Sunday, March 26, 1972 T!-'E MICHIIGA!,-! DAILY Pag6 Three Sunday, March 26, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pa~ Three A LAST 3 DAYS-ENDS TUESDAY * "BEST FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEAR!" -N.Y. NEWS "One of the Fifty Greatest Films of All Time." -CROWTHER, N.Y. Times ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST FOREIGN PICTURE! FILMED Grand Prize Winnes IN ITALY -- IHERITY Venice Film Festival HAPPENED! IN ENGLISH t51 Rallies hit Berrigan trial site Demonstrations mark climax to federal case From Wire Service Reports HARRISBURG, Pa. - A "holy week" of mass demon- strations will begin today at the site of the bomb-kidnap conspiracy, trial of Rev. Phil- ip Berrigan and six others. "We have been advised by the city that it expects a fully peace- ful demonstration," said a local hosoital spokesman. But he added: "We could be ready in half an hour for any big emergency." The city's 165-member police force was reported prepared to handle "any- thing from 3.000 to 30.000." The major rally will come on' Easter Saturday, April 1. Its three sponsoring grous -- the Harris- burg Defense Committee,, the Na- tional United Committees to Free Angela Davis. and the People's Co- alition for Peace and Justice - ontxnt a turnout of 10.000 at that time. Mennwhile. the nine-week-old, Barrrgofl trial was in weekend re- cess. after the defense surprisingly restpd its case Friday without pre- senting any testimony. Closing ar- auments are scheduled for tomor- row, and a verdict may come be- fore the end of the week. The seven defendants are ac-. cuopd of conspiring within the! Catholic anti-war left to kidnap news bi7 IN by The Associated Press CENTRAL AMERICAN radio stations report that President Fidel Sanchez Hernandez of El Salvador was overthrown by a military coup yesterday and is being held by army troops, President of El Salvador since 1967, Sanchez Hernandez Was scheduled to leave office in July of this year, to be replaced by fellow party member Arturo Molina, Molina was- elected president by Congress after all the candidates in the recent popular elections failed to win a majority of the votes. EL PASO, Texas children are suffering from chronic lead poisoning, apparently originating from the smoke of a nearby smelting and refining company, City 'health officials have found evidence of lead poisoning in 35 children and have called for testing of the city's entire child population. The indicated polluting company extracts metals such as zinc, copper, and lead from ore. RALPH NADER has accused the Nixon administration of withholding an important report that would convince Congress that it is economically feasible to aim for zero-level pollution of navigable waters. The House of Representatives begins debate this week on a water pollution bill far more lenient than the controls recently approved by the Senate. Winner of the Golden Gale Award! FEDERICO FELLINI'S STARRING TWO OF AMERICA'S GREAT DRAMATIC ACTORS TWO-TIME ACADEMY AWARD WINNER ANTHONY QUINN RICHARD BASEHART-GIUIETTA MASINA GETTING A CLOSE-UP look at the mummy of an Egyptian noble is Dr. Louise Sheir, acting director and curator of the Kelsey Museum. Inside mmlee By MARTY PORTER The days when Tyrone Power, replete with beige jump suit, sun hat and dedicated band of savages, entered the dark and menacing pyramids in search of lost mummies have been replac- ed by the sophistication of scientific investigators w h o search through spider-webbed basements for lost embalmed corpses. The daring smile, all-American ALSO THE 2nd GREATEST HIT! presidential adviser HnryKsn- face and gleaming eye that al- per. blow up Washington's tunnel; heating system and destroy draft board records in various states. Two other demonstrations planred will involve the forming of a human chain around the courthouse Wednesday morning; and a Good Friday rally, at a local army depot. Panel discussions and entertain- ment will fill the lull between the demonstrations. Alger Hiss, who served time In, prison as a result of Senate in- vestigations led by Richard Nixon. will participate in a discussion of "Nixon's Asian Policy." Other' panelists wil include Owen Latti- more and John Melby, former' members of the U.S. foreign serv- ice who lost their jobs during the McCarthy purge of the early: 1950's. ways led good old Tyrone to his goal have been replaced by the Ph.D, the latest in x-ray equip- ment, and scientific break- throughs in genetics and the laws of probability. It may sound less exciting than fighting off dust storms and maniacal, mummy marauders, but not to University scientists who claim to have solved a 3.- 000 year mystery by using x- rays to discover the remains of two ancient Egyptian queens, and who have also discovered a fraudulent mummy in the Uni- versity's Kelsey Museum. The two queens had been "lost" since robbers plundered their tombs sometime before 1,000 B.C. Anthropologist James Harris, who heads the Univer- sity's Egyptian expeditions, iden- tified them last week as Queen Tetisheri, queen mother of the 18th Dynasty, and Queen Taw- osret, wife of Pharaoh Seti I, who reigned from 1304 to 1290 B.C. They were identified by a ma- thematical comparison of their x-rays and those of their sons and daughters, who themselves were preserved as royal mum- mies. This was the first time scientists have been allowed to subject mummies to x-ray. Despite the application of ad- vanced scientific techniques, not all the fun has been taken out of identifying mummies. Prob- lems arose, for instance, when the scientists found a fake baboon mummy that really contained parts of a human body. Although they used the same techniques that they had been using to ex- amine the Egyptian royal mum- my c llection in annual expedi- ticns to Egypt, they are not sure when this forgery occurred. According to Dr. Louise Shier, acting director and curator of the Kelsey Museum, the forgery could have been done in ancient Egypt when, at the time, there was a shortage of baboons for burial ceremonies. Harris believes that the forg- ery could have been done in the nineteenth century, when mum- mies were shipped wholesale out of Egypt to museums, private collectors and even those prac- ticing witchcraft. The powdered mummy was be- lieved to have a great curative value and is still available in.one witchcraft store in New York. To the average layman, the very mention of a mummy evokes nostalgic pre-adolescent fears of Lon Chaney Jr. unravel- ing as he terrorizes unsuspect- ing victims. To today's scien- tists, equipped with all the trap- pings of modern technology, the enigmatic world of the Phar- chs has lost all qualities of mys- tical intrique and become just another underexplored region for scholarly adventure. In a letter to George Shultz, director ment and Budget, Nader said the White visible and illegitimate controls" over federal agencies. "The report," said Nader, "contains convincing evidence that the cost of eliminating water pollution is but a small fraction of earlier administration estimates and even less than the cost of us- ing present inadequate control systems." * * TWO MARRIED WOMEN who have retained their maiden- names have been told by 'a Maryland election board that they will be disenfranchised unless they re-register under their hus- bands' names. The action resulted from a decision by the state attorney gener- al's office. A STATE DEPARTMENT official said yesterday that the department has recommended to the White House that the U.S. recognize Bangladesh as a new nation. Although President Nixon has indicated that Washington will eventually grant Bangladesh formal recognition, he has shown no haste in making any official announcement to that effect. * * * PERU'S MILITARY GOVERNMENT declared that the coun- try's Indian population will reecive instruction in its native lan- guage as well as Spanish, which 40 per cent of the population does not understand. of the Office of Manage- House was guilty of "in- information gathered by COLOR A CANNON RELEASE AM riFRI SUNDAY "LaStrada" 5:30 & 9:30 ~Joe" - 7:30 P.M. 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: 85 by carrier, $5 by mail. tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. MON. and TUES. "JOE"-7 P.M. "La STRADA"-9 P.M. S ( R I Spanish, until now, has been exclusively taught in the public school system, despite the fact that two-thirds of the, country's pop- ulation is Indian. I r I ATED R* GRAD COFFEE HOUR Wednesday, March 29 8-10 p.m. 4th Floor Rockham Donuts, Cake & Cider RESTR!CTED to GRAD STUDENTS r a, i JAILZIMM DIAL 668-6416 HELD OVER! TWO HIT ENCORES. NOMINATED FOR 6 I I ACADEMY AWARDS "Summer of '42" BEST EDITING BEST SCREENPLAY BEST PHOTOGRAPHY BEST SCORE I p. Academy Award Nominee BEST ACTOR Scott tackles another diicult lc(aracter - that of Dr. I;4riert hock, Chief of Medicine of a giant metropolitan hospital cor- plex-and his minute-by-muite tribulations in coping with both his personal and professional lives J G PARENTAL 7IDANCE SUGGES9E:0UnitedArtists Shows 7:00 and 9:00 I AMOWS A OTTO PREAMNGEU, FILM Color by MOVIELAB - A PARAMOUNT Release 'R' JANE FONDA AND DONALD SUTHERLAND OPEN 12:45 SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. JANE FONDA BEST ACTRESS BEST SCREENPLAY i Try Daily Classifieds* SOLSTIS SCHOOL presents 7A A T DISNEY 31 FESTIVAL Sunday, March 26 7:00 p.m.-"ICHABOD & MR. TOAD"-Legand of Sleepy Hollow & the Wind in the Willows 9:00 p.m.-"MELODY TIME" with Pecos Bill, Johnny Appleseed, Little Toot and more! Monday, March 27 7:00 p.m.-"DAVY CROCKETT AND THE RIVER PIRATES" AN PROD CTION(J f R r STARRING M I UfhliI.D.. AND Ml kino Jams m ihfd ktlflmo A8kr u l