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April 05, 1972 - Image 3

Resource type:
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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1972-04-05

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Interviews Now Being Held For
Msket '73 Director
Sign-Up for an interview
at the UAC Musket Office
2nd Floor Union
2Academy Award Nominations
including
""Best Foreign Fim"
Winner, Golden Bear Award,
First Prize Berlin Film Festival
Winner David Donatello Award,
Best Italian Film 1971
"DeSica returns to greatness"
-William Wolf, Cue Magazine
"The hand of genius is once again
evident" -Judith Crist, New York Magazine
"Reaches artistic and human heights
of 'Bicycle Theif"'
Archer Winsten, New York Post
"May well be the loudiest film of the
year" -Hollis Alpert, Saturday Review
"It's heartbreakingly beautiful"
-Paris Match

I

NEWS PHONE: 764-0352
BUSINESS PIIONFE: 764-0554

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page three

Ann Arbor, Michigan

Wednesday, April 5, 1972

news briefs
by The Associated Press
THREE DETROIT POLICEMEN were bound over for trial
Monday for a March 9 shoot-out between police and Wayne
country sheriff's deputies in which one deputy died and three!
deputies were wounded.
The three are charged specifically with wounding Deputy James
Jenkins.
Court testimony showed the shooting occurred when the three
Detroit policemen, members of the STRESS detail but not on a
STRESS assignment that night, spied a man walking down the'
street carrying a hand gun.
They then followed him to an apartment where off-duty sheriff's
deputies and a civilian were having a card game.
According to court testimony, neither group knew the other was
made up of police officers.
BRITISH SOLDIERS traded gunfire yesterday with guer-
rillas at an army post on Londonderry's city walls and in Bel-
fast's Andersontown district, which is predominantly Catholic.
Neither encounter resulted in death, stretching for another day
the relative lull in violence over the Easter weekend. The last report-
ed casualty occurred last Thursday.
The Irish Republican Army opened the gunfire in Belfast. This
was interpreted as a gesture to underscore the illegal army's author-
ity, said to be facing a slump in support among some Catholics.
Catholic women called for an IRA truce Monday after the funeral
of a slain mother attended by more than 2,000 mourners demonstrat-
ing their concern over bombings blamed on the guerillas.
* * *
AGRICULTURE SECRETARY Earl Butz and a team of
U.S. negotiators will arrive in the Soviet Union next week to
see if the Soviets want to buy some of the U.S. grain surplus.
According to government analysts, the trip is in response to
growing Soviet demands for pork, beef, poultry and dairy products.
The Soviet Union lacks adequate grain supplies to furnish an ex-
panded livestock-raising program.
A new pact, with the Soviet Union would benefit American
producers as well as improve President Nixon's farmbelt support
in the upcoming Presidential elections.
A BOMB TORE apart the Montreal office of Cuba's trade
commission and killed a Cuban guard yesterday, one day afterj
a package of explosives was found outside the island nation's
embassy in Ottawa. A similar package was discovered outside
the Cuban ambassador's residence last week.

-Associated Press
Oil spills in the Southwest
Workmen yesterday make a hay barricade to block oil flowing along the Salt River from Mexico to
Victor, Mo. Over 200,0000 fish have died so far in the oil spill which began in a refractory plant north
of Mexico.
MOSCOW CEREMONY IN DOUBT:
Soviet govt. prevents delivery
o Solzhenitsyn 's NobelPrize

Panel calls
for fight
against VD
WASHINGTON O-P-The Na-
tional Commission on Vener-
eal Disease said yesterday the
government's stepped-up cam-
paign against gonorrhea and
syphillis is not enough to con-
trol what it called an epidemic
striking 2.5 million Americans
each year.
After a year of study, the ad-
visory panel of 16 physicians and
one osteopath recommended fed-
eral spending of -$296 million over
the next five years for VD con-
trol, including a $15.1 million ad-
dition to President Nixon's re-
quested $31 million for the up-
coming fiscal year.
. The panel also proposed a 19-
point program which calls for VD
instruction down to the seventh
grade in public and private
schools, more research and a
soarch for vaccines, and restored
VD courses in the curriculum of
medical schools.
Noting an historic rise in gon-
orrhea and a 20-year high in re-
ported infectious syphillis cases,
the commission blamed the out-
break on public and medical com-
placency following the introduc-
tion of penicillin in the early 1950s.
"We were at the point in 1955
and 1956 when the disease syphil-
is could have been pushed down to
insignificance," added Dr. Merlin
Duval, of the Department of
Health, Education, and Welfare.
"But because of the lack of atten-
tion, both fiscal and professional,
it gradually increased until 1964-
65. when it again peaked."
Dr. Bruce Webster, Cornell Uni-
versity professor emeritus, ex-
pressed the hope that a break-
through will soon be made in de-
veloping a gonorrhea vaccine.
However, officials from the Na-
tional Center for Disease Control
in Atlanta said that it takes seven
to ten years to institute a new vac-
cination program.
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 mall.
Summer Session published Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-
tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail.
tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail.

STOCKHOLM () - Last-min-
ute action by Soviet authorities
has stopped plans for Russian nov-
elist Alexander Solzhenitsyn to re-
ceive his 1970 Nobel Prize for Lit-
erature in Moscow April 9 as

of Ivan Denisovitch," "The First Invitations had already , been
Circle" and "August 1914." The sent out for the Nobel ceremony
novels are often critical of the So- at the Moscow home of a friend
Viet system, of the author.

Seven other Cuban guards were arraigned in court on charges planned
of possessing weapons and interfering with the police investigation Karl-Ragnar Gierow, secretary
of the blast. Police said the Cubans apparently feared secret files of the Nobel Foundation, yester-
would fall into police hands. da wa rfse d deoiethi to
go to Moscow and deliver the No-,
In Miami, Fla., the Spanish-language radio station WFAB re- bel prize and diploma.
ported that an unidentified man telephoned the station to say the The Soviet government was an-'
bombing was the work of a Cuban exile organization called Young gered by the award to Solzhenit-
Cuba. zyn because of the anti-Soviet tone
* * * of his writing. The author refused
THE DIRECTOR of the 'Manned Spacecraft Center said yes- to come to Stockholm for the prize
terday the chances are three out of four that there will be a ceremonies because he feared his
joint U.S.-Soviet space mission, probably in 1975. He cautioned, government would not let him re-
turn home.
however, that we are not ready to make a full commitment at Solzhenitsyn wrote "The Can-;
the present time. cer Ward," "One Day in the Life

The Soviet Embassy in Stock-
holm and the Foreign Ministry in
Moscow declined to give a reason
for barring Gierow.
But the Soviet Embassy indicat-
ed the decision might be reviewed,
saying "the matter of a visa for
Gierow could be discussed later."
The head of the press section of!
the Swedish Foreign Ministry said
Sweden does not plan to intervene
for Gierow or the Nobel Founda-
tion.
"Matters like granting visas are
every nation's own business and
reasons for refusing or granting a
visa are never given," he said.

One of those reported invited
was Minister of Culture Yekater-
ina Furtseva, who said two months
ago "our authorities are not going
to prevent Solzhenitsyn from re-
ceiving the prize here in Moscow."
Solzhenitsyn, in written re-
sponses to questions posed by the
New York Times and Washington
Post, said he did not exclude the
possibility of Soviet authorities
barring Gierow.
He predicted that if Gierow was
refused a visa, "there will be no
ceremony and the medal and di-
ploma will remain in Stockholm
another 10 to 20 years."

EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY
MAJOR EVENTS COMMITTEE
PRESENTS:

"De Sica's film, with its moments of
deep tragedy and soaring poetry, is an
act of love towards all people...and as
an act of love, we welcome this film

ANN ARBOR CIVIC BALLET'
Spring Concert
PREMIERE PERFORMANCE
Choreographed and MountedI
by DOM OREJUDOS of the Illinois Ballet Co.
FRIDAY, APRIL 7-8:00 P.M.
PIONEER HIGH SCHOOL
-ALSO-'
i "Mozartiana"
"Sunday's Child"
"A la Foire"
TICKETS $2.00-Available at Sylvia Studio, The
S Children's Shop, Stangers, and Ulrich's.
1 491-

U OF M FOLKLORE SOCIETY presents
Son House, Mance Lipscomb,
Robert Pete Williams
Stars of the Ann Arbor Blues Festival, -and possibly three of the
greatest blues singers alive today.
April 15 Power Center 8:00 P.M.
ALL SEATS RESERVED-$3.00
Tickets available today and every day at the Michigan Union
ticket office from 11 A.M.-2 P.M. only.
FOR INFO CALL 761-6945
Don't miss 'A Life Well Spent': "A portrait of the musical route
of Mance Lipscombe" Sunday April 9, 9 pm, at Cinema 11 in
Angell Hall.
SATURDAY NIGHT, APRIL 8, 9:00 P.M.
Bursley Hall Enterprises Presents
Alan Arkin, Richard Benjamin,
Martin Balsam, Orson Welles
in JOSEPH HELLER'S
CATCH-22
Admission 75c-FREE POPCORN
"I.D. cards required!"
BURSLEY HALL-West Cafeteria

among us.'

-Golda Meir

VITTORIO DE SICA'S
the Garden of
the Finzi-nt1Iis
8 nZOont n S
Starring Dominique Sanda, Lino Capolicchio, Helmut Berger,
Produced by Arthur Cohn and Gianni Hecht Lucari, in color, from Cinema 5
7:00 and 9:00 P.M.

NEIL DIAMOND
plus ALBERT BROOKS
APRIL 9th-8:30 P.M.
TICKETS: $3.50, $4.50, $5.50
Still available at: Ypsilanti-McKenny Union,
Ann Arbor-Ann Arbor Music Mart

1

Gene Wilder: "Willy Woka & The Chocolate Factory"
1:00 and 3:30 P.M. Matinees Only All Seats 75c

231 S. STATE

TODAY is LADIES DAY
$75c--1-6 p.m.
for All Ladies!

V

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- ---------

DIAL 662-6264 The H
ENDS TODAY!
OPEN 12:45
SHOWS AT 1:10, 3, 5, 7, 9 p.m. -
*e 0 STARTS TOMORROW 0 00

-ANN ARBOR PREMIERE-

Norman Mailer's

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The University of Michigan
Gilbert and Sullivan Society
presents

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