apart to re-examine their positions," virtually ruled out the possibility of a weekend settlement. The National Mediation Board scheduled the break in the talks following ten days of intensive negotiation. The strike, however, came a f t e r a 30 day cooling off period and ten months of talks. Union contracts with the airline expired last May. 1 I Thompson's PIZZA THIS COUPON IS GOOD FOR -off 50c off- ON A LARGE ONE ITEM (OR MORE) PIZZA f U Coupon expires Saturday, March 1st ONE COUPON PER PIZZA ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~........ mm mm mm mm mm w ' Friday, Feb. 28 Sat., Mar. 1 11-2 9-12 p.m. p.m. $1.00 downstairs I Daily Classifieds Get Results rWA~LDISNEY Winnie th~oh andthe busterydcq Technicolor Q Re37RiCTtQ-r...«r.uMauek.an m«. um.as.eosn+p.MN yMr.ntsr.lut!{wrM.n. I CoiI. O in : t W Saturday and Sunday THE LOVERS (LES AMANTS) Directed by Louis Malle, 1959 JEANNE MOREAU "The film's unrestrained ro- mantic plunge into the Real- ity of Sex is purely youthful." -Stanley Kauffman Short: THE CAGE (Son Quentin prisoners) AMECAN INTENA1TONAL sT.S Y+ETTE AAIMEUEX INETHE 33 oPACE-MAGGiETRETT- jNA A 2 UNI UNION-LEAGUE President and Mrs. Fleming Invite you to an SHOWS AT 1,3,5,7 & 9:05 P.M. Feature 25 Min. Later 75c 7:00 & 9:05 662-8871 ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM I OPEN HOUSE Tuesday, March 4, 1969 4-6 o'clock 815 South University Ave. Opportunity to chat informally with faculty and administrators j ij FREE ADMISSION! A on r N- lu I . . . . . . . . . . . . . AA TRUST TENANTS: MIGRANT PROABLEM'S AA Trust is notifying some ten- ants' parents of the Rent Strike. Contact the T.U. o f f i c e in this event. -r .. ;M M 1 111; 11 - ii f'AriinrAV I A A E~iJ I 1 i , 11