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March 25, 1972 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1972-03-25

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

STARTS TODAY-4 DAYS ONLY!

NEWS PHONE: 764-0552
BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554

C14 r

tri gttn

Dat'lu

page three

**

"BEST FOREIGN FILM
OF THE YEAR!"
-N.Y. NEWS

Ann Arbor, Michigan

Saturday, March 25, 1972

"One of the Fifty Greatest Films of All Time."
CROWTHERY N Timm

S , Il N. T. me
ACADEMY AWARD
1 429 ! TY1 i r* "!'1 i

s5

WINNERI!
BEST FOREIGN PICTURE!
FILMED Grand Prize Winnes
IN ITALY - Venice Film Festival
WHERE IT
HAPPENED!
IN ENGLISH !
FEDERICO FELLINI'S
STARRING TWO OF
AMERICA'S GREAT DRAMATIC ACTORS
TWO-TIME ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
ANTHONY QUINN
RICHARD BASEHARTGIULIETTA MASINA

Winner
of the
Golden
Gate
Award!

neWS briefs
by The Associated Press
TERRORISTS BLEW OUT the center span of Phnom Penh's
main bridge yesterday, killing three persons and wounding five
in the third attack on the Cambodian capital this week.
Meanwhile in Eastern Cambodia, South Vietnamese rangers and
armored vehicles began moving toward the beleaguered provincial
capital of Prey Veng, 30 miles east of Phnom Penh.
The U.S. Command also reported that American B52 bombersl
flew five missions in South Vietnam in the 24-hour period ended at!
noon yesterday.-
All of the misssions, the command said, were flown in the north-
ern profince of Thua Thien against suspected enemy base camp
areas and troop concentrations.
* * *
TWO INMATES of the Patuxent Institution in Jessup, Mary-
land, were wounded by guards yesterday, shot in what authorities
said was an escape attempt by some 14 prisoners.
Patuxent is a 482-inmate facility for "defective delinquents".
The inmates, ,'whose condition was not immediately known, were
shot when guards opened fire shortly after 11 a.m., according to state
police at Waterloo barracks. A trooper said one was shot in the leg,
the other in the back.
Four prisoners reportedly escaped while eight others who lay
down when the guards opened fire were apprehended, police say.
Patuxent was the scene of an inmate demonstration last week.
Prisoners ended a peaceful protest last Wednesday after Director
Harold Boxlow and other Patuxent officials heard a list of grievances
from the inmates.
TENTATIVE AGREEMENT was reached yesterday to end
the strike that has closed General Motors Corp.'s assembly plantj
in Lordstown, Ohio, for 21 days, the United Auto Workers an-
nounced.
GM's supply of subcompact Vegas has been shut off by the strike
of 7,800 UAW members at Lordstown.
The labor force had charged what they termed a speedup on
production lines in order to maintain production.
GM has denied any speedup and countered union charges with
allegations that there was a great deal of faulty work in the plant.
No details of the settlement were announced pending a ratifica-
tion vote Sunday in Warren, Ohio.

Berrigan
attorneys
rest ease
Defense team says
crimes committed
by FBI and govt.
HARRISBURG, Pa. (YP) - In
sharp contrast to the govern-
ment's long-drawn examination of
64 witnesses, defense attorneys in
the bomb - kidnap conspiracy
case against antiwar priest Philip
Berrigan pressed motions yester-
day for acquittal and rested with-
out a single word of testimony.
U.S. District Court Judge R.
Dixon Herman had just announc-
ed that he was reserving until
next week a decision on a defense
motion for a directed verdict of
acquittal when former Atty. Gen.
Ramsey Clark, a defense attorney,
announced "the defendants will
always seek peace, and they rest
their case."
"The government has failed to
prove that there has been any
conspiracy," said attorney Paul
O'Dwyer, a member of the six-
man defense team headed by for-
mer Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark.
"The didn't prove there was a
plot to kidnap the President's ad-
viser, Henry Kissinger, and they
didn't prove a plan to blow up
government property."
In its acquittal motion today
the defense said, "The evidence
shows that, if any criminal acts
were committed by the defend-
ants or any of them, such activi-
ties were solicited, instigated"and
provoked by persons in the em-
ploy and under the direction of
the Federal Bureau of Investi-
gation."

-Associatea ress
Richardson defends anti-busing
Elliot Richardson, secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, speaks yesterday before a Senate
subcommittee on education in defense of President Nixon's proposal to halt busing.
POISON CITED:
Mercury-based pesticides banned

ALSO THE 2nd GREATEST HIT !

WASHINGTON (A) - The
Environmental Protection Ag-
ency (EPA) announced yester-
day an immediate ban on inter-
state shipment of about a doz-
en of the most toxic mercury-
based pesticides.
The agency also started ac-
tion toward the eventual ban-
ning of all other mercury pes-
ticides in an effort to stem the
steady buildup of mercury in
the environment.
Ordered off the market im-
mediately, through suspension
of their federal registrations,
were the entire class of alkyl
mercury pesticides.
Also suspended and imme-
diately banned was the appli-
cation of other mercury pesti-
cides to rice seed. laundry fab-
rics and anti-fouling paints for
boats.
The alkyl mercury com-
pounds, said EPA administra-
tor William Ruckelshaus, are

CULUR A CANUNNNRLEAS
SAT.: "JOE-7 P.M.
:.R "LA STRADA"-8 P.M.
SUN DAY
!S "LaStrada" 5:30 & 9:30
AJoe" - 7:30 P.M.

THE SENATE VOTED yesterday to keep Radio Free Europe
and Radio Liberty in operation for the next three months.
The two stations in Munich, Germany were started in the 1950's
and were supported secretly for years by the Central Intelligence
Agency.
The vote of 65-6 will send the White House a bill authorizing $36
million in federal funding for the two stations for the twelve months
ending June 30.
Doubt about the future of. the stations after June 30 was emphasized{
by the votes of influential senators, including Senate Democratic Lead-
er Mike Mansfield of Montana, who seek to, end taxpayer support of
the stations.

"highly toxic, can accumulate
in the brain, causing damage to
the nervous system. The other
suspended products come in di-
rect contact with and can con-
taminate water resources.
"Once in the water, they can
be converted by biological pro-
cesses into a more toxic form of
mercury whose residues find
their way into fish and other
aquatic life likely to be consum-
ed by the public."
Failure to curb the mercury
buildup in the environment now,
said Ruckelshaus, would be "en-
vironmental brinkmanship."
Manufacturers or users of
these pesticides have 30 days
in which to challenge the can-
cellation notices. Products whose
cancellations are challenged
may remain on salewhile an
administrative review of the
proposed cancellation is con-
ducted, leading to an eventual
final decision.
For the Student Body:
LEVI'S
Corduroy
Bells

It was the alkyl mercury
compounds, discharged from a
plastics plant into a bay, which
were blamed for a disastrous
wave of mercury poisoning
among people who ate fish at
Minimata, Japan, in the mid-
1960s.
An even larger wave of mer-
cury poisoning in Iraq, reported
by returning travelers within
the past few weeks, has been
tentatively blamed on the con-
sumption of wheat seeds treated
with alkyl mercury.
The Michigan Daily, edited and man-
aged by students at the University of

MON. and TUE
"JOE"-7 P.M
"Lo STRADA"-91

P.M.

I,

UOES

I1

I

CINEMA Ii

AUD. A, ANGELL HALL

Shows at 7 & 9:00 p.m., 75c

TICKETS ON SALE AT 6:00 P.M.
TONIGHT and Saturday:
Ingmar Bergman's
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 11 open meeting, Monday, Rm. 124 East Quad, 8:00 p.m.)

Insla-Prini
PERSONALIZED
* T-Shirts
* Sweat Shirts
* Jackets
WHILE YOU WAIT
AT
FOLLETT'S
STATE ST. at NORTH U.

MIichin. News jphone: 4-5552. second In a memorandum to Herman,
Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-
igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, the defendants accused -the gov-
Michigan.48104. Published daily Tues- ernment of violating their con-
day through Sunday morning Univer-
sity year. Subscription rates: $10 bysttioarghsb "pcedn
carrier, $11 by mailaagainst them in bad faith." They
Summer Session published Tuesday si hywuditoueeiec
through Saturday morning. Subscrip- said they would introduce evidence
tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5$by mail, to show this was deliberate dis-
tion rates: $5 by carrier, $H by mail. crimination.
SProject Burrito 0
,0 A
A Mexican Dinner
DATE:
SUNDAY,
March 26th
PLACE:
331 THOMPSON ST.
ANN ARBOR
^ TIME:
5:30 p.m.
BENEFIT:
Chicano Legal Defense Fund
Sponsored by: T.R.-Chicano U
of M Social Work Student Org
DONATIO $2.251 "

I 04

1- m
3 Shows-1:00-4:30-8:00
TODAY'S PRICES
$1.50 until 4:30-Then $2.50
SUNDAY
All Day $2.50
DIAL 5-6290

CHECKMATE
State Street at Liberty

,!i 1 .
_r.4 rS Y YOUR NEEDS

WORSHIP

As

^o-

A

I

AN OTrO PrrAevNGEfr PFLAM
Color by MOVIELAB - A PARAMOUNT Release
OPEN 12:45

- -_ _

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
1833 Washtenaw Ave.
SUNDAY
10:30 a.m.-Worship Services. Sunday School
(2-20 years).
Infants room available Sunday and Wednesday.
Public Reading Room, 306 E. Liberty St. -
Mon., 10-9; Tues.-Sat., 10-5. Closed Sun-
days and Holidays.
For transportation call 668-6427.
ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
306 N. Division
8:00 a.m.-Holy Eucharist.
10:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer and Sermon.
11:45 a.m.-Holy Communion (1928).
4:00 p.m.-Holy tucharist and Bach Cantata.
(Palms distributed at all services) .
THE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH
1917 Washtenaw Ave.
Erwin A. Goede, Minister
Church School and Service at 10:30 a.m. -
Sermon: "Signs of Hope." Forum: The
Current School Situation.
BETHLEHEM UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST
423 S. Fourth Ave.
Telephone 665-6149
Ministers: T. L. Trost, Jr., R. E. Simonson
9:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer.
10:00 a.m. - Worship Service and Church
School.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

FIRST UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH AND WESLEY
FOUNDATION
State at Huron and Washington
9:30 and 1 1 :00 a.m.-Sermon by Dr. Hoover
Rupert: "Establishing Priorities."
Broadcast WNRS 1290 am, WNRZ 103 fm,
11:00 to noon.
WESLEY FOUNDATION ITEMS:
Sunday, March 26:
5:30 p.m.-Celebration, Wesley Lounge.
6:15 p.m.--Dinner, Pine Room.
7:00 p.m.-Program: Film "The Year of the
Commune."

Monday, March 27:
Noon-Discussion Class with Ed
"The Christian Faith and the
Pine Room-Lunch 25c.

McCracken,
Inner Life,"

Thursday, March 30:
6:00 p.m.-Grad Community.
CAMPUS CHAPEL
1236 Washtenow
Minister: Rev. Donald Postema
10:00 a.m.-Morning Celebration.
11:00 a.m.-Time for meeting and sharing
with others in the. lounge.
6:00 p.m.-Celebration through drama: Pres-
entation of a contemporary morality play,
"Life or Death."
LUTHERAN STUDENT CHAPEL
AND CENTER
801 South Forest at Hill
Donald G. Zill, Pastor
' ryPALM SUNDAY

UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
(LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Ave.
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
Palm Sunday, March 26-Morning Services at
9:15 (communion) and 10:30 a.m., with
sermon by the Rev. Alfred Scheips, "Hu-
mility and Greatness."
Palm Sunday, March 26, 7:00 p.m.-Contem-
porary Folk Cantata by the Chapel Choir,
"Easter Folk-Style," by Rosemary Hadler.
Campus community cordially invited.
Holy Week Wednesday, March 29, 10:00 p.m.
-Student-led "Tenebrae Service."
Maundy Thursday, March 30, 7:30 p.m.-
Communion Vespers, Sermon, "God's Seal-
ed Covenant," the Rev. Alfred Sche.ips.,
Good Friday, March 31, 1:00 p.m.-50-minute
service, with sermon by the Rev. Richard
Kapfer, of EMU.
CANTERBURY HOUSE
at 330 Maynard St.
(The Alley/The Conspiracy)
Canterbury House, 11 :00 a.m., meeting at
330 Maynard St. (The Conspiracy). The
Eucharist.. . It's Palm Sunday. Moving
on towards Easter.
"Palm Sunday is kind of an up, til you re-
member the punch line."-M.H.
"Wholly holy," Marvin GayC.
Tuesday night: 6 p.m.-Community supper,
Canterbury House, 603 E. William.
Thursday night: 6 p.m.-Supper in remem-
berance of the Supper of the Lord, 603 E.
William.
Friday-Peace and quiet, some music, fast,
and time out.
PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH
2580 Packard Road--971-0773
Tom Bloxam, P.astor-971-3152

SHOWS AT
1-3-5-7-9 P.M.

WHA TARE YOU.
DOING HERE?
Your experience at the "U" should be more than going
back and forth to classes. There are many other ways to expand
and make the most of the time that you spend here. If you
choose to participate in an activity, why not consider joining
something that you can really contribute to. Consider learning
by doing. and consider being satisfied when the job is finished.

il
ii .........
I I
I
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this,

With all this in mind, working on the Yearbook may be

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