The Michigan Daily-Saturday, March 24, 1979-Page 3 rp, Dr. Diag on the lam Dr. Diag's trash can discourses, long known as a local institution, may be a thing of.the past. Richard Robinson, alias Dr. Diag, was scheduled to appear in 15th District Court yesterday for sentencing on an assault and battery charge involving a University student. What happened? Nothing-'cause Robinson didn't show up. "I'm going to leave Ann Arbor for the University of Virginia," Robinson told a Daily reporter Monday. "They don't appreciate me around here. It (being Dr. Diag) is a thankless job." No legal action has been taken against Robinson as of yet for his failure to appear in court. However, there is a strong possibility that Robinson's presence in Ann Arbor will soon be truly in demand-by officers of the 15th District Court. A ttention, 1980 grads It's never too early to start think about getting your lovely mug recorded for posterity, according to the folks at the Michiganensian. If you are expecting to graduate in 1980, the yearbook people want you to know. that pictures are being taken for next year's 'Ensian. For an ap- pointment, stop by the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard St., during business hours, or call 764-0561 between 7 and 9 p.m., Monday through Friday. New Clements Library hours The William Clements Library, located at 909S. University, will now be open from 9 a.m. to 5 pm. Previously, the library was colsed from noon to 1 p.m. The extended hours are intended to accommodate students and the general puiblic who wish to view the Library's exhibits. The Clements Library is open Monday through Friday. AMBASSADOR SLAYING STILL MYSTERY Killer search N BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - In- vestigators from three nations joined forces yesterday to try to track down the killers of a British ambassador and a Belgian banker, and to determine whether the slayings were linked in an international plot of political murder. British, Dutch and Belgian police of- ficials were known to be checking the possibility that the Irish Republican Army was responsible for the slaying Thursday of British Ambassador Sir Richard Sykes in the Netherlands, and for the murder later Thursday of banker Andre Michaux in Brussels. DUTCH police said they were sure Sykes, cut down by two gunmen outside his home in The Hague, was the inten- ded target of that attack. But Belgian authorities seculated that the two men who several hours later shot Michaux may have mistaken nim for a neighbor, said to be an assistant to Britain's NATO representative. Dutch police, noting Brussels is only a two-hour ride by train or car from The Hague, said it was possible the killings were carried out by the same assailan- ts. They were meeting with Belgian authorities and with two agents sent to The Hague by Scotland Yard. In Amsterdam, the daily newspaper De Telegraaf said yesterday it received an anonymous call claiming Sykes was killed by the IRA, which is fighting to oust the British from Northern Ireland. THE NEWSPAPER reported the caller, speaking with an Irish accent, warned, "This is only the beginning. It's war. Tomorrow we will kill either the ambassador in Belgium, France or Germany," apparently meaning the British envoys in those countries. The call could not be authenticated. A Dutch police spokesman said it was being taken seriously but not con- clusively. In Belfast, Northern Ireland, two newspapers reported receiving calls purporting to be from IRA Provisionals, the group waging the guerrilla war, saying both killings "could be the work of our groups, but if it is, we know nothing about it." In a subsequent check, however, Provisional sources denied such a >egins statement had been made to the newspapers. SYKES, 58, and his Dutch valet, Karel Straub, 20, were fatally shot by two gunmen as the envoy was preparing to drive from his home to his office. Michaux, 47, was killed as he parked his car outside his home in suburban Brussels. Diplomatic sources disclosed that the house directly across the street from the Michaux residence is occupied by a British diplomat, whom they identified as Paul Holmer, assistant to Britain's permanent representative at NATO, Sir John Killick. Neither Holmer nor Killick could be reached by reporters for comment. Join ~the Arts Page ROBERT MOORE'S 1976 MURDER BY DEATH "YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO DINNER AND A MURDER. . ." So begins the invitation sent to five fathead detectives by an eccentric millionaire (menacingly played by Truman Capote?). Classier than last year's THE CHEAP DETECTIVE. All star cast: Alec Guinnes, Peter Falk, David Niven, Maggie Smith, and Peter Sellers. "Neil Simon displays his usual killer's instinct for sharp, savvy comedy." Sunday: Brando as THE WILD ONE Monday: THE RED SNOWBALL TREE (Free at 7:00) Cuban exile terrorists receive life sentences CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 Take ten On March 24, 1979, the Literary College's (LSA) Executive Commit- tee said it would ask the Senate Assembly to consider the question of the relationship of ROTC and the University. At the same time, the. LSA Curriculum Committee decided to maintain academic credit for ROTC, but to no longer include ROTC grades in student's cumulative grade point averages. That evening, Former Interior Department Secretary Stewart Udall urged a crowd of over 700 in the League Ballroom to "look inward" at the "shortcomings" of American life. "Our country is simultaneously becoming more polluted, more blighted, and less liveable," he said. Happenings FILMS Dutch Film Festival-"Mariken van Nieumeghen," 1 p.m., "Rem- brabdt fecit 1669," 2:45 p.m., Aud A, Angell. Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Deliverance, 7 p.m.; Godfather II, 9 p.m., MLB Aud. 3. Cinema Guild-Murder By Death, 7,9:05 p.m., Old Arch Aud. Alternative Action-Blue Collar, 7,9:15 p.m., MLB Aud. 4. Cinema II-The Last Waltz, 7,9:30, midnight, Angell Aud. A. Mediatrics-Pretty Baby, 7,9:30 p.m., Union Assembly Hall. East Quad Films-"Contempt," 10 p.m., midnight, Residential College Auditorium. PERFORMANCES Eclipse Jazz-"Oregon" 7:30 p.m., Rackham Aud. Russian Festival-Russian Dance, 8:30 p.m., Hill Aud. Canterbury Loft-"Anita Bryant Follies", 8 p.m., Canterbury Loft, 332S. State St. PTP-"RED Roses for Me," 8p.m., Arena Theater. Frieze bldg. Music School-Menotti's "Fantasies in Opera, Dance," 8 p.m., . Power Center. Museum of Art-Russian Piano Music, Louis Nagel, pianist, 8 p.m., Museum of art. SPEAKERS Kelsey Museum-"The Archaeology and History of Carthage," symposium, 9 a:m.,-1 p.m., Hussey room, Michigan League. Women Law Students Association-"Women and Legal Careers," seminar, 10 a.m.-1 p.m., Room 100, Hutchins Hall. Americans for Democratic Action-"Where do we go from here?" Women's Issues Seminar, 1-4 p.m., Room 120, Hutchins Hall. Vietnam Update: "An Eveing of Informal Political Discussion and Clarification," 8p.m., 429 Mason Hall., An Arbor Friends-Kenpo Kathar Rinpoche, "Tibetian Buddhism: Meditation and Philosophy," 8-9 p.m., Friends Meeting House, 1420 Hill Street. MISCELLANEOUS Sign up for your senior portrait-9 a.m. - 9 p.m., 420 Maynard or call 764-0561. Women's Career Fair-workshops begin at 9 a.m., Aud. 3, ML B. Department of atmospheric and'oceanic science Open House-10 a.m.-6 p.m., Space Research Building, North Campus. Science for the People: A National Conference-workshops on nuclear policy, occupational health and safety, farm labor organizing and support, working with unions, 1 p.m., Union Kuenzel Room. Blac Music Festival-Midtown Disco, 8 p.m., Couzens Cafeteria. Halfway Inn-Women's songs and Latin Folk Music, 8p.m., Half- way Inn, East Quad. Rackham Spring Mixer-8 p.m., Rackham Bldg. IS Nyet on rain Even though the American team scheduled to compete in the 1980 Olympics hasn't been selected yet, the Soviets are already promising sunshine for the opening day of competition-actually they're guaran- teeing it. According to Moscow Radio, an aircraft squadron will be ready for dispersing any rain clouds that might threaten the com- petition. The planes will be able to seed any ominous clouds, forcing the rain out of them before they would reach the main stadium in Moscow. .* West Coast shuffle Every year the rent of most apartments and houses in Ann Arbor jumps about 15 per cent. But tenants at a plush San Francisco apar- tment builing were rather shocked last week when they were told their rents would be increased by as much as $300 a month. Last Thur- sday, however, after publicity of the increases, the landlords reneiged and cut the increases in half. So now, tenants living in a $360 apar- tment will have to pay only $415 instead of $500 in monthly rent. The building managers defended the increases "because of the rapid rate of inflation over the past year." They added that even with the in- creases; "a large gap" exists between market value and rent. Hmmm, WASHINGTON (Reuter) - Two Cuban exiles convicted of murder in the 1976 car bomb slaying of former Chilean Foreign Minister Orlando Letelier were sentenced to life im- prisonment yesterday. A third Cuban right-wing militant has been sentenced to eight years. He had been found guilty of perjury and failure to report a crime. RELATIVES OF the three Cubans shouted "long live Cuba" and "down with communism" as Judge Barrington Parker announced the sentences in U.S. District Court in Washington. U.S. Marshals escorted the group of weeping relatives out of the courtroom. Guillermo Novo and Alvin Ross, members of the Cuban Nationalist Movement (MNC), were convicted February 14 on four counts of murder in a plot allegedly masterminded by the Chilean intelligence service to kill Letelier, a leading exiled foe of the miltary junta. THE FORMER Foreign Minister and his American assistant, Ronni Moffitt, were killed when a bomb attached un- der the car exploded as they drove along Washington's "embassy Row" on. September 21, 1976. The two convicted murderers each were sentenced to serve two con- secutive life terms for their part in the conspiracy. The third convicted MNC member, Ignacio Novo, Guillermo Novo's brother, had been found guilty of lying to the grand jury investigating the crime and failing to report it to the authorities. DEFENSE LAWYERS announced they will appeal the sentences. Michael Townley, from Waterloo, Iowa, has admitted placing the bomb on the car. But he became the govenment's key witness in exchange for a lesser charge and the promise of an early parole. He has not been sentenced yet. The Cuban Nationalist Movement has long been involved in an inter- national campaign to overthrow the government of Cuban President Fidel Castro. TWO OTHER MNC members, Vitgilio Paz and Jose Suarez, have also been charged with murder in the Letelier case. They are both being sought by U.S. authorities. "In my 10 years as a judge, I have not seen a crime as monsterous and savage as this one," Judge Parker told the three convicted Cubans. "You have abused and offended the hospitality of this country, and brought with you fanaticism and hatred," he told the exiles. All three defenants denied guilt in the killing of Letelier and Moffitt and charged that they had been made scapegoats by U.S. authorities. DIR. PAUL SCHRADER 1978 BLUE COLLAR With RICHARD PRYOR, YAPHET KOTTO, HARVEY KEITEL. Three Detroit auto workers, tired of being full-time factory zombies, conspire to rob the union safe as a way to free themselves from their work. 'Blue Collar' entertains, but it nonetheless refrains from the cotton-candy approach so common to American movies. "There are few films around with half of Blue Collar's brains and grist." -Newsweek. TONITE at 7 & 9:15-MLB 4 ALTERNATIVE ACTION FILM SERIES IN DOLBY'!!i Martin Scorcese's THE LAST WALTZ., Where else but Aud. A can you see NEIL YOUNG, DR. JOHN, JONI MITCHELL, BOB DYLAN, VAN MORRISON, MUDDY WATERS, EMMYLOU HAR- RIS, NEAL DIAMOND, ERIC CLAPTON, and THE BAND together on one stage? THE LAST WALTZ is Director Martin Scorcese's (TAXI DRIVER) tribute to THE BAND. The film eclipses other concert films in the vividness of its pho- tography, the insight provided by the interviews, and above all the mas- terfulness of the musicianship. The Band's Robbie Robertson emerges as a matinee idol and heartthrob to all those with hormones in working order. "Oh Man!" Lawrence Ferlinghetti. Sun-Richard Benjamin Night-GOODBYE COLUMBUS & DIARY OF A MAD HOUSEWIFE TONITE at Angell Hall Aud. "A" 7:00, 9:30, & 12:00 $1.50 The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at MLD 3 Saturday, March 24 DELIVERANCE (John Boorman, 1972) 7 only-MLB 3 A tense, action packed, sometimes friahtenina narrative of four friends who take a canoe trip in the Georgia wilderness. Based on the James Dickey novel with Dickey portraying a~Southern sheriff. Solid performances by JON VOIGHT, BURT REYNOLDS. THE GODFATHER, PART 11 (Francis Ford Coppola, 1974) 9 only-MLB 3 In expanding the themes and scope of the original, Coppola has succeeded in adding resonance and power to an already brilliant vision. The players are AL PACINO, ROBERT DE NIRO, LEE STRASBERG, and DIANE KEATON. "Makes movies once again seem a miraculous medium."-Pauline Kael. "Nothing personal . . . just business." MONDAY: Nicholas Ray's THEY LIVE BY NIGHT & THE LUSTY MEN