NATIONAL GENER~AL CORPORATC N FOX EASTERN THEATRES Showing FO VILLAGE 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769-1300 FEATURE TIMES Mon. -Fri. 6:00-9:00 Sat.-Sun. 1:30-4:45-8:00 second front page $ irl i ttn aait NEWS PHONE: 764.0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 NEVER SO TIMNil.Y!NEVER SO GRIEAT SE ITIDURING THlE25TH ANNIVIERSARY YEAR OF D-DAY e Stupendous! There are no more worlds to conquer." -New York Times DARRYL F ZANUCK'S THE ..... I1AVBased an th/e Book by CORNELIU RYAN Reeased by Mb coawy-foot WITH42INTERNATIONAL STARS/ Saturday, June 7, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Senate aging committee sets earing Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho) will confirmed by the Senate as U.S. com- Church's Monday hearings will be Syndicated columnist Sidney Mar- Division of the National Better Busi- conduct a senate subcommittee hearing missioner on Aging, continuing the work begun by the go'lius, Helen Lamale, chief of the ness Bureau in New York. on the problems of elderly, consumers Economists Abram J. Jaffe of Co- Senate Special Committee on Aging Division of Living Condition Studies There will also be a panel consisting at Rackham Lecture Hall on Monday lumbia and James N. Morgan from which conducted hearings in April in the U.S. Department of Labor, and of Clark Tibbits, director of the De- at 1:45 p.m. the University, who are both involved concerning the "Economics of Aging." Patricia G. Carter, director of the partment of Health and Education and The senate subcommittee's hearing in social research in the economic Church said, "At Ann Arbor, the Consumer Education Project for Older Welfare's training grants staff; Wal- is the highlight of the University's problems of the elderly, are scheduled subcommittee will look into matters re- People in New York will all participate lace F. Janssen, historian in the Food 2nd annual Conference on Aging. to testify on early retirement and con- lated to one basic question: What are in a discussion of budgets and con- and Drug Administration; Gertrude Representatives from at least 20 Mich- sumer income. the needs of the elderly and the rela- sumer problems. Landau, a New York consultant and igan _communities will attend the The final scheduled witness for tionship of those neds to retirement The urgency of the problems can be lecturer on aging and Dr. Jack Wein- hearings, which will be .open to the Monday is Dr. Wilma Donahue, direc- incomes? demonstrated statistically. The median berg, clinical director .of the Illinois public.ftor of the University's Division of "We will explore such matters as income of older fanilies was 50.6 per State Psychiatr'ic Institute in Chicago. Gerontology, which sponsors the an- the Bureau of Labor Statistits' moder- cent of the median income of younger Tuesday's session of the conference Virginia H. Knauer, special assistant nual Conference on Aging. She will ate budget for retired couples, a n families in 1962, but dropped to only at the Michigan Union will become to President Nixon on consumer af- speak 'on "Perspectives on the Older . 46.2 per cent in 1967. work groups devoted to particular sub- fairs, will be the first to testify before Community." National economic growth puts jects ranging from automobfe' in- the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Con- TIere will also be a panel of older ga irtion aby cconsu added dollars in the pockets of work- surance and credit to health problems sumer Interests of the Elderly consumers who will testify concerning behavior in the elderly; effects of early ing groups, but continually lowers the and shopping. Mrs. Knauer will be joined by John the difficulties they encounter in try- economic status of retired persons. The final Wednesday morning ses- B. Martin, who was chairman of the ing to make fixed retirement income sumer problems that may reduce the Another speaker scheduled for Mon- sion will deal with consumer educa- Michigan Commission on Aging from meet their needs while the cost of buying power of the elderly," Church day's hearings is Irving Ladimer, vice- tion and services available to the 1960 to 1963, and who was recently living continuously rises. added. president of the Health and Safety elderly. Join, rThe Daily Today! DUBLE FEATURE-STARTS SUNDAY ACADEMY AWARD WINNER "BEST SUPPORTING v _.. ACTRESS " "POSSIBLY THE BEST FILM OF THE YEAR" -New Republic "A MAJOR ARTISTIC ACCOMPLISMENT! -Cue' "ENGROSSING, FASCINATING, a MAGNIFICENTLY MADE" -Newsday the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service CONTINUED TESTING of multiple warhead delivery sys- tems could jeopardize the success of hoped-for Soviet-American arms talks, said Secretary of State William Rogers yesterday. Speaking before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Rogers conceded that successful "MIRV" tests "might present new problems of -inspection", for an arms control conference that the Nixon admin- istration hopes to convene this summer. But Rogers insisted, "If the Soviets want successful arms limita- tions talks, we can work out a successful arrangement with them" despite tests of the new weapons system. * * * A STATE OF EMERGENCY was declared in Hartford, Con- necticut yesterday after four nights of vandalism, while black militant leaders attempted to calm racial violence which erupted Thurlsday night in Indianapolis. 10 persons were arrested in Hartford after continued disorders were aggravated When two bystanders were shot and injured by po- lices Police used teargas to disperse a crowd that gathered after the shooting. Fire-trucks and passenger cars were stoned and a white reporter was beaten in a black. neighborhood of Indianapolis after white po- licemen intervened in a fight. PEKING charged yesterday that hundreds of Soviet armored vehicles made a foray last month into Sinkiang Province a site of Red China's nuclear test grounds. The Chinese alsd charged the Russians of provoking numerous. other fron'tier incidents since the border clashes last March- The Soviet Union denied the charges. Foreign Ministry spokesman Leonid I. Zamayatin said, "According to our information, everything is completely calm on the border.' Peking announced its charges to coincide with the world Com- nunist meeting in Moscow. Red China and all Communist-ruled Asian nations are'boycotting the conference. * * * ROMANIAN COMMUNIST PARTY leader Nicolae Ceausescu responded yesterday to an attack on Red China by Polish leader Wladyslaw Gomulka with a plea "to put the interests of the work- ing class, socialism, and peace above any temporary disagree- ments." Ceausescu reminded delegates gathered in Moscow for the world Communist conference that "in preparations for our meeting we de- cided not to reproach other Communist and worker parties" and that such attacks "represent a danger" to the conference's success. -Associated Press RFK, memorial mass Terence Cardinal Cooke of New York (right) officiates last night at a memorial folk mass for Robert Kennedy at the grave- site beneath the Custis-Lee Mansion in Arlington National Cemetery. Yesterday was the first anniversary of the senator's, assassination. "TRIUMPH !" -Judith Cri t 1 * 12 Presidio GI's lose mutinHyea'se, await sentencing FT. ORD, Calif. OP) - A court martial yesterday convicted 12 soldiers of mutiny and two others of lesser offenses stemming from a sit-down protest in the San Francisco Presidio Stockade by 27 enlisted men last October. Of the two soldiers not convicted of mutiny, one was convicted of willful disobedience and the other of failure to obey a lawful order. Eight of the original 27 previously had already been convicted of mutiny. Three are fugitives and two have been sent to hospitals for winu .tI3EA.TT REFUSED SITE: National SDS charges U.S. blocked convention 4rWritabyDYQBNE W RI8TON-Poduced by*AMREN S Y-Doectedbi RTh15}ElU l " 'TECjHNICOL0RS FROM WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS WV! RI The year's #1 best seller also picks you up and never lets you down. A KUL A-MUL GAN au oto ' A D StarIgAcademyAwardWinner BEL KAUFMAN TAD MOSEL S ADYDENNISALAN }PAKULA' ROBERTMUGAN ; TECHNICOLOR FROM WARNER BROS.* WASHINGTON (P) - Students for a Democratic Society accused the federal government yesterday. of blocking its attempts to sched- ule an annual convention. "We're Fbeing banned from ev- ery campus in the country," claimed Mike Klonsky, a national secretary of the SDS which spear- headed scores of confrontations in the nation's colleges this school year. The FBI and Justice Depart- ment refused to comment. TwoC universities gave other reasons for refusing the SDS convention. The convention had originally been scheduled. to open Monday, but no site could be found. The opening date was pushed back to June 16. Now even that date looks doubtful, said Klonsky. "We had been accepted at a lot of schools,"' Klonsky said, "but as soon as the word got out the fed- eral government stepped in and made them cancel it." observation. TerenceHallinan, the civilian defense attorney, compared , the two-months-old trial to the Drey- fus case in Frane in 1895. He said the French army in sentenc- ing Capt. Alfred Dreyfus to life on Devil's Island for treason "over-' reacted and created a national scandal." Hallinan said the defendants' act in sitting on, the grass, a n d singing ,last Oct. 14 instead of going on stockade work details "was a cry for help, not an at- tempt to override lawful military authority." "Thee was no attempt to mu- tiny," Hallnan said. In a statement for the prosecu- tion, .'Capt. Dean Flippo argued that nonviolent acts of the 14 were "Just as serious as the violent kind." "Any flouting of lawful military authority is mutiny," Flippo said. The same five-man panel that convicted the 14 will reconvene to decide their sentences. Sentences up to life are possible for mutiny. The maximum for wilful dis- obedience is five years. F o r fail- ure to obey a, lawful order the maximum sentence is six months. The first three of eight privates, previously convicted now are serv- ing two-year terms. They w e r e sentenced originally to 14, 15 and 16 years. Sentences were reduced by the Army judge advocate general after' protests against the penalties in the U. S. Senate. 3 Pvt. Larry Sales, 22, of Modesto was convicted of failure to obey a lawful order. Pvt. Danny Seals, 22, of Orangeville, was convicted of wilful disobedience. The 12 others, convicted of mu- tiny, were: Roy A. Pulley, 19, Clear Lake Park; Richard B. Stevens, 20, Centerville; Richard N. Duncan, 20, St. Helena; Buddy J. Shaw, 18, Hayward;, Patrick Wright, 20, Santa Rosa; Michael J. Marino, 21, Vacaville; and Stephen R o w- land, 22, of San Francisco. Richard L.. Gentile, 20, of Hampton, Va., Francis Schiro, 21, St. Petersburg, Fla.; Ernest Tre- fethen, 18, Getzville, N.Y., Alan L. Rupbert, 20, Bellingham, Wash., and Danny L. Wilkins, 20, Central, Utah. The trial board returned its ver- dict after six hours of deliberation at the conclusion of a 36-day trial. extending over two months. -1 Red, Cross plane downed by Nigera LAGOS (P)-Soviet-built MIG lets of the Nigerian air'force shot down a Swedish Red Cross plane flying supplies tp Biafra. 'The four-man crew was captured after parachuting safely, according to reports reaching Lagos yesterday. Informants here and in Sweden identified the plane as a DC-7 flown by an American pilot, Dav- Id Brown,.'wyho now lives in Stock- holm. They said it was hit Thurs- day night and went down while enroute with 10 tons 6f supplies to Biafra's Uli-Ihiala air strip. Radio Nigeria identified t h e aircraft as a DC-6 and said it was "apparently making a surprise bombing raid." Col. Shittu Alad, Nigerian air force commander, said, "It is dif- ficult to know if it' had Red Cross markings or not. As far as we're concerned we are hitting at any- thing into Biafra, Red Cross .. . or not."- About two dozen Red Cross and other relief planes fly into Biafra nightly but arms flights also'fly in. Swedish Embassy sources said two other mercy flights reported they were attacked but they were thought to have returned to their bases. The International Red Cross in Geneva reported a DC-7 missing on a flight to Biafra from Fer- nando Poo, an island off the Afri- can coast. A report reaching the Red Cross in Sweden from a pilot flying an- other supply mission Thursday night to Biafra said the Red Cross .plane was shot down in flames Thursday night. The pilot, identified in Stock- holm only as Capt. Olsen of Ice- land, said two other relief planes had been hit and caught fire. The Swedish account said they landed safely. Other relief pilots returning from Biafra said. Brown radioed he was hit and on fire and then radio contact went out around 7 p.m., reports here said. 4 : TONIGI the incredib of BC HT le mind 1421 Hill St. 8:30P.M. FRANKE Sunday "UP THE DOWN STAIRCASE"--3:00-7:0:5 "BONNIE & CLYDE"-5:05, 9:10 - IF 11 E FT A t I guitar FORGOTTEN MASTERPIECES OF 1968-Ends Today I "ONE OF THE BEST PICTURES I'VE EVER SEEN. 'WILL PENNY' RAISES THE GENRE OF HOL- LYWOOD MOVIE MAKING SEVERAL NICHES IN THE DI- RECTION OF ART." -Rex Reed, N.Y. Times "BEST SCREENPLAY" -N.Y. Film Critics "SUSTAINS A LEVEL OF WIT AND TENSION THAT FEW MODERN FILMS ASPIRE TO, LET ALONE ACHIEVE." -Newsweek "THE NICEST, NASTIEST CRIME FILM TO COME .06 OF HOLLYWOOD IN YEARS!" -TIME MAGAZINE 20TH CENTURY FOX PRESENTS A LAWRENCE TURMAN From the Producer of "THE GRADUATE", OLO BY DELUXE AJ Gsa 5U 1a e MATUeE VeNCU ENDS TODAY Matinees today only $1.00 "Will Penny"-2, 5:30, 9 "Pretty Poison"-3 :30, 7:00 L and banjo contempora ry and original music SAT. NITE LATE: "AFTER HOURS" Program Information 662-6264 NOW * * * SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 p.m. GEYDA RECORDING LIVE at SATURDAY, JUNE 7 8 P.M.-$1.50 AT THE DOOR A JOINT PROD.UCTION I -IT 11 who holds, the deadly key to the MulEar Fi E GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe U I MONDAY NOON -- MCAi Tu DIAL 8-6416 .Ch ffnfli n~f TECII4MCOLOR A PARAMUMJPICTURE The War of Intrigue Across the Face of the SGlobe! F 0 R c ?. LUNCHEON SERIES "Aspects of the Law" JUNE 9- PROFESSOR GERALD ISRAEL: "Criminal Law Reform in Michigan" JUNE 16 - - - t r-II e e lI n I tfrn CA V "A SLICK BIT OF IEDROOM DEdEPTION ... EXUBERANT AND ENGAGING... DIALOGUE" -N.Y. Timies CLASSIC COMEDY FESTIVAL TONIGHT ONLY 11:00 P.M.-separgte admission .JEANI CHIARLI L VTH- .E CHASE viairnv U~ I i U 191-1 - ' ,,, I I .: . :. f