SHOWCASE PRODUCTIONS joe orton What the Butler Saw THURS., FRI., SAT. EVES. AT 8:00 Arena Box Office in TRUEBLOOD Theatre MONDAY, 2-5, Season Tickets only $8, $4 Single and season sles Tues., Wed., 2-5; Th-Sat., 2-8E Single tickets at $1 .00 and $1 .50j NEWS PRONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 aI P AP 41P tr4t n a- at'ly page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Sunday, October 31, 1971 By The Associated Press TONS OF MUD and slag rolled over houses and buildings at a mining center in Romania's Transylvania coal country early yesterday. According to official reports 45 persons were killed and about 90 injured. Investigators reporting to central government officials in Bucha- rest said a facility for containing the slag gave way. No explanation was given for the collapse, which occurred be-j fore sunrise yesterday morning. Rescue workers, including army teams, labored through the day and into the night hunting for bodies. * * * 'TEACHER' DEFEATED U.N. Week toasts U.S. loss Held Over AGAIN! DIAL 8-6416 Shows " At 1-3-5-7-9 IHELLSTROM CHRONICLE ONE NIGHT ONLY MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1 AT THE ALLEY CINEMA JAMES DEAN in REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE Dir. Nicholas Ray, 1955. Also starring Natalie Wood, Nick Adams, Sal Mineo, Dennis Hopper. SHOWS AT 7 & 9:30 $1.00 330 Maynard COMING TUES.-Bergman's The Seventh Seal FRANCE AND RUSSIA have signed a joint declaration pro- mising that their "active collaboration" will be a "permanet fac- tor in international life." However, yesterday's pronouncement fell short of the friendship treaty Communist party chief Leonid Brezhnev wanted when he ar- rived in France last Monday. In a separate communique, Brezhnev and French president Georges Pompidou called for the convening of a European security conference next year, immediate resumption of the Gunnar Jarring peace mission in the Mideast, the settlement of tensions on the In- dian subcontinent, and an end to foreign intervention in Indochina. French spokesmen said the declaration did not compromise France's relations with NATO or West Germany. Immediately after the signing ceremony, Brezhnev flew to East Berlin for talks with East German officials. SOUTH VIETNAMESE PRESIDENT NGUYEN VAN THIEU will take the oath of office today in Saigon as barbed wire and hundreds of combat police guard the square where the inaugural ceremony will occur. Thieu's inauguration will be attended by South Vietnamese government officials, top military commanders and foreign digni- taries, including Secretary of the Treasury John Connally. One square mile of downtown Saigon has been closed to traffic for the event, and 40,000 troops and police stand by as a security force for Saigon and its suburbs. PRESIDENT NIXON AND YUGOSLAVIA'S PRESIDENT TITO issued a joint communique yesterday noting the importance of non-aligned nations in international relations and the need for "firm peace and true security" in all of Europe. The communique marked the end of two days of meetings be- tween the two men at the White House. Noting Yugoslavia's policy of non-alignment, Nixon said that countries following such a policy can make an active contribution to the resolution of world problems." SAN FRANCISCO MAYOR JOSEPH ALIOTO'S tough City Hall style faces a crucial test in Tuesday's mayoral election, an 11-candidate race in which the main issue has been the quality of life in San Francisco. While Alioto says that the city needs a leader with "toughness of spirit" and "toughness of mind," one of his main challengers, Board, of Supervisors President Diane Feinstein, claims it is time to show sensitivity, rather than toughness, to the city's residents and their problems. Meanwhile, another competitor, former supervisor Harold Dobbs has warned that "the problems we've seen wreck Eastern cities are going to devastate our own San Francisco." i -Associated Pressf Tito in U.S. President Tito of Yugoslavia is pictured after talks with Presi- dent Nixon. The two leaders issued a joint message on the im- portance of non-aligned nations (See News Briefs). AFTER MARKET VOTE: 13ritain's Laborites con ront party crisis UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (R) - Officially it was TJnited Nations Week, but something else was being celebrated when delegates danced in the aisles of the General Assembly. They reminded onlookers of pupils who had just put one over on teacher. Perhaps they had. The United States had suffered a serious diplomatic defeat on the issue of China representation. For many U.N. members-certainly for the Americans- there seemed little to inspire celebration. On the Asian subcontinent, a war threat boiled up and made the United Nations seem, for the moment at least, un- convincing in the role of protector of peace. In the Middle East, both Arabs and Israelis criticized American peace efforts. Moscow's top leaders pushed a major offensive of diplo- matic tourism, sparked in part by suspicion of both Chinese and American intentions. But American policy, despite the U.N. buffeting, con- tinued on a course charted for the 1970s, aimed 'at detent with China and lessened Soviet- U.S. tensions. The White House announced President Nixon's visit to China will come after the turn of the year, in advance of his Moscow trip. Would events of U.N. Week in- side and outside the world or- ganization have a damaging im- :: . act on it? Or would the entry. . . . . 4 . of Peking, ending the exclusion" -.. ".' :;.,_.:; of a regime claiming to repre- sent 800 million people, in the long run strengthen the United Nations? The cost of the American de- feat is hard to calculate, even in political terms. However, there is a growing sentiment among Washington officials and Con- gressmen that the net result of Chou En-Lai the defeat has been a dimunition of American influence overseas. The campaign to keep Taiwan in the U.N. outweighed any com- parable diplomatic program undertaken by the United States in recent memory. It involved a variety of devices, ranging from low- level appeals to Presidential pleas to heads of state. State department officials concede that in the 20-year lobbying effort on behalf of Taiwan's seat, dozens of commitments both politi- cal and economic have been made to enlist the support of various nations. "We've used every kind of currency," one official said, from funds to build a new dam in one country to trade-off promises of political support in another. President Nixon suggested that anti-American manifestations inthe assembly could undercut U.S. public and congressional confi- dence in the United Nations. In Washington, in any case the set- back stung painfully. Immediately in advance of the Monday showdown, the U.S. delegation had insisted it was going to be able to block expulsion of Chiang Kai-Shek's Taiwan-based regime by making that issue an importai, question, requiring a vote of two thirds of the members. Somewhere along the line the Americans may have been tricked. In the ordinary course of events the vote should have come Tuesday. The Americans needed those extra hours to step up pressure for their "IQ" resolution, as the delgates called the important-ques- tion proposal. Around dinner time Monday came a sudden drive to push for a final vote that night. When the Americans couldn't stop it they knew they were in trouble. Soon after, the "IQ" resolution also failed, 59 to 55, with 15 abstaining. The hall rang with triumphant cries of the sponsors. The Al- banians, Peking's bellicose East European allies, clapped rhythmically, Communist-style. Tanzanians, whose African nation gets Peking aid, joined other enthusiasts in a victory dance. The demonstration was limited mostly to "third world" nations, but there was no mistaking the note of joyous anti-Americanism. Only three of its 13 NATO allies voted with the United States. LONDON ()A - Britain's La- bor Party, one of the most pow- erful Socialist movements in the Western World, appeared yes- terday in danger of exploding in a violent burst of recrimina- tion. Sixty-nine of Labor's 289 mem- bers of Parliament, led by Depu- ty Leader Roy Jenkins, defied official party policy and voted with the ruling Conservatives Thursday in favor of British membership of the Common Market. The motion was car- ried with a 112-vote majority. Many Laborites had seen the vote as an unparalleled oppor- tunity to defeat the government and seize advantage of the Con- servatives' current unpopularity over high prices and unemploy- ment to return to power in the resulting general election. Political observers were say- ing yesterday that the bitter- ness, anger and insults resulting from the move have shocked parliamentarians by their in- tensity. Judith Hart, a left-wing mem- ber of Labor's national execu- tive and a former government minister, declared Friday night that the party now faces the greatest crisis in its history- "unequalled even in 1931." That was when Labor disin- tegiated over Ramsey MacDon- ald's decision to join the Tories in a coalition government. The most recent conflict cen- tered on the scholarly Jenkins. He is a nationally respected figure; as chancellor of the ex- chequer in the Labor govern- ment which fell last year, he accrued much of the credit for transforming Britain's chronic balance of payments' deficit in- to a healthy surplus. After his rebellion Thursday, Jenkins extended an olive branch to the left wing. He said he would not support the gov- ernment in votes over the com- ing year to get through Parlia- ment a mass of enabling legis- lation to put Common Market membership into effect, al- though hedid not rule out the possibility he might merely ab- stain. 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 carr-er,-iAlt y mi...5 STARTS TODAY-3 DAYS ONLY! 2 BIG X HITS! "'A Vibrantly Blunt andi Lifelike Eyeful. Brazenly Sl Boldly Fatalistic and:/ Often Hilarious -Howard Thompson, N.Y. Times PARAMOUNTPICTURES PRESENTSHENRY MILLER S ,eie U/Uwmicef R IPTORN DAVID BAUER PHIL BROWN ELLEN BURSTYN JAMES CALLAHAN LAURENCE LIGNERES eDaeced by J )OSEP H Ji suRIKSceenplay byJOSEPH STRICK and BETTY BOTLEY COLOR A PARAMOUNT PICTURE ALSO-2ND BIG X HIT PLAYBOY ran ten . : yced pages on this film! "A sort of 'What's New Pussycat Y brought up to today's level! "A zany es a on, -erotobiography! There are some scenes so explicit, so yet!"-PLYO realistic, so natural that Mgzn "IMAKES BLOW-UP' LOOKLIlKE 177LEMSS MARKER 7" -LS ANGELES HERALD-EXAMNER I4i-onp lus NERKN cv r t, I c-Fom THE ALLEY-330 Maynard NOV. 5, 6, 7 MUDDY WATERS $2.25-SHOWS AT 7:30-10:00 NOV. 11 (THUR.), 12, 13 (SAT.)C Buddy Guy and Junior Wells $2.25-SHOWS AT 7:30-10:00 Tickets on Sale at Salvation RecordsI 330 Maynard-1103 S. Univ. American Revolutionary Media University of Michigan Film Society present The MaleseFalcon classic detective novel by Dashiell Hammett directed by John Huston HUMPHREY BOGART PETER LORRE SIDNEY GREENSTREET MARY ASTOR and Elisha Cook Jr., as Wilmer Miss Wonderly, who Sam Spade thought was, "well, you know, wonderful," turns out to be "not so wonderful," but "good, very good." She's just another contender, though, along with Joel Cario and the Fat Man and his boy Wilmer, for "the bird," a black falcon whose enamel surface hides "a vast fortune of diamonds, rubies and emeralds encrusted in gold, sent as tribute by the Knights of Malta to the King of Spain." Sam sends them all over, including Miss Wonderful. "Oh, it'll be bad at first, es- pecially at night, but I'll get over it. And when your partner is killed, you're sup- posed to do something about that. People might get the wrong idea. Any other way, I'd never know." "Oh, Sam."' Saern published uesday Well before the vote, Foreign Minister Chow Shu-kal had led his through Saturday morning. Subscrip- Taiwan delegation in a dignified final exit from the General Assem- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. bly hall. SHOP MONDAY 9:30 A.M. UNTIL 5:30 P.M. snuggle up in lounge-boots by Dearfoam After skiing and at home, you'll be ankle-deep t in warmth and brightness with a multicolor I