DIAL 668-6416 HELD OVER ! TWO HIT ENCORES NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDSj "Summer of '42" BEST EDITING BEST SCREENPLAY BEST PHOTOGRAPHY BEST SCORE AND JANE DONALD FONDA SUTHERLAND kiute. JANE FONDA BEST ACTRESS BEST SCREENPLAY Order Your Subscription Today 764-0558 'I news briefs by The Associated Press Friday, March 24, 197T. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES U, T students campaigni I CREATIVE SHABBAT SERVICE Every Friday-6:15 p.m. HILLEL-1429 Hill Classifieds Read Daily THE STATE DEPARTMENT yesterday denied a memo alleg- ing that the United States engaged in coercive activity during thej 1970 electoral process in Chile. Press Officer Charles Bray srongly suggested, however, that the. United States was pressured to block Chilean President Salvador Allende's election but refused to name the source of the pressure. The memo, released by columnist Jack Anderson and attributed to two representatives of the International Telephone and Telegraph Corporaion, alleges that the State Deparment gave the U.S. embassy in Santiago authority to do all possible short of armed intervention to keep Allende from taking power.{ THE PRIME MINISTER of Northern Ireland threatened to resign yesterday in a major political dispute with the British gov- ernment. Political sources said Faulkner told Heath, "Go ahead on your terms and my government quits." As the political crisis deepened more bombs ripped through the: embattled country. Blasts hit Belfast's main railroad station and it's largest hotel. * * * THE DEPARTMENT of Health, Education, and Welfare will not cut off federal funds to force further school desegregation by busing while Congress is debating President Nixon's proposed busing moratorium. The decision, released yesterday, applies immediately to school districts in Georgia and Maryland which had been taken to formal compliance hearings by the U.S. Office for Civil Rights. Although the loss of federal funds has been authorized since 1964 no school or university actually has lost any federal aid since Nixon took office. KING HUSSEIN OF JORDAN yesterday declared he will soon leave for the United States to discuss with President Nixon his proposal for a realignment in the Middle East. The king has called for the creation of a semi-autonomous state of Palestine under his rule on the Israeli-occupied west bank' of the Jordan River. Hussein said his plan for a Palestinian state can only be achiev- ed when Israel agrees to withdraw from the west bank territory it occupied in the 1967 war. Israel has spurned the proposal. MAJOR TELEVISION NETWORKS told a Senate investigating committee yesterday that they are making efforts to eliminate needless violence from TV programs. The network presidents agreed with portions of the U.S.-surgean general's report that there is a causal relationship between TV vio- lence and aggressive behavior of some children. "We are placing additional emphasis on resolving conflict in children's programs through nonviolent means," said Elton Rule, the head of the American Broadcasting Company. 4 By RALPH VARTABEDIAN In contrast to the sensational political activism of the '60's students are approaching the present presidential campaigns with a more deliberate system- atic activism. At the University, this year's race for the Democratic presi- dential nomination is not a student protest campaign as was the insurgent efforts of Eugene McCarthy four years ago. Stu- dent campaign workers seem more oriented towards candi- dates than towards specific is- sues. There has been a far lighter student turn-out for Republican candidates than for Democratic ones. However, here too stu- dents are concentrating mainly on the primaries and on t h e grassroots government level. On the Democratic side, one of the strongest, most active groups oncampus, Students for McGovern, has been operating an office on South University for several months. The McGovern office is man- ned nine hours a day by all- volunteer help from Ann Arbor. There are eight fulltime work- ers, experienced from the bat- tles fought four years ago. Be- sides these specialized workers, there are also 100 part-time workers and over 500 workers on file who have pledged time or have already worked. The McGovern headquarters is currently working on petition drives to get delegate names on the ballots. "Until you have candidate presence and media exposure, actual campaigning isn't very effective," headquar- ers coordinator Dave Vaughn says. Ted Bartell, co-leader of the local Youth for Muskie organi- zation, is also working quietly but with a dedication unlike that in the media-saturated elections in 1968. His organization is try- ing to fill up precinct delegate spots and help delegates gather petitions. Among Muskie group members. -Daily-Jim Judkis STUDENT WORKERS stand at the campus headquarters for the Shirley Chisholm campaign. Chis- holm (D-N.Y.) is running for the Democratic presidential nomination. TRUCK STOP presents RUSS GRIFFIN at STOCKWELL Fine Music FRIDAY, March 24 at 9:00 NO ADMISSION CHARGE there are also veterans of politi- cal campaigns. Bartell was co- chairman of the university group for State Senator Philip Hart two years ago. Mark Levin, a. law student who is presently working for Muskie, ran Mayor Robert Harris' first campaign. The campus Shirley C h i s- holm headquarters claims to have "hundreds working all over campus," with about 25-30 peo- ple deeply involved. Budget con- straints limit their activity and so the group is concentrating their efforts on Chisholm's April 10th speaking date here. Efforts to organize c a m p u s support for Senator Hubert Humphrey's campaign have just gotten underway. Law student Alec Vensky is forming a group whose aim he says will be to enlist volunteers to work in the state primary and to edajcate students about Humphrey. Of the two Republicans vy- ing with President Richard Nix- on for the nomination, only Onio Congressman John Ashbrook has aroused some active support here so far. Bob Edgeworth, a local Ash- brook spokesman, said se r"ral students from his group were in- volved in the New Hampshire primary, where Ashbrook gain- ed 10 per cent of the Republican vote. Edgeworth added that the group plans to send several peo- ple to work this weekend on the upcoming Indiana primary on May 2. Mike Rener, a. member of she Youth Advisory Council to trae Republican Party, said t h a t Nixon supporters have recently been more involved in the Ann Arbor city election than in ,ire- sidential politics. A spokeswo- man at the Republican H e a d- quarters said that efforts would be made to form a student group later in the year. The Human Rights Party is most reflective of the changed attitude. The bitter defeat of leftist politics at the 1968 Demo- cratic Party convention convinc- ed many radicals that .upport of any national candidates was futile. Doug Cornell, coordinator of the party, declares "We won't support any Democratic or Re- publican party candidate b e- cause participation in those parties shows what they stand for." Cornell believes that the de- feat in 1968 demonstrated that third party movements must have a local support base before any national effort oan be mounted. The party now has about 200 active volunteers working in a \grassroots bid for power. ITT party has entered a candidate in each of the five wards for the city council elections scheduled for April 3. This "direct" effort appears to characterize the tone for pre- sent student political involve- ment, supplanting the :bore sym- bolic action of four years ago. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session' published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. CINEMA I i E AUD. A, ANGELL HALL Shows at 7 & 9:00 p.m., 75c STARTS SATURDAY-4 DAYS ONLY **** "BEST FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEAR!" --N.Y. NEWS TICKETS ON SALE AT 6:00 P.M. TONIGHT and Saturday: Ingmar Bergman'sj THE PASSION OF ANNA [1970] Bergman details the mysterious and surreal relationship between Anna and her lover with closeups like the "stare of consciousness." (Cinema II open meeting, Monday, Rm. 124 East Quad, 8:00 p.m.) ANN ARBOR TENANTS UNION pre sents FRIDAY, MARCH 24 and SATURDAY, MARCH 25! 7:00 P.M. SHOWING- NANCY WECHSLER FOR CITY COUNCIL 2ND WARD "DECENT HOUSING IS A HUMAN RIGHT" "One of the Fifty Greatest Films of All Time." --CROWTHER, N.Y. Times ACADEMY AWARD 7; WINNER! " IMMEDIATE CONSTRUCTION OF 5000 UNITS OF LOW.-COST HOUSING " DEMOCRATIC TENANT CON- TROL OF ALL RENTAL HOUSING * REPEAL ALL LAWS RESTRICT- ING RENT CONTROL 0 ACTIVE SUPPORT & RECOGNI- TION OF ALL TENANTS UNIONS S. BEST FOREIGN PICTURE! FILMED Grand Prize Winnes IN ITALY- Venice Film Festival , WHERE IT HAPPENED! IN E N G L ISH! FEDERICO FELLINT'S ASTRADA STARRING TWO OF AMERICA'S GREAT DRAMATIC ACTORS TWO-TIME ACADEMY AWARD WINNER ANTHONY QUINN RICHARD BASEHART-GIULIETTA MASINA DUCK SOUP - Marx Brothers THE BOAT-Buster Keaton SPARRING PARTNER-Charlie Chapman plus: ROAD RUNNER Cartoon 9:15 P.M. SHOWING- MONKEY BUSINESS - Marx Brothers MONEY MUDDLERS-Abbott & Costello BIG BUSINESS-Laurel & Hardy plus: TWO ROAD RUNNER Cartoons! NATURAL SCIENCE AUDITORIUM-Admission: 75c Winner of Ihe Golden Gale Award! I U U Vote HUMAN RIGHTS PARTY-Monday, April 3 Cre ative Arts Festival PRESENTS \ NGrCT 1W In Conjunction with the Monthly Art Fair Series and the Student Art Gallery tall events free admission) SATURDAY, March 25;1-5 p.m.,in the Student Gallery ART DEMONSTRATION and WORKSHOP: Poetry readings at 1 :00 (bring your own poems!) and a Quilting Bee at 2:00. 8:00-11:00 IN THE MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM- COFFEE HOUSE: Poetry Readings by Ken Fifer, Larry Ross, and Terry Patten. Folksinger Sue Geiger. Bring your own instruments and JAM. FREE REFRESHMENTS SUNDAY, March 26; 12-6 p.m., Michigan Union Ballroom -TONIGHT ONLY- Bette Davis Joan Crawford ALSO THE 2nd GREATEST HIT in the Academy Award-winning chiller What Ever Happened to Baby Jane. "Best shocker since PSYCHO!"-Variety "Grisly fun-achieves its goals with something breathlessly close to perfection. A shocker in the best Hitchcock tradition, and at the same time a superb showcase for the time-ripened talents of two of Hollywood's most accomplished actresses."-Saturday Review "Gorgeous Gothic! The year's scariest, funniest, most sophisticated thriller."-Time $1 contribution 7:30 and 9:30 free cider, coffee, etc. --Saturday and Sunday- in color