Friday, July 26, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Patio Thrae." Friday, uly 261 96 H I HI A A L (-uyu I i I1 CC :.: TONITE'S THE NITE forI , The GIGANTIC SOUND of the Sunday Night Film Series Sunday July 28, 9 p~m. NEWMAN CENTER 331 Thompson The End of St. Petersburg (1927) V. I. Pudovkin, director of "Mother" and "Storm Over Asia" Newsreel: "GARBAGE" Admission 75c NATIONAL NEWS ROUNDUP: Claim OEO interest conflicts Nigerians assert no relief route set BATTLE of the BANDS Local Groups Appearing in Person at ALL 3 Drive-in Theatres WILLOW -- YPSI - ANN - S(10 (No inctease in admission prices) These groups are being sponsored by the local area music stores. . . * APOLLO Music Center " LIBERTY Music Shop *. ALNALI Music Store I 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor JAMESEBBIEY AURCE GARNER REYNOLDS RONET I Technicolor" disit anav NOW! 9 I By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Rep. Edith Green (D-Ore.) said yesterday the deputy director of an antipoverty program is also on the board of a private firm with a $1 million contract with the Office of Eco- nomic Opportunity. She said In a House speech that Richard Frost, a $1,000-a-month' official with an Upward Bound project in Oregon, also serves as a $100-a-day consultant to Educa- tional Associates, whith she said has a contract, with the OEO to review applications for Upward Bound grants. mTpward Bound is a program ad- ministered by the OEO aimed at helping potential high school drop- outs remain in school and go on to higher learning. She said Frost, former director of Upward Bound, resigned that position on Aug. 1, 1967 and be- came a member of the advisory board of educational associates, ATTENTION FRESHMEN Reserve your textbooks NOW Pick them up when you return for fall classes. NO CASH REQUIRED--oll advance orders guaranteed. Save up to 1/3 on Folletts used books. Drop in or mail your reservation card to FOLLETTS 322 S. State St., Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 which had received an OEO con- tract a month earlier. Educational Associates was formed in June, 1967, and was given a $789,000 contract by OEOD a month later, Mrs. Green said. Subsequent additions within the next three weeks raised the total of the contract to $1.3 million, she said. She pointed out that Educa- tional -Associates has no other source of revenue. Although resigning as national director of Upward Bound, Frost became deputy director of an Up- ward Bound program in a prison in Oregon, said Mrs. Green, and is still on the payroll at approxi- mately $1,000 a month. Newark police NEWARK -- An Essex County grand jury yesterday indicted Newark Police Director Dominick A. Spina on a charge of "willfully refusing" to crack down on illegal gambling operations of which he was aware. The indictment charged Spina with having knowledge of wide- spread violations of state law re- garding "bookmaking and pool selling, keeping a gambling resort and lottery operations." As soon as the indictment was handed up to Judge Walter H. Conklin, an assistant prosecutor asked that a warrant not be issued for Spina's arrest, but that he be notified of his indictment by mail. The judge granted the request. The grand jury was empanelled May 25 to investigate allegations made in the Governor's Select Commision on Civil Disorders. - * * * Cut overseas assistence aid WASHINGTON - The Senate F o r e i g n Relations Committee sliced another $25 million from President Johnson's foreign-aid request yesterday and sent a $1.24-billion recommendation to the floor. The new cut was made in mili- tary aid, which the committee set at $365 million. Johnson sought nearly $420 million for such aid. Johnson originally requested a $2.9-billion authorization for the overseas assistance program in the current fiscal year. It has been slashed repeatedly in its progress. through Congress. Those voting against it, he said, included Chairman J. W. Ful- bright, campaigning for a re-elec- tion in Arkansas. Fulbright voted by proxy. Other opponents were Sen. Wayne Morse, (D-Ore.), Frank Church, (D-Idaho), and John J. Williams, (R-Del.). Dial NO 5-6290 wht" t ect icn an .Modern 0 eoohn OH THE LIBERTIES THAT NIGHT EVERYtH ING' WENT EXCEPT THE LIGHTS BECAME "FUN WERE TAKEN THE OUT IN NEW YORK . AND N.Y.C. CITY"! LAGOS, Nigeria (P) - A fed- eral spokesman yesterday called' "ridiculous" a report from Niger that, Nigerian and Biafran dele- gates had agreed on a mercy route across northern Biafra to aid starving civil war refugees. The reports from Niamey, Ni- ger's capital, said the negotiators had agreed on a 10-mile corridor extending from Enugu, the capi- tal of secessionist Biafra captured by federal troops, to Ogoja, 93 miles east. The spokesman pointed out that Ogoja is practically inaccessible, has long been under federal con- trol, atnd any food sent there would be farther away from starv- ing Biafrans than at Enugu. CITIES CONFUSED He thought informants in Nia- mey may have confused -Ogoja with Awgu, 33 miles south of Enu- gu. The federal government has offered to open a mercy, corridor from Enugu to Awgu, the point of deepest penetration from the north by federal troops. Federal officials are also con- cerned that relief attempts to get food to the starving refugees in Biafra might be used to slip arms to the rebels as well. "I believe all practical means should be employed for relief," said Foreign Minister Okoi Arikpo on his return from the Soviet Un- ion and Poland. "But we are not going to allow the opportunity for Ojukwu to import more arms." REBEL LEADER He was referring to Lt. Col. Odumegwu Ojukwu, who has led Biafra in its '14-month-old revolt from Nigeria.., In other events concerning Bi- afra and Nigeria, it was acknowl- edged for the first time yesterday that the United States has main- tained "informal contact in a number of places" with Biafran representatives. The United States does not recognize Biafra and had denied having any dealings with them up to now. Another ipeflection of Nigerian federal suspicion came out of a meeting yesterday tetween Maj. Gen. Yakubu Gowon, head of the Nigerian military government, and Dr. August Lindt of Switzerland, chief executive coordinator in Ni- geria of the International Com- mittee of the Red Cross. The federal ministry of infor- mation said Gowon warned Lindt that his government ,would not tolerate political interference in the internal affairs of Nigeria by relief organizations. In remarks to reporters at the airport, Arikpo was particularly critical of Caritas, the Roman Catholic charity organization that has been flying relief supplies into Biafra. Caritas officials hatee said some of. their planes ,have been fired on by federal ground forces. Nigeria has threatened to shoot down' relief planes. Foresee Viet offensive., in highlands SAIGON (P) - A North Viet- namese buildup in a new area of the central highlands alerted U.S. officials yesterday, to the possibil- ity that the next enemy blow may be struck there. In response to the threat, U.S. B52s, the heavyweights of the Air Force, struck six times Wednesday and' early yesterday in the area north of Ban Me Thuot, capital of Darlac Province. "If there's going to be any ac- tion, it looks now like it will be in Darlac Province," a senior' U.S. officer said. The highlands have lbeen rela- tively quiet with no major fight- ing since the battle of Dak To last November. Ban Me Thuot is about 110 miles south of the area of Kon- tum, hitherto considered the most likely point for an enemy drive designed to cut South Vietnam in two. But intelligence reports say the North Vietnamese in the Kontum area near the borders of Cambo- dia, Laos and South Vietnam have been on the move to the south. There was no estimate of , he size of the force moving into Dar- lac Province. Metro Goldwyn-Mayer presents An Everett Freeman Production Doris DayRobert Morse-TerryThmas-PatrickO'Neal I EXCLUSIVE AREA SHOWING ~AI3Ia i7AU l IF YOU'RE THIRTY, YOU'RE THROUGH! 52% of the Nation is under 25 and they've got power. That's how Max Frost at. '24, became President of the United States. This is perhaps the most unusual motion picture you will ever see! 41x Shelley Christopher Diane WIMiERS * ]ONES * YARSI COLORO HALHOLBROOK by PERFECT "u"E^ E.r Mature Audete d BE| !G chief executive coordinator in Ni- lao Province. U a CINEMA, GUILD Tonight and Tomorrow'r From Here To Eterniy "The movie of it's year! . . . Pauline Koel. Dir. Fred Sinneman, 1963. With Frank Sinatra, Deborah Kerr, Burt Lancaster and Montgomey Clift-as "the last epresentative of depression-style alienation." "That's a great movie!" J. Block "I saw it-I enjoyed it" Steven Yenik 7:00 and 9:05-Architecture Auditorium-only 75c I Co-Stamng LolaAlbright-Steve Allen-Jim Backus-Ben Blue-Pat Paulsen Screenptay by Directed by Produced by Everett Freeman and Karl Tunberg-HyAverback-Everett Freeman and Martin Melcher ( PANAVSIONand METROCOLUR mGM 2::==P 1:00 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:10 NEXT: Sidney Poitier "FOR LOVE OF IVY" I i ' .+ a , ' { " .,. _. .. t «'* ..t.r r. '. , : . II r "fit. N ' "r''I1t K.,/'{4+" \ '.w/ ,. ,F i+ , f y L , . 1 r :1 , / r ley y 'fi. t 1I l ,1 "'i " . rt t A ur , r i q t 'y . , / r ;'. .;, , ; ; . t.1 t . ; 1 '"i c is G X S f . '+ :. r. ; ,* fr ~; a , , f 1 " !t, ,, r " . rlf r r r t^ r I BURT LANCASTER I RUSS GIBB PRESENTS IN DETROIT I I W ~