NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 idritan tai1 rage three THE ALLEY CINEMA PRESENTS TONIGHT-WED., OCT. 6 Triumph of the Will dir. Leni Riefenstahl, 1934-1936 Hitler himself commissioned Riefenstahl to produce a record of the Party Congress in Nuremberg, placing 30 cameras and a staff of 120 at her disposal. This unique historical record of a fanati- cal devotion to the "Fuehrer" principle cleverly exposes the psy- chology of the Third Reich. SHOWS AT 7 AND 9:30 $1.00 330 Maynard COMING THURSDAY-Richard Myers' "AKRAN" sponsored by ann arbor film cooperative 1]1 Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, October 6,1971 ;:1 - - Senate denies >.OIY45F6Y* 0DYEY* 0~ x WINE NIGHT o FEATURING BUDDIES IN THE SADDLE Q FOOD-DRINK-ENTERTAINMENT iA.M.-2 A.M. 1 208 W. H URON 761-0110 GY5EY. OLYSSEY. ODKSY~$ ne ws briefs By The Associated Press A PONTIAC FIREMAN has identified himself as the infoim- er who led the FBI to six members of the Ku Klux Klan charged with conspiring to bomb school buses in Pontiac, Mich. Jerome Lauinger said he infiltrated the Klan and became a volunteer informer as "my down payment on democracy." The six Klansmen, including the former grand dragon of the Michigan Klan, were arrested last month and conspiracy charges are pending against them in the Aug. 30 dynamiting of 10 Pontiac school buses. * *4 * PRESIDENT NIKOLAI PODGORNY of the Soviet Union completed two days of talks with North Vietnamese leaders in Hanoi yesterday. Announcing this, the official Vietnam News Agency said the talks were successful but did not disclose what was discussed. A dispatch from Tass, the Soviet news agency, said the talks "reaffirmed full unanimity and mutual understanding on all prob- lems under discussion."j * * * PRESIDENT NIXON worked on the next stage of his eco- nomic program yesterday while the .House took up his tax cut- ting program and labor leaders renewed their attack on the President's economic policies. "Robin Hood in reverse" and "socialism for the rich" were terms applied to Nixon's program by Patrick Gorman chief executive of- ficer for the AFL-CIO Amalgamated Meat Cutters Union. Testifying before the sHouse Banking Committee, Gorman urged Congress, to reject the tax bill as a "bonanza for industry." LAWYERS FOR ATTICA inmates asked Supreme C o u r t Justice Thurgood Marshall to halt temporarily state questioning of prisoners about last month's confrontation that left 42 dead. They asked Marshall to end the questioning until the Circuit Court decides whether the prisoners' rights are being violated. The lawyers said that prisoners are being beaten with clubs, at Attica in a "continuing pattern of assaults and threats." PRIME MINISTER BRIAN FAULKNER of Northern Ireland said yesterday he is flying to London this week for more emer- gency talks about the violence in his country. He described North- ern Ireland as "bleeding to death." As he spoke at Stormont, the provincial parliament, guerillas robbed a bank and fought a gun battle with troops caught in am- bush. Faulkner told the session, boycotted by the pro-Roman Catholic opposition, that he will hold new crisis talks with Prime Minister Edward Heath tomorrow., NORTH VIETNAMESE FORCES have withdrawn from the Cambodian border following a 10 day offensive, said Lt. Gen. Nguyen Van Minh, South Vietnamese commander at the battle. According to Minh, the pull-out follows less than 24 hours after clashes near Fire Base Alpha inflicted heavy casualties upon the North Vietnamese. Minh placed casualties at 450 dead for the North Vietnamese, and reported that South Vietnamese casualties numbered 41 killed and 289 wounded for the overall campaign. PRESIDENT NIXON'S long-delayed school desegregation bill was approved by the House Education and Labor Committee yesterday but without the ban on busing he proposed. The committee first watered down and then killed an amendment that would have prevented school districts from using any of the $1.5 billion authorized by the bill to bus pupils. It then passed the bill 24-3, heading it toward an expected stiff floor fight. The Senate ,pased a different version of the legislation last April. missile WASHINGTON {M - The Senate yesterday rejected three proposals to add funds for major U.S. offensive missile sys- tems after Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss.) cautioned against do- ing anything to jeopardize chances for a U.S.-Soviet arms- limitation agreement. It also voted down a proposal to stop U.S. air attacks in Indochina as it neared final passage, scheduled this after- noon, of a $21-billion military procurement authorization bill. Stennis, chairman of the Armed Services Committee, led funds -Associated Press A Cttia inmates testify Charles Calvin (left) and Gary Haynes, both inmates at Attica Correctional Facility, are led in handcuffs from a federal court- house Monday after testifying about brutality they reported they received from prison officers and state troopers. 10,000 TO GO: Lottery ceiling Set at 125 for Nov., Dec. COMING FRIDAY the opposition to added mis- sile funds proposed by Sen. James L. Buckley (R-N.Y.) and backed by conservatives from both parties. Stennis said they would be interpreted, rightly or wrongly, as a U.S. bid for a first strike nuclear capability. Their approval could upset chances of an agreement at the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT), Stennis said. He added that in any case President Nixon wouldn't spend any of the funds "at least until the last glimmer- ing hope of success for the SALT talks . . . is gone." Buckley termed the argument by Stennis "something of a red herring" and contended h i s amendments were designed' to give the United States the option of making improvements in the quality of its strategic forces. In the day's only other vote, the Senate rejected 64 to 19, an amendment by Sen. Mike Gravel (D-Alaska) to bar U.S. air attacks throughout Indochina and Thai- land with the option for the Pre- sident to continue air attacks in South Vietnam if needed to pro- tect withdrawing U.S. troops. "I don't understand why we're bombing all over Indochina if we're getting out," Gravel told a virtually deserted Senate cham- ber. Stennis said, "You've got to do something to keep them on the 'defensive as much as pos- sible." Thieu foes to take. election to high eourt SAIGON (/P) - Political foes of President Nguyen Van Thieu say they are going into Supremd Court today in an attempt to have his unopposed election victory in- validated. Other Thieu opponents and the local press "ridiculed his reported 91.5 percent "vote of confidence" as being "beyond comprehension." Thai Lan, official representa- tive of Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky's ticket before Ky withdrew, said four members of- the Com- mittee Against Dictatorship would file a complaint with the court. They will charge the election was "illegal and unconstitutional," ask that the results be invalidated and new elections organized. Today is the deadline for filing such complaints. The Supreme Court, which must rule by Oct. 26 on the validity of the presidential election returns, already has before it one case challenging the constitutionality of a one-man election. Although it generally has been considered Thieu-controlled, the court-in a move which surprised most observers - ruled last week that the Aug. 29 lower house elee- tion was rigger in at least three provinces. -9 'Y BNL 1 .. , °' 1 ,, ', "" ,.; 4J {::: '' "' A"i: :v ?5:..: : ' , rti " WASHINGTON (P) - Men classified as lA in this year's draft pool won't be called if their lottery numbers are over 125, but all with numbers below that can expect a summons, Se- lective Service announced yes- terday. Earlier, draft officials had said men probably would be called with numbers as high as 140. But that was when 15,000 to 20,000 instead of 10,000 were expected to be drafted in the remaining months this year. Draft Director Curtis Tarr, in another change, said draftees will be given 30 days' notice to report for induction rather than the 10 days minimum set down by law. The 30-day notice means that nobody will be drafted this month. But the Pentagon's 10,- 000-man call will be split 6,500 between Nov. 1 and 18 and 3- 500 between Nov. 29 and Dec. 9. When the draft suspended orn June 30 there had been calls totalling 88,000 for the year, with 84,000 men called. Selec- tive Service said it does not plan tomake up the 4,000-man backlog. Tarr, in another announce- ment, said he has ordered local and appeals boards to defer ac- tion on classifications, personal appearances, and appeals until new regulations on draft re- quirement provisions under the new draft law are drawn up. The regulations will be com- pleted in about two weeks, draft officials said, but they can't be put into effect under the new law until 30 days after they are published in the Federal Register. Every young man clas- sified 1A who drew a number 125 or lower in the 1969 and 1970 lotteries and is in this year's pool can expect to receive an induction notice in the near future, Tarr said. STRIKES CONTINUE Nixon may seek dock injunction purveyors of Sparadise N rWdARREN EATTY .JUUE CHRISTIE in The Robert Altman-David Foster Production of "McCABE & MRS. MILLER" Also Starring RENE AUBERJONOIS - Screenplay by Robert Atman and Brian McKay " Produced by David Foster and Mitchell Brower Based on the novel "McCabe" byEdmund Naughton - Directed by Robert Altman PANAVISION@ TECHNICOLORO-+From Warner Bros. A Kinney Services Company Under 17tqures accompanying Parentor Adutt Guardian 2 DAYS B.B. KING HOWLIN WOLF FRI.-H ILL AUD.-9 P.M. $2.50-$3.50-$4.50 Tickets: Mich. Union Salvation Records, 330 Maynard LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of Drug Help Inc. will be held at 8:00 p.m., Wednesday, October 20 in the Michigan Union, Ann Arbor; Michigan. At the time election of Board of Directors will take place. By The Associated Press President Nixon awaited yes- terday the report of an inquiry board before deciding whether to seek a Taft-Hartley interrup- tion of an Atlantic-Pacific dock strike that has paralyzed most of the nation's deepwater ports. The five-member board, ap- pointed by the President, w a s going about the automatic chore of certifying contract deadlocks already reported from both East and West Coasts, where a total of 60,000 longshoremen are idle. The board's report was due no later than today after which the chief executive was e m- powered to obtain a back-to- work injunction with the Taft Hartley provision for an 80- day cooling off period. Meanwhile, 80,000 U n i t e d Mine workers were idle for a fifth day, in a strike in 20 coal producing states. A spokesman said negotiators fere "not even close" on a union demand for a top wage of $37 a day. Ten nonunion mines in Ohio, employing about 1,500 men were closed by management to avoid violence. But property damage attributed to strike vandalism was reported by two of t h e m, a coal company in Harrisville Ohio, and another in Holloway, Ohio. Taft-Hartley has been invok- ed seven times in the eight East Coast pier tieups since World War II. However, President Nix- on has yet to use the law in his nearly three years in office. The President was spurred to action in the current dock tie- ups by what he described as a peril to 'national health a n d safety" resulting from the first TG Delta-Sigma-Delta Fraternity FRIDAY-Oct. 8, 8-11 p.m. Live Band & Refreshments 1502 Hill St. simultaneous strikes on b o t h the Atlantic and Pacific coasts. The two walkouts were not re- lated. The White House had yet to indicate whether it would aim any injunction at 15,000 strik- ing West Coast dockers, or the 45,000 idle longshoremen on the East and Gulf coasts or both. The independent Longshore- men's and Warehousemen's Un- ion went on strike on the West Coast July 1, over issues t h a t included off dock container jur- isdiction a guaranteed w or k week and wages and benefits. West Coast warehouses were crammed with backed-up cargo, and 208 ships were reported stranded in 24 ports from Seat- tle to San Diego. The break- down of peace talks there Mon- day led Nixon to put in motion Taft Hartley machinery. I I q I I 4% a " Subscribe to The Michigan Daily r Daystar presents As Great a Blues Show as There Could Be ANNOUNCING OUR NEW FALL POLICY! GREAT NEWS FOR MOVIE FANS! THE FREEZE IS ON SO WE'RE LOWERING OUR PRICES TO SAVE YOU MONEY EVERY FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY 2 OR A CARLOAD FREE! FREE! So load up A free pass to the car or the car with the wagon and most people! $2 50come along SEE SPECIAL AD FOR THIS WEEK'S PROGRAM! B B a AND HOWLIN' WOLF FRIDAY, OCT. 8 HILL AUDITORIUM 9 P.M. $2.50, $3.50, $4.50 + " o Box OfficesOpen 6.30 Show Starts at 7:00 'p MMEmq TAKE HER TO SEE "RELATIONS" in color "Relations" at 7 and 10:10 "Aroused" at ?$ 8:45 and ;' ' o®] LW .{.1 EANTi DRIVE-IN#~ I 668-7083 Ehil _ew [Y1T )RD w wcnW enwn/ FAST OF YPSILANTl en. ml