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September 18, 1971 - Image 3

Resource type:
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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-09-18

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2

ARM/Michigan Film Society
Jean-Luc Godard's
'lull
the Rolling Stones
Something quite different from a Stones concert
film-parallels themes of "creation" Stones re-
cording Sympathy for the Devil and "destruction."
Black men stockpiling arms, Eve Democracy on the
relations of culture and revolution.
"A movie experience of major importance"
Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times
TONIGHT-Nat. Sci. Aud.

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page three
Saturday, September 18, 1971

Sfil!A

Dat'l-y

NEWS PHONE: 764-0552
BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554

Ann Arbor, Michigan

News Phone: 764-0525

II

Congressmen

iefs
By The Associated Press

to

investigate,

I

7:30 & 9:30

$1 contribution

Ecumenical Campus Center

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SATURDAY
The Bride Wore Black
(1968) 7 & 9 P.M.-75c
Francois Truffaut's
tribute to Alfred Hitchcock
starring JEANNE MOREAU
The Thirty-Nine Step$
11 P.M.-75c (1935)
a film by HitchcockI

- SUNDAY -
The Lone Ranger and the
Lost City of Gold
hi, ho Silver

WEST GERMAN CHANCELLOR Willy Brandt and Soviet
Communist Party chief Leonid Brezhnev conducted top-level
talks yesterday in the well-guarded Black Sea resort of Oreanda.
None of the topics discussed were officially disclosed, al-
though they were reliably reported to include a full range of Soviet-
West German relations, including Bonn's problems in negotiations
with East Germany over access to Berlin.
REINFORCED SOUTH VIETNAMESE infantrymen battled
Viet Cong forces yesterday in the U Minh Forest for the third
straight day and heavy losses were reported on both sides.
The South Vietnamese claimed 164 enemy killed and put their
own losses at 50 killed and just under 100 wounded.
"A MAJOR SPILL" of crude oil from a Swedish tanker
spread over the waters of San Francisco Bay yesterday, a Coast
Guard spokesman reported.
The tanker slipped her moorings at a Standard Oil Co. of
California wharf and severed two oil pipes releasing an estimated
15,000 to 30,000 gallons of crude oil.
A 10,000-foot containment boom was placed around much of the
spill and men working off the barges were picking up the "very heavy,
waxy crude oil" with pitchforks, the company said.
Company information officer Emmett Britton stated the oil
slick "doesn't seem to be any threat to birds or wildlife."
SNIPERS of the Irish Republican Army killed a Dritish
soldier and wounded two others in Belfast yesterday after a
woman staged an ambush with a telephone bomb tipoff.
The gunmen, stepping up a bloody street war against British
rule in Northern Ireland, baited the trap with a 22-pound gelignite
bomb in the middle of an intersection.
The troopers were shot while guarding a bomb disposal squad
that managed to defuse the bomb under fire.
THE COST OF LIVING COUNCIL is ready to send from
20 to 25 cases alleging violation of the wage-price-rent freeze
to the Justice Department for possible legal action, the council's
executive director said yesterday.
None of the cases involve large U. S. corporations and most of
them tend to be small entrepreneurs and small enterprises, said
director Arnold Weber.
The council is reported to be trying to stop short of legal action,
but Weber said it's up to the Justice Department.
Thus far the government has not tried to enforce the freeze in
court.
EGYPT "has not closed the door" to the continuing Ameri-
can effort to achieve an interim settlement of the Arab-Israeli
conflict by the reopening of the Suez Canal, a U.S. official said
yesterday.
The official was responding to reports that Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat, in a speech Thursday, ruled out any further mid-East
peacekeeping role for the United States.
The speech merely reports an "understandable frustration, un-
derstandable impatience and an understandable desire for progress in
the U.S. effort," he added.
VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS
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Attica killings

ATTICA, N.Y. (' - A congressional committee flew here
yesterday with free rein from Gov. NelsonRockefeller to in-
vestigate the bloody four-day Attica prison riot.
"The governor has not put any impediments in our way,"
- said Rep. Claude Pepper, (D-Fla.), after a 90-minute meeting
with Rockefeller in New York City.
Pepper described Rockefeller as "very candid," and add-
ed: "We reviewed the whole unhappy and tragic episode. We
cannot bring back lives but we're concerned with what led
up to the trouble so we can prevent a reoccurence."
An estimated 1,200 of At-> __
r tica's 2,254 mostly black inmates
took part in 96 hours of rioting
which took 40 lives. Ten of the L im its set
victims were guards or prison em-
ployes, the rest prisoners.
Originally, most of the hostages
were said to have been killed by onl
the rioters, who slashed t h e i r
throats. But 24 hours later, it de-
-Associated Press veloped that they had all been C nU Vi1c i10
light memorial service for Attica prison guards slain by the gun- troopers.
fire of police forces that quelled an inmate insurrection there A member of Pepper's select FT. McPHERSON, Ga. P) --
Monday. House Committee on Crime, Rep. The military judge in Capt. Er-
- - Charles,, angel, (D-NY), a Har-. nest Medina's court-martial ruled
lem congressman, said he had a yesterday that the jury may con-
CASES DROPPED: list of five reported leaders of the vict the officer of no more than
uprising, which began Sept. 9. involuntary manslaughter in the
The committee hoped to inter- deaths of 100 My Lai civilian in
view the five, as well as other 1968.
prisoners and members of At- Medina, 35, of Montrose, Colo.,
tica's all-white guard force. commander of the troops that
Rangel was among a group of staged the assault on My Lai, had
black congressmen seeking a fed- been charged with premeditated
pi eral grand jury probe into the murder in the deaths of the civi-
riot, and especially Rockefeller's lians on the allegation that he re-
WASHINGTON (A )- The Department of Health, Educa- endorsement of a mass assault on fused to intervene after learning
tion and Welfare has eased its pressure on some of the 80!Monday they were being killed
Southern and border state school districts tentatively target- The president ofithe predom- Col. Kenneth Howard, the judge,
for urthr dsegrgatin tis yar.inantly black Baptist Ministers let stand a charge that Medina
edficia s EgregOtiof ivieRi Conference of Greater New York premeditatedly murdered a wo-
Officials of HEW's Office of Civil Rights confirmed they City, the Rev. Daniel Nickerson, man in a rice paddy outside My
have dropped cases against nine of the small and Middle- charged yesterday that prison au- Lai, but said he would direct ac-
sized schools systems that still have majority black schools, thorities "falsified the record in quittal on a separate charge that
and they said action will not be pressed against a good many an attempt to deceive the public the captain murdered a child by
of the 35 districts with cases still pending. into believing the inmates were ordering him shot.
subhuman." The judge also let stand.a charge.
HEW succeeded in negotiat- that Medina, whose lawyers rested
ing voluntary desegregation plans T his case yesterday, assaulted a
I _ .._IMMEDIA TEFU TTURE RBLEAK i aeyetraasaie

7&9

75c

AUD. A.

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The ALLEY presents

COMMANDER CODY
and his LOST PLANET AIRMEN
plus Stephen and John
Sat. 2 Shows 7:30, 10:00
Price $1.75

Sun. 2 Shows 7:30,
- Price $1.50
(WHAT A DEAL!)

COM I N'G: Sept. 24, 25, 26
MISSISSIPPI FRED McDOWELL
plus TERRY TATE
PINBALL ALLEY IN THE BASEMENT
ADMISSION ALWAYS FREE

with 36 districts, or fewer than
half of the midsummer target list
for further integration this fail.
Most major Southern cities w i t h
the largest numbers of black child-
ren are subject to desegregation
orders by federal courts rather'
than HEW voluntary plans.
The HEW officials, who declin-
ed to be quoted by name, c o n-:
ded that one factor in deciding
not to prosecute some districts is
the long-distance busing that
would be required to integrate re-'
maining schools with racial im-
balances.
They listed these other reasons
for dropping cases against v a r-
ious districts: Computer figures on
the racial composition of individ-
ual schools were incorrect; t b e
segregation was determined to be
inadvertent and not the result of
discriminatory action; court suits
pre-empted HEW action.

WASHINGTON (A) - The Nix-
on administration expects Ha-
noi to toughen its bargaining
stance in the immediate weeks
ahead. However, it forsees the
possibility of serious peace ne-
gotiations' sometime thereafter
if Saigon's leadership remains
stable and U.S. troop withdraw-
als proceed in a dignified way.
In saying this, yesterday; in-
formed officials reaffirmed Pres-
ident Nixon's position that he
prefers a negotiated end to- the
war and in any event wants to
leave South Vietnam able to de-
fend itself from a "Communist
takeover."
If by next year at this time

this policy is successful, 'the of-
ficials said, it will render in-
significant such questions as spe-
cific troop pullout rates and
beating withdrawal deadlines.
They portrayed South Vietnam
as now in a crunch period, with
U.S. withdrawals at a critical
point coinciding with the Thieu
government's election time diffi-
culties.
The wide-ranging account by
informed officials, who spoke
under rules barring attribution,
amounted to a defense of Nixon's
Vietnam policy and an appeal for
a toning down of domestic criti-
cisms of it.

1 l 1r l t X l il' 1S V l' U L'1Y2
Nixon expects toughening
in Hanoi bargaining stand

L

11\

Ypsilanti, Mich.

Ph.-4$3-2062

Subscrlibe To
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Phone 764-0558

Viet Cong suspect the day after
the operation by firing a rifle over
his head during an interrogation.
The defense had asked for dis-
missal of all charges against Me-
dina. Howard's action left for the
jury to begin deliberating next
week the one charge of premedi-
tated murder, involuntary man-
slaughter in the deaths of the 100
Vietnamese peasants.
Howard said he would instruct
the jury that if Medina is found
guilty of wrongdoing in the deaths
of the 100, the jury may convict
him of negligible homicide, which
carries a one-year sentence. In-
voluntary manslaughter carries a
maximum penalty of three years.
The Michigan Daily, edited and man-
aged by students at the University of
Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second
Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-
igan. 420 Maynaid Street, Ann Arbor,
Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues-
day through Sunday morning Univer-
sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by
carrier, $10 by mail.
Summer Session published Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-
tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail.
1214 S. University
4 DIAL 8-6416
FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT
FESTIVAL
"'STOLEN KISSES' is easily
Truffaut's best and further evi-
dence that he may be the finest
comic artist now working in the
movies. "-Life Mag.

Join The Daily Staff
Phone 764-0558

I . __ . _ _ _ _ - _ _ _ _ _ - - - - - ,

WORSHIP

Give The
Bear a break.
You're the only one who can.
Because all Smokey can do is ask you to help prevent forest fires.
He can't break your matches. Or douse your campfires. Or snuff out.
your cigarets.
Only you can.
So, please, lend Smokey a hand.
And maybe while you're at it, lend him your voice too: tell people to
give the bear a break.
He deserves it.
So does America. 'j <,

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw Ave.
Ministers:
Robert E. Sanders, John R. Waser,
Donald A. Drew, Brewster H. Gere
THE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH
1917 Washtenaw Ave.
Erwin A. Gaede, Minister
Church School and Service at 10:30 a.m.-
Sermon: "Broken and Accepted."
BETHLEHEM UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST
423 S. Fourth Ave.
Telephone 665-6142
Ministers: T. L. Trost, Jr., R. E. Simonson
9:00 a.m.-Morning Prover.
10:00 a.m. - Worship Service and Church
School.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
1833 Washtenaw Ave.
SUNDAY
10:30 a.m.-Worship Services. Sunday School
(2-20 years).
Infants room available Sunday and Wednesday.
Public Reading Room, 306 E. Liberty St. -
uMan.. 10-- e_- nt__I0- ,(nedcStn

FIRST UNITED
CHURCH AND
FOUNDATION

METHODIST
WESLEY

State at Huron and Washington
Church-662-4536
Wesley-668-6881
Dr. Hoover Rupert, Minister
Bartlett Beavin, Campus Minister
R. Edward McCracken, Campus Minister
9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Sermon by Dr. Hoover
Rupert: "The Collapse of Consensus."
Broadcast WNRS 1290 AM, WNRZ 103 FM,
11:00 to noon.
WESLEY FOUNDATION ITEMS:
Sunday, Sept. 19:
5:30 p.m.-Celebration, Wesley Lounge.
6:15 p.m.-Supper, Pine Room. 50c.
7:00-8:30 p.m.-Program with Dr. John Jury
speaking on "The Church as a Movement
and Life Style."
Monday, Sgpt. 20:
8:00-9:3b p.m.-"Christian Concepts in the
70's" with Ed McCracken, Wesley Lounge.
Wednesday, Sept. 22:
Noon-Luncheon Discussion: "Why Situation
Ethics?" with Bartlett C. Beavin, Pine
Room. Lunch 25c. Out in time for 1
o'clocks.
Thursday, Sept. 23:
Noon-Luncheon Discussion: "The Christian
and Militarism" with Bartlett C. Beavin,
Pine Room. Lunch 25c. Out in time for 1
o'clocks.

UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
(The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod)
1511 Washtenaw Ave.
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
Sunday at 9:15 and at 10:30 a.m.--Services.
Sunday at 9:15 a.m.-Bible Study.
Sunday at 6:00 p.m.-Supper-Program,
Wednesday at 10:00 p.m.-Midweek Vespers.
HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH
3150 Glacier Way
Pastor: Charles Johnson
For information, t'ransportation, personalized
help, etc., phone 769-6299 or 761-6749.

Academy Award
Winner

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ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL
306 N. Division
1, 3, 5th SUNDAYS
8:00 a.m.-Holy Communion.
10:00 a.m.-Holy Communion.
7:00 p.m.-Evening Prayer.
2, 4th SUNDAYS
8:00 a.m.-Holy Communion.
10:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer.
7:00 p.m.-Holy Communion.

C

;HURCH

A Film By FRANCOISTRUFFAUT
"STOLEN KISSES"
i .COLOR byDeluxe
-..AND ..

PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH
2580 Packard Road-971-0773
Tom Bloxam. Pastor-971-3152

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