NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 C4r Sfr~igaun IBat page three ann arbor film cooperative Gregory Peck, Orson Welles in John Huston's MOBY DICK based on Herman Melville's novel Screenplay by Ray Bradbury and John Huston TUESDAY - September 28 - ONLY! Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, September 28, 1971 y TAbriefs By The Associated Prtess iNew Mansfield auditorium a angell hall 7 & 9:30 p.m., still only 75c children 35c J proposal seeks COMING THURSDAY-Midnight Cowboy THE ALLEY CINEMA PRESENTS TONIGHT-TUESDAY, SEPT. 28 ON THE WATERFRONT dir. ElJA KAZAN, 1954 With BRANDO, ROD STEIGER, KARL MALDEN, LEE J. COBB, EVA MARIE SAINT SHOWS AT 7 AND 9:30 P.M. $1.00 330 Maynard across from Nickels Arcade sponsored by ann arbor film cooperative THE ALLEY presents 330 MAYNARD Fri.-Sot.-Sun.; Oct. 1, 2, 3 2 shows 2 shows 1 show ARTHUR "BIG BOY" CRUDUP "ONE OF THE GREATEST BLUES ARTISTS OF ALL TIME" Elvis Presley's Inspirational Tool" PLUS JOHNNY SHINES spent his early years with Robert Johnson and played with all the greats-Muddy Waters, Otis Spann, Little Walter, and Sonny Boy Williamson TICKETS ALL SHOWS $2.25 ADVANCE TICKETS: SALVATION RECORDS 330 MAYNARD-1103 S. UNIV. COMING. Oct. 9, 10: DR. ROSS-LIGHTIN' SLIM OCT. 15, 16, 17: ALBERT KING OCT. 22, 23, 24: JIMMY REED & THE CHICAGO BLUES BAND Pinball Alley Waiting Room in the Basement PRESIDENT NIXON AND EMPEROR HIROHITO of Japan.r, r."i met for 25 minutes Sundaynight in Anchorage, Alaska White House officials said even though there was nothing specific to announce, the private discussion between the President and the; emperor and brief talks with their key diplomatic advisors, produced enough of a feeling of good will to ease, somewhat, the strained rela- tions between the U.S. and Japan. Hirohito is the first reigning Japanese emperor to visit a foreign land in the 2,631 history of the monarch., REP. MORRIS UDALL, (D-Ariz.), yesterday alleged there is a strong appearance om impropriety" in the selection of under- i? ::: writers for a $250 millionhoffering of U.S. Postal Service bonds. . «:"<>..aid Udall, chairman of the House Postal Service subcommitesi a two-month investigation by his staff found no "compelling" evidence ! of violations of the criminal code but accused postal officials of a ,,: lesser degree of misconduct and impropriety." * * * THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION (FDA) yesterday said it has found a persistent and poisonous chemical called PCBs in seven packaged food products. Hirohito i The chemical is apparently the result of contamination from con-! Emperor Hirohito of Japan (s tainer's made of recycled cardboard. mark's King Frederik. Hirohit The FDA said it found the DDT-like chemical in one sample' following a two hour stop in An of Sunshine shredded wheat at a tlevel 48 times the federal action with President Nixon. (See New guideline. The agency also found the chemical at levels up to four -- -____ times the federal standard in shredded wheat, spaghetti dinner, corn LEADERS MEET: meal, mixed baby cereal, grits, noodle dinner and pancake mix. U.S. withdrawal WASHINGTON (p) - Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield (D.-Mont.), yesterday introduced another amend- ment seeking withdrawal of U.S. forces from Indochina with- in six months, and said he will press the issue "again and again and again" until American involvement ends. The amendment would declare as U.S. policy a with- drawal of American forces within six months if U.S. prison- ers of war are released. Mansfield's original amendment was approved earlier by the Senate, rejected by the House, and compromised in the final version of the draft ex- -- in Denmark econd from right) chats with Den- arrived in Copenhagen last night chorage, Alaska where he conferred s Briefs.) tension bill. The version Congress approved asks President Nixon to negotiate a final date for U.S. withdrawal. Republican Leader Hugh Scott, (R-Pa.), said last week the new amendment could be moot before it is enacted because of Nixon's own withdrawal program. The new amendment, like the first one, will be added to a bill h ndl d by the Armpn 2d e noi a ueu fy ue fri eu committees of the House ate, and it could again N. Viets srvices and Sen- run into * * * ISRAELI PREMIER GOLDA MEIR said yesterday in an inter- view that the United States is undermining its own quest for a Middle East peace by denying Israel deliveries of warplanes. Meir contends that Egypt is likely to see this as ground for not compromising in peace efforts. She said also that in a situation where: Egypt is receiving continuous military aid from the Soviet Union, the imbalance might encourage Cairo into a new battle against Israel. A SPECIAL GREEK MILITARY COURT last night heard Lady Amalia Fleming testify that she had assisted in a plot to free from prison a would-lie assassin of the Greek premier. Fleming, widow of the discoverer of penicillin, is charged along with two Americans and a Greek, of associating to "form a gang" andk "assist a prisoner to escape."c The prisoner, Alexander Panagoulis, attempted the execution of Premier George Papadopoulos in August, 1968, and was spared the death sentence only after international appeals. * n app* s THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT acknowledged yesterday over- hearing on a so-called nationl security wiretap the voices of five persons charged with conspiring to plant bombs in four cities.+ In papers filed with the District Court in Detroit, the government' said that although the five "were never the subjects of direct elec- tronic surveillance" they "did participate in conversations overheard, by the federal government." The five are among 13 members of the Weatherman organization indicted by a federal grand jury in Detroit more than a year ago. Ir 110 1110 o -114 110 o House resistance and a deadlock between the branches. " I U I ' I V j t j ,ft $,' Sen. John Stennis, (D-Miss.), chairman of the Armed Services " ' Committee, said the withdrawal amendment should be dealt with eC nop wm se as a separate measure, not tacked onto the big weapons - buying bill. LONDON (AP') - British axAd Irish prime ministers sought in' three-way summit talks yester-. day to head off the danger of civil war in Ireland. In day-long talks Britain's Edward Heath led the search for a politicaltruce between the feuding leaders of the Irish re- public and the Northern Ire- land government, Jack Lynch and Brian Faulkner. There was no evidence of im- mediate progress after the two- day parley recessed for the night. Heath, Lynch and Faulkner are all under fierce political pressures at home to yield little or nothing to their challengers. Nevertheless, .despite a news. blackout, informants reported one of Heath's starting points was a moveto discover if a process of compromise - Brit- ain's short-term aim - would follow any modification of Nor- thern Ireland's system of intern- ment without trial. Internment, introduced early in August, is at the center of Northern Ireland's latest strife. Faulkner insisted the system was essential for the security of the Protestant - ruled six counties and that mainly kncwn or suspected terrorists of the outlawed Irish Republic Army have been held. His opponents contend it has been used mainly on the basis of political selectivity, with members of the Roman Catho- lic. minority as the chief vic- tims, But the House wouldn't even have to consider a separate end- the-war measure, and even if one were passed in that fashion, it would be subject to a Nixon veto. Mansfield said as far as he is concerned, the fate of prisoners of war and missing Americans "at this late date is the only signifi- cant basis for this nation to re- main any longer in Vietnam." 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 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day throughSunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mall. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mall.. shell roads to Saigon SAIGON (P)-North Vietnamese troops kept up heavy pressure for a second day yesterday against South Vietnamese forces guarding the western and northern ap- proaches to Saigon. The attacks yesterday followed two ground assaults in the region Sunday and day-long bombard- ment of rockets and mortars against South Vietnamese posi- tions. The two-day surge of shellings and ground attacks on both sides of the Cambodian-South Vietna- mese border took a rising toll of South Vietnamese casualties and claimed two U.S. aircraft support- ing the Saigon troops. One North Vietnamese objec- tive appeared to be to open infil- tration corridors into the heart- land of South Vietnam. U.S. officers speculated that Hanoi also may have timed the attacks, and an increase in sap- per activity, to take advantage of internal political turmoil in South Vietnam. The unrest stems from opposi- tion to the one-man candidacy of President Nguyen Van Thieu in the presidential election next Sun- day. Kenward Elnisie (1971 Winner of the O'Hara Award for Poetry) Author of Book & Lyrics of "The Grass Harp" x- .1 w ill b e p re se n te d ina MASS MEETING for people interested in Registering the Student Vote i i Bowling Leagues Forming LAST CALL! Michigan Union Lanes Open Noon Mon.-Sat., IP.M. Sun. LUNCH-DISCUSSION TUESDAY, September 28, 12:00 Noon U.M. INTERNATIONAL CENTER Subject: "Policy Dimensions of the Attica bicident" Speoker: PROF. DAVID CHAMBER Professor of Criminal Law, U of M 8:30 p.m.-Tonight Anderson A & B in the Union sponsored by the Coalition to Register the Student Vote For Reservations call 662-5529 Cost: 50c Sponsored by: Ecumenical Campus Center and lnte,rnational Law Society i Special Poetry Reading SEATS NOW! MENDELSSOHN BOX OFFICE, 10-1, 2-5 1 Subscribe to The Michigan Daily ------ --- - Sponsored by U /M Extension Service and the Dept. of English 9"tf~iXa~~~l 5 Jealre Myw Wed. & Thur. SALE Sept. 29 & 30 TODAY 4 P.M. 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