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news briefs
by The Associated Press
ADAM CLAYTON POWELL, former U.S. Congressman from
Harlem, died after a long illness Tuesday night, at the age of 63.
The preacher-politician, who presided over the House Educa-
tion and Labor Committee during the Kennedy and Johnson admin-
istrations, was turned out by his colleagues in 1967 for misusing
funds.
OIL COMPANIES cannot be required to post their gasoline
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atly
Thursday, April 6, 1972 Page Three
is ::' "<:'<
Lydia MendeIssohn I heatre octane ratings, a federal judge ruled in a suit brought by 30 ma-
jor oil companies against the Federal Trade Commission.
The FTC rule, which compelled the companies to list specific
octane ratings directly on gasoline pumps, had intended to enable the
consumer to see the quality of the gasoline being purchased.
CHRYSLER AND GENERAL MOTORS have filed formal
requests for a one-year extension of the 1975 deadline for reduc-
PHAS IIIing auto emissions.
The Environmental Protection Agency will begin hearings on
ALL DRINKS 1 Oc the extension requests next Monday. Ford is also expected to submit
a request before then.
Except Black Coffee 8c *
THE ROMAN CATHOLIC ARCHDIOCESE of New York
HOT CHOCOLATE LEMONADE ORANGE JUICE has published for the first time a report on its financial worth.
COCA-COLA ORANGE SPRITE JIt puts its net assets at $643 million.
Ninety per cent of the assets consists of land, equipment, and
STATE AND PACKARD STORE ONLY buildings. Over half of the expenditures go to parochial schools or
other educational programs.
DUNKIN' A CALIFORNIA PROSECUTORin the Angela Davis trial tes-
tified that he shot and killed three abductors in the Marin
County courthouse shootout in August of 1970.
Deputy District Attorney Gary Thomas was himself crippled
To your home from ours in the attempted court-house break, during which he was held
Fresh every four hours. hostage. Davis is accused of supplying the guns that sparked the
"The difference is freshness" incident.
OPEN MONDAY-THURSDAY 7:30-9 P.M. JOHN CHAFEE has resigned from his post as Secretary of
FRI., SAT., SUN. 7:30-3 P.M. the Navy. The 49-year-old former governor of Rhode Island
This offer expires April 17th will return to his home state to run' for the Senate.
Government sources say the leading candidate to succeed Chafee
is John Warner, undersecretary of the Navy since 1969.
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-Associated Press
Chafee packs up
John Chafee prepares to leave his Pentagon office after resigning as secretary of the Navy. See
News Briefs.
DEMOCRATS IN DEBT
Political telethons: New trend.
2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
Including 'Best Foreign Film'
WINNER 3 INTERNATIONAL FILM
! BEST FOREIGN FILM
! BEST DIRECTOR
! BEST ACTRESS
AWARDS
MICHIGAN VOTERS will have the opportunity to switch
the state to Daylight Savings Time during next November's
elections.
The proposal would "change Michigan to Daylight Savings Time
from the last Sunday in April until the last Sunday in October." A
similar referendum was narrowly rejected in 1968.
AVON PRODUCTS, Inc., the nation's biggest cosmetics
producer, is breaking its tradition of secrecy by providing con-
sumers with listings of the ingredients of its products.
Doctors and government offcials advocating cosmetic ingredient
disclosure said the move should help Americans avoid or get treat-
ment for the estimated 60,000 cosmetic-reaction injuries each year.
HERBERT STEIN, President Nixon's chief economic ad-
viser, said yesterday it would be foolhardy to predict that present
economic controls will succeed without change.
He said the Pay Board and Price Commission must be ready
to modify their policies if necessary, to reduce inflation to the ad-
ministration's goal of a two or three per cent rate by December.
A CYCLONIC STORM in Dacca, Bangladesh has killed at
least 42 persons and injured 100 others.
GOLDEN BEACH. Fla. (A)--
Can the man who sold Colonel
Sanders' Kentucky Fried Chic-
ken to America sell the bank-
rupt Democratic party over na-
tional network television?
Can he raise $9 million and
the Democratic mortgage with
thekind of telethon appeal that
works for Jerry Lewis and mus-
cular dystrophy?
John Brown Jr. thinks he
will - with a little help from
his friends like Andy Williams.
Glenn Campbell, Don Adams
and Johnny Carson.
j A 38-year-old multi-million-
aire. and political aspirant,
Brown is devoting all his ener-
gies to the proposed telethon,
the brainchild of the Jaycees
in his home town of Louisville.
Kentucky.
He has convinced the ABC
network that it is a viable and
necessary idea. Adding a new
twist, he has persuaded several
nationwide credit card outfits
to let telethon viewers make
their contributions by simply
phoning in the amount and their
credit card numbers. Then the
charge would be made auto-
matically and could be paid off
in installments.
None of it was easy. The net-
works were reluctant at first,
but Brown told them, "Either
you give us the time we need or
we don't have a two-party sys-
tem."
The telethon will cost about a
million dollars, spanning 17
hours beginning Saturday night,
July 8.
Ten years ago, Brown started
off his career with a borrowed
$7.000, a law degree and a bud-
ding friendship with a white-
haired gent who had a tasty re-
cipe for barbecued ribs and
fried'chicken.
He remains board chairman
pf Kentucky Fried Chicken, al-
though he sold the company,
and he owns the 350-restaurant
Lums hot dog chain.
Besides that, he plans to run
for senator from Kentucky in
1972 or 1974, and in this elec-
tion year he has weighed offers
from several Democrats who
want hin to manage their cam-
paigns.
Speaking of the upcoming
Winner Golden Bear Award,
First Prize Berlin Film Festival
Winner David Donatello Awards,
Best Italian Picture 1971
"Reaches artistic and human
heights of 'Bicycle Thief'."
-N.Y. Post
May well be the loveliest film of the year.
-HoprSuuaar y Rcew
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SATURDAY NIGHT, APRIL 8,9:00 P.M.
Bursley Hall Enterprises Presents
Alan Arkin, Richard Benjamin,
Martin Balsam, Orson Welles
in JOSEPH HELLER'S
CATC H-22
Admission 75c-FREE POPCORN
"I.D. cards required!"
BURSLEY HALL-West Cafeteria
____----. _ .__.___.f
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telethon, he says, "There might
be a way to pay for this whole
thing through advertising com-
mercials," he says, picturing the
donations being brought before
the television cameras in Ken-
tucky Fried Chicken buckets.
"Another thing, though, is us-j
ing the candidates to do com-
mercials like Johnny Carson
does. Like Hubert Humphrey
advertising Clorox, or having
Ed Muskie advertising Excedrin."
He chuckles at the thought.
To guard against a shortage
of financinghfrom advertise-
ment, a 17-hour fund raising
dinner will be held concurrent-
ly with the telethon.
The basic idea, he feels, is
sound, even more so since Presi-
dent Nixon vetoed a bill that
would have permitted people to
make contributions via their in-
come tax.
"It's unconscionable to me in
a trillion-dollar economy that
one of two political parties that
have been in business for two
centuries and are largely re-
sponsible for our form of gov-
enmnent should suddenly be
faced with bankruptcy," Brown
says.
"Money is necessary as a ve-
hicle to give your candidate ex-
posure," he continues. "It's just
like advertising a product . . .
When Coca-Cola cut down their
advertising and Pepsi upped
theirs, that's when Pepsi be-
came a competitive force. For-
tunately or unfortunately, which
ever way you look at it, that's a
fact of life in this country. It
takes money to be able to com-
pete.,'
Brown's father, a lawyer, in-
spired his taste for politics. The
senior Brown ran unsuccessfully
for the U.S. Senate seven times
in Kentucky. He made it once
as a Congressman,
Review of
Atty. Gen.
slow-going
WASHINGTON (M - Senate
leaders of both parties said to-
day no case has been made
against confirmation of Rich-
ard Kleindienst as Attorney
General and urged early ac-
tion on his nomination.
Democratic Leader Mike Mans-
field (D-Mont.) said he hoped the
Senate Judiciary Committee could
separate its consideration of the
nomination from other factors in-
volved in its investigation of the
Justice Department's out-of-court
settlement of antitrust cases
against the International Tele-
phone and Telegraph Corp.
The committee is to meet in
closed session Thursday and Re-
publican Leader Hugh Scott in-
dicated a motion will be made
then to sever Kleindienst's nom-
ination from the ITT investiga-
tion.
The committee had approved
President Nixon's nomination of
Kleindienst to succeed John Mit-
chell. But Kleindienst asked that
the hearings be reopened to ex-
amine columnist Jack Anderson's
charge that the ITT settlement
was linked to a $400,000 pledge by
the giant conglomerate to help
underwrite the Republican Na-
tional Convention in San Diego
next August. Kleindienst was dep-
uty attorney general at the time
of the settlement.
Scott, who hopes that Senate
debate on the nomination will be-
gin as soon as possible, said the
committee's hearings no longer
have "any real bearing on Klein-
dienst despite the best efforts of
the wrecking crew."
He previously had accused some
of the committee's Democrats of
trying to prolong the hearings in
hopes of making political gains.
Mansfield said there still are
unanswef-ed questions that have
been raised in the hearings and
the committee ought to take the
testimony of "other legitimate wit-
nesses" and then consider Klein-
dienst's nomination apart from
other aspects of its investigation
of the antitrust settlement.
He said no definite conclusions
have been reached and he would
like the service of the committee
before calling up Kleindienst's
nomination in the Senate.
Am'ong witnesses the committee
might still want to hear, Mans-
field said, is White House aide
Peter Flanigan.
Mansfield said he understood
Flanigan would decline to testify,
however, on the grounds of execu-
tive privilege.
Sens. Edward Kennedy (D-
Mass.), and John Tunney (D-
Calif.), have been urging expan-
sion of the investigation, but they
do not appear to have majority
support for calling all the wit-
nesses they have suggested.
Even Sen. Philip Hart of Michi-
gan, the senior Democratic liberal
on the committee, reportedly has
told associates he sees no reasor
to change his original vote recom-
mending confirmation of Klein-
dienst.
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 mal.
I' M I ME_________________________- __________
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L KRIS
KRISTOFFERSON
and BONNIE RAITT
Fri., April 21-8 p.m.
Hill Aud.
1.50 3.00 4.50
His songs are pieces of
dreams realized. His de-
livery; honest, sincere,
and right to the point.
Reserved Seats NOW:
MICH. UNION 12-6 p.m. M-F
SALVATION RECORDS,
Maynard St.
f
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E
VITTORIO DE SICA'S0
the Garden of the Finzi-Continis
Starring Dominique Sanda, Lino Capoiicchio, Helmut Berger,
Produced by Arthur Cohn and Gianni Hecht Lucari, in color,
Interviews Now Being Held For
Musket '13 Director
Sign-Up for an interview
at the UAC Musket Office
2nd Floor Union
7:00 and 9:00
not continuous with
matinee or Carman Festival
MATINEE SPECIAL
"WILLY WONKA AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY"
plus '3 Stooges'-1 :00 and 3 :30-All Seats 75c
the ann arbor film cooperative
DUSTIN HOFFMAN, JON VOIGHT, and BRENDA VACCARO in
JOHN SCHLESINGER'S
MIDNIGHT COWBOY
Winner of two Academy Awards: Best Picture and Best Director
TONIGHT!-Thursday, April 6th-ONLY!
11. "1
SHOP TONIGHT AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M.
SALE
Deck Shoes for Miss J
Two pairs - $9
One pair - $6
'4
I 7
'
auditorium a, angell hall 7 & 9:30 p.m. 35 mm COLOR '
originally rated "X." New "R" rating does not reflect any cuts
Two performances only! Tickets for both shows on sole at 6 pm
"R" 75c
HIKING
BOOTS
" TYROLEANS .
* DUNHAMS *
Gals and Guys
COMING TUESDAY-Marlene Dietrich in Emil Janning's BLUE ANGEL
NEXT THURSDAY-Yul Brenner, Steve McQueen
in THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN
Now through April 15, save
on two pairs of action
shoes by Uniroyal of
sturdy canvas with ripple
soles. White or navy. Sizes
5/2-10 narrow. 5-10 medium.
W'eSorry but the Tuesday show is4rA.:
S LD UT
There are, at this time, 50 tickets left for
the Wednesday and Thursday evening per-
formances.
DON'T MISS VON RONK'S ONLY ANN
ARBOR APPEARANCE IN TWO YEARS.
GET YOUR TICKETS NOW AT:
MICHIGAN U NION-Noon to Si~
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