The Michigan Daily-Saturday, September 15, 1979-Page 3 ACTRESS CONSIDERED BLACK PANTHER SUPPOR TER FBI admits to smear tactics against Seberg rr F CUuSEE NEAROPECALL ZDANt It Clairvoyant While demonstrating the statistical method, Psychology 192 Prof. Daniel Weintraub may have provided his 50 students with a little more information than he intended. Yesterday, Weintraub tested the students' powers of extrasensory perception (ESP) as a means of in- troducing them to statistics. While the students sat in their Mason Hall classroom Weintraub went out in the hall and raised, at random, a card with either a triangle or a squre on it. He shouted "Up" to the students when a card was raised and they made a note of which card they sensed was being raised. After 100 tests, the results were tabulated and it was discovered that two of the students, statistically, H have ESP. But it remains to be seen if, on the night before the mid- term, the two who seem to communicate so well with Weintraub will be able to predict his test questions. Political football Predicting the outcome of football games has always been a quick way to make, or lose, a few bucks. But Pol. Sci. Prof. Arthur Miller has found a different use for these often zealous efforts to forecast the out- comes. He claims they will serve to illustrate trends in the way people make predictions. These trends, he says, can be linked to trends in election predictions. Miller will take about five forecasts on football games for his American Political Processes class and analyze them at the end of the football season. In yesterday's first round of predictions most students picked Michigan, though one predicted a Michigan 7- Notre Dame 24 score. But Miller ought to learn to control his ex- pressions of Amazement at predictions unfavorable to the Wolverines, let he damage the survey sample. Correction The story in Thursday's Daily concerning the House's rejection of a draft registration proposal missed a decade through a typographical error. The paragraph should have read: "The plan would have required the president to beging Selective Service System registration January 1, 1981 (not 1991, as originally reported), for males who reached the age of 19 after December 31, 1981 (not 1991)." Happenings t . FILMS Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Banaas, 7 p.m. and 10:20 p.m.; What's Up, Tiger Lilly, 8:40 p.m., Aud. 3, MLB. Cinema II-Heaven Can Wait, 7, 9p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. ' Cinema Guild-Small Change, 7,9:05 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. Alternative Action-Julia, 7,9:30 p.m., Aud. 4, MLB. Mediatrics Films-Harold and Maude, 7, 8:30, and 10 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. SPEAKERS Fall Faculty Workshop-Prof. Theodore St. Antoine, "Labor Law: * Major Current Problems," 9 a.m. to noon, 116 Hutchins. PERFORMANCES Pendleton Center-Mark Sullivan and Friends: New, Music and +;;Jazz, 8 p.m., Pendleton Room, Michigan Union. Office of Major Events-Improvisational comedy troupe; Best of ,,Second City, 8 p.m., Power Center. Canterbury Loft-Trees in Concert, Ann Arbor folk group, 8 p.m., 332 S. State. Music School-Guest Piano Recital: Maria Kardas Barna, pianist, 8p.m., Rackham. EXHIBITS Art Exhibit-"The Great American Medical Show," Sept. 10 to Oct. 12, 9-5, mon.-Fri., Clements Library, South'University. MISCELLANEOUS Free Blood Pressure Clinic-blood pressure tests administered by qualified nurse and written results provided to participants; 9 a.m. to noon, Heart Information Center, 3800 Packard. WUOM-Radio broadcast of Michigan-Notre Dame game, 3 p.m. University Club-University football game broadcast on newly in- stalled wide-screen TV; drinks available for those over 21, 3 p.m. WASHINGTON (AP) - The FBI ad- mitted yesterday that in 1970 it spread gossip that actress Jean Seberg, who committed suicide last week, had become pregnant by a member, of the Black Panther Party. The bureau released an internal memorandum which showed that it had sought to discredit Seberg because she supported the Black Nationalist cause. "IT IS FELT that the possible publication of Seberg's plight could cause her embarrassment and serve to cheapen her image with the general public," the memorandum said. Her husband at the time, Romaim Gary, a French diplomat and author, charged this week that the FBI had destroyed Seberg's life by disseminating the rumor about her pregnancy. Government documents show that in the memo, dated April 27, 1970, the Los Angeles office of the FBI asked bureau headquarters in Washington for per- mission "to publicize the pregnancy of Jean Seberg, well-known movie ac- tress ... by advising Hollywood gossip columnists in the Los Angeles area of the situation." ON MAY 6, 1970, the FBI, then under the direction of J. Edgar Hoover, responded that the idea was a good one. It noted that "Jean Seberg has been a financial supporter of the Black Pan- ther Party, and should be neutralized. The current pregnancy by (blank space) while still married affords an opportunity for such effort." On May 19, 1970, the Los Angeles Times published an article by Hollywood gossip columnist Joyce Haber, which referred to an anonymous "Miss A,'' an international movie star who supported the "Black Revolution" and who "is expec- ting. . . Papa's said to be a rather prominent Black Panther." The Haber article provided a number of details that matched Miss Seberg's personal and professional life. GARY, THE ACTRESS' former husband, charged this week that "Jean Seberg was destroyed by the FBI" bec- cause of the publication of the rumor. He said that in 1970, while they were in the process of getting a divorce, she read the article. In an interview earlier this year, Seberg said sh'e was seven months. pregnant when she read the article and the shock was so great that it caused her to go into labor immediately and the child was dead at birth. Gary said that as a result she "became psychotic" and "every year on the anniversary of this stillbirth she has tried to take her own life." MISS SEBERG'S BODY was found this week in her car near the Paris apartment she had been sharing with an Algerian actor. She had been missing for nine days and had left a suicide note for her 16-year-old son, Diego. When the twirlers have high-stepped and twirled And the passers have side-stepped and hurled, Then the championship crew Can dine (and you, too) For the LEAGUE serves the best in the world! G.M. ____ mSend yo TheICh nManager 227 Sou Next to Hill Auditorium You will Located in the hert of the campus. tickets it is the heart of the campus,,. . one of of CAFETERIA HOURS; 11:30-1:15 5:00-7:15 SNACK BAR 7:15-4:00 ur League Limerick to: r. Michigan League th Ingalls receive 2 free dinner your limerick is used in our ads. - ii JULIA (Fred Zinneman, 1977) The storyline involves a true incident in which playwright Lillian Hellman, at-the request of her friend Julia, tried smuggling money into Nazi Germany to help resistance efforts. Beyond this, the film examines the subleties of her relationship to Julia and to novelist Dashiell Hammett. JANE FONDA, VANESSA REDGRAVE, JASON ROBARDS. Three Academy Awards. TONITE at 7:00 & 9:30-MLB 4 Alternative Action Film Series $1.50 The Comic Opera Guild MASS MEETING for PERICHIOLE An Operetta by Jaques Offenbach MOMDAY, SEPT. 1 7-7:3Opm Onn.Arbor Public Library (corner of William and Fifth) SIGN-UP FOR AUDITIONS CAN'T ATTEND CALL 665-6074 ., r b r. . THE DENTISTRY building was one of six campus buildings to receive recognition from the American Institute of Architecture for exceptionally appealing design. Campus buildings honored with architecture awards Do the HUD-stle i Those strident self-proclaimed disco-haters may be about to receive a crushing blow. No, the Bee Gee's haven't struck again, this time it's the federal government. A Pittsfield, Massachusetts com- munity group has filed an application for a federally-financed disco club. The group has presented their argument to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) that the proposed non- alcoholic disco would deter 17-to-21 year olds from making dangerous drive over mountains into New York where the drinking age is two, years lower. At the public hearing held Tuesday, HUD official David Jameson was told that even if one life were saved, the money would be worth it. Jameson's reply was right on beat: "I am impressed with what I've heard so far." Sons and mothers 4 Now that Rose Kennedy has granted her son, Teddy, permission to run for president, another mom, Lillian Carter, says she will vote for Teddy. That is, of course, if the boys and girls in the Democratic Party don't let her son Jimmy play. During a visit to New York City Thursday, Mrs. Carter said Kennedy would get her vote, "if he is decent and kind as he's always been." But, like any mother protecting her own, she pointed out that Kennedy has not announced his can- didacy and said, "I wish he wouldn't run. I'd hate to see him get beat." Caught you napping These days it's no longer enough to keep an eye on your purse and your wallet, because even a simple yawn can invite thievery. At least that's what a woman taking a bus trip in central Lima, Peru found earlier this week. While nonchalantly ya)Vning during a tiring journey, a robber snatched the woman's gold rimmed dentures before she had a chance to complete her sign of fatigue. Well, if you haven't learned to keep your mouth shut this should teach you! By JULIE SELBST As you walk by on your way to classes, you might not have noticed the looks of the Modern Languages Building. However, this week an ar- chitectural organization has honored the edifice for outstanding architec- tural quality, along with five other campus buildings. Sharing awards from the Detroit chapter of the American Institute of Architecture (AIA) with the Modern Languages Building (MLB) are the Physics and Astronomy Building, the School of Public Health II, the Den- tistry Building, the Furstenberg Student Study Center, and Oxford Housing. THE INSTITUTE is a professional organization, ranging in size from 700- member firms in the Detroit chapter, to 32,000-member firms nationally. The organization has a theme this year, called the "Celebration of Architec- ture" and designated this week "Ar- chitecture Week." As part of the festivities, the chapter held a competition for buildings in the southern part of the state. A group of juries, members of the AIA from dif- ferent parts of the country, judged the nominations on the basis of a portfolio of designs, plans, and photographs. One clerical worker in the MLB said she had not even heard of the award at all and was very surprised. "YOU CAN'T find your way around, the ,.heating system doesn't work, the cooling system doesn't work, the colors are just grotesque. . . I could go on for hours. I have to say one thing for it, I do have a very nice view," the clerical said. Richard Glissman, an AIA member and University architect, said the cam- pus buildings that were selected came as no surprise. "We have about 10 to 12 plaques from various years, going back to around 1965 for those buildings," he said. In addition, Glissman mentioned the Power Center, Regents Plaza and Ad- ministration Building Complex, and the Music School as missing from the list of winners. "Of course, if older buildings were part of the competition, the Law School would be on the list," he added. I EE I I A Dne4 All entries had to be constructed within the last 20 years. HERBERT JOHE, Assistant Dean of the Architecture School, said the awar- ds "make people sensitive to the fact that some buildings are better than others." "Architects are the last people in the world to win honors - they're modest people, but they know when they have a good building," he said. A spokeswoman for the Institute said the list of educational buildings in the competition ran high. Others in the running included entries ranging from the State Police Academy to an elemen- tary school in Royal Oak. According to the spokeswoman, the University took the most awards, "because the University has been quite design-oriented in the past, particularly the student center," she said, referring to Furstenberg Study Center. I. Come Celebrate Briarwood Movies' First Rocky Horror Anniversary G,4 So i~h This Friday and Saturday WITH SHOWS AT 12:00 MIDNIGHT AND 2:00 AMI THAT'S RIGHT 2:00 AM (after the bars closet) U EM AUDITIONS for T. S. Eliot's Surier in tbie fthibriin II September 17, 18 oA n ,..fa ,,.,a