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October 01, 1971 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-10-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Speak of me as I am. Nothing extenuate,
Nor set down aught in malice. Then must you speak
Of one that loved not wisely, but too well...
OLIVIER is OTHELLO
THE GREATEST SHAKESPEARE EVER PUT ON FILM,
BY THE GREATEST ACTOR OF OUR TIME.

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

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Sftrligan

antty

page three

Ann Arbor, Michigan

Friday, October 1, 1971

SUNDAY.
AUD. A, ANGELL

ONE
DAY
ONLY

at 1-4-7-10 pm

sponsored by orson welles film society

C CMA 1
FRIDAY, SATURDAY
FINN IGAN'S WAKE (1959)
film adaptation of James Joyce's novel done by di-
rector Mary Ellen Bute with an Irish cast.
- AND -
F ILM (1965)

pantomime with Buster Keaton, written
Beckett, and directed by Alan Schneider.
SHOWN TOGETHER --7 and 9:15
75c

by Samuel
AUD. A

-OPENING TONIGHT-
THE ALLEY
330 MAYNARD
Arthur "Big Boy Crudup
"Elvis Presley's Inspirational Tool"
AND
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
Fri. 7:30-10:00 Sat. 7:30-10:00
Sun. 8:30 ALL TICKETS $2.25
COMING: OCT. 9, 10: DR. ROSS-LIGHTIN' SLIM
OCT. 22, 23, 24: JIMMY REED
PINBALL ALLEY WAITING ROOM IN THE BASEMENT
ARM, Michigan Film Society
Issho yi Gong and Ecumenical Campus Center
flapan Jeilwoat
TON IGHT
Kwaidan
1965 Cannes Prizewinner-160 mins. color
Four traditional ghost stories directed by Masaki
Kibayashi. "The ultimate, a film to revel in and re-
member."-Judith Crist. "A horror picture with an
extraordinarily delicate and sensuous quality, an
exquisite thriller, mystical and spectacular."-N.Y.
Times.
NAT. SCI. A UD.
7 & 9:30 Info: 761-7849 $1.25

news briefs
By The Associated Press
THE UNITED STATES took a hard line yesterday against
devaluing the dollar and called on other governments for progress
in dismantling trade barriers as a condition for removal of the
ten per cent U.S. tariff surcharge.
Treasury Secretary John Connally delivered to the International
Monetary Fund meeting an address that was conciliatory but un-
yielding on the U.S. terms for ending the monetary stalemate.
He suggested a transitional period of freely floating currencies.
During this period, day-to-day dealings on world money markets
would determine approximate levels at which realistic exchange rates
could be pegged.
CBS NEWSMAN WALTER CRONKITE said yesterday that
politicians should leave the radio and television business to the
broadcasters and journalists.
The veteran journalist proposed as the "cleanest and perfect
solution" to what he sees as government intimidation of broadcast
news the elimination of all government control of broadcasting.
He proposed the Federal Communications Commission be stripped
of its authority to review a station's program content.
* * *
TWO PRISONERS FROM ATTICA testified yesterday they
were beaten by police after a riot at the prison was quelled
Sept. 13.
The prisoners said they were forced to run a gauntlet of police
and guards after they had surrendered and were stripped naked.
They claimed the offices hit them with sticks and belts, then put
them back three men to a cell
A U.S. APPEALS COURT yesterday reversed a former ru-
ing that the Democratic party's compromise formula for appor-
tioning state delegate strength to its 1972 national convention
is irrational and unconstitutional.
The court rejected a June 16 finding that the apportionment
must be based only on the number of Democrats voting in each state
in past elections.
The decision is thought to represent a major victory for Demo-
crats throughout the nation.
* * *
THE VETERANS ADMINISTRATION, faces a growing prob-
lem of drug abuse in its own wards, triggered in part by the in-
creasing numbers of Vietnam veterans among VA patients.
Cited as offenses are marijuana parties and flagrant heroin ad-
diction. In addition, addicts have been reported to hold up other pa-
tients to get money for their habits.
A VOTER REGISTRATION DRIVE at the Merchandises
Mart in Chicago, the world's largest commercial building, drew
large crowds yesterday, prompting organizers to plan drives in
office buildings in other cities.
An official said, "We had registrations at the rate of eight at
minute. This is just the beginning. We will go to every city in the
next year and the registrations will have a dramatic effect on the
national elections."
SHIPPING FIRMS in New York proposed a new guaranteed
income plan yesterday, seeking to avoid a strike of 45,000 Easte
and Gulf Coast longshoremen that would tie up nearly all thet
nation's deep water ports.
Meanwhile, the givernment prepared to halt any walkout with
a Taft-Hartley injunction. Most major West Coast ports are already
shut down by similar strikes.
The dockworkers were scheduled to go on strike this morning.E
THE HOUSE approved yesterday a massive new child devel-r
opment program that the administration said could cost $20 bil-s
lion a year.
Overriding administration protests, the House adopted the pro-
posal 203 to 181, but trimmed the number of children eligible for helpr
under the program.
The vote made the program part of the Economic Opportunitys
Act. The Senate has passed a similar version of the bill, and a com-
promise will have to be worked out.V

Thieu has said he will res
half the votes, and his impli
does not win a larger majority.
He predicted to aides and news-
men, however, that he might re-
ceive as much as 80 per cent of
the vote, and this seems possible.
What would happen then is un-
certain.
He has told newsmen he would
rather resign than see U.S. aid
to Vietnam cut off, and, although
the Nixon administration is com-
mitted to Thieu, Congress is like-
ly to take a hard look at continu-
ing aid.
He has told the country's lead-
ing generals he will resign rather
than have the nation torn by a
coup-if they want another lead-
er. He has said he expects to
bring peace to the country within
two years, and will resign once
this task is accomplished.
This makes his continuance in
office contingent on American aid
and the armed forces' support,
both unpredictable factors.
Through a series of restric-
tions placed on the election, Thieu
eliminated from the contest his
two major opponents, Vice Presi-
dent Nguyen Cao Ky and Gen-
eral Big Minh.
Despite pressure from Wash-
ington to maintain at least the
facade of democracy, Thieu said
his opponents' withdrawal in no
way affected the election's legal-
ity.

ign if
ed he

he receives
might step

fewer than
down if he

Roads to peace
Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban is shown during a major ad-
dress before the U.N. General Assembly yesterday. He proposed
"five roads to peace" in the Middle East, including direct talks
with Egypt at the U.N.

SAIGON (G - Despite widely publicized demonstrations
against President Nguyen Van Thieu and his uncontested
campaign for re-election, few doubt that he will get the
"vote of confidence" he seeks in Sunday's polling.
The opposition is the most cohesive and widespread of
Thieu's political career but it lacks significant popular sup-
port. He has succeeded in either suppressing or ignoring his
foes.

Thieu predicts 80% support

WIDESPREAD OPPOSITION

N. Viet drive
slows near
Cambodia,
SAIGON (A') - The South Viet-
namese command flew reinforce-
ments yesterday to the aid of two
surrounded artillery bases along
the Cambodian border, but senior
U.S. officers said the North Viet-
namese offensive has slowed, at
least temporarily.
About 2,000 government troops
were ferried by American and
South Vietnamese helicopters to
both sides of the frontier in ef-
forts to relieve units at Fire Base
Alpha in eastern Cambodia and
Fire Base Tran Hung Dao on the
Vietnamese side of the border.
At last report by nightfall, the
defenders still held the bases and
the airlifted relief forces were
moving toward them.
Officers at Tay Ninh, forward
headquarters 55 miles northwest
of Saigon said enemy rocket and
mortar attacks dropped off dras-
days.
tically yesterday from the heavy
shellings of the four previous'
A senior U.S. adviser said North
Vietnamese pressure on the two
fire bases has "eased consider-
ably." They had been the main
targets of the enemy attacks since
Sunday.
Despite a South Vietnamese
counterdrive launched Wednes-
day, no significant ground action
has been reported. This is in the
same area where U.S. and South
Vietnamese units drove into en-.
emy sanctuaries in the spring of
1970.

EXPRESS OPTIMISM:

U.S., Russia sign
dis~armame~nt naeU~s

- ---.. - - v.vv- W v He asked for a vote of confi-
dence in policies which he claims
WASHINGTON () - Secretary of State William Rogers and haverestored relative peace and
Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko signed two disarmament prosperity, especially in rural
side agreements yesterday and promised that the big powers will areas.
strive for a major accord to curb their missile systems. The people can vote against
At a State Department signing ceremony, Rogers hailed the him, Thieu says, by casting an
agreements on modernizing the Washington-Moscow hot line and "irregular" ballot - by tearing
guarding against accidental nuclear war as "this new imperative of the ballot in half, defacing it, or
the uclar ae "putting an empty envelope in the
the nuclear age." bx
But both he and Gromyko noted the agreements fall far short Thieu is almost certain to win
of the avowed goal of the U.S.-Soviet Strategic Arms Limitation a considerable majority in rural
Talks (SALT) to'limit the nuclear arms race. See THIEU, Page 8

Rogers said "considerable pro---__
gress has been made in this larger
endeavor" for a mutual restric-RacialcSpeld,
tion on antiballistic missiles AB-
M's and on offensive missiles, "but

much remains to be done.-
Of the SALT negotiations re-
suming in Vienna in November,I
he said: "We must intensify our
efforts to reach agreements to
limit the means as well as the risk
of waging nuclear war. We shall
strive toward this objective."
Gromyko said in the same vein:
"The agreements signed today do
not yet solve in any way the sub-
stance of the problem of limiting
strategic armaments. This task is
still outstanding and the partici-
pants in the talks should seek
ways to solve it."

Mass.; nonstudents enter school

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (A') -
Police turned back 100 white
youths marching on city hall
yesterday in this city beset by
a week of clashes involving
blacks and whites and youths
of French and Spanish extrac-
tion.
Three of the demonstrators
were permitted into the office
of Mayor Frank Freedman,

where it was announced they
had agreed to a proposal to set
up talks between black and
white high school pupils.
Thirty-one persons have been
injured since disturbances be-
gan Sept. 22, including three
French-speaking youths who
were wounded by a blast from a
s h o t g u n following clashes
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. Pubiished daily Tues-
day through Sunday 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 mail.

Wednesday n i g ht between
youngsters of French - Cana-
dian background and Puerto
Rican youths. Two of the
wounded youths were hospital-
ized, one in poor condition.
The violence began last week
with school officials blaming
nonstudent white "outside agi-
tators" for entering Technical
High School and attacking
black pupils. Twenty - eight
person:s have been arrested, in-
cluding two demonstrators who
failed to obey a police order to
move yesterday.
.. No explanation was given for
the outbreaks between gangs
of French and Spanish-speak-
ing youths in the city's north
end.

DIAL 8-6416

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