Wednesday, August 20, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednesday, August 20, 1969 THE MICHiGAN DAILY Page Three RADICAL FILM SERIES presents AGIT-POP 105 A film by Norman Fruchter and John Douglas Distributed by NEWSREEL -Draft Resistance organizing in Boston -A Boston organizer's trip to North Vietnam -A G.l1. coffee house in Texas -Newsreel's appearanceion Channel 13 in N.Y. -Production of THE RAT'S special issue in Chicago -Chicago during the Democratic Convention-the planning and carrying out of five days of protest Each section focuses on an organizer central to each project- the attemptis to define the nature of commitment to "the Move- ment" against a backdrop of last summer's activity. WednesdayAug. 20 7-8-9-10-11 p.m. Admission 50c CANTERBURY HOUSE 330 Maynard Hippies move to oust Sand City government, SAND CITY, Calif. (P)-Voters' flocked to the single polling booth in tiny Sand City yesterday as both sides predicted victory in a hippie- inspired recall election to oust business-minded city leaders. Bob Lynn, bearded leader of the movement to recall the mayor and four-man City Council of this sea- side town of 520 persons on scenic Monterey Bay, faced a challenge to his own vote. City Attorney John B. Stohlton said, "There's some question of whether Lynn lives here . . or in Pacific Grove, about three miles away." A spokesman said Lynn has a lease on a home in Sand City and is eligible to vote. During the first three hours the single polling booth was open in the town's three-room City Hall, 50 persons-or nearly 30 per cent of the town's 180 eligible voters--- cast their ballots.E Mayor Phil Calabrese, a wealthy contractor who has headed the city government for nine of the 10 years it has been incorporated, claimed hippies were trying to turn Sand City into a "new narcotics terminal for the country." Lynn. a 44-year-old former pot- tery teacher, denied that narcotics is the issue. He says the city has no low-cost housing and no re- creation and park facilities. He rlaunched the recall campaign last February. Stohlton said 32 other votes would be challenged-primarily of hipipies-on grounds that they do not meet residency requirements. He said he expected "somewhere around 20 to 25 hippies" would vote. "The established residents in town look on the hippies as a real threat," he said, "and they want to get them out of here. I think you could call it a clash between the establishment and the hippie, community." r etio i vmoerna ~ooling DIAL 5-6290 TODAY at 1:30 and 8 P.M. GIRLS! DO YOU DARE AfAT!IIIIL H rEE Program Information 662-6264 WATCH WF DID WITH THEIR BABY AFTER THE AFFAIR WAS OVER? MAT HE ENDING TONIGHT "THE LAST TIME" and f"SINFUL DAVEY" * THURSDAY "NOW I'VE SEEN EVERYTHING' -Beverly Hills Courier TODAY LADIES 75c until 6 P.M. What made you leave him, Cathy... was it thevt he made love, or why? -Associated Press Nixon on the links President Nixon shows his newly appointed ambassadors his golf swing after their session yesterday at the Western White House in San Clemente, California. Next to Nixon from left to right are Taylor G. Relcher, Peru; Leonard C. Meeker, Romania; Walter L. Rice, Australia and Luther I. Replogle, Iceland. Two other appoin- tees not pictured here are Eileen R. Donovan, Barbados and Adolph W. Schmidt, Canada. . .. - - t~Sl .Vf P~~ DAILY,' OFFICIAL BULLETIN v,::":}5:::Y:::":' :x'i ;: Y'";-: :?,?:;f, ~ri''Y:Y.Ax."..{,:.Y"LT}:'t ,,;S.g, fY,,Y: "V~ii, ,.y ,au+;" SA.M.P.A.S.; BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! "To Miss It is To Throw Away Ecstasv!" -Drew Bogema Mich. Daily I WINNER 6 ACADEMYAWARDS! Todav Mat. $1.75, Eve. $2.00 Official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in- TYPEWRITTEN f o r mnto Room 3528 L.S.A. Bldg., before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publi- cation and by 2 p.m. Fiay for Saturday and Sunday. General : Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices a r el not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270 Day Calendar WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20 University Summer Choir - Thomas Hilbish, conductor: Hill Auditorium,, 8:00 P.M. 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Fall I.D. cards will be distributed at this location beginning Wednesday, August 27 through Thursday, Septem- ber 4 during regular working hours. Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Current Positions Received by Gen- eral Division please call 764-7460 for further information: Management Consultants, Detroit - Sales positions with both technical and consumer products. Alphanumeric Inc., Detroit area - Sales Rep, oil Mich, exper in data pro- cess sales, graphic arts. S Young America, Inc, five territories covering U.S., - Regional Managers, ambitious young women, college grads. to manage territories of distributing organization serving college coeds. Personal Products Co., Wislington, Ill. - EDP and engineering positions. exper necess. General Foods Corp, Waseca, Minn.- Mechan. engr. Systems Research Laboratories, Inc., Dayton, Ohio - Physics and engrg. de- grees, many positions all requiring exper. Abbott Laboratories, Chicago, Ill. - Exper degrees bus. ad., educ, math and indust. engrg. for positions in manage- ment training. 11 Eastern News Distributors, Inc., N.Y.. - Student to market here at Michigan, special interest magazines. the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Srivice THE GOVERNMENT hinted yesterday it hoped to touch off a still-controversial underground nuclear' blast at Amehita Is- land, Alaska on Oct. 15. There has been speculation that the proposed test is in cpnnec- tion with efforts to produce warheads for the Safeguard missile de- fense system. The Atomic Energy Commission gave the hint of a specific date in announcing that it is establishing a "safety area" - 50 nautical mile radius - all around the remote island in the Aleutian Island chain. The AEC declared the safety area was being set up in connection with a period from Sept. 25 through October 15 when heavier than normal ship and aircraft activities may take place in the area. VIRGINIA DEMOCRATS yesterday nominated William Bat- tle in that state's first primary runoff for governor. Battle, a middle roader who carried the backing of the elected powers of the party, defeated the more liberal Henry Howell, a state senator who claimed "the people" were behind him. The basic issue of the primary was the future structure of the Democratic party organization. Howells populist-type campaign gave the party structure its toughest test in 20 years. A FEDERAL JUDGE yesterday ordered the government to furnish him with the transcript of a bugged conversation between a top witness at the trial of Teamsters Union President James Hoffa and another official convicted with Hoffa. Walter Sheridan, a former Justice Department investigator, was the first government witness in the Supreme Court-ordered hearing into alleged wiretapping and bugging by federal agents during Hoffa's 1964 trial in Chattanooga, Tenn. Sheridan admitted that a car bugged by the FBI was used by Baton Rouge, La. Teamsters official Edward Partin. He said a conver- sation between Partin, a witness against Hoffa, and Edwin King, another Teamsters official was recorded. One of King's lawyers asked the court to deliver the transcript of the recording to the defense. However, U.S. District Court Judge Frank Wilson, who presided over the 1964 trial, requested that the transcript be turned over to him for study before deciding on the request. $' THE NOMINATION OF CLEMENT HAYNSWORTH to be a Supreme Court Justice will upset the timetable for Senate action on a constitutional amendment to overhaul the presidential elec- tion system. Sen. James Eastland (D-Mlss), chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, set Sept. 9 for a hearing on Nixon's nomination of Hayns- worth. The hearing is set for 11 a.m. which will give the committee time to meet first in an executive session to vote on three nominations for the 9th circuit court.' However, proposed amendments to abolish the electoral college and a bill for limited anti-trust exemption for' joint newspaper publishing agreements which had been scheduled for that day will be delayed., HUNDREDS OF AMERICAN REINFORCEMENTS poured into a battle near Da Nang yesterday to relieve two badly battered U.S. infantry companies. This was the biggest ground fighting in the north since the North Vietnamese launched their fall campaign last week. The two units of 177 troops each ran into an estimated 1200 North Vietnamese infantryman while sweeping the foothills south of the city. Six hundred American reinforcements were rushed to their aid with more to follow. * * * THE NATION'S GOVERNORS are being .asked to take a stand pinning down present policy against any cross-country flights by the controversial supersonic transport when the air- liner is developed. They also are being asked to recommend that the federal gov- ernment consult with each governor or his representative before any commercial SST flights take place over any state or territory. The proposal is contained in a policy statement prepared for ap- proval at next month's National Governors Conference. In dealing with the SST currently under review by the Niyon Administration, the statement acknowledges the project may have value to further the aerodynamic competence of the United States. However, it adds "it has not been conyincingly shown that the advantages to be gained in the operation of supersonic transports would counterbalance the possible adverse environmental noise ef- fects to which the citizens of the various states would be subjected." SOVIET NAVAL STRENGTH in the Mediterranean was per- haps at a record high yesterday, as U.S. officials speculated over reasons for the buildup. A U.S. Navy spokesman said 63 to 65 Soviet ships had been counted, outnumbering the more powerful U.S. fleet, Soviet presence in the Mediterranean has not -been this great since they began' deploying naval forces after the Middle East war in 1967. The U.S. officals did not release the number of Soviet submarines because they say they do not want to let the Russians know how effective American surveillance is. ATTORNEYS FOR THE PARENTS OF MARY JO KO- PECHNE, fighting exhumation of her body, raised new legal objections yesterday that could delay next week's hearing on an autopsy request by a Massachusetts district attorney. Presiding Judge Bernard Brominski of Luzerne County Common Pleas Court said the Kopechnes' attorneys had presented a motion that "raised enough legal points" to warrant a conference with Dis- I1 hvey1 ...... . ........ "OTLEY IS WITH IT! AMUSING, FINE FARE! Wild chases, good photography, neat scenery, swinging London, and suspense... everything is here!'-i Smith, Cosmopolitan "DON'T PASS UP MEETING THIS BLOKE, OTLEY! Surprisingly fresh, funny, youthful comedy far different from the rest!" -William Wolf. Cue Magazine; "OTLEY PLEASURES ONE GREATLY! Tom Courtenay is a charmer, wonderfully ingratiating! Good rhythmic fun!" -Judith Crist, New York Magazine' "FRESH AND SOPHISTICATED, SHEER ENJOYMENT! Director Dick Clement has filmed a chase sequence that is a classic!" -Kathleen Carroll, New York Daily News * "SIT DOWN AND ENJOY YOURSELF! I trict Attorney Edmund Dinis. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor. Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning University year. Subscription rates: $9 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published, Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. Rent your- Roommate with a Classified Ad Tom Courtenay turns up as Otley himself, who exists on the fringes of London's younger, swinging set!" -Archer WinstenNew York Post "OTLEY IS FULL OF LAUGHTER! A rollicking adventure for Tom Courtenay and fun for the entire audience!" -Frances Taylor. Long Island Press T UMUIRfAAY=TU=ES= CARL FORIIMI rtsw. TOM COURTENAY Order Your Daily Now- Phone 764-0558 NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION _ FOX EASTERN TEATREi ' FOX VILLA5E Now Showing 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769-1300 STARTS TOMORROW I I 8