PILOT PROGRAM PRESENTS FINAL WEEKEND ALICE'S RESTAURANT The New Huron Valley Bluegrass and Rounders FRIDAY, APRIL 18 9:00 P.M. FREE FOOD 50c Admission-Alice Lloyd Hall ATTENTION INFORMATION ON CO-ED HOUSING MOSHER 2nd FLOOR Rooms 204 & 207 Anytime i E f 3 t I Friday, Apri 1 18, 1969 4QE Sfurii~ N ity second f rant page Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three s. w als out of discussions i i L M a a ~ a a aa. r presents .this weekend Saturday, April 19 HURON VALLEY BLUEGRASS ROUNDERS doin 9 p.r. bluecountry and westerngrass $1 .00 Sunday, April 20 a music orgy with EARTH OPERA Elektra Records people 3 p.m.-a special afternoon concert Sunday, April 20 Apokatostase's The Improvisational Theatre of Ann Arbor 8:30 p.m. FREE FREE FREE FREE ! ! 8:30 p.m. with N. Korea on missing the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Servic 204 AMERICANS were killed in Vietnam last week, the lowest total in two months. U.S. and South Vietnamese commands also reported yesterday that 244 South Vietnamese and 2,890 NLF and North Vietnamese troops were killed in the week ended midnight Saturday. This latest casualty report brings the total number of Americans killed in Vietnam to 34,067. MEANWHILE, at the Paris peace talks, American and South Vietnamese delegates warned their NLF and North Vietnamese coun- terparts that they could not win military victory. A FEDERAL JUDGE ruled Wednesday that a draft board may not order a registrant to report for immediate induction as: punishment for violation of Selective Service "delinquency regula- tions." The judge held that a New York board had denied a registrant his constitutional rights by placing his name at the top of its con- scription list. The board had received a false report that the registrant was enrolled in the Air Force Reserve, but the registrant denied he had any knowledge of the report. . . .* plane PANMUNJON, Korea tP, A face-to-face meeting between the United States and North Korea over the downing of a U.S. intel- ligence plane broke up with an American walkout last night. The walkout came 46 minutes after the start of the meeting when the North Korean delegate insisted on knowing the unit to which the downed U.S. Navy plane was attached. The plane was shot down Tues- day. Two bodies of the crew were recovered in the Sea of Japan Thursday. There was little hope of findingany sury-ivors among the the 29 crewmen still missing. Air Force Maj. Gen. James B. Knapp read out a U.S. protest to the North Korean side at a meet- ing of the Military Armistice Com- mission here. The statement charged that the downing of the plane was a "calculated act of ag- gression." Knapp then abruptly walked out when his North Korean counter- part, Maj. Gen. Lee Choon-sun, persisted three times in demand- ing the plane's unit. Knapp has just finished his statement when the North Korean representative counter-c h a r g e d that the United States illegally dispatched the plane for spying purposes in an act of piracy. The Communist delegate then asked Knapp to say which outfit the downed aircraft belonged to. Knapp ignored the request and said: "f have nothing further to discuss. Do you have anything,to say?" Lee then asked Knapp again to disclose the unit from which the plane came. Knapp repeated his earlier statement. So did the North Kor- ean delegate. It was then that the American general stood up and walked out of the room with his aides as the bewildered North Korean nego- tiator watched. watched. Lee and his aides then also walked out, ending the meeting called by the North Koreans. The North Korean delegate opened the meeting at 9 p.m. EST last night, with a statement that did not contain any reference to the downed plane. -Daily-Jay cassidy Student power at RC I m SR Goes to the Movies Holis Hail Joanna Every now and then a movie comes along that gives one the feeling that things are going to change. They don't really or at least very slowly and haltingly, for habits of mind and operation in so expensive a medi- um as that of feature film are relatively fixed, and the tendency s to do it the old way. But then The Graduate suddenly breaks through, or Bonnie and Clyde, and- a few more people get the chance to do it their own way. This year it may well be Joanna, which Twentieth Century-Fox is releasing, that will signal another change of direction. In technique it 3s fresh; its spirit is contemporary; its attitudes are youthfully free of cant or moralizing. The movie was made in London, and it tells a relatively simple story. It's all about a pretty, leggey, teen-age girl called Joanna who comes to London to study art and who, let us say, is inclined to diversify her affec- tions. It would be wrong to call her promis- cuous because the word has a moralistic ring. There's nothing bad or wrong about Joanna. She enjoys sleeping with whoever happens to strike her fancy at the right moment. Her view of reality is slightly askew, mainly because she's almost childish- ly caught up in a fantasy of who she is. Michael Same, a twenty-eight-year-old former pop singer and composer, photog- rapher, journalist, book and film critic, wrote the story and directed it; Michael Laughlin, a twenty-eight-year-old American from Illi- nois produced it; and, very importantly, Walter Lassally, the brilliant young camera- man of Tom Jones, photographed it. They all somehow- provide the conviction that they knew exactly what they were doing and how to do it. It's as though they said to each other: "Let's make a story about a crazy, cheeky, beautiful girl, the kind who comes to London and wanders into someone's bed, who shows up at parties in Chelsea, who seems built by nature to wear mini-skirts, who doesn't understand a thing, and yet is somehow lovable. And let's tell about the people she runs into, and what happens to them and to her because of them." That's about all the movie does for its two-hour length, but it does it so winningly, with such tender, tolerant understanding of the girl, that it is a joy to watch. For a while, one is not even much aware of the fact that a story is being told. We meet Joanna casually; catch glimpses of her here and there; suddenly are catapulted into one of her girlish fantasies; see her yawning, running, talking to someone at a party; learning about life from a serious young artist; being rejected by a boy who is as diversified in his affections as she is inclined to be: visiting a girl friend about to have an abortion. In Joanna's little world, both black and white are equally beautiful. Her best girl friend is a beautiful black girl, whose brother, handsome and arrogant, Joanna falls most in love with. The black girl has a boy friend, Lord Peter Sanderson, a young man dying of leukemia who doesn't want his friends to know about it, or grieve over Alpert him when. he goes. What helps make the movie so pleasing (rather than pleasant) is that it doesn't make a "thing" out of its racial mixing. The film is helped immeasurably by Gene- vieve Waite, who plays Joanna as though playing herself. Maybe Miss Waite is Joanna, for I can't separate her from the role, and I don't ever want to meet her,' because it might spoil the spell she has cast over me. Miss Waite makes you understand why all those intelligent, talented young people wanted to tell Joanna's story. And she is wonderfully abetted by those who play the people who flow in and out of her life, such as Donald Sutherland as Lord Peter. Because we are made to see everyone through Joanna's, hazy view, Lord Peter is a modern-day saint, even though he is rich, idle, and hedonistic. He just wants people to enjoy life while they have it, and he contributes what he can to that enjoy- ment. Then there is Calvin Lockhart, as the black nightclub owner, with a streak of innate violence, who has his pick of girls but likes best the complaisant Joanna; and Christian Doermer, who won't let his birds interfere with his pursuit of art. In a fan- tasy'ending, these and others (and here, I think, Mr. Sarne was perhaps influenced by the ending of Fellini's 81/) perform a show business salute to the happy-sad-go-lucky spirit of Joanna. A little too cheeky, maybe. But providing the ambience, the beauty, the nostalgia, the charm, is that limpid photography of Mr. Lassally. And, for mood there is Rod McKuen's score which has a "sound" and some simple, evocative songs. Joanna doesn't say anything "important," but it's right out of today, or perhaps what young people think is today. In its way it is brave and bold, and I hope it does well, Saturday Review/l1-23-68 5 t 4 jl 1 t C 1 THE JOB CORPS has substantially improved the economic Over 100 Residential College faculty and freshmen, lot of youths who complete their training in it, Congress was told debated whether to require a final exam in the R( yesterday. Behavior course. The group decided to let each recitati A massive new study of the program shows that it has very make the decision. significantly increased wages and reduced unemployment among youths who graduate from it. The study, done by Louis Harris for the Office of Economic Opportunty, was presented to the House Education and Labor Committee yesterday. The Nixon Administration has proposed a curtailment of the P avo '''' ''' ~' '''' ''' P arty ou sts D u b( Jlob Corps program. Db THE ECONOMY continued to expand vigorously during the (Continued from Page 1) Husak said, "The irt uarter of thss year. Though he spent six years in machine has disintegri The new round of statistics made available yesterday indicated psoa certain extent so that inflationary trends are continuing, despite government efforts prison-1954-1960-during Czech- imagine that liberty i to restrain them. oslovakia's Stalinist era, the 55 without limits, but the The Commerce Department revealed that the GNP-the market year-old Husak is not regarded as be observed." a liberal. He has been outspoken value of all the nation's goods and services-had risen to a seasonally in his opposition to anti-Soviet He emphasized what adjusted rate of $903.4 billion. Both industrial output and personal protests which had angered Mos- was the need "to con income rose substantially, while personal savings declined. cow in recent weeks. lations with the Sov _ ~That was the closes, party chief came to the August invasion m1 ILSoviet-bloc occupation whole state ated and to me people s something rules must t he termed solidate re- iet Union." st the new mentioning and the yesterday C Human on section muiiiiinumiuim 44 I ~ _2 I II I l. I I1. 1 A; I " "'I-Il El- iEPTEMBER 16-28 SA RO' YAWS I I TFR/4 APRIL 18-19 SINDERE-LLA AND, THE' "Filled with infinite profundity . -The Board U"- Fri:, Sat., 7-9 P.M. Aud. A, Angell 75c -j Another delightful APA revival of an American classic! i SEPTEMBER 30-OCTOBER 12 SPECIAL 11:00 SHOWINGS both Fri. and Sat. nights SHANGHAI EXPRES.S with MARLENE DIETRICH directed by Von Sternberg Ghelderode's rA whiff of satanical sulphur" by the author of the APA hit "Pantagleize" Ii kL~illhAJ Directed by John Houseman «" IIMIIr r OCTOBER 14-26 C ogols COWBOY FESTIVAL, during study days MONDAY, APRIL 21 MY PAL TRIGGER Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, Gabby Hayes TUESDAY, APRIL 22 THE PROFESSIONALS Lee Marvin, Claudia Cardinale,. Burt Lancaster, Jack Palance C i L. F ~i Directed by f~fSI'~IID~t Stephen Porter I I I