10-7 MON.-THURS. 10-9 FRI., SAT. The wine £Zh11pe 347 Maynard St. PURVEYOR OF THE WORLD'S FINEST WINES NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 al4c tr4'igFCYi ttii page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, October 22, 1971 _ UI! ._~ Box Office Open at 6:30 Show Starts at Dusk! 9 Those Babysitters Are Back to Back! 2 Showings of Each Feature Every Night SHE CAME p SHE CAME TO SIT WITH TO SIT WITH BABY BABY... AND WENT AWAY Ind ENDED UP L WITH DAOOY! WITH DADDY! UCROW NERNTINA PCTURES pNses \bab itter BABYSWITTHER A CROWN-INTERNATIONALAT R Cm PICTURES RELEASE ADUNDEERUC C A CROWN INTERNATONAL.PICTURES RELEASE r> R i~ 5 news briefs By The Associated Press SOUTH VIETNAM'S army says it has taken control of some 60 square miles in eastern Cambodia and that recent Communist attacks between Saigon and the frontier are just "noise to cover the defeat of North Vietnamese forces." A North Vietnamese push in the border region 60 to 90 miles: northwest of Saigon began nearly four weeks ago. But in the last week hostilities have dwindled to small skirmishes, and enemy shell- ings with Allied air and artillery retaliation. * * * THE SENATE is preparing to debate a new effort to force i withdrawal from Indochina but the Foreign Relations Committee chairman J. William Fulbright says he doubts President Nixon will pay attention even if it passed. The new proposal, calling for total U.S. withdrawal within sixI months and barring funds except to pull out, was included Wednesday by the Foreign Relations panel in a $3.2 billion foreign-aid authoriza- tion bill. The vote adding it was 11 to 5. SOVIET U.N. AMBASSADOR Jacob Malik, angry at a shoot- ing attack on the Soviet U.N. Mission, accused the United States yesterday of failing in its obligation to protect Russian diplomats stationed in New York. Malik accused the Jewish Defense League of firing the shots and said the JDL's leader, Rabbi Meir Kahane, may have planned the attack on instructions from Israel. FEDERAL MEDIATORS are pressing to reopen deadlocked negotiations in the three-week-old strike of 80,000 miners that has virtually halted U.S. soft-coal production. The steel industry, which has a large stake in the coal nego- tiations, and, the coal-burning public utility firms reportedly have. ample stockpiles for several more weeks, but railroads that haul' coal have suffered large revenue losses from the strike. U.S. rolls back propan rates of ree oil firms WASHINGTON (U) - The government has succeeded in forcing down all propane gas price increases posted by major oil companies in the Southwest, it was learned last night. The Cost of Living Council is preparing to announce to- day that the oil firms have agreed to roll back posted price boosts amounting to close to $100 million on an annual basis. Already, the council has won price rollbacks from three Texas firms. One, Wanda Petroleum Co., Houston, announced its rollback Wednesday. Two others, Sid Richardson Gasoline Co., Fort Worth and Diamond Shamrock Corp., Amarillo, agreed yesterday to the rollbacks. As the council prepared to move, the government an- nounced that national personal income showed a moderate rise in September, showing - - - that President Nixon's wage- s price freeze has taken hold.Literature The Commerce Department re- T e C m ec De at e t r -'ported that personal income in- creased by $3.2 billion last month, mainly on the strength of rises in r1Ze 0 U farm income and railroad retire- ment pensions.I Meanwhile, the White .House announced it will name this week the members of the pay and price ..+CI* IXA&VE.. 1-94 EX1T169 JACKSON ROAD OM -77 . WEST OT BROAD ---" = r Fri.-Sat.-Sun. $2.50 PER CARLOAD 3 Adult Features- "RELATIONS" "AROUSED" "MATING URGE" Free Passes to the Car With the Most People I Burt Robert Lancaster Ryan "LAWMA N" Stacy Faye Keach Dunaway "DOC" 4 Burt Lancaster "The Scalp Shelly Winters Hunters" -Associated Press Gravel, MPS' picket White House Sen. Gravel protests planned atomic tests WASHINGTON 1 - The White House, a mecca for pro- testers, had some unusual pickets yesterday: a U.S. senator GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION panels that will administer the post-freeze economic controls. The names will be "very likely" an- nounced Friday, press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said. The White House is reaching into the academic community for some of 'the key spots, and has selected Dr. C. Jackson Grayson, head of the Business School at Southern Methodist University, FOURTEEN INMATES of the Cassidy Lake Technical School and two members of Canada's Parliament. have walked away from the minimum security facility since a But unlike other sign carriers, Set n. Mike Gravel of disturbance there Sunday. Alaska and the Canadians trotted the Pennsylvania Ave. A 90-minute disturbance Sunday night by about 150 of 450 in- sidewalk for only 25 minutes before packing up and leaving mates ended without serious injuries or police action. the field to the regulars: anti-war Quakers, Pakistani-war A spokesman said he could give no reason for the walkaways. protesters and a man plugging away for Men's Liberation. HECKLERS MAR DEBATE British open Common Market debate LONDON (f) - Foreign Sec- retary Sir Alec Douglas-Home said yesterday membership in Europe's Common Market may represent Britain's last chance to regain prosperity and author- ity in the world. But storms of jeers from h e c k 1 i n g antimarketeers fre- quently interrupted the aristo- crats British statesman as he opened House of Commons de- bate on the nation's bid to join the European community. The rowdy scenes seemed to throw Douglas-Home off bal- ance, giving an anticlimatic sense to the crucial"issues to be decided by British lawmakers in the next eight days. A substantial vote for entry into the Common Market is ex- pected when the shouting ends. Arguing the case for British entry in a chamber packed with legislators, diplomats and visi- tors, Douglas-Home said this country through most of the 1960s had displayed symptoms of withdrawal from world af- fairs and involvements. But now the time had come to "regain some of our confidence and en- ter a partnership in which we can pull our full weight." Struggling to make himself heard above a chorus of inter- ruptions, he said: "Such a DIAL 662-6264 COLORGPc OPEN 12:45 At State and Liberty SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:05 HELD OVER-2nd Hit Week! EVERY WEDNESDAY, 1-6 p.m., Ladies Pay only 75c chance of economic expansion, for increased authority, to build security for the future will not recur for many a day, if it ever comes again." . F o r m e r Defense Minis- ter Denis Healey, who rose to argue Labor's case against ac- cepting Heath's terms, chal- lenged Douglas-Home's argu- ment. There is no chance of a unified Common Market for- eign policy, he said, while France follows its own line to- ward the Americans, Russians and the Middle East. Healey warned against any move to implement Heath's pet plan for pooling British-French nuclear weapon resources to form a European deterrent, "Any attempt to set up such a force would split Europe from America and Canada," he said. "Any attempt to set up a deter- rent which did not include Ger- many would split Britain and France from Germany and the rest of Europe. If it included Germany it would rule out any hope of improving relations be- tween East and West." Gravel and the Canadians pro- tested the five-megaton u n d e r ground nuclear explosion planned . later this month on Amchitka Is- land in the Aleutians. The Presi-: dent has not decided whether to halt the test. "We are acting essentially as citizens," said Gravel, a Democrat carrying a sign that proclaimed: "Mr. President, where do you stand on Canmkin?" Cannikin is the code name for the test., At the time the President was in the East Room receiving cre- George Meany ,dentials of new ambassadors from Malta,Senegal, Bolivia, Yugoslavia Dallas, as chairman of the Price land Argentina. While Gravel.Commission. ,pounded the sidewalk, soldiers On wages, AFL-CIO President from the Army's fife and drum George leany said that labor co- corps, dressed in Revolutionary operation with the Phase 2 re- War redcoats, were playing cere- straints would be jeopardized if monial music for the dignitaries workers don't get eventu'ally re- departing by the front door. troactive pay for frozen wages and Gravel said he had sent tele- deferred pay hikes already nego- grams twice to President Nixon tiated. asking for a chance to explain his Meany said in a recorded tee apprenhensions that the test could vision interview that there is a pehnsn hath tes d kee sense of injustice on the part damagae the environment- There STOCKHOLM W) - The Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded yesterday to Pablo Neruda, a Com- munist poet from Chile who says he tries "to interpret a little of the soul of all Latin America." Some of his poetry is anti- American, and his writings helped sway public opinion to bring the first Marxist government to Chile last year. President Salvador Al- lende rewarded him by naming him ambassador to France. At the embassy in Paris, Ner- uda, 67, told reporters: "Poets be- lieve in miracles and this time it seems the miracle happened." He had been considered for the prize for 20 years. He will come to Stockholm Dec. 10 to receive the $88,000 prize. Asked if he .regarded himself as a politically militant poet, Uer- uda replied: "Yes I am, as are all the writers of Latin America. There must be writers of all ten- dencies., One cannot ask that ev- eryone think alike. "The government and people of Chile have a great responsibility and a great struggle to carry for- ward and naturally everything that depends upon me is at the service of this struggle." The Swedish Academy of Let- ters said his poetry "brings alive a continent's destiny and dreams." The academy secretary, Karl Rag- nar Gierow, conceded that Neruda was a "controversial author," but declared he was a strong a na- tionalist as a Communist. He called Neruda "the poet of violat- ed human dignity." It was the second time in four years that the Nobel -Literature Prize has gone to a radical na- tionalist Latin-American writer assigned as ambassador to Paris. Miguel Angel Asturias of Guate- mala won the prize in 1967. 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 mall. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. a , a .o F. I~IT ~ The'**' man v 1' is not~ alone gad1 So I O j Issho yi Geng 1J_. was no response from the W h i t e? House, Gravel said. Gravel introduced the Canadian MP's Mark W. Rose and Leonel Beaudoin as his guests, Rose apol- ogized for trying to influence ano- ther country's actions. of workers whose pay hikes were frozen and their employers allow- ed to pocket the money. Read and Use Daily Classifieds me e 7:00 & 9:15 S __ / OCT. 23 HELD OVER . MICHIGAN' DIAL 5-6290 TODAY AT 1-3-5-7-9 ___._ J ? r f 4 a S f ! f'. ' f. . SATURDAY ONLY The Taira Clan Saga STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF U. Of M. CHARLTOI1 HSTON TE OMEGA MAN The great Kenji Mizoguchi's epic of the against the Emperor and the aristocracy, rise of the samurai, against the Buddhist hierarchy, with its private, army. A classic historical action drama. 120 mins. Nat. sci. Aud. COLOR I I i w' I , ACAPULCO 12-26-1-2 $259 1-2-1-9......$199 JAMAICA 12-25-1-1 ... $249 1-1-1-8.....$209 NASSAU 12-26-1-2 $199 1-2-1-10 . $169 FREEPORT 12-27-1-4 ... $1.99 ALL TRIPS INCLUDE: " Round Trip Jet Air " Transfers " Welcome Party " Accommodations Based on 4 to a Room .i. .. ::.::".:. ::. i"7:. . ": ;:. ... r ;.; :"... :::.:: .. .............:.. .."...................... J.: I