W.C. FIELDS FILM FESTIVAL at MARKLEY in DINING ROOM NO. 3 (three) on SATURDAY, APRIL 22 AND SUNDAY, APRIL 23 MY LITTLE CHICADEE NEVER GIVE A SUCKER AN EVEN BREAK YOU CAN'T CHEAT AN HONEST MAN THE BANK DICK THE GREAT CHASE NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 (17 4 r irl igttn ~ati page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, April 21, 1972 news brie fs by The Associated Press NATIONAL GUARDSMEN took control of the University of Maryland campus yesterday, after three consecutive nights of violent student protest against the renewed bombing of North Vietnam. A noon antiwar rally had failed to materialize and the campus; had been reported fairly quiet in the hours before the guard took1 over. Apollo 16 lunar module arrives THE BIG THUMB. THE BARBERSHOP AT 7:00 P.M. RESIDENT AND NON-RESIDENT ADMISSION: $1.00 safely on moon "-UU-MOPF BOX OFFICE OPEN AT 7:00 SHOW STARTS AT DUSK 'p This program not recommended for pre-teens NOW! Shown 7:30 & Dr. Jekyll Sister Hyde 10:55 Plus at 9:20 SHELLY WINTERS "WHO SLEW AUNTIE ROO?" However, after recalling a busload Gov. Marvin Mandel declared a state the soldiers onto the campus in force. decree, a. 9 p.m. curfew was imposed adjacent areas. * * * of guardsmen, Democratic of eme'rgency and ordered Under Mandel's emergency on the campus proper and1 SPACE CENTER, Houston tM - Two American astronauts landed safely on the moon last night to begin an expedition that was temporarily threatened by a failure in the main engine of the Apollo 16 command ship, Casper. Astronauts John Young and 'Charles Duke Jr. thus achieved man's fifth landing on the moon and began 73 hours of scientific exploration on a plateau high in the lunar mountains. Young and Duke had separated from the command ship earlier in the day and had --- been scheduled to land on the imoon at about 3:41 p.m. E.S.T. Letters to But during their final landing h bit~4 M.~4+,,', tti l f A u TWO GIANT PANDAS, a gift of friendship from the People's Republic of China, were welcome to Washington yesterday by Pat Nixon. Ling-Ling from Peking Ling-Ling, the female giant panda presented to the American people by the People's Republic of China relaxes in her new "-. -fHI. -VEGE - -" ____ WE_______________RO __D I - I $2.50 PER CARLOAD "BEWARE OF THE BRETHREN" PLUS "WILLARD" MAC 3 HORRORIFIC HITS 1. "I Drink Your Blood" 2. 3. "I Eat Your Skin" "Sweet Baby Charlie" - K Ting Hung, head of the bureau of public service of the city of home at Washington National Zoo. ($e Peking, officially presented the "pair of giant pandas to the - American people in token of friendship of the Chinese people." SENATE HEARINGS: Like the two musk oxen the U.S. gave to the People's Republic ,SENATE of China, Ting said the animals would remain as "a symbol of friend- ship" and he extended his country's greetings "to the entire Ameri- can people." ITT fix den ee News Briefs.) BRITAIN'S RAILROAD UNIONS bowed to a court ruling last night and called off a nationwide "go slow" strike that has thrown the state-owned rail system into chaos. White I-hmw aide pied by approacn oric ,navungiyloun n he could not fire a planned rock- et thrust with the command ship's main rocket power plant because of a failure in the back-up steer- ing control system. He elected not to fire the en- gine and Mission Control imme- diately ordered Orion to delay any landing. i vUvv AL j v The astronauts, however, will al and the ITT cases were pend- not make the moon walk planned ingfor yesterday. Duke said earlier he Program Rated R I t l ; GENERA :ORPOR The unions agreed, "with the greatest reluctance", to a 14 day WASHINGTON (Al) - Presiden- cooling-off period for further negotiations on their claim for a tial aide Peter Flanigan yesterday pay raise of 16 per cent. denied attempting to fix the out- come of three multi-million dol- These unions, representing 300,000 railroad workers, accepted an lar antitrust suits pending against order by the new Industrial Relations Court to resume normal work- International Telephone & Tele- ing as soon as possible. A management spokesman said that rail graph Corp. last summer. services could return to normal by Monday if the workers end their Flanigan's long-sought appear- , nn b hfnre the Renate Judiciary 11F j r mm The committee is reconsidering at his request Kleindienst's nom- ination to be attorney general. The hassle over which questions Flanigan should answer stemmed from the concept of executive rivilee and an a a r ne m en t f TENANTS ® UNION 1528 SAB 763-3102 Friday only at 7 and 9:30 p.m. "PHANTOM AT THE OPERA" 1925. Lon Chaney's most sensitive role. "THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI" A Classic. One of the first attempts at Chairoscuro lighting effects. Saturday only at 7 and 9:30 p.m. "THE TAMING OF THE SHREW" with Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor slowdown and ban on overtime. aLk Juui IU1, y j Committee was interrupted re- reached by the committee on the x I peatedly in a wrangle over the; specific subjects to be discussed. AFL-CIO PRESIDENT George Meany yesterday stated that range of questions he could or Flanigan had been named in the American labor movement wants rising food prices strictly would answer. testimony as -the man who ar- controlled, even if this control leads to farmer resistance and food Flanigan, the administrations r ed. atNMcLa Yrk investment chief emissary to the business banker Richard Ramsden which community, said his role in the bar iad Rayen which Citing a 56-page list of what he said are significant price in- decision not to carry ITT cases McLaren testified played a major creases at nationwide grocery stores since the first of the year, to the Supreme Court was limited Repeatedly. Flanigan was asked Meany claimed that wages are being effectively controlled while sisting another overworkedpublic if he had baen contacted last prices are allowed "to go through the roof." servant." suring by ITT officials anxious about their antitrust cases pend- ! Manv called for both an excess-profit tax and a revision of the The other public servant, Flani- ing in the Justice Department and and Young had decided to get some sleep first if they were al- lowed to land. The astronauts had been sched- uled to make the first of three sur- face excursions at 7:19 p.m. EST The decision came after tests on the ground determined the engine problem was associated with an open electricalloop in the engine's drive mechanism and that firing+ it would cause structural damage.+ A camera capable of capturing{ in a single picture a 40,000-mile- thick hale of atomic hydrogen en- veloping the earth is expected to be set up on the moon by Apollo 16 astronauts soon after landing. Operating in the airless atmos- phere of the lunar surface, the de- vice will for the first time probe distant galaxies to find out why they may contain 30 times more mass than can be detected by earth-based telescopes. Dr.hThornton Page, a Naval Re- search Laboratory astrophysicist now attached to the Manned Spacecraft Center, believes the "missing mass" will turn out to be gas-mostly hydrogen-filling the void in space once thought to be a perfect vacuum., be used at' Davis trial SAN JOSE, Calif. () - Angela Davis' letters to the late George Jackson were ruled admissible evi- dence at her murder-kidnap-con- spiracy trial yesterday. Superior Court Judge Richard Arnason's ruling came after a two- day defense fight' to keep jurors from reading the letters. The prosecutor has said 'the letters are so personal they will be "embar- rassing" to Davis when read in court. The judge's decision was crucial to the prosecutor's case. Asst. Atty. Gen. Albert Harris Jr. said in his opening address to the jury that letters written by Davis would clearly link her to the Aug. 7, 1970, Marin County Courthouse escape attempt which took four lives, including a judge's. Davis, 28,, munist who losophy at plotting the a self-described Com- formerly taught phi- UCLA, is accused of escape. Economic Stabilization Act and declared that he has no intention' of helping President Richard Nixon politically by making decisions for him i§LA UL..i Admission 75c Shown in new auditorium MLBAud.4 gan testified, was former Asst.' Atty. Gen. Richard McLaren, anti- trust chief while Richard Klein-: dienst was deputy attorney geners- McLaren's reputation as a trust- buster. That. Flanigan answered, is out. side bounds set by the committee in a 12-1 vote Tuesday when only Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D- Mass.), dissented. "Therefore," Flanigan said, "I respectfully decline" to answer. Kennedy: "I'm getting happier and happier about my vote on this thing." Program Information 8-6416 1214 S. UNIVERSITY BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! --ato.- Stoe-R-----,.. "Her own words will reveal," Harris said then, "that beneath the cool academic veneer is a wo- man fully capable of being moved to violence by passion." There are five letters - three found by the FBI in Davis' apart- ment, one confiscated in Jackson's mail at Soledad prison and one fovnd in his San Quentin cell aft- er he was killed last year in what was described as an escape at- tempt. The prosecution seeks to show "THE YEAR'S FIRST REALLY SATISFYING, BIG COMMERCIAL AMERICAN FILM. ONE OF THE MOST BRUTAL AND MOVING CHRONICLES OF AMERICAN LIFE EVER DESIGNED WITHIN THE LIMITS OF POPULAR ENTERTAINMENT." -Vincent Canby, New York Times "A SUPERIOR WORK OF POPULAR ENTERTAINMENT! REMINDS US OF THE VANISHED PLEASURES OF THE OLD- FASHIONED GANGSTER MOVIES! WHAT MORE COULD WE POSSIBLY WANT FROM A' MOVIE? HOW OFTEN, THESE DAYS DO WE GET ANYTHING LIKE ALL THAT?" -Richard Schickel, Life Magazine "'THE GODFATHER' IS A MOVIE THAT SEEMS TO HAVE EVERYTHING! WARMTH, VIOLENCE, NOSTALGIA. THE CHARISMA OF MARLON-BRANDO IN ONE OF HIS FINEST PERFORMANCES, AND THE DYASTIC SWEEP OF AN ITALIAN-AMERICAN 'GONE WITH THE WIND'!" -Time Magazine "THERE IS ONLY ONE BRANDO. HE IS THE GODFATHER. THE CENTERPIECE OF WHAT PROMISES TO BE THE 'GONE WITH THE WIND' OF GANGSTER MOVIES." -Paul D. Zimmerman, Newsweek "'THE GODFATHER IS A SPECTACULAR MOVIE, ONE OF THE FINEST GANGSTER MOVIES EVER MADE. IT'S RARE TO COME OUT OF A 3-HOUR MOVIE AND WANT TO MAKE A U-TURN AND GO IN AND SEE IT ALL OVER AGAIN. BUT THAT'S EXACTLY MY FEELING AFTER SEEING 'THE GODFATHER'." -Gene Snalit, NBC-TV The Michigan Daily, edited and man- through the letters that Davis aged by students at the University of was in love with Jackson, one of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second three unrelated blacks known as Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- the Soledad Brothers charged with Igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, murdering a white prison guard. IMichigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer. They say she furnished four guns sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by and helped plot an escape at- carrier, s11by mail, tempt of three black convicts from Summer Session published Tuesday the Marn County courthouse. The through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates.: $5.50 by carrier (campus convicts, along. with Jonathan area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Jackson, 17, George's younger Oh o); $7.50 non-local mail (other states brother, took the judge, prosecu- S otor and three women hostage. $1.50 8:4O STEVE GOODMAN singer-songwriter "Great" -David Bromberg "You have to hear this guy . . . one of the best in the business." -Michael Cooney SUN- CHRIS SMITHERS va W 1u Vaaa I1 fT VaaaVal L va}VW( Vf k - -- -.. - W- r., .. 'too Huron River Canoe Rental 2 and 4 hour RIVER TRIPS TRIPS DEPART ON THE HOUR FROM 9:00 A.M. DAILY Phone: 662-1270 4325 JACKSON AVE. I Triple Tribute to the 30's 1421 Kill STRET Roman Pblanskis fan, o W- I l KING KONG and SON OF KING KONG "the original monster epic, equal to and better than the productions of today." starring FAY WRAY NIGHT AT THE OPERA. Wed. -Sat.-Sun. 1:15-3:45 6:15-8:45 In Mon.-Tues. Thurs. -Fri. 6:45 and 9:05 I I SATURDAY NIGHT, APRIL 22-9:00 P.M. Bursley Hall Enterprizes Presents: GEORGE C. SCOTT and SUE (Lolita) LYON in THE FLIM-FLAM MAN 25c Popcorn charge (at door) FOR ALL THE POPCORN YOU CAN EAT ! ADMISSION COMPLIMENTARY BURSLEY HALL WEST CAFETERIA I I NIGHTLY AT 7:00-9:15 '%:?=.- "" ," LLJ MATINEES Wed., Sat., Sun. 1:00-3:15 They used every passion in their incredible duel! TONIGHT KRIS KRISTOFFERSON and BONNIE RAITT MARX BROS. "the brothers cut loose is this great greatest." * by the Ii I ?ir' 0,Tml w ROCKETSHIP BUSTER CRABBE as FRI., April 1 8 p.m. Hill Aud.. I_ 1 L a a .. - . j t a ?