lunch non-profit cooperative conspiracy coffeehouse-theater 330 Maynard Street UM Film Society Termpaper Arsenal, Inc. Send $1.00 for your descriptive catalog of 1,300 quality termpapers 519 Glenrock Ave., Suite 203 Los Angeles, Calif. 90024 I (213) 477-8474 477-5493 I "we need a local salesman" i !? NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 P Liti~rigan hault page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Sunday, February 20, 1972 j DIAL 8-6416 S2 FUN FESTS "The funniest movie I've seen this year! Just go, run to see it!" New York Post .A' ,, AND "B ES # 00 TODiSHOWN AT 1-5-9:05 d7 p.m. Claude Chabro# s LA FEMME INFIDELE (1969) A graceful and engrossing story of a suburban couple and their disenchanted cottage in the woods near Versailles. The wife is still young and beautiful. The husband watches dopey pro- grams on the little television set that sits in the mouth of their enormous, unused fireplace. Beauty and boredom don't mix for long. "Claude Chabrol demonstrates how to make a civilized thriller. He serves up the sensuality and adultery with the elegance of a master."-Paulirie Koel NEXT WEEK: Fri. & Sat.: Bunvel's Tristona Sun.: Conrad Rook's underground classic, Chappaqua MATINEE Ann Arbor DANCE THEATRE CONCERT news briefs by The Associated Press PRESIDENT NIXON has ended the Congressional ban on aid to Pakistan, stating that conditions in Pakistan are returning to normal. The President's action has led to mounting concern among Con- gressmen that an early resumption of military aid to Pakistan is planned. In a vote last summer, Congress barred all aid, except humani- tarian, from the country until the East Pakistani refugees be allowed to return to their homeland from India. THE NAVY HAS FORBIDDEN its officers to take government- financed graduate courses at colleges that are terminating Navy ROTC. The order resulted from pressure applied by the House Armed Services Committee, according to the Navy. The committee reported that, "It is morally wrong for the mili- tary to spend dollars sending students to a particular college or uni- versity which has chosen not to cooperate with the military services."' THE INDIAN GOVERNMENT has issued a blanket invita- tion to Pakistan to enter into direct peace talks. The proposal was contained in a letter sent to U.N. Secretary- General Kurt Waldheim, released yesterday. The letter stresses a preference for a bilateral conference thatt would be arranged and conducted by the two nations, without any third country assistance. India's two-week war with Pakistan last December resulted in the creation of the independent, Indian-supported state of Bangladesh. * * * ARGENTINA HAS BECOME THE FIFTH LATIN-AMERI- CAN country to recognize the People's Republic of China, agree- ing with Peking that mainland China is "the only legal govern- ment of China." Argentina favored the admission of Communist China to the- United Nations but voted against the expulsion of Nationalist China. E-last year. East Quad Martha Cook residents WE'D LIKE TO MEET YOU! TUES., FEB. 22 Room 20 7:00 p.m.EAST QUAD BUSINESS STAFF Viets dealt loss; U. S. resumes air raids over Laos 0 SAIGON ( - South Vietnamese forces suffered one of their worst defeats in months yesterday in a battle at the out- post in Ba Xuyen Province, about 110 miles south of Saigon. The Communist attack opened up with mortars followed by a ground attack against the outpost defended by several hundred militiamen. Field reporots listed 27 soldiers and four civilians killed. The South Vietnamese command reported 38 Communist attacks during a 24-hour period ending yesterday morning. A series of battles in the Mekong Delta left 34 South Vietna- mese dead and 87 wounded. Communist losses were not known. In the central highlands, South Vietnamese rangers bat- tled about 150 North Vietnamese troops three miles south of Fire Base 5 near the border,-- In the air war, U.S. bombin~ raids shifted from South Viet- nam to Laos, touching off "pro- oren i v tective reaction" strikes over neighboring North Vietnam for the third successive day. Ir S orm Six anti-aircraft artillery guns were destroyed or damaged over the North after they opened fire across the border at U.S. planesn- bombing the Ho Chi Minh trail, the U.S. Command said, reporting no damage to US. aircraft. -Associated Press Comimnunist Party convention U.S. Communist Party president Bus Hall addresses the party's convention yesterday as its nominee -for president in the 1972 election. GUAM STOPOVER: r Nixon en route to China; hotline likely FEB. 18, 19-8:30 FEB. 20-2:30 Residential College Auditorium ADULTS $2 STUDENTS $1 Tickets available at: Stangers, Jacobsons, and at the door HONOLULU (A') - President Nixon and his party left Hono- lulu last night for Guam, onenof his last stops before reaching mainland China. After an overnight stay on Guam, the Nixons will fly to Shanghai to pick up a Chinese navigator and go on to Peking for the summit talks. Press secretary Ronald Zieg- ler emphasized yesterday that no dramatic results should be ex- pected from the President's meetings with Chairman Mao Tse-Tung and Premier Chou En- Lai. However, he quoted Nixon as saying he wants to set up "an ongoing communications belt" between Washington and Pek- UI Saturday and Sunday SATYAJIT RAY'S THE MUSIC ROOM Dir. Satyajit Ray, 1965. Indian, Bengal; subtitled. Story of India's aristo- cracy with music by Ravi Shankar. ing which has been isolated from normalrcontact with Americans for more than 20 years. Ziegler neither confirmed nor denied speculation that the Nix- on visit might produce a capi- tal-to-capital hotline similar to that between Washington and Moscow. The United States, however, is laying the groundwork for the potential establishment of such a link by granting RCA Corp. a license to export to China a permanent ground station that would multiply China's commu- nications with the rest of the world. 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 Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day throughSunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier. $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tLion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. Explaining the shift in air at- tacks from Vietnam to Laos, one military source said, "During the dry season, the Ho Chi Minh trail is the most lucrative target." SThe 10 tactical air strikes in South Vietnam during a 24-hour period ending yesterday morning was about the average number of raids in the South for the four months prior to Feb. 9. After that date, the air strikes reached an average of 150 a day. The command said the increased air strikes were designed to coun- ter a Communist buildup along the western borders of South Vietnam. The Viet Cong radio reported that five American pilots who were shot down in raids over North Vi- etnam this past week were pre- sented at a news conference in Hanoi yesterday. The pilots were identified as Lt. R a 1 p h Galati, Capt. William Shwertfager, Capt. Kenneth Frase or Fraser, Capt. James Cutter, and Capt. Edwin Hawley. No home towns or serial numbers were giv- en. The U.S. Command, although acknowledging t h r e e fighter- bombers were shot down over the North last Wednesday and Thurs- day, declined coment However, the Pentagon confirm- ed the five were missing. Northern Ireland Protestants sign- ed up yesterday in an armed mili- tia pledged to fight any move to- ward a united Ireland. At one enrollment, Billy Hull, veteran labor union chief and lea- der of the Protestant hard-line Ulster Vanguard movement an-= nounced, "We will fight to stay British, and when I say fight, I mean exactly that." British authorities view the Van- guard movement as the beginning of the long fore-told Protestant backlash against the fight by the outlawed Irish Republican Army to bring Ulster under control of the nainly Roman Catholic Irish Re- public. The movement adheres to the principle of Protestant rule, veto- ing British suggestions that the province's domestic parliament be reorganized to give the Roman Catholic minority a guaranteed place in government. Meanwhile, across the province violent incidents were reported. In Londonderry, a British soldier shot in the head by a sniper was re- ported in critical condition. In Belfast, terrorists planted a dummy body packed with explo- sives. When an army patrol went to inspect the "body',, it exploded and the troops came under fire. One civilian was reported in- jured. $1-3 PREVIEWS TUES. & WED. A/i . Il/ !r La;I7 "A DELIGHTFUL COMEDY !" (Geo. White-Head, Eugene O'Neill Foundation) PLUS A SHORT: SATYAJIT RAY ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 7 and 9 p.m. 7 4 PERFORMANCES Thurs.-Sun., Feb. 24-27 JI l ,! 1 N1: ISM 5c i I I the ann arbor film cooperative I HELD OVER! Special additional engagement of KEN RUSSELL'S WOMEN IN LOVE with GLENDA JACKSON (Academy Award: Best Actress), OLIVER REED, ALAN BATES I MONDAY !-February 21st-2 SHOWINGS ONLY ! 0 0