THE ALLEY CINEMA
PRESENTS
TONIGHT ONLY-TUESDAY, OCT. 19
RULES OF THE GAME
dir. JEAN RENOIR, 1939
Long banned in France by a community too soft-
skinned for Renoir's stinging appraisal, "Rules of
the Game" frankly delineates the erotic charades of
the French leisure class before World War 11.
"A masterpiece, a work that grows in stature with repeated
viewings."-Film and Filming
"Jean Renoir's greatest work . . a masterpiece."-The London
Observer
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Sf"ri~igaxn
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Ann Arbor, Michigan
Tuesday, October 19, 1971
news
briefs
By The Associated Press
SHOWS AT 7 and 9:30
$1.00
330 Maynard
COMING WED.-Robert Bresson's "Diary of a Country Priest"
sponsored by ann arbor film cooperative
A SCHOOL LUNCH bill which would guarantee free or
reduced-price lunches to all needy school children passed 353-
0 in the House yesterday.
The vote came shortly after the Department of Agriculture
reversed a ruling which would have eliminated a million children
from the program by- establishing a maximum level for families
whose children would qualify for the program. The Department of
Agriculture restored the previous system of «allowing states to set
the eligibility requirements.
The bill now goes to conference committee to resolve differences
between it and a less sweeping version passed in the Senate on Oct. 1.
SENATOR WILLIAM PROXMIRE (D-Wise) said yesterday
he has learned of another accident involving the C5 jumbo
cargo plane. The statement came hours after the Air Force an-
nounced the return to service of the first of 47 C5 planes which
had previously been grounded.
The planes were recalled after an engine tore loose from one
of the planes Sept. 29 at Altus Air Force Base in Oklahoma.
Proxmire said he was told that in the new accident the hull
of one of the planes was pitched to the ground, causing $100,000
damage. He claimed that the Air Force has a policy of accepting
planes "knowing that they have major deficiencies."
* * *
THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT refused yesterday to obey a
court order to make public the transcript of grand jury proceed-
ings in the Pentagon papers case if Anthony Russo testifies,
Russo, who was released from jail Oct. 1 after serving a 45-day
sentence for civil contempt for refusing to testify, appeared at the
federal courthouse in Los Angeles prepared to testify about his'
association with Daniel Ellsberg, who has admitted leaking the
secret Pentagon documents to the press.
A GROUP OF STUDENTS at Shorter College in North Little
Rock, Arkansas, took over the school's administration building
yesterday to protest physical conditions at the school and the
resignation of the college president, Dr. Lonnie Johnson.
Johnson, in his resignation, criticized the conditions of the
buildings on the campus. The, students complained of broken windows
not being repaired, plaster coming off the walls, and cracks in the
floors of some dormitories.
Britons
meeton
Ireland
Arms shipment
for IRA sought
LONDON () - British lead-
ers met in secret session yes-
terday to discuss charges of
torture of detainees in North-
ern Ireland and the possibil-
ity that guns are coming from
behind the Iron Curtain to
the Irish Republican Army
(IRA).
As Prime Minister Edward
Heath met Labor party chief Har-
old Wilson, Prime Minister Brian
Faulkner of Northern Ireland
warned terrorists "the screw will
be tightened" on them. London-
derry and Belfast experienced an-
other weekend of violence, leaving
four persons dead.
Heath met with Wilson after
Wilson swore a vow of secrecy on
the talks. Topping the agenda was
the torture charge leveled against
British interrogators in Northern
Ireland.
But they also discussed the
week end seizure by Dutch police
of a planeload of more than three
tons of arms from Czechoslovalia,
reportedly bound for the IRA. The
IRA is fighting to merge North-
ern Ireland, which is mainly Pro-
testant, with the Roman Catholic-
dominated Irish Republic.
Security officials at Western
European airports checked air car-
goes for other shipments through
the night but discovered nothing.
The check was triggered by dis-
covery .of the gun-running plot,
code - named "Operation Patriot,"
believed masterminded, by a lead-
er of the IRA's militant "provi-
sional" wing, David O'Connell.
Intelligence sources in Belfast
reported that two more plane-
loads of weapons may be on their
way to the IRA. Some reports
from Dublin said the IRA had al-
ready received shipments which
were in the Irish capital and
broken down into small consign-
ments to be smuggled across the
border.
During a debate on the issue,
members of Parliament whistled
with surprise when Douglas-Home
disclosed the size of the shipment.
-Associated Press
Death of oceans
Undersea explorer Jacques Cousteau tells a Senate subcommittee yesterday that the oceans will
be dead within the next half-century unless indutrialized nations cooperate to save them. In the
background is Scott Carpenter, former astronaut now working with undersea research.
SIX-MONTH DEADLINE:
House GOP leaders may try
to block Viet wuioithdrawal vote.
M
UAC-DAYSTAR
HOMECOMING 1971
"Let's Work Together"
TICKETS NOW ON SALE
WASHINGTON (A) - W i t h
VICE PRESIDENT SPIRO AGNEW finished the last of three antiwar forces gaining strength,
lengthy conferences with Greek Premier George Papadopoulos administration leaders debated
yesterday. yesterday whether to risk a House
Although the North Atlantic Treaty Organization was the only vote on rejecting a six-month
announced point of discussion, sources speculated that they also deadline to get out of Indochina.
discussed American criticism of the Greek dictatorship. Rep. Gerald Ford (R-Mich), the
Victor Gold, Agnew's spokesman, disclosed only that the vice House Republican leader, said he
president feels that it is not up to the United States to impose a to turn back a Senate pullout
timetable for the return of representaive rule in Greece. amendment, but is not confident
BORDER FLARE UP
Viet Conghit S. Viet positions
Thursday, Oct. 28
PINK FLOYD
GUARDIAN ANGEL
$1.50-$2.50-$3.50
Friday, Oct. 29
Parliament-Funkadelic
BLACK ENSEMBLE
$1 -$2-$3
Saturday, Oct. 30
QUICKSILVER
CATFISH
$2-$3.50-$4-$4.50
SAIGON (R) Viet Cong units attacked two
South Vietnamese positions northeast of Saigon
yesterday, and fresh fighting flared along the
Cambodian frontier, northwest of the capital.
The attacks to the northeast were the fifth and
sixth actions in six days in that 50-mile sector.
Latest targets were a hamlet and a troop posi-
tion near Xuan Loc, a provincial capital 40 miles
from Saigon.
Moving under a predawn mortar barrage, the
Viet Cong attacked a 100-man company of re-
gional force militiamen six miles southwest of
Xuan Loc. Nine militamen were killed and eight
wounded, and 10 Viet Cong were killed, according
to reports.
In the other assault, the Viet Cong fired 30
mortar rounds into a hamlet four miles southeast
of Xuan Loc, then attacked a militia platoon
defending the hamlet. Field reports said one
Viet Cong was killed and defenders' losses were
three killed, one wounded.
In other recent action in the north-northeast
sector, sappers blew up five U.S. helicopters eight
miles northeast of Saigon last Wednesday, Viet
Cong troops shelled and attacked a Vietnamese
army compound 45 miles northeast of the city on
Thursday, and on Saturday rockets hit a training
icenter and a battalion-size engagement was
fought, four and 33 miles north of Saigon, re-
spectively.
The new outbreak in the Cambodia border
region 60 to 90 miles northwest of Saigon flared
after three days of relative calm in the fourth
week of a Viet Cong drive.
South Vietnamese spokesmen said two com-
panies of about 200 paratroopers, with artillery
support, killed 29 Viet Cong in sharp fighting
near Thien Ngon on Route 22 in Tay Ninh Prov-
ince.
To the north, seven miles inside Cambodia, a
South Vietnamese base near the rubber town
of Krek was hit Sunday by nine rockets and
two mortar rounds but casualties were reported
light, with no fatalities.
The only American-manned outpost in the
border. region, Fire Base Pace, took eight mortar
rounds yesterday, without casualties, the U.S.
Command reported.
enough to commit himself to a
showdown.
An Associated Press c h e c k
found at least nine House mem-
bers who helped reject a similar
amendment 219-176 last June will
switch their votes, and another
four who say they may switch.
"It's close enough to be ser-
ious," Ford acknowledged. "We'll
have to check into the parliamen-
tary situation to be sure of the
proper result."
Republicans have the parlia-
mentary right to block the six-
month deadline from coming to
a vote. Ford said House accept-
ance of the Senate amendment
"would tend to undercut the Pres-
ident's efforts in Moscow and, Pe-
king."
Only one vote is permitted on
instructing conferees today when
the House sends a $21-billion mili-
tary-weapons bill containing the
six-month war pullout amendment
to a House-Senate compromise
conference.
Republicans get the motion and
Rep. Charles Whalen Jr. (R-Ohio)
wants to make it on accepting
an amendment by Senate Major-
ity leader Mike Mansfield (D-I
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Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-
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Maj or powers confer on
India-Pakistan escalation
HILL AUDITORIUM
ALL SHOWS START 9 P.M.
ADVANCE TICKETS-Mich. tUnion and Salvation
Records, 330 Maynard, 1 103 S. Univ.
WASHINGTON (P) - T h e
United States is holding consul-
tations with the Soviet Union,
Britain and France and perhaps
others over the apparent buildup
of military forces on both sides
of the India-Pakistan border.
Disclosing this yesterday, State
Department spokesman Charles
Bray declared, "We are concern-
ed over reports of heightened
tensions on the Indian subcon-
tinent, including what appears
to be a buildup of forces on both
sides of the border. a
"We have been and continue
to be in touch with both govern-
ments with a view to urging re-
straints in the situation."
There were indications that
the touchy border dispute would
also be a subject when Dr. Henry
Kissinger, presidential adviser,
meets with Chinese Premier
Mont) for U.S. withdrawal from
the war in six months in exchange
for release of American prisoners.
But Ford left open the possibil-
ity of giving it to some Republican
who wants House rejection of any
of seven other items in the bill,
including an additional $389 mil-
lion military pay raise.
If Ford does this, the H o u s e
conferees will be on their own
as far as the Mansfield amend-
ment is concerned when they go
into their bargaining session with
the Senate conferees. W h e t h e r
they insist on deleting the six-
month pullout amendment from
the bill, or agree to keep it in, will
be up to them, subject to a later
vote by the House.
Chou En-lai in Peking on Wed-
nesday. The People's Republic
of China is a strong supporter
of Pakistan and the Soviet Un-
ion signed a treaty last June
with India for consultations in
the event that India's borders
are threatened.
The degree of concern r o s e
visibly hergreafter India's defense
minister Jagjivan Ran told a
public meeting Sunday nig h t
that "We shall go right up to
Lahore and Sialkot - in West
Pakistan - and shall not come
back whatever the consequenc-
es."
Engaging in what they called
"preventive diplomacy," Amer-
ican officials emphasized that
the United States would sup-
port any measure that India
and Pakistan agree upon that
would have the effect of reduc-
ing tensions.
F
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Issho yi Geng
'1r
02N C, 1I
' U , A s
N s
TONIGHT
ONLY
Crucified Lovers
Presented by
CivicZ
Ann Arbor
Theatre
in
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre
October
20-23 at 8:00 p.m.
0
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"One of the last and greatest films by
KENJI MIZOGUCHI"
-TIME
Japan's greatest traditional filmmaker famed for his "floating
world," and his sympathetic insight in portraying women.
MENDELSSOHN BOX OFFICE HOURS:
10 A.M. UNTIL CURTAIN
The Center for Continuing Education of Women
with the Department of Sociology
presents
ALICE ROSSI
Acting Chairman, Sociology Department, Goucher College
U!
.