Page Three THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, March 31, 1972 Page T hr e T E M I HIG N D IL Y rid y, arch 31, 197 I COUZENS FILM CO-OP PRESENTS "The Cheyenne Social Club" JAMES STEWART SHIRLEY JONES FRI., March 31 & SA 7, 9, 11 p.m. COUZENS HALL STARRING HENRY FONDA 4T. 75c per person $1 per couple KRIS KRISTOFFERSON and BONNIE RAITT FRI., April 21 8 p.m. Hilf Aud. $1.50, 3.00, 4.50 reserved seats' "His songs are pieces of dreams realized. His de- livery; honest, sincere, and right to the point." TICKETS N OW: MICHIGAN UNION 12-6 p.m. M-F, and SALVATION M a y n a r d Street store only. LAST PERFORMANCE! news Wbriefs by The Associated Press HARVARD PROFESSOR Samuel Popkin was given a maxi- mum 18-month sentence on federal civil contempt charges result- ing from his refusal to answer grand jury questions about the Pentagon papers. Popkin's attorney filed an appeal immediately after the decision was returned Wednesday.I Popkin, an associate of Daniel Ellsberg, was released on $1,000 personal recognizance. * * * A WOMAN JUROR taken hostage in the Marin County court- house shootout admitted under cross examination at the Angela. Davis trial yesterday that her testimony may have been influ- enced by the prosecution- Maria Graham testified Wednesday that her captors repeatedlyl demanded freedom for the Soledad Brothers. However, yesterday she admitted that her first report to investi- gators 11 days after the shootout did not mention the Soledad Broth- ers. CONGRESSIONAL INVESTIGATORS accused the Division of Biological Standards (DBS) of allowing 32 ineffective vaccines to stay on the market for over ten years. A General Accounting Office report also said the DBS released flu vaccines for three years even after tests proved their potency to be less than one percent of standards. The report urged removal of ineffective biological products from I interstate commerce, saying 75 of the 263 DBS-licensed products wereE "generally not recognized as being effective by most of the medical profession." THREATENED STRIKES by the United Transportation Union (UTU) against Penn Central Railroads and the Sheet Metal Work- ers Union against the Association of American Railroads may cause President Nixon to invoke a "cooling off" period, press secretary Ronald Ziegler said yesterday. Under provisions of the Railway Labor Act, Nixon can create an emergency board to look into rail disputes and make any strike illegal for 60 days. Army lures Invited from the nursing school and high school rosters of Ann Arbor, Chelsea, Man- chester, Dexter and Saline, most women at the meeting Fri- day indicated that the Army was almost their only alternative. "I don't have the money for college," remarked one 16-year- old, who said she wanted to go into psychiatric nursing. A University nursing student concurred, saying she wanted to take the burden of her educa- tion off her father. "I'm a materialist," another women joked. "The Army is not for rich peo- ple," Tasey commented. She said many women come to the Army for lack of other job and pay options. Other women expressed inter- est in a job that is "better than my job now" and in the excite- ment of Army life. "I have ideas of spies and stuff", com- mented one high school sen- ior. Another said she hoped tc "learn responsibility, see the world, and meet new people" in the Army. Responding to the needs of women like these, Army moves shown at the open house stressed training, pay, and promotion op- portunity. However, publicity concentrat- ed most on the peripheral as- pects of the Army career, such as travel, social activities, re- creation, and the chance for Army women to "meet and mar- ry the man they have been wait- ing for" even while on field as- signments. A pamphlet entitled "Fashions with a Future" couched the at- WAC, ANC RECRUITMENT focal women vantage of Army work, ,he said. Army pay - "The same as your male counterpart's" - and travel opportunities - a guar- anteed 16 months in Germany, aim at women looking for paid adventure. Women are lured with offers to live in a "dormitory-like" sit- uation where "new friends", men, and recreational facilities are always available. WAC and ANC women may rank as high as first lieutenant upon beginning active duty if they participate in the WAC Student Officer Program in col- lege. Length of required service var- ies from two to three years de- pending on the amount of time spent as a paid student at a re- gular academic institution. At- school pay may be as high as $486 a month. -_<} A six-week Army orientation program and any further spec- nnce, ialty training is included in ac- tive duty time. fe in de- Recruitment Sergeant Philip VAC uni- Leroy called last week's open frth Ave- house "real successful" and om- was chit- mented that Army efforts to re- up ctard- cruit women here are aided by g women publicity from women already nd white. involved in Army scholarship he WAC and training programs. Leroy he asaid the recruitment office in- s an ap- vited about 1,800 women to Fri- ynd their s-eto satfil day's meeting. Gray-green wool' Arthur Kopit INDIANS A UTU spokesperson said Penn Central goes through with conductors. The Sheet Metal and stricter work rules. yesterday a strike is inevitable if plans to lay off 6,000 brakemen and Workers are seeking more money' Power Center MARCH 29-APRIL 1st CURTAIN 8 P.M.! Box office open daily at 12:30 TICKETS: Wednesday, Thursday $1.50, $2.50 Friday, Saturday $2.00, $3.00 A 30-DAY FREEZE on the prices of fresh meat and poultry was announced by Grand Union Co., the country's tenth largestI food chain. There was no immediate indication that other major food re- tailers would take similar action. Should there be any declines in wholesale prices during the 30 days, Grand Union said its retail prices would be reduced accord- ingly. Grand Union president Charles Rodman said that "by holding' the price line on meat for a month we are doing something positive in the fight on inflation." RALPH NADER'S Aviation Consumer Action Project peti- tioned the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) yesterday to penalize the nation's major airlines for their late flights. The research group stated that all airlines made their schedule within a 15 minute grace period 74 per cent of the time in 1970, which is one per cent below the minimum requirement set by the CAB. , Citing Delta and Eastern Airlines as the two most tardy, the group suggested airlines pay a penalty to their customers equal to the' price of the ticket for a cancelled flight and $25 to each passenger for each half hour a flight is late. By REBECCA WARNER "The most beautiful girl in the world. A U.S. Army Nurse." This is one of the slogans de- corating publicity posters and pamphlets at the local Army re- cruitment center as the Wo- men's Army Corps (WAC) and Army Nurse Corps (ANC) step up a recent campaign to increase their strength, doubled in the past two years. In sharp contrast to the care- free atmosphere of Army re- cruitment films and publicity, however, was the attitude of women at a WAC and ANC open house Friday night. High school students and Uni- versity nursing degree candidat- es, they were generally more concerned with training and pay opportunities than with Army men, swimming pools and chap- eroned dances. Almost none said they would prefer the Army to college if they were able to af- ford further academic training. Surrounded by a generous sup- ply of party food, the 50 to 60 women attending the openhouse saw three Army films and talk- ed to about 10 uniformed Army recruitment officers, male and female. "No you don't have to get vjur hair cut" and "Yes you can get married," Sergeant Alice Tasey told a group discussing WAG. Another officer, Lieutenant Paula Stalbaum, who returned recently from a nursing assign- ment in Da Nang, passed around a height and weight require- ment chart when several wo- men expressed the fear that they would not meet Army weight regulations.. rru Ae an wan i i fillment through "serving your Country in the proud tradition of the United States Army." After a few months ir the Army "I felt like a real wom,.,n," commented one movie's typical Wac. She went on to say the men she was helping "needed" her. "They needed a smile," she said. Publicity also stressed t h a t femininity need not be lost by enlistment. "As an officer in the Army Nurse Corps y u are truly a professional woman, but no less a woman than you can be in any other pursuit, ' bub- bled one pamphlet. WAC's may work in any of 96 job specialties ranging from food service and clerical work to "intelligence analysis" and psychological warfare. Few WAC jobs are highly trained however, most requiring from 6 to 13 weeks of specialty training. The Army offers women op- portunity for promotion, respon- sibility, and continuing educa- tion, its publicity emphasizes. Tasey has worked in medical assistance, in psychological test- ing, in personnel, as an admin- istrative assistant to a general, and in recruiting during h e r Army career. Choice of joi lo- cation and field is a major ad- 'Evening elega tractions of military lif scriptions of stylish W forms. Ann Arbor's Fou nue recruitment officev tered with life-size stand board figures of smiling in uniform, both black am The other side of t and ANC sales pitch i peal to women who fi inh~q "rnrntin ' n ri PARAMOUNT PICTURES IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE THE RETURN OF THE GREATEST FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT OF ALL TIME! 'Commands attention' 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. 'Dress blues' 1 : " i i BOX OFFICE OPEN 6:30 SHOWS STARTS AT DUSK I - CINEMA II I 77= ,- ' NOMINATED FOR TWO ACADEMY AWARDS! WALTER MATTAU For BEST ACTOR BEST SONG! "Life Is What You Make It" "KOTCH" (PG) -PLUS- MARLO "I I ALAN THOMAS AJENNYLDA Aud. A, Angell Hall 7&9P.M. 75c Tickets On Sale at 6 P.M. FRIDAY and SATURDAY: Jan Nemec's REPORT ON THE PARTY AND GUESTS (1966, Czech) From the same period as the Czech films as Closely Watched Trains, Shop On Main Street, and Fifth Horseman Is Fear; Nemec's Party and Guests is a searing allegory about the people's willingness to conform to fascism. A picnic is interrupted by a mad guest who persuades the others to join in his- "dame" of insults, humiliation, and torture, when one guest declines, he is chased with dogs and guns. "It is certainly one of the best Czech films ever made, and Nemec is clearly one of the most powerful and universal young directors at work."-Renato Adler, NKY. Times SUNDAY-Joseph Strick's ULYSSES; see Saturday's separate ad. NEXT WEEK-Fri. & Sat.: TO DIE IN MADRID SUN.: MINGUS and MANCE LIPSCOMBE, A Well-Spent Life Summer Rooms singles & doubles $30-$45 Open Kitchen Color TV Theta Xi 1345 Washtenaw 761-8104 c- I STARTS FRIDAY FOR FIVE HORRIFIC DAYS THE FINAL DIMENSION IN SHOCK? No. 1-THE CORPSE GRINDERS No. 2-UNDERTAKER & HIS PALS No. 3-THE EMBALMER f! q CECILB.DEMILLE'SPODUCINTHE TEN COMMANDMENTS ""ni CHARLTON YUL ANNE EDWARD G YONNE DBRA JOHN HESTON BRYNNER BAXTER ROBINSON DECARLO-PAGET DEREK SIN COIC NINA MARTHA JUITH VINCENT Wie fo the cen byAcn,,,Mac n,,yie lsseI. Lasy kJVGa,,ss HARD WKE-FOCH SCOTT-ANDERSON PRICE a as ducedced by Motio n G J ^TECHNICOLOR' ONE SHOW DAILY 7:30 ONLY! l6k scio 668-708N DRIVE-I 1-94 EXIT 169 JACKSON ROAD F rl iiiii CINEMA TONIGHT ONLY Le Million Dir. RENE CLAIR, 1930 From the director of Paris Qui Port, A Nous La Li- GALA RE-OPENING FRIDAY MATINEE SPECIAL "Out-Disneys Disney" - Cleveland Press "WILLIE WONKA AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY" PLUS: "3 STOOGES" Short $2.50 PER CARLOAD NEW SPRING POLICY Our Opening Prograrr Clint Eastwood "PLAY MISTY FOR ME" R Paul Newman "SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION" $2.50 PER CARLOAD 1:00 and 3:30 All Seats 75c berte, and The Italian DtNERAICINlMf CORPORATION :. FILLI ,. .., w " .. i . , , ., . . ,. -.. Straw Hat. Another brilliant comedy with music Clair works from slap- Once upon a time, Gaius Petronius, ARBITER ELEGANTIAE to Nero's court, wrote the world's first novel, the SATYRICON, now extant only in fragments, and long suppressed or expurgated in this country until a decade ago. Fellini takes parts of this, and in perhaps his greatest film, follows two handsome pagan hippies through picaresque episodes in a pagan world-as it was in Nero's time, and as it may be in ours. (For an excellent article, see Gilbert Highe':'s "WHOSE SATYRICON-Petronius's or Fellini's," Horizon magazine, Autumn 1970, p. 42) ITALIAN LAUGUAGE-ENGLISH SUBTITLES MONDAY EVENING!-April 3rd-ONLY! stick to satire in a story of the search lost lottery ticket. zany for a PLUS A SHORT: 2fnnv Anniverarv