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February 27, 1972 - Image 3

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1972-02-27

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I

I

Park West Announces an
GalleriesA
ART AUCTION
SUNDAY, MARCH 5th AT 1 P.M.
r EXHIBIT STARTING AT 12 NOON 0
At WEBER'S INN
3050 JACKSON RD., ANN ARBOR
* LITHOGRAPHS " ETCHINGS " ENGRAVINGS 0 DRAWINGS
0 GAUACHES @ POSTERS ETC.
Miro Renoir, Matisse, Calder, Gat, Jansen, Freed, Braque, Cha-
gill, Dali, Qufy, Siquerios, Vasaraly, Picasso, Max, Rembrandt,
Lautrec, Aloux, Weintraub, Viko, Menguy, Marini, Bolotowsky,
Challenger, 'and many others.
Catalogues Available
ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED TO BE GENUINE AS DESCRIBED

news 'briefs
by The Associated Press

cl,4 P

Sfr ii!3n

DatiIu

Sunday, February 27, 1972

Page Three

Ip
HOUSE ARMED SERVICES Committee Chairman F. Edward
Hebert (D-La.) threatened Friday to cut off all defense funds to
colleges and universities not cooperating fully with the military.
"Any university that throws our ROTC programs off campus
can't have any defense money for education," Hebert said.
However, Defense Secretary Melvin Laird has indicated he opposes
Hebert's blanket policy and hopes to work out a compromise with
the chairman.
- - 44
PIONEER 10, THE FIRST nuclear-powered spacecraft de-
signed to probe Jupiter, will be launched at a record speed of
31,112 miles an hour at Cape Kennedy today.
The satellite will establish other space records. It will be the
first spacecraft to penetrate and investigate the Asteroid Belt, billions
of pieces of debris that orbit the sun.
It will also travel faster and farther than any previous space
vehicle, requiring 22 months to reach Jupiter, 600-million miles away.
It will reach the moon in 11 hours, a three-day journey for the
Apollo astronauts.
ISRAELI ATTACKS on Lebanon continued yesterday as the
two countries met with the U.N. Security Council.
Lebanese ambassador Najati Kabbani asked the council to
impose sanctions on Israel to prevent further raids, while the Soviet
ambassador asked for Israel's expulsion from the U.N.
Israeli ambassador Jacob Doron said Lebanon should be con-
demned for allowing terrorists to set up headquarters in Beirut.t
He said the Israeil raids were acts of self-defense.

Senate set to
r. vote onbusing.
WASHINGTON P)- Senate Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield disclosed yesterday he has wired all Democrats-
including five campaigning presidential hopefuls-to return
for Tuesday's showdown on the battle over school busing.
Mansfield told reporters that, "my guess is that they Will
all be here," and that, with their votes, there is a reasonable
chance that a strict anti -busing measure approved Friday
will be rejected in favor of the compromise for which the
SenatE initially voted.
The Montana Democrat rejected the contention by Re-
publican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania that the absence
of the five candidates was responsible for the 43-40 adoption
of an amendment by Sen. Robert Griffin, (R-Mich.), to bfr

AuctionConducted by
Albert Scaglione, Ph.D.,
Director of PARK WEST
GALLERI ES.

23916 W. 9 Mile Rd.
Southfield, Mich.
313-354-2343

presents
LUBITSCH
FILM
FESTIVAL
TONIGHT ONLY
Design For
Living
Dir. Ernst Lubitsch, 1940
with Gary Cooper and
Frederic March. One of
the most forgotten of all
great movies.
PLUS A SHORT:
Broadway Highlights
ARCH ITECTURE
AUDITORIUM
7 and 9 p.m. 75c

presents
LUBITSCH
FILM
FESTIVAL
MONDAY NIGHT ONLY
Shop Around
The Corner
Dir. Ernst Lubitsch, 1933
Jimmy Stewart and Mar-
garet Sullivan. Story of a
budding romonce in turn-
of - the - century Vienna.
Lubitsch is the peak of
grace, humor, and good
manners.
ARCH ITECTU RE
AUDITORIUM

A SPOKESPERSON for the Palestinian Arabs that admitted R
responsibility for the hijacking of a Lufthansa airliner this week
said yesterday that more hijackings may follow. The threat was William Christie, earlier
made' because the Bonn government broke its word by revealing Mayor of Belfast, views
that the captive plane had been ransomed. bomb exploded there y
One of the passengers on the hijacked plane was Joseph Ken- __-- - -
nedy, son of the late Robert Kennedy. He and the other passengers
were released unharmed in Aden after the West German government ISSISSIPPI
revealed it had paid $5 million in ransom.

uins of war

r this week nominated as the next Lord
s wreckage of his wallpaper shop after a
esterday. (See story at right).

RUSSIAN AMBASSADOR to the U.N. Jacob Malik said yes-
terday Soviet Jews who were allowed to emigrate to Israel are
now pleading for permission to return to Russia.
Malik denied charges that Soviet authorities yielded to Zionist
pressure in allowing thousands of Jews to emigrate, saying the
decision was "a sort of test of acceptability of the Israeli paradise."
He said the Soviet mission has received many letters of "despair

Dems. seek to mend
divisions i prt

and regret" from the immigrants. JACKSON, Miss. (I)-Mississip- the civil-rights oriented loyalist
% pi's traditional Democratic party splinter group won national party
set up a special committee yes- recognition in 1968 on grounds the
SEVERAL HUNDRED persons marched through northeastern terday to negotiate with the na- regular delegation did not repre-
Paris yesterday protesting the killing of a Maoist demonstrator. tional party and a rival state fac- sent blacks adequately.
A guard at the Renault auto works, where the shooting took tion for a unified national conven- Wailer said he thought the five-
place, was held by police but charges have not been made. tion delegation. man negotiating team should first
The guard said he fired only after 80 leftists attacked plant Gov. Bill Waller, who began talk to the Democratic National
guards with iron bars, injuring eight. calling for an end to factional Committee about what should be
SEVERAL PRESIDENTIAL nominees, including Sen. Edmund splits before taking office last done and "then it will be up to the
Muskie (D-Maine), Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn.), Sen. George month, recommended the step and negotiators who to talk to."
McGovern (D-S.D.), Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Wash.) and Mayor the convention shouted its ap- The governor said he thought
John Lindsay (D-N.Y.), have agreed to limit campaign spending proval. that if the Loyalists, who willhold
in states without primary elections. The convention approved selec- their convention here today, also
The agreement limits the candidatesto expenditures totaling tion of a five-member negotiating approved a recess things can be
three cents per registered voter in those states. committee from the ranks of the worked out.
State Executive Commitee, then The regulars' list of delegates
recessed until April 8 without com- and alternates includes only three
pleting its slate of nationalsconven- blacks and three women.
tion delegates. The loyalists picked 19 of their
The regulars, headed by the gov- 25 at district meetings, including
ernor, dominate state politics, but five blacks and nine women.
AR

federal courts from requir-
ing school busing to end seg-
regation.
"There were others besides the
presidential candidates who might
have made the difference," Mans-
field said. "Don't lay the blame
entirely on them."
All five, Sens. Edmund Mus-
kie (D-Maine), Hubert Humph-
rey (D-Minn.), Henry Jackson
(D-Wash.), George McGovern (D-
S.D.), and Vance Hartke (D-Ind.),
said they were opposed to Griffin's
amendment.
Of the other twelve absentees,
seven Democrats and five R -
publicans, four indicated definite-
ly that they would have opposed
the Griffin amendment and two
others also were reported against
it a total of 51 of the 100 sen-
ators.
Griffin, the assistant Republi-
can leader, said only a constitu-
tional amendment, requiring a
two-thirds vote from both the
House and the Senate, would be
a stronger legislative weapon
against busing than his proposal.
Rejection of the Griffin amend-
ment would probably lead to
adoption of the compromise Mans-
field - Scott amendment, ap-
proVed Thursday, which would al-
low federal spending for busing
only if local officials so request.
Tuesday's vote on the busing
law, in amendment to a higher
education bill, is necessary be-
cause of parliamentary proce-
dures. Action on the bill is due
Wednesday by previous agree-
ment, and if passed it will next go
to Senate-House conference.
Mansfield said he was surprised
to see Vice President Spiro Agnew
show up Friday to preside when
it came time to vote on the Grif-
fin amendment and wondered
which way he would have voted if
there had been a tie.
"I would dearly love to know
what the administration's point of
view is on this," he continued.
"Maybe with the President com-
ing back Monday night, we might
know by Tuesday."
Mansfield indicated that the
busing issue may come up again
when the Senate considers next
month the propo'sed constitutional
amendment to give equal rights to
women.

afeared i
-N. Ireland
BELFAST (-) - Fears of a vio-
lent Protestant backlash mounted
yesterday as a Cabinet minister
began a remarkable recovery from
an assassination attempt ,and
guerrilla bombers maintained
their offensive across Northern
Ireland.
Two teen-age terrorists - a boy
and girl about 16 - blew up a
Belfast wallpaper shop with an
incendiary time bomb and wound-
ed three, British army headquar-
ters said. Three other bombings,
one in Londonderry, were report-
ed.
Northern Ireland's Protestant
minister of state for home af-
fairs, John Taylor, was said to be
"ill but in no immediate danger"
in a Belfast Hospital. Guerrillas
shot him six times in Armagh on
Friday.
The anger of Northern Ireland's
Protestant majority was under-
scored in a fighting speech. by
hardliner William Craig, a former
home affairs minister and leader
of the Ulster Vanguard Movement.
"If people declare war on this
community, we will play our full
part in fighting that war," he told
a rally at Enniskillen. "We are
going to beat this conspiracy into
the ground."
Two thousand protestants at the
rally pledged themselves to fight
any move toward a united Ireland.
Craig said he hoped to mobilize
200,000 men into a parade through
Belfast on March 18 to symbolize
2rotestant determination to stay
British.
A U.S. organizer for the Irish
Republican Army's, political 'arm.
Sean Kenny, was charged in Dub
lin yesterday for a Tuesday bomb-
ing in Aldershot which killed sev-
en, and was released on X1,300
bond.
A 4- dxfel in the. Irish renub-

7 and 9 p.m.

75c

,7

l;!

STUDY FILM IN LONDON, ENGLAND
No Prerequisites MAY 7-JULY 3, 1972
A UNIQUE AND EXCITING PROGRAM ARRANGED
THROUGH THE BRITISH FILM INSTITUTE
" Film Performances at the Nat'l Film Theatre
" Lectures and Discussions by Directors,
Actors, and Authorities on Film
" Lectures by Program Director
Prof. Marvin Felheim on the Aesthetic
and Cultural Significance of the Cinema
$790.00
Includes: Round trip air, hotel, meals at London restaurants,
membership in BFI, tuition, fees, excursions, insurance.
MASS MEETING, TUES., FEB. 29-4 P.M.
MODERN LANGUAGE BUILDING-AUDITORIUM 3
Open to students and non-students
or Contact: STUDENTS ABROAD
211 Michigan Theatre Bldg.
(Above Marilyn Shop)
662-6666

mI

A &T, texiorain , .uu -
lic, Irish Labor party leader Bret-
The Michigan Daily, edited and man- dan Corish told 1,000 delegates-at
aged by students at the University of thearty's annual conference that
Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second
class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- even more disaster must come be-
igan, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, fore a political solution can begin.
Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- '"It is now -an English-Irish crisis
day through Sunday morning Univer-
sity year. Subscription rates: $10 b involving two sovereign govern-
carrier. $11 by mail. ments in Dublin and London in a
Summer Session published Tuesday diplomatic war and causing the
through Saturday morning. Subscrip- beginnings of an economic war,"
tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. he said.

w

ONE NIGHT ONLY-TONIGHT-ONE NIGHT ONLY
THE ANN ARBOR PREMIERE OF

CHAPPAQ
Directed by Conrad Rooks; 1966
TWO REVIEWS-

A

As marshall McLuhan loves to remind us, ours isa. particularily eye-
minded generation; and yet paradoxically, in our two most visual
media, telivision and the movies, the word tends to dominate. Movies,
especially in Hollywood, are made not on the basis of an idea that
might be cinematic, but on the basis of a written scenario that might
be cinematized. Critics praise flms that are "Iterate" and TV docu-
mentaries that "tell us about the world." Perhaps because they them-
selves deal primarily with words, they feel less at ease, less at home
with the kind if direct sensory perceptions that McLuhan writes
about. Certainly, most of the movies that they see are more readily
synopsized than responded to . . .
The most extended and effective use of McLuhan theory that I have
yet encountered is to be found in a remarkable, feature-length, auto-
biographical first film entitled CHAPPAQUA, by Conrad Rooks. In
simplest terms, it is the story of a young man's experiences while un-
dergoing withdrawal from drugs in a sanatorium near Paris. But
ulike, say, the Man With The Golden Arm, in which we watch the

As an example, at the end of the film Rook is released from the
sanatorium (Rook is the central character, as well as the producer,
writer, and director). We see him leave and enter a limousine, the
doctors and nurses waving goodbye. A moment later he is back in his
room leaping from a window and racing toward a helicopter. The
helicopter soars over the chateau that has been the hospital-prison,
and, as we look down we see him again, this time climbing labor-
iously to the topmost tower from which he waves at the plane. Has
he really been released? The soaring sensation has been an affirma-
tion of his new freedom, but is a drug addict ever really free of his
affliction? Cinematically, the film suggests all this, but in the most
literal sense it tells us nothing.-Hollis Alpert, Saturday Review
The cast of CHAPPAQUA is surely one of the most diverse in movie
history. It contains, among many others, Jean-Louis Barrault (the
gentle doctor in charge of the clinic), William S. Burroughs (a splendid
villain), Allen Ginsberg, Ravi Shankar, Paula Pritchett, Ornette Cole-

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