CINEMAI II FRIDAY & SATURDAY GRETA GARBO in NINOTCHKA with MELVYN DOUGLAS directed by Ernst Lubitsch 7 and 9 p.m., AUD. A, ANGELL NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 al4c 2Utr4t l ttn IBatiy page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, October 7, 1971 NEXT WEEK: Gunga Din and the Hound of the Baskervilles THE ALLEY CINEMA PRESENTS TONIGHT ONLY-THURS., OCT. 7 AKRAN dir. RICHARD MYERS GRAND PRIZE: ANN ARBOR FILM FESTIVAL, 1969 "AKRAN was unquestionably the discovery of the year . capturing in rapid brilliant flashes the fears, the frustrations, the hang-ups, the hopes-the emotional texture of young people today.", -Arthur Knight, Film Society Review . May be the single most important event of this year's Chicago Film Festival . the most influential film since Godard's early work .,." -Ebert, Chicago Sun Times SHOWS AT 7 & 9:30 $1.00 330 Maynard COMING MON.-Bunvel's The Exterminating Angel sponsored by ann arbor film cooperative 4I newsbriefs By The Associated Press CHARLES "BEBE" REBOZO, a close friend of President Nixon received favored treatment in the sale of Florida land to the federal government in 1969, according to Newsday, a Long Island newspaper. While other landowners in the area were offered a "take-it-or leave-it" deal at low prices, Rebozo obtained close-to-appraisal prices on his holdings, the newspaper said. The newspaper account quoted A.E.N. Westcott, an Army Corps of Engineers official who negotiated the acquisition of the property as explaining "We were supposed to be dealing with someone who was an intimate of people in high places." Rebozo was unavailable for comment. ALASKAN ESKIMOS have laid claim to the entire 76,000- square-mile North Slope of their state, including 413,000 acres of oil field already leased to private companies by the state government for almost $1 billion. The Arctic Slope Native Association filed suit yesterday with the U.S. District Court, claiming that the state's selection of North Slope land under the Alaskan Statehood Act of 1958 be invalidated. Alaska Gov. William A. Egan said yesterday, "The state feels there is no question about state ownership of such land." THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY requested the Justice Department to file charges against the Ford Motor Company yesterday charging them with violation of the Clean Air Act. The agency charged that Ford shipped to its dealers, autos which had not received antipollution clearance, a charge carrying with itI a fine of up to $10,000 for each vehicle shipped illegally. Ford conceeded it shipped 207,500 uncertified vehicles with Dr(..- major tax cut WASHINGTON UP) - House yesterday passed a Without even calling the roll, the bill to cut business and individual House taxes $15.4 billion over the next three years. It was a victory for President Nixon. Even though the measure was modified to give individuals more and busi- ness less than he recommended, it remains a key part of his new economic program. It was a defeat for powerful segments of organized la- bor. Union chiefs had staged a last-minute blitz against the measure, contending it is still a bonanza for business. passes ' Egyptian charges, Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad, speaking at the United Nations yesterday accused Israel of seeking an interim agree- ment to reopen the Suez Canal as a "springboard for further aggression." Riad further called for an immediate Israeli com- mitment to withdraw from all Egyptian territory. RIGGING' CHARGED: S. Viet court -aske to overturn election All individual taxpayers would benefit at least a little under the measure. Those at the poverty level and for some distance above it would receive significant tax cuts. Au- tomobile buyers would save an average of $200 on new cars pur- chased. Business would get a tax sub- sidy on new equipment purchased. This incentive to stimulate or- ders and employment and to make U.S. plants more competi- tive is a major administration ob- j ective. Hoping to speed the measure to enactment by early Novem- ber, the Senate Finance Commit- tee opens hearings, today. How- ever, strenuous efforts to reshape the tax relief are expected on the Senate floor. According to over-all estimates, individual incomes taxes would be Scut by about $27billion this year, $5 billion in 1972 and $2.7 billion in 1973. By next year, individuals with no more than $2,050 income or families of four with no more than $4,300 would have no income tax to pay. A typical individual earning $3,500 would save $24 on this year's tax, $59 on next year's, $51 on 1973 earnings. If he earned $15,000, his savings would be $7 this year, $13 next year, none thereafter. M A T/'V l17T I r1l h__ __ _ _ n 1ti. " e . . .... 4' II - - - AT LAST IT'S HERE Open 12:45 Daily! Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 p.m. cautions to prevent their sale until they were cleared but said they had oral but not written permision from the EPA to do so. SOVIET JEWS have been told in a statement from the Communist Party Central Committee that there is little hope for allowing their mass emigration to Israel. Albert Ivanov, head of the Committee, told a delegation of Jews Sept. 20 that "the preservation of the interest of the state and the so-called brain drain will be taken into consideration" in deciding on individuals who will be allowed to go. SAIGON (A1) - Opponents of President Nguyen Van Thieu asked the Supreme Court yesterday to overturn results of Sunday's election that election officials claimed gave the unopposed president an overwhelming vote, The petition to the court came only hours after Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky assailed the election as "brazenly rigged" by Thieu. The petition was filed by Trinh Quoc Khanh, chairman of the Committee Against Dictatorship, labor leader Nguyen Ngoc Loi, and two Saigon city councilmen, Duong Van Long At State & Liberty DIAL 662-6264 U Senate votes govt. pay hike WASHINGTON (AP) - The Sen- ate, by a 60-27 vote, took a first step yesterday to upset President Nixon's effort to keep the lid on federal pay scales as part of his anti-inflationary program. It adopted an amendment to a military procruement bill under which government employes could get a pay raise on Jan. 1 of as much as permitted private em- ployes after the wage-price freeze expires on Nov. 13. Nixon ordered that a scheduled Jan. 1 pay raise of about 6 per cent for government employes un- der legislation passed last year be postponed for six months. Senators trying to overturn Nixon's order hailed the adop- tion of the amendment as a sign that the Senate will approve to- morrow a resolution of disapprov- al of Nixon's order. "It looks pretty good now," Sen. Frank E. Moss, D-Utah, told reporters after the vote. The House upheld the Presi- dent on Monday, defeating a re- solution disapproving the order. A similar resolution was ap- proved by the Senate Post Office and Civil Service Committee ear- lier yesterday and is scheduled for a floor vote tomorrow. The amendment proposing fed- eral raises equal to those in pri- vate industry was coupled to the disapproval resolution approved by the Senate committee 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 through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. THE CRITICS AGREE: "BRILLIANT" -Newsday " SHOCKING" -Unger, Ingenue "IMPORTANT" -Show "The polarization of American society is stated brilliantly!" -Paul D. Zimmerman, -Newsweek starring WILLIAM TEPPER KAREN BLACK COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents A BBS PRODUCTION HE MID A Film by JACK NICHOLSON Senate approves weapons bill, asks withdrawal from Vietnam and Ha The Ruyet. It challenged the legality of the election's organization by the In- terior Ministry, the voters' lack of choice, and the way in whichI votes were tabulated and the final results determined. The court must rule on the WASHINGTON (R') - The Senate gave overwhelming ap- proval yesterday to a bill au- thorizing $21 billion for mili- tary weapons and research while asking for total U.S. withdrawal from Indochina within six months. Passage of the annual mili- tary arms bill by an 82-4 vote came after the Senate blocked an effort to force a new presi- dential election in South Viet- nam and set the stage for an effort to override President Nixon's delay of a federal pay raise. The arms bill, already pass- ed by the House in a slightly different form, goes back to that body before going to confer- ence for resolution of the dif- ferences. The nay votes were cast by four Democratic senators, Wil- liam Fulbright, Ark., Mike Mansfield, Montana, Gaylord Nelson, Wisconsin, and Mike Gravel, Alaska. The bill had been under de- bate for less than three weeks, the shortest time the arms measure has taken to pass the Senate since before Pentagon critics began mobilizing against it in 1969. The $21 billion figure is only $1 billion under Nixon's request. By a vote of 60 to 25, the Senate rejected the amendment by Sen. Joseph Montoya, (D- N.M.), to shorten the six-month deadline for U. S. withdrawal voted earlier if South Vietna- mese President Nguyen Van Thieu fails to call a new election by Feb. 3. Montaya accused the United States of partial responsibility for Thieu's uncontested reelec- tion last Sunday, asserting that "In the name of political ex- pediency. America has openly assisted South Vietnam's Presi- dent, Thieu in stifling democ- racy." Then, on a 44-38 tally, it rejected Fullbrigbt's move to block a provision in the bill that would break the United Na- tions embalgoon trade with Rhodesia and permit U.S. im- ports of strategically important chrome ore. Once more, the military pro- curement measure, which au- thorizes projects for which ac- tual money will be voted in a later appropriations bill, sur- vived the Senate with all ma- jor weapons systems getting authorizations approved by the usually pro-Pentagon Armed Services Committee. validity of the election and the d returns by Oct. 26. E 0 E( t t In other developments, Vener- able Huyen Quang, secretary- 9 general of the An Quang Buddhist ,P ase T o Church, said he would send a letter to U.S. ambassador Ells- WASHINGTON (P) - President worth Bunker denouncing alleged Nixon will outline the details of American intervention in the elec- his Phase 2 economic program tion "against the will of the in a live radio-television broad- South Vietnamese people." cast at 7:30 p.m. EDT tonight. i He cited the fact that tear gas, weapons and helicopters used to break up Buddhist demonstrations and to attack Buddhist pagodas were furnished to South Vietna- mese police by the United States. The U.S. Embassy acknowled- ged Buddhist charges that an American police adviser accom- panied South Vietnamese riot po- lice who quelled bloody street riots in Da Nang on election day. It said the U.S. consulate in Da Nang was "keeping in touch" with Buddhist leaders. Nixon thus will beat by more than a week the mid-October deadline be set some time ago' for laying out the program t h a t will replace the current 90-day wage-price-rent freeze. The major question expected to be answered in Nixon's speech is how much if any will wages and prices be allowed to rise following the end of the current freeze Nov. 13. WATCH FOR THEI OMEGA MAN! 4 - SEATS NOW! MENDELSSOHN BOX OFFICE, 10-1, 2-5 r9tro$44ioIt/ £Jeai-re Moya I L THE GALA INAUGURAL PRODUCTION I NOW SHOWING . ON WASHTENAW AVE. 11/2 MILES EAST OF ARBORLAND-U.S. 23 DIAL 434-1782 MGM'S FABULOUS THREE AT 6:30 &9 P.M SAT. & SUN. AT 1:30-4-6:30-9 P.M. the ultimate trip O A SPACE ODYSSEY 1 THE ALLEY CINEMA SATURDAY, SUNDAY, Oct. 9, 10 DR. ROSS and LIGHTNIN' SLIM 2 SHOWS NIGHTLY - 7:30, 10:00 $2,25 COMING-Oct. 15, 16, 17 ALBERT KING Oct. 22, 23, 24 JIMMY REED Advance Tickets-Salvation Records 330 Maynard and 1103 S. University THE FIFTH HORSEMAN IS FEAR (Czech, 1966) FRIDAY, OCT..8 7:00, 9:30, 11:30 p.m. Alice's Restaurant ALICE LLOYD HALL FREE COFFEE 75c F m -0 POWER CENTER A,6 Xe /ex/r'min y eA14 I I WORLD PREMIERE 1 i II I BARBARA COOK RUTH FORD WESLEY ADDY CELESTE HOLM its CAROL BRICE BLOW-UP BLOW-U DIRECTED BY MICH " DAVID HEMMINGS P BLOW-UP 0o MAX SHOWALTER RUSS THACKER ELANGELO ANTONIONI. MUSIC BY HERBIE HANCOCK "THE GRASS HARP" * VANESSA REDGRAVE " SARAH MILES " Best Picture of the Year * Best Director -National Society of Film Critics 0 " . the sharpest cinema of the year."-Bosley Crowther N.Y. Time=_ " "Antonioni revolutionized the art of color film with BLOW-UP .Until BLOW-UP no filmmaker had successfully used color to deal with real people in real situations on a contemporary basis." -Lee R. Bobker, ELEMENTS OF FILM "Why is it that the impact of our best films has been limited to the summation a prevailing mood as opposed to the ability of works in other media (i.e. the record album Highway 61 Revisit- ed) to, literally, change people's lives?"-William Bayer, Break- ing Through, Selling Out, Dropping Dead and Other Notes on Filmmaking. "BLOW-UP," though not an American film, of which Bayer is writing, has this ability to change peoples lives. It changed mine."-D.M. I STARTS WED., OCT. 13th Book & Lyrics by KENWARD ELMSLIE Music by CLAIBE RICHARDSON a WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS! I NOTE: The Clarity of the Photography, the Brilliance of Color, and the Subtleties on the Sound Track Are Not Adequately Evident in the 16- mm Prints We Have Played in the Past. For that Reason, We Have Especially Arranged for an Original-Format 35-mm Print for This Per- I I m