second front5pag4e T4c ta-ddLtr4t MYt Dat4"ty NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Saturday, October 25, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three FIGHTS INFLATION the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service w.e Germany revalues mark _... I TODAY AT F DIAL 1:30 & 8 P.M. 5-6290 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! BEST ACTRESS! t BARBRA STREISAND COLUMBIA PICTURES and RASTAR PRODUCTIONS Lesen { BARBRA OMAR STREISAND SHARIF The Musical Blockbust- r of the Movie Season, ny Movie Season!" Judith Crist, NBC-TV (" Today at 1:30 I' Adults $1.50 Ton iht at 8:00 Adults $2.00 U.S. INTELLIGENCE speculated that the Viet Cong might be planning a winter-spring offensive. Choosing the first or second week in November as the probable starting date for such an action, the officers cited the increase in arms and ammunition found by U.S. patrols and captured documents as the bases for their judgment. In addition, the officers were concerned that there were many more Viet Cong sighted and encountered in the vicinity of Saigon than had been the case during the last several months During the last three years, casualty statistics have also Indi- cated that November has been one of the bloodiest months of the war, while October has been one of the quietest. SEN. GEORGE McGOVERN recommended an overhaul of government regulations concerning food additives. McGovern, chairman of the Senate Committee on Nutrition, called for an immediate and systematic review of clinical testing of all chemicals, noting that more than 680 everyday food additives are now on sale which have never been subjected to animal tests for safety. Until last week, the artificial sweetner cyclamate was also in- cluded on the government's list of additives exempt from testing. It has since been banned. . . .* SEN. STEPHEN YOUNG, an Ohio Democrat, said he would not seek re-election. . A leading Senate dove, the 80-year-old senator cited his age as the reason for his retirement. Given virtually no chance to win either election or re-election in earlier years, Young has served in the Senate since 1958. In 1964, Young, the oldest man in the Senate, was opposed by former astronaut John Glenn who was expected to win before he suffered a fall in his bathtub and withdrew. Glenn is rated as the top contender to replace Young next year. . . * "T ei A -Associated Press Ar* mo red vehicles guard Tripoli streets Palestine guerrillas spur T ATE HELD OVER Theat 3 3rd Big Week! Proqram Information 662-6264 where the heads of all nations meet SHOWS 6b TODAY of113,5,7 n raECv' street-fights in M THOMAS JAMES WHITE HAWK, a South Dakotan convicted of murder, had his sentence commuted from death to life im- BEIRUT, Lebanon (Y-Demon- prisonment. strations in defiance of a govern- The case of White Hawk, a 21-year-old orphan who had admitted ;ment curfew erupted into open the slaying of a South Dakota jeweler two years ago, had drawn street warfare in the northern national attention because the former prep school athletic star was Lebanese' port of Tripoli yester- scheduled to be the first man to die in the electric chair in the U.S. I day. At least seven persons were reported killed in the fighting. in 22 years. Troops fought running battles The decision to commute the sentence was made by the governor with armed civilians and Arab because, he said he felt that life imprisonment was just as severe guerrillas. The boom of heavy a penalty as death. weapons echoed off building walls and Lebanese Mirage jet fighters swept low over the city. Meanwhile, the government of South Yemen broke off diplo- matic relations with the United States, and ordered all U.S. em- bassy officials out of the country within 24 hours. In making the announcement, Salem Ali Rabyee, chairman of the Yemen presidential council, I Friday and Saturdo ait 1, 3,15 7, 9 P.A AND 11 P.M Soon "EASY RIDER I A, c 4 DETROIT MAYORAL RA CE YDs join campaign for , "ALCE'S RESTAURANTZ,, ARLO GUTHRIE PAT iNN-'JAMES BRODERICK sam-me PETE SEEGER - LEE HAYS-m MICHAL MC CLAhATHA* GEFF UTLAW-"TINA CHEN."KATHLEEN DANEY xMPoNceCieI WILIAM OBANKEIN 0 IhcM r Att0GwfH( I ,VENABLE HERNDON 4ARTHUR PENN ,IM-" *.,HILLARD ELKINS JOEMANDUKE -,ARTHUR PENN COLOR by DeLuxe AYAILA9EON UNITOAScoTSj United AVAMBEO UNT[ ARM15EA rh ~ste By DEBBIE THAL University Young Democrats (YD) are currently mobilizing students to work for Wayne County Auditor Richard Aus- tin's campaign to become the first black mayor of Detroit. Club leaders believe their ef- forts at this time are of the ut- most importance to the cam- paign, "It's a close election where our efforts could be decisive," explained Howard Heideman, YD vice-president. Mainly, t h e group plans to canvass Detroit homes for the next two week-ends, the last be- fore the Nov. 4 election. Mem- I bers believe they can best in- fluence the outcome of the elec- tion by talking with individual voters. "Simply going up to the door and talking to people personaby can affect their voting," s a y s Heideman. "Canvassing really does make a difference because people are flattered by the attention. Many people are misinformed and just talking to them helps, but we also want to remind people to get out and vote," says Jerry De Grieck, another YD officer. "Canvassing is the most ef- fective political work, and col- lege students, being the most willing and knowledgeable, are the best ones to do it," De Grieck adds. YD became involved in the campaign last summer when the state federation of Young Democrats endorsed Austin. Austin's chief opponent in the election is Wayne County Sher- iff Roman Gribbs, another Dem- ocrat. The local group became in- volved chiefly because its lead- ers felt students in Ann Arbor had a special interest in the election since so many of them are from Detroit and its sur- rounding area, "We felt we should set up a program to work in these last critical weeks, especially because so many of the students here are from the area and will be directly effected by the election," says De Grieck. x Austi~ But Yp leaders are also con- cerned that race has been a major factor in the campaign. "The only reason many people are voting for Gribbs is because he is white," Heideman claims. As a result, the campaign or- ganizers plan to have as many as 500 students canvassing in predominately white areas dur- ing the next two weekends. Furthermore, the leaders be- lieve the election of a liberal black mayor is of national im- portance. "The whole idea of reversing the trend toward repression anci law and order would reaffirm that Detroit can be a progressrie city, if we elect Austin," Haide- man said. ebanon blamed the U.S. imperialism for' recent clashes between guerrillas' and government troops in Leban- on. The announcement of the dip- lomatic break was made at a massive rally staged in support of Palestinian guerrillas in Lebanon: In Tripoli, a city of 150,000 people and a hotbed of Arab na- tionalism, snipers turned their guns on Lebanese troops in the Chateau St. Gilles, a massive castle overlooking the area. Leba- nese security forces moved cau- tiously up the steep street toward' the castle firing machine-gun bursts at suspected sniper posi- tions. All major cities in the country were under indefinite curfew, and most were reported relatively quiet. But in Beirut, Palestinians seal- ed off the Sabra quarter with sandbag barricades, and Al Fatah guerrillas were seen handing out Soviet machine guns to their sup- porters. Other Palestinians pre-, pared a store of gasoline bombs. Mosque preachers in Syria, Iraq and Jordan accused Lebanese authorities of oppression and "in- tolerable heresy" in the dispute over Palestinian guerrillas who want to use Lebanon as a base for attacks against Israel. In Cairo, the preachers urged all Moslems to halt the bloodshed in Lebanon because "Arab arms and fire should be spared for the battle of destiny." Moves to curb rising exports BONN P) -- West Germany raised the value of the mark 8.5 per cent Friday to check an in- flationary boom. The revaluation of Europe's strongest currency was expected to send shock waves through the international mone- tary system. Effective Monday, $1 will buy 3.66 marks. Under the old rate $1 was worth four marks. Announcing the revaluation af- ter a Cabinet meeting, Economics Minister Karl Schiller said it was "a courageous but not a foolhardy step." He said it would bring sta- bility to West German industry. It was the first significant act of West Germany's new coalition government of Social Democrats and Free Democrats, headed by Chancellor Willy Brandt. Brandt had proposed upward revaluation since last March but his former coalition partners, the Christian Democrats, had successfully block- ed it. Schiller told a" news conference yesterday it became obvious last spring that the country's uncheck ed boom and rising prices could not be controlled without raising the mark's exchange rate. Yesterday's action, he said, "cannot remove the results of in- action then, but it is never too late for a good policy." In Washington the U.S. Treas- ury Department welcomed the mark's revaluation, saying it "should resolve in a constructive manner the principal cause of un- certainty that has existed in the exchange markets." Apprehensive West German in- dustrialists anticipated sharp cuts in profits and stiffer competition abroad. An official of the West German Industry Federation said: "The revaluation is being regretted but accepted by industry." Besides revaluing the mark from 25 cents to 27.3224 cents, the gov- ernment announced it had decided to do away with a 4 per cent ex- port tax imposed last November in See WEST GERMANY, Page 8 SMayor honors UN delegation Mayor Robert J. Harris has pro- claimed today United Nations Day in Ann Arbor. Harris made the proclv nation in honor of thirty foreign UN diplomats visiting the city until Monday. The visitng d gelation and a panel of profesors fiom the Uni- versity a,id Michigan State Uai- versity will be dicussing a reso- lution asking the ON to consider population control lrograms their -first topic of the 1970's. The open discu:sion will be held in the City Counicil chambers at City Hall from 3:00 to 4:00 p.m. today. LOW PRICED PREVIEWS MON. & TUES., NOV. 3 d4 FINAL PERFORMANCES SUNDAY! TONIGHT AT 8:00 OLD TIME COMEDY FESTIVAL friday and saturday-11:15 p.m. I WORLD PREMIERE I IMON., NOV.3- SAT., NOV.8 OCTOBER 14-26 AUDRA LINDLEY TH JAMES WHITMORE CATHERINE BURNS TAMYGRIMES BRIAN BEDFORD 1 ! ir t NOEL COWARD'S y EVAN HUNTER I I E