I MV COWBOY. JEW Stefan Grossman March 7-8:30 p.m. $1.50 at THE ARK, 1421 Hill Street a Folklore Society production UNBOSSED and UNBOUGHT it news briefs, by The Associated Press E SfrMidiau Baiy I Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, March 3, 1972 SHIRLEY /I CH ISHOLM Shirley Chisholm for President Headquarters 206 Nickels Arcade-Ann Arbor-769-5965 A BLACK POWER LEADER was returned to Trinidad yes- terday under heavy guard to face multiple murder charges. Abdul Malik, also known as Michael X, and five others have been charged with the killings of a 27-year-old woman divorcee, who is the daughter of a former member of the British Parliament, and a local barber. Police, acting on an anonymous tip, searched:the garden of Malik's home and found the bodies. Police reported that Malik had arrived in Trinidad and said he was going to organize the country's black power groups into one cohesive movement that would make him the next prime minister. FARM EXPORTS may reach a record value of more than $7.8 million this year, according to the Agriculture Department. This report comes despite administration claims that dock strikes have caused a sharp cutback in exports. Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz has criticized dock workers for tying up farm shipments and predicted a drop in the export value. A problem now is to find a "graceful" way to explain how farm ex- ports are higher than Butz predicted, one source said. Much of the Nixon administration's strategy for improving farm income is based on expanded foreign trade. The goal, Butz said, is for farm exports to reach $10 billion a year as early as possible. PAUL GILLY was sentenced to the electric bhair yesterday by a jury in Washington, Pa. for his role in the slayings of Jo- seph Yablonski, his wife and daughter two years ago. Yablonski gained reknown for his challenge to the established United Mine Worker Union leadership two years ago. Gilly was the second of five alleged participants in the Yablon- ski, slayings to be convicted and sentenced to the electric chair. No date was set for Gilly's execution and an appeal is expected on the three count charge of first-degree murder. SENATOR EDWARD MUSKIE (D-Me.), said yesterday he is running against a "phantom" opponent - the percentage of the vote he wins in New Hampshire's Democratic presidential primary. Muskie told a group of supporters in Portsmouth, N.H. that the press will interpret next Tuesday's balloting on the basis of whether he achieves "a percentage they haven't agreed upon yet. What counts next Wednesday morning is who got the most votes, who got the most delegates." Muskie's strategists have been aiming at polling at least a clear majority over his opponents. including four on the ballot and a write-in candidate. GOV'T. WARY Castro hits at U.S. ties -Associated Press RICHARD KLIENDIENST, Acting Atty. Gen., pours a glass of water for Felix Rohatyn, a director of International Telephone and Telegraph Corp., yesterday during their hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee. HARRISBURG TRIAL: A llege errigan letter sai to praise informer Douglas Ni xon aide denies tie," inITT case WASHINGTON A - Acting Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst denied vehemently yesterday that the settlement of an anti- trust suit against Internation- al Telephone and Telegraph Corp (ITT) was based on po- litical considerations. Kleindienst also told the Sen- ate Judiciary Committee he did not know of reports that ITT com- mitted $400,000 to the 1972 Re- publican National Convention un- til six months after the anti-trust settlement was made. "I would like to say categorical- ly and specifically that not until Dec. 1971 did I have any knowl- edge, direct or indirect, that I'TT was beirg asked to make a contri- bution for the Republican Nation- al Convention," he testified. The controversy stems from gov- ernment handling of a 1970 merg- er described as the biggest in American history. ITT, a giant conglomerate with assets of $6.3 billion, acquired the multi billion-dollar Hartford Fire Insurance Corp. in June of. 1970, despite government anti-trust ob- iections. The Justice Department, in a move at issue now, said 13 months later that ITT could keep Hartford Fire if it got rid of several smaller acquisitions. Syndicated columnist Jack And derson charged that a settlement favorable to ITT was arranged aft- er one of its subsidiary companies pledged up to $400,000 to help fi- nance next August's Republican National Convention. During a recess from the Sen- ate hearing, committee chairman Sen. James Eastland (D-Miss.), said when asked for comment on Kliendienst's testimony that "he's guilty of nothing." The hanging HARRISBURG, Pa. (A) - Philip Berrigan was quoted yes-{ terday as praising informer Boyd{ Douglas' devotion to the antiwarf Catholic left, some 10 weeks afterI the latter had secretly betrayed him to the FBI. "Our charge emerges in truly outstanding fashion," the Rev. Berrigan allegedly wrote Sister Elizabeth McAlister in a letter read into the record at the fed- eral conspiracy trial of the priest, the nun and five others. "The value and concerns that went on. "He's thinking move- ment. Mark my words he will be one of our best people." Douglas 31, testified that he was referred to as the "charge d' affaires" by the defendants. The seven are accused of plotting to kidnap presidential aide Henry Kissinger, blow up heating tun- nels under Washington D.C., and vandalize draft centers. A fellow convict with Berrigan in the Lewisburg, Pa., federal penitentiary in the spring of 1970, Douglas said he defected to the FBI in the course of smuggling 1970 to begin a six-year federal term for destroying draft records. Douglas was serving an eight-year stretch for transporting fraudu- lent checks and assaulting an FBI agent. The defense is seeking to sub- poena FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover to produce records relating to Douglas' criminal record and his work as an FBI informer. Tuesday the defense revealed that Douglas sought a tax-free $50,000 reward from the FBI as the price of his information. A LEONARD FREEMAN PRODUCKON C t nq INHOER-STEVENS ED BE6EY-PATHINGLE asJude Fenton eSMA COLOR by Deluxe liwug TONIGHT ONLY at 7, 9, & 11 P.M. Klein Lounge, Alice Lloyd Hall-$1.00 WASHINGTON (VP) - Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro is telling intimates he is no long- er inflexibly opposed to resum- ing a more friendly relationship with the United States. Diplomats attuned to Castro's thinking say there has been a decided change in his views since last September when he declared that Cuba has "no in- tention or desire of resuming relations with Yankee imperial- ism." The first evidence of . the emergence of a "New Castro" came in Chile last Nov.'25 when he declared that an era of U.S.- Cuban friendship might be pos- sible after the Nixon adminis- tration leaves office. U.S. officials say Castro has given them no direct signal of a desire for resuming a dialogue and there is some question whe- ther the Nixon administration would agree to talks prior to the November elections. Nixon administration political strategists, recognizing that anti - Castro sentiment among Cuban refugees remains strong, say that a show of flexibility toward Castro before November would cost the Republicans thousands of votes. -t . . occupy us are beginning to con- mail in and out of the penitent- sume him," the 43-year-old priest iary for the priest. More than a score of these letters have been identified by Douglas and read The Michigan Daily, edited and man-intifiedcby Dordaindtheas aged by students at the University of into the court record in the last Michigan.sNews phone: 764-0552. Second three days. class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- Douglas testified that after his igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, refection he remained known to Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- h day through Sunday morning Univer- te ussetn soitso Ssit year. Subscriptionmrates: $10 by Berrigan as "Phil's friend inside carrier, $11 by mail. the penitentiary." Summer Session published Tuesday Berrigan and . Douglas met through Saturday morning. Subscrip- when the priest entered Lewisburg tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail, federal prison in the spring of V r 1 French agents capture record heroin shipment New Styles First at WILD'S I I 20% STUDENT DISCOUNT TONIGHT ONLY! Benefit for Skip Taube CINEMA. GUILD Unbeatable Double Feature George Manupelli's DR. CHICAGO The First in the. Chicago Series. 7:00 P.M. Only AND CHARLIE CHAPLI N SHORTS 9:05 P:M. ONLY ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 75c -coming- to the conspiracy 330 Maynard Tuesday, March 7 Salamander folk-rock 8:30 & 10:30 Wednesday-Thursday- Friday March 8-10 East of Eden James Dean directed by Elia Kazan screenplay by John Dos Passos novel by 'John Steinbeck 8:30 p.m. ! Saturday-Sunday Marcdi 11-12 The Guns of Navarone, MARSEILLE, France (j?) - French customs agents made the world's largest recorded seizure of pure heroin yesterday - 425 kilos or 937 pounds con- cealed in the bilges of a Carib- bean shrimnp boat. In Washington, U.S. Treasury officials said the cache would be worth $200 million to $450 mil- lion on the streets of New York depending on how much it was cut with other substances. They said 100-milligram doses with 5 per cent heroin would bring $450 million. Officials said they believed the boat had already made two Atlantic crossings, delivering similar quantities through "the Latin connection," the route that ; takes hard drugs from clandestine French laboratories through Central and South America to U.S. addicts. Each shipment, when cut, could sup- ply every addict in the United States for a month. 1972 UNDERGRAD ART SHOW All Undergrad Students Are Eligible. Up to Three Pieces of Work Accepted. MONDAY, MARCH 13 TUESDAY, MARCH 14 10-5 p.m. and 7-11 p.m. both days 3rd FLOOR RACKHAM GALLERIES $1.50 Entrance Fee For Further Information Call Gary Greenfield, 769-3792 .t .......**.... . . . I ABSOLUTELY THE SCARIEST SHOW EVER ! BEYOND HORROR ! SHOWN INTACT! NOTHING CUT! TONITE & SAT. ONLY 11 P.M. "MORE TERRIFYING THAN HITCHCOCK'S 'PSYCHO'!"- g An IMAGE TEN Production THE ACTION MAN SLACKS GD CHARGER FLARES Double-knit action slacks in solids, Ainnannl +mille and horri-ne...n .0.,:-- T@~ALSO-. ~TbM. P. 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