. :1 page three aI E 4fl't Yl i Iiit NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN FILM AN EVENING OF DISCUSSION and FREE FILMS Presented by the ann arbor film cooperative TONIGHT - WED. 7-9 Alice's Restaurant Alice Lloyd Hall Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, October 27, 1971 I I \ I a THE ALLEY CINEMA PRESENTS TONIGHT ONLY-WEDNESDAY OCT. 27 FIVE SHORTS BY MAYA DEREN ONE OF THE FINEST WOMAN FILMMAKERS OF ALL TIMES MAYA DEREN was the first recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship ever awarded for creative work in motion pictures. Miss Deren also won the coveted Grand Prix D'Avant Garde at Cannes. Her influence is. clear in the work of the major underground film- makers of our day. I Includes "Meshes In the Afternoon," the famed classic of the American experimental cinema. SHOWS AT,7 AND 9:30 $1.00 330 Maynard COMING THURS.-THE HORROR CHAMBERS OF DR. FAUTUS sponsored by ann arbor film cooperative news briefs By The Associated Press TWO REMAINING DEFENDANTS in the case of the slaying of Black Panther Alex Rackley pleaded guilty to reduced charges yesterday. Landon Williams, 27, and Rory Hithe, 20, had been charged with capital crimes of kidnapping resulting in death and aiding and abet- ting murder. They were allowed to plead guilty in Superior Court to charges of conspiracy to murder. The conspiracy charge carries a maximum I5-year penalty. Sen- tencing was scheduled for Nov. 19. The defendants were earlier jailed on charges of taking part in an alleged plot to kill Rackley, a fellow Panther from New York, because he was thought to be a police informer. JOHN SINCLAIR, former White Panther Party Leader, filed a motion today asking to appear in person at the appeal of hisI 911-11 Years sentence for illegal possession of two marijuana cigarettes. Last week, briefs were also filed in an effort to release Sinclair from prison while awaiting the appeal. In his application for appeal, Sinclair maintained, among other points, that his sentence was cruel and inhumane, that evidence was obtained by entrapment and that the jury was improperly paneled. * * * WELFARE MOTHERS nearly three dozen strong staged a demonstration outside Gov. William Milliken's office yesterday. The boisterous action marked the opening of the fall session of the Michigan legislature. The principal chant was: "Welfare mothers got no drugh. Governor Milliken is got to go." Earlier in the afternoon a student group attempted, in the face of a brisk, gusting wind, to set up a heavy, wood beam and plastic banner protesting possible passage of a Senate billboard control measure. FOUR MIDWEST SENATORS signed a statement this week to ease pollution from taconite tailings in Lake Superior. Sens. Philip Hart (D-Mich.), Robert Griffin (R-Mich,), Charles Percy, (R-Ill.) and Vance Hartke (D-Ind.) urged the Environmental Protection Agency to take court action by the expiration date of an 18-day notice on the Resevve Mining Co. for polluting Lake Superior waters. The plan calls for the disposition of the fine tailings at a depth which will have the least adverse effect on the aquatic environment. This method "appears capable of eliminating the green water phenomenon," explains Michigan technical representatives. INDIAN PLIGHT a , Substandard housin France agrees to sign Russian friendship pact PARIS (P) - France has agreed to sign a "declaration of principles" with the Soviet Union governing future Paris- Moscow relations, but deep policy differences remain on some concrete issues discussed with Soivet Communist party chief Leonid Brezhnev. The declaration was said to contain three main points on which the two powers say they agree. The points of agree- ment are: -The desirability of dissolving the political-military blocs which divide Europe; 1 -The inviolibility of existin European frontiers; and -The principle of noninterfer- -Assoiatedence in the internal affairs of oth- PAssociated Press er countries. Brezhnev welcomed in Pari Unprecedented in Western deal- Soviet Communist Party Chief Leonid Brezhnev acknowledges ;ings with Moscow, the declaration Cwill represent the "new step for- cheers during yesterday's ride along the Champs Elysses to the ward" which Soviets have b e e n Arc de Triomphe in Paris, France. urging France to take during the visit of Soviet Communist chief eoi Breznev. REFUGEES FLEE: edSources descibed the d o c u- ment as the limit of French Pres- ident Georges Pompidou's willing- kness to develop a special political relationship 'with the Soviet Un- ion. " " " " ';The sources said that even in continued filtin though Pompidou agreed to t h e declaration he remained skeptical about the sincerity of Soviet in- DACCA, East Pakistan OP) - Pakistan claimed yesterday that In- tenont statement issued ast dian artillery killed 23 Pakistani villagers in shellings of more than' night outlined areas of accord, a dozen East Pakistani settlements. but remained silent on such key A military spokesman said 2,300 artillery and mortar shells fell questions as the Soviet proposal near the eastern border with India, where Pakistani military sources for mutual force reductions in reported earlier that 585 persons had been killed in fighting with Europe. '~ ~ Ti z .L~.J BOX OFFICES OPEN 6:30 SHOW STARTS AT 7:00 I Special Halloween Program this Fri. & Sat. Night Shaft nightly at 7 & 10:30 ELECTRIC HEATERS AT 9:00 SHAFTCLhIsname. SHA~bisgam HEMAVEN M LL METROCOL-OR r rD IN COLOR a( I C! iJ..i V - Iztk'A f11YY) I w v y E*- i., ,,, I w MJ6WILLOW. 483 6'Uo EAST OF YPSILANTI I -V4 tAF( IOY- 7AGKbUN ROAD L=, T OF Z#FB ROAD r F FRI.-SAT.-SUN. $2.50 per carload A Russ Meyer Film Festival "Cherry & Harry & Raquel" 0 "LORNA" [x "Finders, Keepers Lovers, Weepers" Free Passes to the car with the most people I I- NOW SHOWING! CindyCaffaro "GINGER" -PLUS- "HOW TO SUCCEED WITH SEX" 2|1 plus Bonus Hit David Janssen "Macho Callahan" I Oh I WASHINGTON (A) - Sub- standard housing on Indian reservations is not being re- placed, rapidly enough, accord- ing to government investiga- tors. Unless government - assisted Indian housing programs are accelerated substantially, thou- sands of Indian families will still be living "under severe hardship conditions" at the end of the 1970's, Controller Gen- eral Elmer B. Staats explained. His report to Congress is bas- ed on a General Accounting Of- fice (GAO) inspection of hous- ing on 22 reservations. Inspectors found the program lagging not only because of in- sufficient building of new hous- ing facilities, but because of construction deficiencies, short- cuts and inadequate mainte- nance. The Bureau of Indian Af- fairs estimated in June, 1968 that 68,300 Indian families were living in substandard housing. Two years later, after construc- tion of 4,800 houses and renova- tion of 5,700, the substandard figure was 63,000. forces launched from India. The spokesman pinpointed the areas of Kasba, Kamlapur ' and villages south of Comilla as receiving the most destructive shellingsI yesterday. These areas alsd were mentioned in the earlier reports. - - India and Pakistan have moved into a dangerous confrontation - with armies on the alert on both sides of the border - in their " dispute over East Pakistani re- remain s fugees flooding into India. ( ( The refugees are fleeing con- tinued disruption in East Paki- "In about one third of the stan, which was torn by a civil houses which we inspected, de- war this spring and is still the ferred maintenance and poor i scene of guerrilla fighting by housekeeping had contributed holdout Bengali guerrillas trying to the deterioration of the home to revive the independence rebel- environment to such an extent : lion crushed last March. that the planned safe, sanitary In other developments: and decent living environment -Bombs which police believe they were designed to pro- were set by Bangali rebels killed vide was being lost," the report at least seven persons and injured said. 30 in the Dacca area, police re- "Some houseshad improperly ported. operating heating, electrical, -Well informed sources report- water and sanitation systems, ed the trial of Sheik Mujibur Rah- and some families were living in man, leader of the political group filth and around garbage, de- whose success at the polls led to bris, and vermin." the civil war, has been postponed '-until November. Sheik Mujibur is, accused of "waging war" against, .Lai rd seeks Europe pact BRUSSELS, Belgium (P) - Defense Secretary Melvin Laird attempted yesterday to align Western allies for a joint ap- proach to Moscow on reducing armed forces in Europe. Laird conferred with Lord Carrington of Britan, Mario Ta- nassi of Italy and Helmut Schmidt of West Germany. He earlier collaborated with Schmidt in presenting to the Nuclear Planning Group (NPG) of the North Atlantic Treaty Or- ganization a picture of what might happen if the Soviets made a major attack on south- ern Germany and the allies met it with a battlefield nuclear weapon, 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- N. Ireland " violence claims two BELFAST, Northern Ireland 0") - Two more persons died in Nor- thern Ireland as fighting between British soldiers and Roman Cath- olic guerrillas continued raising the fatality toll to 135. One of the victims of violence was a 26-year-old man who was gagged, blindfolded and shot through the' head apparently by an Irish Republican Army execu- tion squad. The other died of bul- let wounds from a weekend gun- fight. In the nearby town of Newry, where soldiers killed three men trying to rob a bank Saturday night, thousands of residents lined the streets and jammed into a church as the three coffins were carried through town. Two army helicopters watched overhead- for trouble. Troops moved in when stone- throwing youths smashed a few windows, but no major Incidents flared. Civil rights leaders charg- ed the army had committed mur- der by shooting down the men. In Belfast, an angry crowd of more than 8,000 watched the fun- eral of two sisters killed by army gunfire at a roadblock Saturday. On the political front, about 15 rebel members of the provincial Parliament and Senate met with politicians in a ballroom at Dun- given Castle to form their own rival parliament. Breakaway lead- er John Hume told "the Assembly of the Northern Irish People" that the rebel parliamentarians "had lost faith in the government of Northern Ireland . . . The age-old Irish problem is no nearer a so- lution . . . Citizens are separated from citizens by barbed wire." GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION Phone 764-0558 to Subscribe to THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1 BIG DOUBLE FEATURE! coming .. . for HALLOWEEN SENSATIONAL --3D3 m" SPECTACULAR I COLOR eyes of hell "In the gruesome division, this one is really very good."-L.A. TIMES XEROX COPIES Fast perfect copies every time. Come and see our convenient location. 4c rate available DISCOUNT COPY SERVICE 1217 S. University 769-0560 EXCLUSIE AREA SHOWING -AN ALL:TIME FIRST ,iy ear. uocriptinres'Pvu!- ice J. Williams. said there will be carrier, $11 by mail. Late last night, a powerful bomb no widespread famine in the pro- Summer Session publishedTuesday- Late la nit aon omb vince, only scattered pockets of through Saturday morning. Subscrip- smashed a police staition outside food shortage. tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. Belfast, wounding 13 persons. SHOP THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. Pakistan. . igan, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, -President Nixon's aid repre- Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- sentative in East Pakistan Maur- day through Sunday morning Univer- ur th v srRi~rni ae:$0b V!- fri.-sat., oct. 29-30 Natural Science Aud. 7:30-9-10:30 ARM 761-7849 r, UAC Cultural Affairs presents Art Print Loan 1971 The "Masters" works at student rental prices I If -.r .i - - wr - .. MV I I il .1 L 'il i i rv w VIrG VI 11 11. 1 i.nnY vo..rv I Z 8- 'Blue Movie' is honest, tittilating. it gives the audience what It paid to see. ****-N.Y. Times : > ... ALSO 2nd BIG HIT! "ELEGANT!" Newsweek "BEAUTIFUL!" N.Y. Times "Superb! A picture to savor, ponder, and probably view a second time! A Fascinat- ing sex story!" Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post 'Luis'BunueAh c Vasterpiece of'Erotica! . _- M IFS I I Nov. 1-5-3:00-5:00 p.m. Nov. 6-9:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. 2nd fl. Union-Small Ballroom THISQRATED FILM IS , HIGHLY RECOMMENDED BY THE MANAGEMENT * Pius 2nd feature * ainemart230 warm and sunny fleece is forecast for juniors by Evelyn Pearson in a long robe combining bright purple, red and gold. Morning and evening, it's a cozy idea in Arnel triacetate/nylon fleece. Purple with red/gold or red with purple/gold. I - I HILLEL FOUNDATION PRESENTS Norman Podhoretz 5-13 sizes. $26. j v ;.. CAT: ~HE-R INE- II-NI- I IV - "