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February 25, 1972 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1972-02-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Friday, February 25, 1972

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

.'Page. Seven
i

Friday, February 25, 972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seve&

Mw

CINEMA II
AUD. A, ANGELL HALL, 7:00 & 9:00 P.M., 75c

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TICKETS ON SALE AT 6:00I
FRI. & SAT.-FEB. 25'

P.M.
&26

LUIS BUNUEL'S
LOS OLVIDADOS (1950)
(The Young and the Damned)

s
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This is considered the classic film on juvenile delinquency. The
brutality, the depravity, the visceral attack of every action domi-
nates this film. Los Olvidados contains some of the most unflinch-
ingly sadistic and brutal scenes ever filmed, such as the de-
linquent's attack on a legless, armlessacripple; or the stuffing of
a young boy's body in the slum's garbage heap. Brunuel, the
director of such films as Belle de Jour and Tristana, delights in
rubbing the. nose of the naive innocent in the feces of reality.
To watch Los Olvidados is to understand where such films as
Straw Dogs and Wild Bunch find their inspiration.I
SUNDAY-Chappaqua-see Saturday's separate ad
Schedule change-Tristana will not be shown this semester f
.- riene Griffin .
(recent delegate to Paris Peace Conference),
Gene Pluniondon Marge Himell
(visited N. Vietnam) (venceremos)
ON
"INDOCHINA:t
THE NEW AIR WAR"
UNION BALLROOM-FRI., FEB. 25
8:00-Free Admission
SLIDES, MUSIC AND RAPS
"I am not going to place any limitation upon the
use of air power in Indochina."-Nixon, Feb. '71

TERMPAPERS
UNLIMITED
5744 Woodward
Dot., Mi. 48202
(313) 874-0770
WE LIVE
BY OUR
REPUTATION
TONIGHTI
The Women of the
HUMAN RIGHTS PARTY
invite ALL ANN ARBOR
WOMEN to a discussion
of "The HRP and its re-
lation to the WOMEN'S
MOVEMENT AND SO-
CIAL CHANGE."
761-
6621
304( m
S. Thayer
(across from Hill Aud)

(Continued from Page 1)
grant protection from reprisal or{
punishment to inmates involvedt
in the suit.
Bush sought to present testi-
mony from inmates, former in-,
mates, and jail administrators to
support his contention that the
injunction was necessary.
Judge Ager, however, ruled that
for the "emergency injunction"
only the testimony of jail in-
mates would be heard. "At this
point," the judge said, "the court
is only interested in hearing from
the inmates themselves."
One inmate, Betty Matthews,
who has been in the jail since last
July, testified concerning alleged
reading of prisoner's mail.
Matthews said it was a common
jail practice for all incoming and
outgoing letters to be opened byj
the jail administration.

Further Matthews said under
cross examination by County
Prosecutor Jerome Farmer, Har-
vey's attorney, that some letters
sent to her, and some that she
had sent had never been delivered
by jail authorities.
Harvey could not be reached,
for comment yesterday.
Following the testimony Ager
said "as of this point there is not
sufficient eVidence" to grant theI
injunction sought by the initia-
tors of the suit.
Bush then asked Ager to grant
an injunction covering only the
opening of prisoners mail.
Ager also denied this request
citing fears that attorneys could
"unwittingly pass materials that
would be harmful or that defend-
ants shouldn't have" if incoming
mail weren't checked by jail au-
thorities.

Washtenaw County Jail Anti-war
suit hearings conductedprogram

set tonigh
A slide show and rap session,
designed to focus attention on the
heightened air war over Indo-
china is scheduled for tomorrow
night at the Michigan Union
Ballroom.
The program will include talks
by Student Government Council
member Arlene Griffin, who at-
tended the peace conference re-
cently held at Versailles, France,
Genie Plamondon, Human Rights
Party City Council candidate in
the Thimd Ward, and songs by
Marge Himmel of Venceremeos, a
group who has harvested sugar
cane in Cuba.
SGC member Marty Scott will
also speak op the implications of
the Regents' recent policy deci-
sion on classified research, which
would maintain the present guide-
lines for limiting such research,
despite a Senate Assembly policy
which called for changes.
A slide show of damage caused
by bombs now being dropped onI
Indochina will also be shown.

PICTURE YOURSELF AS
A PAULIS.
{ "
First ,; t '
picture a re-
ligious Com-
.Community
founded by
an"meri
can convert .
in, aind for, the y'
banefit of
North Amer - Y
ica.
Picture a
founder who .
wa a century
ahead of his #f4.
time. A man
with a vision
thatcametrue
A man with
a belief that
a Community could be modern
and flexible enough to meet the
needs of the Church in every age
as they arise. A Community that
wouldn't lag behindthe times on
leaden feet. A Community that
would communicate through the
spoken and printed word and one
that wouldn't be hampered by
specific activities when new needs
arise.
Next, picture the men in this
new Community. They would be
flexible. Each one would use his
own individual talents in his own
way and would be given the free-
dom to do so.
These are the Paulists. The
modern religious Community.
Keeping pace with the times.
Concerned. Involved.
If you can picture yourself as
a Paulist, why not write for more
information to: Rev. Donald C.
Campbell, CS.P., Vocation Di-
rector, Room No. 400
415 West 50th Street
New York, N.Y. 10019

STUDENT SERVICES
POLICY BOARD
open discussion on
Special Services and Programs
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25
3 :00 p.m.
Third Floor-Michigan Union
THE HEBREW UNIVERSITY OF JERUSALEM
Programs for American Students 1972-731

PRESIDENT AND MRS. NIXON and Secretary of State William
Rogers tour the Great Wall of China near Peking yesterday as
part of their trip to the People's Republic of China.
Nixon aims for full
relations with China

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8 p.m. and 11 p m.
CAFETERIA 1
Markley Hall
by Reeves House Film Society

ONE YEAR PROGRAM -for college sophomores.
and juniors.
TWI YEAR PROGRAM-for high school graduates.

I

(Continued from Page 1)
Yesterday evening Chou was
host in the Great Hall of the
People to the Nixons and mem-
bers of their party at a two-hour
dinner. The menu featured Pe-
king duck, China's most vaunted
delicacy.
Nixon toured Peking's Forbid-
den City in a snowstorm earlier
today to start off the fifth day of
his visit.
Today is the Nixons' last day in
Peking, before going oi to Han-
chow and Shanghai.
Thousands of Chinese - per-'
haps as many as one million -
were out early in the morning
cleaning Peking's streets and the
route of the President's motor-
FREE to any
Jewish person
NEW
TESTA-
MENT
in English,
Yiddish,
Other literature or Hebrew
available. For
more information,
writes
CHRISTIAN P.O. Box 1048,
INFORMATION Rochester, N.Y.

cade to the site of the ancient im-
perial palaces.
He will go to the Great -Hall
of the People on this afternoon
for what is expected to be his
final Peking- conference'' 'with'"
Premier Chou En-lai.
tn tne evening, the Nixons will
entertain Chou and other promi-
nentChinese in the banquet room
of the Great Hall.
North Vietnam yesterday made
its first comment on President
Nixon's visit to China.
Uhan Dan, the newspaper of
the North Vietnamese Communist
party, accused the Nixon admin-
istration of "dark plotting to car-
ry out continued U.S. neocoilnial -
ist war in South Vietnam 'and
throughout the Indochina penin-
sula."
Then, is an obvious reference to
the' President's trip. Nhan Dan
said: "Never b -fore has there been s
a war when - -T S. president has '
had to run to the East and his
vice president to the West."
"The situation stated above
clearly shows how more and more
the U.S. aggressors are deadlock-
ed in a position from which they
strive to extricate themselves:"
Subscribe to.

* GRADUATE STUDIES- Master's and Doctoral programs.
* SUMMER COURSES-given in English.
r- - ---- - - - -For applications and information: --- ---- - - -
OFFCE OF ACADEMIC AFFAIRS / AMERICAN FRIENDS OF THE HEBREW UNIVERSITYI
11 EAST 69 STREET, NEW YORK, N.Y. 10021 / 212 - 988.8400I

1

LAdde"

---

TODAY, Friday, February 25
HEAR
Dr. Samuel Keen
visiting theologian and contributing editor
to Psychology Today
"Personal Storytelling: the technological

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in the Reliigous Dimension Series
sponsored by the Office of Religious Affairs

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