NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Ann Arbor, Michigan PRESENTSI Sergei Eisenstein's 1 Wefs IVAN THE TERRIBLE Thursday and Friday-Part I SENATE MAJORITY LEADER Mike Mansfield said yester- Saturday and Sunday--Part 11 day he will introduce a new amendment to set a date for total jwithdrawal of U.S. troops from Indochina. Directed by Sergei Eisenstein between 1941 and Mansfield said he is hopeful that the House will support the new, 1946. Music by Prokofiev. /!amendment - expected to call for total U.S. pullout in six months if American prisoners are freed - which will be offered next week Eisenstein is the universally acclaimed master of as an amendment to the measure authorizing funds for military composition and editing and Ivan is his final and, hardware and research. perhaps, his most powerful work. The spectre of ( * Czar Ivan will touch you with greatness in this mov- WASHINGTON ) - THE HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS ing and awesome apotheosis of Russia's notorious ! COMMITTEE approved yesterday a revised version of President monarch. Nixon's tax program, trimming his proposals for business tax j relief by about $4.9 billion over three years and increasing in- ARCHIT ECT U R E AUDITORIUM dividual relief by $3.4 billion. The package approved for House action about Oct. 5 includes an investment credit and export aids for business, offset partly by t r0reductions in depreciation allowances, income tax reductions starting! on this year's income for individuals especially those in lower brac- __. - l Tbkets, and repeal of the excise tax on light trucks as well as auto- irk i gttn a'tin page three Thursday, September 23, 1971 2-China plan presented for approval to U._N UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (R - The United States and 16 other countries called yesterday on the General Assembly to seat Red China in the United Nations while permitting Na- tionalist China to remain. The long-awaited resolution also proposed that the Pe- king government should be given China's permanent seat in the Security Council, which carries with it the all-important veto power. The action came simultaneously with a preliminary round of debate in the assembly's 25-nation steering com- mittee in which Albania's vice minister of foreign af- " fairs, Reis Malile, denounced Ind[ ans the U.S. two Chinas policy as an anti-Chinese maneuver. Maelneasserted that the U bth reslutonwas intended to delayb a t e ' i a solution of the 21-year-old con- troversy over who should occupy China's U.N. seat.Ugovt "We oppose this maneuver," he govte said. "It must be rejected." Malile spoke after U.S. Ambas- WASHINGTON (P) - I n d i a n sador George Bush proposed that militants fought with police yes- the U.S. item and a rival pro- terday in the lobby of the Bureau posal, sponsored by Albania and 16 of Indian Affairs (BIA) as they other countries, be debated con- tried to protest what they claim currently in the 130-nation as- to be administration moves to stif- sembly. le reforms giving them greater The Alley - 330 Maynard FRIDAY, 24 PRESENTS SATURDAY, 25 SUNDAY, 26 MISSISSIPPI FRED McDOWELL and TERRY TATE Fri., Sat.: 2 Shows 7:30-10:00 Sunday: 1 Show 8:30 TICKETS ALL SHOWS $2.00 No one wanted the blues master to leave the stage but he had to give way to the other artists. "They have to be heard. You know they got a right," Mississippi Fred McDowell explained. And anyone who had seen the Arhoolie Records artist's set should consider themselves lucky, for they had been treated to a blues giant who had lived it a lifetime and played it for the betterapart of three decades. He accompanied his vocals with Stella, a Gibson electric guitar, slightly amplified, and Jim Tutunjian on Fender bass. The set was pure blues, smooth and clean, as McDowell allowed his fingers to float across Stella's frets augmenting a strong vocal blues style which McDowell could truly call his own. "My Babe," "Baby Please Don't Go," "Good Morn' Lil' Schoolgirl," and "You Got to Move," had everyone foot stomping and drifting at the same time. The man has lived his music. Also appearing was Tom Everett, RCA Records artist. Everett, playing a 12-string guitar and accompanied by a three-man back-up, ran through several pop country tunes from his new LP, "Porchlight On in Oregon," "Excitation Revire," "Theresa," and "Bad Dreams," fea- tured a good vocal effort on Everett's part and a very tight group. But Everett does not have the total control of his voice as yet. His style, somewhat akin to Roy Orbison's vocal style, really showed when he sang Orbison's "It's Over." Everett sits on the threshold of a fine career, and his group is more than adequate. There will be more heard from this RCA artist in the future. BOB GLASSENBERG Billboard Magazine Sept. 4, 1971 COMING: Oct. 1, 2, 3-Arthur Bigboy Crudup And Johnny Shines ADVANCE TICKETS at Salvation Records, Pinball Alley in the Basement-ADMISSION ALWAYS FREE EAST AND WEST GERMAN negotiators broke off talks yes- terday aimed at carrying out the four power agreement on Berlin. Egon Bahr, West German state secretary and chief negotiator, said the talks were deadlocked over the issue of translating into German the text of the agreement signed on Sept. 3. Bahr told newsmen that the two Germanys had come to an agreement on the German translation and impl'ed that the East? Germans had gone back on what was agreed on. a * THE TRENTON BOARD OF EDUCATION voted Tuesday night to fire 330 of the school system's 333 teachers because of an eight day work stoppage by those teachers. Superintendent J. Warren Adair said the board viewed the strike as illegal. The board instructed Adair to begin recruiting new teachers to fill the vacancies. The Trenton Education Association which represents the striking teachers said the TEA had offered four separate proposals for at- tempting to resolve the impasse, and the board rejected all four offers. ** * -Associated Press ABOUT 300 DEMONSTRATORS marched in front of the United Nations yesterday carrying banners and signs supporting the seat- ing of Communist Chinese regime in the General Assembly. AUGUST FIGURES: Prices, wages climb; gas hike major factor :1 x Y. . C. THE NATIONAL LEAGUE of Cities agreed Tuesday to support an amendment to the U.S. Constitution which would "outlaw or at least severely control handguns in this country." The new rule should leave the details of prohibition of handguns the federal government and preserve the right of the people own long guns. to to The government said today in its first consumer price report since President Nixon ordered the wage - price freeze that both living costs and wages rose in August. Living costs increased three- tenths of one per cent, largely because of a sharp boost in gas- oline prices, but the government said the figures did not reflect the wage price freeze because the figures were compiled before it took effect. Average wages of some 45 million rank-and-file workers rose 2 cents an hour to $3.44 and $1.43 a week to $129 a week in August, and purchasing power edged up within five-tenths of one per cent of the record high of 1968, the report said. The August price hikes pushed the Consumer Price Index up to 122.2, meaning that it cost $12.22 last month for every $10 worth of typical family pur- chases in the 1967 base period. The sharpest rise was a 3.7 per cent hike in gasoline prices, largest in more than a year. Hodgson said Nixon's Cost of Living Council set up to monitor the freeze has no plans to order a gasoline price rollback as de- manded by Sen. William Prox- mire, D-Wis. Neither, said Hodgson, are there any plans to roll back large wage hikes negotiated just before the freeze was imposed, such as the AFL-CIO Communi- cations Workers' contract cov- ering some 50,000 telephone workers. The report said fruits and vegetables dropped 1.9 per cent in August. Fresh fruits, vegeta- bles and eggs are not covered by the freeze. "Beef prices increased less and pork prices more than they us- Sponsors of the so-called Al- banian resolution are seeking to seat Peking and at the same time expel the Chinese Nationalist dele- gation. There is only one China, Malile said. The U.S. proposal gained some prestigious support at the last minute when Japan agreed to be a cosponsor, but its prospects for approval were uncertain. U.S. of- ficials, however, continued to ex- press optimism. The United States and 16 co- sponsors submitted a second reso- lution declaring the expulsion of Nationalist China to be "an im- portant question." This would re- quire a two-thirds majority for any move to oust the Taiwan dele- gation. The U.S.-backed resolutions rep- resent a major shift in policy for the Nixon administration, appar- ently linked with the President's planned visit to Peking and other steps to improve relations with the Chinese Communists. A major objective of the United States, however, as stated by top officials, is to preserve a place for Taiwan in the world organization. self-determination. The Indians were attempting to make a citizens arrest on John Crow, deputy commissioner of the BIA who they charge is a tool of the anti-Indian elements within the Interior Department. Twenty-six Indians, mostly from the American Indian Movement' (AIM) and the National Indian Youth Council, were arrested and charged by the Interior Depart- ment with illegal entry. But BIA Commissioner Louis R. Bruce ask- ed Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton to drop the charges. TuSsday, Navajo Tribal Chair- man Peter MacDonald told a news conference that Crow is cutting short reforms Bruce had initiated. Most of the reforms - such as giving Indians more protection from invasions of their land, wat- er and mineral resources; c o n- tracting out some BIA functions to the tribes and downgrading the powers of the BIA superintendents to give Indians themselves more say-so - were endorsed by Presi- dent Nixon himself in a speech a year ago. The action came at the urging of Detroit's Mayor Roman Gribbs who said, "statistics show that it is not criminals, but friends and relatives, which are responsible for 80 per cent of all homicides." WASHINGTON W) - The House accepted yesterday a Sen- ate-passed bill to ban the Amchitka Island underground nuclear test "unless the President gives his direct approval for such test." The Senate's restriction, on use of funds for the test was writ- ten into a compromise $4.7-billion public works appropriation bill. The House passed the compromised 376-0 and sent it to the Sen- ate for final action. ually do," the report said. prices rose less than usual." "Egg III . .... .............._ :3 11E III t < ooo<=::o<><>o ><><>ooC o c-= GAY LIBERATION! Come out to A- MEETING: Thurs., Sept. 23, 8:30 P.M. Union, 3-North, SGC, Health Lounge Topic: "GLF & UM-A Fair Exchange?" POTLUCK: Friday, Sept. 24, 6:30 P.M. 3! Canterbury, above Mark's, William St. BYO Food, etc.-ALL WELCOME! L>o co=>c=o . o oc_><=o= .. -} I