NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 94P Siig3&f I43all page three STARTS TONIGHT! "UNFORGETTABLE! IT IS SO BEAUTIFUL THAT IT REQUIRES MORE THAN ONE VISIT!" -The New Yorker. "A STUNNING, RICHLY ROMANTIC EVOCATION OF TIME AND PLACE! Visconti's Venice is a cine- matic dream. Bogarde gives a superior perform- ance!" -Playboy "MIGHT WELL BE VISCONTI'S MASTERPIECE! Fascinating, enigmatic, overwhelmingly seductive in its inner logic. Its physical grace and beauty are breathtaking !" -Show Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, September 22, 1972 "EXTRAORDINARILY BEAUTIFUL!" -Rex Reed "VISCONTI IS A GENIUS!" -Gannett News Syndicate "REMARKABLE! A STUNING VISUAL RECREA- TION!" -New York "A MASTERPIECE OF POWER AND BEAUTY!" -Cue Magazine THE CELEBRATED STORY OF A MAN OBSESSED BY IDEAL BEAUTY. Inews briefs By The Associated Press PRESIDENT NIXON wound up his survey of post-freeze pro- posals yesterday, and will reportedly be ready to unveil his "phase II" program for the economy in mid-October. The timing of the announcement is planned to "give everyone 30 days to prepare themselves" for what will follow the freeze, accord- ing to Senate Minority Leader Hugh Scott (R-Penn.). Meanwhile, the House Ways and Means committee approved the controversial business tax credits portion of Nixon's economic plan making only minor alterations in the original p1'oposal. * * * TERRORISTS touched off a bomb yesterday at the home of a labor leader once mentioned as a possible running mate for President Nguyen Van Thieu. The target of the attack, Tran Quoc Buu president of South Vietnam's million-member Confederation of Labor escaped unhurt from the blast which destroyed his living room. The incident came at the end of a politically turbulent day as student demonstrations and opposition blasts against the one-man candidacy of Thieu continued. * BUSSING from minority dominated schools to integrated schools improves the education of black and Mexican-American elementary students a recent report states. The report, based on a survey taken in Sacremento, Calif. shows that in tests of arithmetic and reading ability minority students studying in integrated situations consistently outscored their coun- terparts in minority dominated schools. Dr. Donald Hall of the Sacramento Board of Education said there was no noticeable drop or gain in scores by whites after minor- ity students were bused into their schools. * A* FRENCH NATIONAL RADIO speculated last night that Mao- Tse-Tung was either dead or seriously ailing. The Chinese Embassy in Ottawa Canada said yesterday it had no information concerning the health of Mao, and monitors in Tokyo re- ported nothing new about him in broadcasts from Peking. French press speculation is apparently based on a series of puzzling incidents including refusal of Chinese off icialp to talk to newsmen, and reports that the celebration of China's National Day, Oct. 1, had been called off. BUSING OPPONENTS in Pontiac said yesterday they will seek passage of a constitutional amendment permitting parents to determine where their children will attend school. Sponsors of the amendment say they will attempt to collect 250,000 China debate nears as U.N.! session opens UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (R) - The United States expressed "overflowing" confidence of success in seating "both Chinas" as the United Nations General Assembly opened its 26th session yesterday. The United States said it had rounded up a dozen spon- sors for two resolutions aimed at seating the People's Republic of China in the General Assembly and on the Security Coun- cil and retaining Nationalist China's place in the assembly. Delegation spokesmen said the proposals would be put forth this week. Eighteen backers of the People's ~~ Republic of China, however, have submitted a resolution that would T ends seat Peking and oust Chiang Kai-P r t s en Shek's Taiwan regime. Informed diplomats expect the pro-Peking delegations to fight L a. prison the U.S. proposals in the steering committee today or tomorrow, NEW ORLEANS, La. ()-Fifty- with claims that the U.S. plan is four prisoners who had barricaded both a duplication of their own themselves in the Orleans Parish and a dodge to bar Peking, which Prison during a five-hour dis- has said it will not come to the turbance Monday night surrend- United Nations as long as Na- ered without resistance after noon tionalist China is a member. yesterday, officials said. The committee's agenda recom- The 54 were the last of a group mendations will be subject to ap- proval of the full assembly, which of more than 250 inmates who caused severe damage to the three- U. N. SECRETARY GENERAL U THANT (left) greets U.S. Am- bassador to the United Nations George Bush prior to the opening of the 26th General Assembly of the United Nations in New York yesterday. NEW RULING: State- game statutes to*be enforced against Indians WARNER BROS PRESENTS AILM LBY J WINNER GRAND PRIX CANNES 25th ANNIVERSARY AWARD p LUO40 \!SGAru WARNER BROS, PRESEN7,E A FILM BY LUCH'INO VISCON T STARRING DIRK BOGARDE N "DEATH IN VENICE" / BU' / NDRESEN sUESLVANA MANG('AN / C^ /SCREENPLAYBYCOA USTN /UAM G TECNAV0SON* SCPP§AtBYVISCONTI BADALUCCO FRO THE NOVELtBY THE)MAS EfAN/ PRODUCED' & ( TI ASOCATEEXECUTNE SCTBY LUCHI IN XJUVISCO N / CE ROBE GORDON 'OM EXECUTIVE PRODUCER - MARIO GALO ! FROM WAER OYBEOS .A KINNEY LESURE SERVI~C[tp Q LANSING U) - The Michigan Natural Resources Department said yesterdayrthat starting next Monday it will resume applying all state fish and game laws to In- dian fishermen, hunters and trap-' pers. The Department said it will "ri- gidly enforce" the laws and "re- quire full compliance" by all In- dians throughout. the state except the L'Anse and Vieux DeSert bands of the Chippewa tribe along the Keweenaw Bay area covered in a recent state high court opin- ion. fishing rights under five disputed treaties were rescinded when Michivan became a state and gained title to lands held by the federal government. The department said "com- passionate" commercial licenses' will be available to Indians in1 areas where additional netting "will not place undue pressure on, Great Lakes fish stocks." It said it also will back legis- lation allowing Indians free sport fishing and hunting licenses. A court battle by Indian fisher- men contesting the department's decision is expected. meets rFriday. Debate and voting on th China resolutions is expected on the 10-day period beginning Oct. 18. Indonesian Foreign Minister Adam Malik, newly elected presi- dent of the assembly, focused on the China question in his address, urging the organization to forge "a universality of membership" for the United Nations. Leading issues besides China among the 109 items on the pro- posed agenda for the session are how to make peace in the Middle East and who should be U.N. sec- retary-general after U Thant leav- es at the end of this year. story structure during the Inci- dent. Officials had reported early in the day that the disturbance was "all over," but Warden A. J. Fal- kenstein acknowledged at mid- mornihg that the 54 were locked in the cell blocks of one tier and had refused breakfast. Criminal Sheriff Louis A. Heyd Jr. said the last 54 surrendered shortly after noon. He said they were being searched for possible concealed weapons. O PiH DPorUM SIFTH AVENUE AT LIBERTY DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR INFORMATION 761-9700 SHOWN 6:45 & 9 P.M. Subscribe to The Daily Phone 764-0558 SHOP WEDNESDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. signatures statewide to get the issue on the November 1972 state The court's ruling earlier this ballot. spring held that Indians under Pontiac's busing program ,ordered by U.S. District Court Judge several centuries old federal trea- Damon Keith has been upheld by the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Ap- ties are exempt from conservation peals and is presently on appeal by the Ponitiac School Board before laws because they were granted the .S.Supeme our. :unrestricted fishing and hunting the U.S. Supreme Court rights in exchange for deeding lands to the federal government. A FEDERAL JUDGE yesterday ordered the massive Tennes- The ruling raised a storm of see-Tombigbee water way project in Mississippi halted until he controversy among white-orient- can determine its effect on the environment. ed sportsmen's groups and the, The decision, the third such victory for the Environmental De- court later issued a clarifying, fense Fund, was termed "judicial tyranny" yesterday by Mississippi statement that not all Indians were Senator James Eastland, a Democrat, covered by the ruling as'had been The proposed project would create a 300-foot-wide waterway widely supposed. in the northeastern part of the state. Department re-examination of old Indian treaties, one source .I .CUPON) . said, made it "patently clear that ( )it was the intent of the drafters : M rM n i's that the rights were temporary s and precarious and subject to re- FRESubmarine ' vision." The department position, work- FREE SOFT DRINK with ed out in coordination with Atty.1 each Mr. Mini's purchase * Gen. Frank Kelley and Gov. Mil- r liken's office, is that apart from .* Offer good thru 10-1-71 at I tetet oee nteArl S. University location only u the treaty covered in the April jin~mm~~Supreme Court case, hunting and GOVT. DECL ASSFIES Pentagon Papers released I i WASHINGTON ( P) - The Pen- tagon Papers which caused such a hullaballoo when they first ap- peared in the press were sent to the printers yesterday enroute to general sale. The officially declassified docu- ments dealing with U.S. involve- ment in Vietnam were sent to Con- gress yesterday and rushed to the government printers. at once. Four volumes reportedly dealing with peace negotiations and prisoner- release nnegotiations were not re- leased for publication. Public printer A.N. Spencer said they'll be ready ror public sale within a week-but he foresees no heavy demand for them at $6 a set. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. -. 5 7 . House Armed Services Commit- tee Chairman F. Edward Hebert, (D-La.) said only 20 of 435 House members have looked at t'e "top secret" copies of the 47-volume Vietnam study that have been available to them in his commit- tee room for three months. Rady Johnson, Secretary of De- fense Melvin Laird's legislative- affairs assistant, notified four con- gressional committees that four of the original 47 volumes had been eliminated entirely. "They deal exclusively with sen- sitive negotiations seeking peace and. the release of prisoners of war," Rady said in a cover let- ter. "Their disclosure would adver- sely affect continuing efforts to achieve those objectives." Pentagon spokesman Jerry Friedheim however said yesterday that among documents which will remain classified is a special Pen- tagon study of the Tonkin Gclf in- cident. The incident inspired the Tonkin Gulf resolution mandating to President Lyndon Johnson the power to prosecute the war in In- dochina. Disclosures of the Tonkin Gulf study appeared along with ac- counts of other Pentagon docu- ments in newspaper accounts this summer. Friedheim said an early Penta- gon study of the Tonkin Gulf in- cidentthat was sent to Congress along with the Pentagon papers in June has not been declassified and is not among the papers released for the public. The Pentagon said about 5 per cent of the material in the remain- ing 43 volumes had been censored out by some 100 Defense and State Department personnel since June 22 when Laird announced a de- classified version would be releas- ed in 90 days. Af Miss J and her "A UNIQUE AND OFTEN STUNNING SPECTACLE! DEMONIAC MAS- QUES AND BLASPHEMOUS ORGIES... AS A GLIMPSE OF HELL, IT IS SUPERB- LY FRIGHTENINGLY EFFECTIVE."- TIME MAGAZINE "KEN RUSSELL'S TURBULENT MOVIE ON-= SLAUGHT...HE HAS BREWED HIS OWN 'RUSSELL'S INFERNO' BRILLIANCE IS THERE WITH HARROWING FFECT. - CUE MAGAZINE special little dress by The Cottager will be seen in all the best places. It's that kind of dress in soft nylon jersey gathered slightly and sashed in back. 5-13P sizes. Wine or black. $22. MICK JAGGER. And MICK JAGGER. Vice. And Versa. PERFORMANCE JAMES FOX, as runaway gangster, meets recluse rock-star and ritual. Brilliant color photography. "Then came PERFORMANCE; that confused, remarkable, psy- chedelic radicalizer. One can interpret the, film as a vicious as- sault on capitalism . . . as well as a sermon on the potentialities of the drug culture for defusing its terror." Richard Neville, p. 30 CREEM magazine, October, 1971. THURSDAY-September 23-ONLY auditorium a 35 mm. 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. angell hall Rated "X" Still Only 75c the ann arbor film cooperative TUESDAY-John Huston's MOBY DICK with Gregory Peck . .. 0W6J~j VANESSA REDGRAVENOLIVER REED IN KEN RUSSELL'S FILM OF '"