t}. ?:h, ":; ';i: ?tv ":y;iiii~i"v.iit- ~......... ..... +u Uof M Gilbert and Sullivan Society SMikado Aidition1"s Thursday, 7-10:3 0 p.m. Sept. 16 Union .:.:. .....::.::: . h T rspmpage Thursday, September 16, 1971 three aloe Sfr tgtin Ia-tiu - --- 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0525 '.1".' t..i:......... " 4' I ,! THE ALLEY CINEMA PRESENTS TONIGHT-THURSDAY-SEPT. 16 WITCHCRAFT THROUGH THE AGES Swedish, 1922. A unique combination of bothfan- tasy and documentary, full of information and data for students of witchcraft and superbly eloquent images for students of cinema. SHOWS AT 7 and 9:30 p.m. $1.00 330 Maynard across from Nickels Arcade sponsored by ann arbor film cooperative news bie s C ~By The Associated Press A TERRORIST BOMB demolished a popular Saigon night club last night. The bombing was a bloody climax to three days of anti- American and anti-government unrest. Although the U.S. Command said no Americans and three Vietna- mese were killed, South Vietnamese officials reported 10 fatalities- three Americans and seven Vietnamese apd a score of persons in- jured. REV. RALPH ABERNATHY and an estimated 160 other dem- onstrators were arrested yesterday as they attempted to march to the Choctaw County Courthouse in Butler, Ala. The march was in defiance of an anti-demonstration injunction. Witnesses said the marchers gathered at a church about one mile from the courthouse square where a black demonstrator, Margaret Knott, 19, was struck and killed by a car Saturday during a sit-in at an intersection there. The arrests were in addition to 41 others who were taken into custody during the morning after disturbances at three boycotted Butler area schools. NORTHERN IRELAND Prime Minister Brian Faulkner yes- terday authorized a series of "get tough" measures against insur- rection and disorder in Protestant-dominated Northern Ireland. The measures set off a new series of riots. Faulkner signed orders authorizing indefinite internment without Senate to decide draft bill status today in key vote WASHINGTON UP) - A key vote is expected today in the Senate on a bill combining two-year draft extension with the most costly military pay raise, ever proposed. Opposing sides seemed uncertain yesterday of the out- come of the vote on a motion to table and thus kill the bill worked out over a period of five weeks by a Senate-House conference committee. The House already has approved the bill, and J o h n Stennis, (D-Miss.), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said that if the Senate rejects it, the result may be no draft bill and no 0 t t ,,, , . f t' SECRETARY OF TH British Chancellor of Group of Ten finance Foreign military pay raises this year. The secretaries .of the Army E TREASURY John Connally, (left), and Navy and Air Forcedispatched a the Exchequer Anthony Barber attend the letter to all senators yesterday ministers' talks on monetary problems. saying that further delay in re- viving the draft, which expired June 30 may jeopardize beyond ck redemption the prospects of diploats attaGckachieving an all-volunteer force by July 1, 1973." Y z r i f T 1 FINALLY Tickets Now on Sale for the first three Daystar shows Fri., Sept. 17-Blues Special $2.00 $3.00 $4.00 Fri., Sept. 24-MOUNTAIN and MYLON trial of 219 suspected subversives, and expanding the Ulster Defense' Regiment-the national guard-by the addition of new units. His government also filed the first suits against citizens with-' holding rents and local taxes in a Roman Catholic-based civil dis- obedience campaign.! * * THE UNITED STATES will hold a meeting today at the United Nations on cosponsoring resolutions which could provide for seating the People's Republic of China in the U.N. Security Council.1 A State Department spokesman said the main U.S. aim is to keep Nationalist China from being ousted from the United Nations and that Washington has not reached a final decision on the Security CouncilI seat issue. Nl ixon's eco LONDON AP - Secretary of the Treasury John Connally serv- ed notice yesterday that the Nix- on administration intends to fa- shion a $13-billion turnabout in its overseas dealings, transform-I ing a current annual loss of $9 billion into a $4billion surplus. The American plan stunned fi- nance ministers and bankers at- tending a conference of "the Group of Ten ." omic plan The two-day talks brought t gether representatives of t world's richest countries to par dp tavof ori le npn Despite the pressures from the military and the administration, Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, (D-Mont.), who is opposed to any o- kind of draft-extension bill, called he the outlook for tabling the motion n- encouraging. STRONG OPPOSITION AEC plans new nuclear test aer a ys oA eny ng the "ne a~ Mansfield agreed' with Stennis tional money crisis. that adoption of the motion would A clash of views dramatized the kill the bill but he said t h i s first encounter between U.S. lead- would be followed by another mo- ers and a group of friendly states- tion seeking a new conference men since President Nixon one with the House and instructing month ago proposed a program the Senate conferees on key is- of emergency action to stave off sues. the threatened devaluation of the The draft bill originally passed dolar. by the Senate includes an amend- The assault on Nixon's econom- ment by Mansfield declaring it to ic policies was led by Finance be U.S. policy to withdraw a 11 Minister Mario Ferrari-Aggradi, troops from Vietnam in n i n e of Italy, speaking for most of the months provided American pri- Europeans, and by Finance Minis- soners of war were released.' ter M. M. Mizuta of Japan, the This is unacceptable to the ad- United States' main commercial rival.E ministra'tion and the House re- rival.jected it. In conference it was Their demands included: changedito a declaration of the -A devaluation of the dollar sense of Congress that U.S. mill- against gold as part of a general tary operations in Indochina realgnmnt f wrldcurrencies, should be ended at the earliest realignment of world rpracticable date. -Removal of the 10 per cent M U.S. surcharge on most imports. Mansfield told the Senate that if the compromise bill is tabled, --A phase-out of the dollar's he will seek to have Senate con- role as a world currency. ferees instructed to stand by his --Developmnet of special Draw- original amendment except to cut ing Rights on the International the deadline for withdrawal by 21/2 months to make up for the Monetary Fund to replace gold as time that already has elapsed. backing for currencies. n fn $2.50 $3.50, $4.50 Fri., Oct. 8-B.B. KING & HOWLIN WOLF $2.50 $3.50 $4.50 JUNEAU, Alaska (P -- The barren island halfway between Atomic Energy Commission (AE- Anchorage and Tokyo at the con- C), says preparations for an un- fluence of the Bering Sea and1 derground five-megaton nuclear Pacific Ocean. test on Amchitka Island are pro- The blast, the equivalent of ceeding on schedule, despite five million tons of TNT, is de- strong opposition from govern- signed to test the warhead of ment leaders and others, and the Spartan missile, a part of thef speculation President Nixon may ' Safeguard antiballistic missile sys- cancel it. tem. No specific date has been set Some senators and conserva- but AEC spokesman David Jack- tionists have expressed fears the son said it still is "tentatively" test might touch off earthquakes scheduled for early October. and tidal waves. The site of what would be the Both Canada and Japan have largest underground blast ever protested the blast. detonated in North America is a In June, the AEC released a All shows Hill Auditorium Advance tickets Michigan Records, 330 Maynard and Union and Salvation 1 103 S. Univ. draft environmental statement saying the planned test has a low likelihood of triggering a severe earthquake. But the report added the AEC could not rule out the possibility of a quake. It also said there was not much chance the test would create large tidal waves, harm wildlife or release radioactive material into the atmosphere. However, Sen. Mike Gravel, .D- Ala.), told a Massachusetts peace organization this week that five of the seven federal agencies ad- vising the President on nuclear matters have opposed the test. Opposition to the test also has been expressed by a U.S. nuclear scientist who helped develop the atom bomb that destroyed Hiro- shima during World War H. Witness to testify forl edina FT. McPHERSON, Ga. UP) - The military judge in Capt. Er- nest Medina's murder trial, re- versing a previous decision, ruled yesterday that the jury may hear a key defense witness recount a conversation in which Lt. William Calley Jr. spoke of My Lai. Capt. Robert Hicks of Ft. Ben- ning, Ga., had tesitfied in the ab- sence of the jury, saying Calley told him that Medina knew noth- ing of Calley's actions at My Lai. The prosecution objected to this testimony as hearsay and Col. Kenneth Howard, the military judge, initially sustained the ob- j ection. But after a two-hour meeting with the defense, Howard said he had been persuaded to allow Hicks to appear before the jury. In another ruling, Howard held that the jury could not hear the testimony of Capt. Eugene Ko- touc, an intelligence officer ac- quitted earlier this year of maim- ing a Viet Cong suspect after the My Lai attack. Kotouc had indicated he would testify that he had advised Me- dina on methods of interrogating prisoners. The prosecution objected. The 35-year-old Medina, of Montrose, Colo., is accused of as- saulting a Viet Cong suspect by firing a rifle over his head, shoot- ing a wounded woman as she lay in a rice paddy outside My Lai, ordering the shooting of a boy, and of murder in the deaths of 102 civilians. The infantryman was in com- mand of Charlie Company when the unit, whose platoon leaders included Calley,attacked My Lai on March 16, 1968. Dylan Seeger Baez For the best in contemporary and traditional folk and blues mus c WPAG-FM 107.1 8 PM-i A.M. ih IA Sorry for the delay I - - i --Preservation of the "aver- age price" of gold against major currencies, meaning that while the dollar price of the metal might go up the West German mark or Japanese yen price might go down. ie otner part of the 1bll on! which instructions to Senate con- ferees will be sought relates to the $2.4 billion pay raise provided for in the compromise version. Sen. Gordon Allott, (R-Colo.), is leading a fight to add $300 million to the bill to beef up the increases in the lowest grades. DAYSTAR Presents ! 4 i Muddy Waters Buddy Guy John Lee Hooker Junilor Vells Terry Tate Friday, Sept. 17th-Hill Auditorium "NOT TO BE MISSED -Archer Winsten, New York Post 'Fellini's best since '8'/2 '. -Joseph Gelmis, Newsday "A wonderful movie! -Leonard Harris, WCBS-TV A glory !" -Penelope Gilliatt, New Yorker L~evitt-Pickrnan ihnCorporation PRES t FEDERICO FELLINI Technicolor iQ a o PiPTH poruviOPEN SHOWN TON ITE FPFTH AVENUE AT LIBERTY 7:15 & 9P.M. DOWNTOWNANNARBOR 7 P.M. FRIDAY: 7:15 9 10:45 LI] INFORMATION 761-9700a A :5 O 9* 104 I I 8-12 Admission: 2.00, $3.00, $4.00 -- i I .. .... .., r 1" t .nite $1.00 INTOLE3ANCE 1916. Starring Lillian Gish, Miriam Cooper, Tod Browning, Erich von Stroheim, Constance Talmadge, Eugene Pallette, Minte Blue, Bessie Love. 121 min. with new piano score by Mr. Donald Sosin, performing! Mr. Sosin received standing ovations at our successful presentations last spring of The Phantom of the Opera for his score and performance. One of the most awesome spectacles ever filmed! Often hailed as one of the most influential of silent films, INTOLERANCE, two years in the making, intercuts four different episodes which depic cruelty and pre- judice through the ages. PAM OSTERGREN and Bobbi Thomas banjo, guitar "Where'd this chick learn to play like that?" -John Hartford 0 FRI., SAT.- Pat & Victoria GARVY L1421 HillISTREETI 114H5J I I R,:m l Il~ ~ U - A...E... -- 4£. ~khE WI U V&% §O*-R W a iaAWIL mA 7 AL -- ftuI vv I