TODAY Clr Daily CROSSWORD PUZZLE on the Classified Page MAOR Theater presents, Nov. 6 & 7 The Newcomers A DRAMA OF SURVIVORS OF THE CONCENTRATION CAMP by JOHN BERNSTEIN Saturday and Sunday at Hillel-1429 Hill-8 P.M.-$1 FREE BILLIARD EXHIBITION JIMMY CARAS 5 TIME WORLD CHAMPION THURSDAY-4 P.M. & 8 P.M. Michigan Union Ballroom The ALLEY presents 330 MAYNARD MUDDY WATERS Nov. 5-6-7-Fri.-Sat.-Sun; TWO SHOWS EACH NIGHT 7:30 & 10:00 Tickets $2.25 ALL CHAIRS HAVE BEEN REMOVED Pinball Again in the Basement Adv. Tic.-SALVATION RECORDS 330 Maynard, 1103 S. Univ. COMING-Nov. 11, 12,13: Buddy Guy & Junior Wells NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 'a 4-Q *Iti~I3&Un I ai1 page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, November 2, 1971 L news briefs By The Associated Press Federal refuses' to deter judge pleas blast I THE U.S. COMMAND in Saigon announced yesterday that American troop strength in South Vietnam dropped below 200,- 000 for the first time since January 1966. U.S. headquarters also announced that an additional 1,325 men were pulled out of combat yesterday. This accelerated troop cutback came as informants disclosed Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird will bring to Saigon tomorrow President Nixon's broad outline for the definite disengagement of U.S. troops. The Nixon administration is reportedly considering a residuall force of 40,000 to 50,000 men by July 1. THE SENATE passed yesterday a bill to give native Alaskans $1 billion and 40 million acres in settlement of their aboriginal land claims. The Senate's action cleared the way for an attempt by a con- ference committee to resolve differences between the Senate bill and a measure passed by the House. The bill would give the 55,000 Eskimos, Aleuts and Indians $500 million in royalties from mineral production on Alaska public lands. AUTHORITIES IN ANNISTON, Alabama, lifted a cordon around a mostly black area after a night of racial violence. Black leaders, in conjunction with the move, called off scheduled! protests in the town. The black area was sealed off after six fire- bombs were thrown at white-owned businesses and two persons were wounded in a shooting incident. Leaders plan to meet to discuss a list of grievances presented byj the blacks, primarily concerning incidents at a nearby high school last week. * WASHINGTON (P) - A federal judge turned aside for the second time yesterday attempts by environmentalists to halt a giant underground nuclear explosion set to go off within days on a remote Alaskan island. U.S. District Court Judge George Hart Jr. ruled that seven organizations headed by the Committee for Nuclear Responsibility failed to prove that the government did not adequately consider potential environmental dangers of the blast on Amchitka Island. He also ruled that the blast is necessary to national security. The conservationists said they would appeal immediately a to the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington. The appeals court has already,~ - burned down one request for a temporary injunction against the -Associated Press blast - reportedly set to go off Ouse o Thursday with aforce equivalent to five million tons of TNT. - .- Belfast bombing A crowd gathers to view wreckage yesterday, after a time bomb exploded in a downtown Belfast office building. Six persons were reported injured. A clerk said two armed men walked into the building, lit the bomb fuse and yelled, "You got four minutes to get out." But the first ruling came be- h old r t0 fore Hart was ordered by t h e , appeals court to study secret doc- uments the environmentalists say will prove the explosion can trig-on S1 release radioactive waste into the ger arthuake ortdlwaves 15000 DEAD: air, or injure wilctme. 1_ V 1 A THE ALLEY CINEMA PRESENTS TONIGHT ONLY-TUES., NOV. 2 THE SEVENTH SEAL dir. INGMAR BERGMAN, 1956 " Cannes Film Festival Winner 1956 & 1957 * With Bibi Anderson and Max Von Sydow SHOWS AT 7 and 9:30-$1.00 330 Maynard COMING WED.-Wajda's "Ashes and Diamonds" Polish sponsored by ann arbor film cooperative SCOTLAND YARD DETECTIVES took emergency actions yesterday to protect Queen Elizabeth II after two bombs exploded in London and terrorists struck with explosives and bullets in Northern Ireland. A telephone caller warned that the tower above the royal entrance to the Houses of Parliament would be blown up today. The Queen will visit the Houses today at a state opening ceremony. Detectives suspected members of two groups; the rebel Irish hav Republican Army, and the Angry Brigade, a secret London group rep dedicated to the overthrow of British society. disa * * * ISRAELI PREMIER Golda Meir discussed U.S. proposals but for an Egyptian-IsraelidSuez Canal settlement yesterday with trop the American ambassador to Israel, Walworth Barbour. tr At the meeting held at Israel's request, the premier explained to Barbour Israel's position on American program for a canal accord. She asked for a clarification of the U.S.'s position on the canal settle- dest ment and its delay in resuming supplies to Israel. she] NO MANDATORY CONTROLS Phase 2 to seek lower inti WASHINGTON UP) - Home the Congress take definite ac- ing mortgages and consumer credit tion - makes its position cry- will be the immediate targets of stal clear - I don't think we are su& administration efforts to hold going to get much more than on down interest rates but a fixed talk and studies about consum- E ceiling will be avoided, Federal er interest rates," Chairman inf Reserve Chairman Arthur Burns Wright Patman, (D-Tex.), said. tio said yesterday. Burns also called for speed in dov But Burns, chairman of the achieving new international sai new Presidentially - appointed economic arrangements and pae committee on interest and divi- dropping the import surtax Nix- de dends, said the outlook for in- on imposed as part of his emer- d terest rates in the next year or gency program. E so is uncertain. Administration policy has not toI And some members of the yet clearly emerged in this field ten House Banking Committee who and Burns declined to discuss sug heard him continued to press specifics. But he said "There are inv for stronger interest controls in those who feel that time is on bus Phase II of President Nixon's our side, that we can be re- vid economic program. laxed about restoring the inter- swi "Unless this committee and national economy and eliminat- tio) The appeals court also told Hart to turn over to the environ- mentalists all of the documents I from four government agencies which showed any potential en- vironmental damage. Hart said he did so reluctantly and added: tIndiaseast coast "When I got through reading all this material on atomic explos- NEW DELHI, India (A,) - A cyclone and 16-foot tidal wave ions, I couldn't help feeling it was e slammed into India's east coast, and political leaders a tpt in a eot orted the loss of 15,000 to 20,000 lives in this latest natural ments turned over to the conserva- ister on the rim of the Bay of Bengal. tionists and others kept secret be- The wave and 100-mile-an-hour winds hit Friday night, cause he said they fell within the the devastation was so complete that word of its catas- legal doctrine known as executive ic proportions did not reach the ouside world unil yes- privilege. day. Hart, who earlier had dismissed -ay the environmentalists' case with- The Indian government radio reported a million homes out a formal hearing, said he troyed or damaged, leaving four million persons without turned down their second a t - lter. The broadcast put the death toll at 10,000. tempt to obtain a preliminary in- --__-___--_The political leaders, including needed for national security rea- a member of Parliament, gavens.ded aions ecnsea- their estimates of the higher toll . He also said the conserva- erest rates the surcharge. I have grave doubts about h views," he said, "Time is nobody's side." Burns said success in curbing lation and the fear of infla- rn should bring interest rates wn in the long run. But he id the immediate future is un- dictable because of unprece- nted cross-pressures. Business recovery could lead more demand for credit and d to raise rates, he said. He ggested an effort to devise an estment credit geared to the siness cycle that would pro- e stimulus during d o w n Ings without adding to infla- nary pressures in boom times. after a tour of the stricken area in India's Orissa State. vironm h The wave submerged scores oflon isf villages and islands in much the blast, it same way that a 30-foot tidal of a te, wave swept through the Ganges Spartal River basin of East Pakistan a the Nix year ago and left 300000 persons needed dead. ponry. This new tidal wave hit the Atton mainland near Cuttack, 225 miles vironm southwest of Calcutta and about to file 300 miles southwest of the Ganges Hart's Basin. hearing Cyclones and tidal waves ar:e If Si annual occurences in the Bay of down I Bengal at this time of year, some- sowd h times lashing India and o t h e r said he times East Pakistan. for an Seventy two hours after t h e Court. storm had struck, most of t h e The affected villages were still cut formal off from the rest of the country. United All rail lines, roads and air strips spendin were submerged or destroyed. passage failed to show that te en- ent would be damaged. ie Atomic Energy Commis- allowed to proceed with the t will mark the final stage sting program for the new n Antiballistic Missile which on administration claims is to counter Soviet w e a- ney David Sive of the en- entalists said he planned an immediate appeal to ruling and hopes for a in the appeal. ve should again be turned by the appeals court, he e would carry the request injunction to the Supreme' WASHINGTON (P) - T h e House refused yesterday to let a $1.5 billion school desegregation bill pass without a direct vote on busing. Backers needed 238 votes to win on the maneuver which required a 'two-thirds majority approval. They mustered only 135. Thus the move to suspend the rules an d pass an unamendment bill was crushed, 222-135. This means the desegregation bill remains eligible for action later this week andtwill require only a majority vote. At that time, sponsors said, the desegregation measure will be of- fered as an amendment to a high- er education bill, and antibusing proposals can be considered on their merits. The procedure in- volved yesterday barred a separ- ate vote on busing. Speaker Carl Albert (D-Okla.) had sought in yesterday's maneuv- er to slip the bill through with- out making it necessary for north- ern Congressmen- to go on record on the busing issue. The amendment supports the desegregation bill, but President Nixon wants it amended to pro- hibit spending any of the money for busing pupils to overcome se- gregation. Education Committee Chairman Carl Perkins (D-Ky) said the ad- ministration "has made it per- fectly clear that no federal funds will be available, for busing." Rep. Joe Waggonner (D-La) told congressmen from northern states "Busing is your problem now." Rep. John M. Ashbrook (R- Ohio) said that while the b ill won't require busing, it would en- courage it. The MichigantDaily, 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 mal. ENDS TO N ITE ! "A Vibrantly Blunt and Lifelike Eyeful. Brazenly Sly, Boldly Fatalistic and Often Hilarious!" Thompson, N.Y. Timesr "SEX" From the book that was damned By the author who was condemned, . . State notice States Department served yesterday that the is temporarily su- PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS HENRY MILLER S sian a RIP TORN DAVID BAUER PHIL BROWN ELLEN BURSTYN JAMES CALLAHAN LAURENCE UGNERES Dsete a JOSEPH.STRICK Screenplay byJOSEPH STRICK and BETTY BOTLEY COLOR A PARAMOUNT PICTURE ALSO 2ND X RATED HIT! - - o 11 U Vv aaaa V V faa - v a v+ - -V +- -----_- - - - - - - t _- - -- American Revolutionary Media University of Michigan Film Society pre sent The Ma 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." Indian newspapers reported of- ficial confirmation of nearly 2,500 fatalities in the small island vil- lage of Jambu, near the Bengall port of Paradip. The village was believed to have been washed away and the port severely dam- aged. SNAP TMDAY AND wAE NESDA Y UNTIL 5:30 PM. through roundin Nov. 2 Japan iet Unio ing fle waters; all bee : v o o H eironymus MERKIN -r ever'F et MARCY Humppe and find frue happiness9 * Rn..............ee............o* '-' A Regional Filni Release - Technicolor. ng the right of innocent by ship and aircraft h territorial waters s u r- ng Amchitka Island from until Nov. 4 inclusive. r, South Korea, the Sov- on and Canada, whose fish- ets are in the Bering Sea adjoining the island, have n notified. SPECIAL Cotton Knit Shirts 4.40 Here's the shirt of the season. . .long sleeves, scoop neck, hugger styling. . .now at special savings. There's a great selection of bold stripes and rich solid tones for the choosing.. S,M,L. .ii::ii. orPirTH roruM FFNH'AIUN ATUWSRTY DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR LJLJ INFORMATION 761.9700 "TROPIC" 6:30 & 10 OVER 11:30 "HEIRONYMUS" 8 P.M. V STARTS WEDNESDAY! "YOU'LL LOVE 'FRIENDS.' Andreas V photography is so good, next year's Oscar should be cast with his name engraved on IC A REAITIII C"TIDE!" . Winding's statuette it. THIS .'^- nw I