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November 07, 1971 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-11-07

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THE ALLEY CINEMA
330 MAYNARD
TOMORROW ONLY-MONDAY, NOV. 8
THE BICYCLE THIEF
dir. VITTORIO DE SICA, 1949
" New York Film Critics Award-Best Foreign Film
* Academy Award-Best Foreign Film
"One of ten best films in 40 years. In its revelation of the lone-
liness of man in a complex world it ranks for all-around great-
ness with any picture made."

NEWS PHONE: 764-0552
BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554

94P

SfrAVi Ar

4:3atly

page three

Ann Arbor, Michigan

Sunday, November 7, 1971

n e wsbriefs
By The Associated Press
INDIA'S PRIME MINISTER INDIRA GANDHI headed home
Saturday with assurances from the Nixon administration that
Congress will approve $250 million in economic aid funds and
$250 million worth of food grains to help the needy in India and
Pakistan.

Mansfield sees

cutoff

of funds

-Bosley Crowther, New York Times
special price 75c

SHOWS AT 7 & 9:30

sponsored by ann arbor film cooperative
COMING TUES.-Antonioni's "L'Eclisse"
"'FRIENDS' IS AS OLD AS
'ROMEO AND JULIET' AND
AS NEW AS 'LOVE STORY'!"
-Wanda Hale, New York Daily News

In Pakistan, the Pakistan Election Commission said 86
dates were elected unopposed to the East Pakistan provincial
bly to fill some of the 193 seats vacated by the outlawed
League.

candi-
assem-
AwamiI

PARAMOUNT
PICTURES
PRESENTS f ie d
MUSIC BY ELTON JOHN
A TECHNICOLOR A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
ALSO-2nd GREAT PICTURE!
"A DAZZLING MOVIE. A superior film. The most
striking and baroque images you're ever likely to
see. A rich, poetic, cinematic style."
-Vincent Canby, New York Times

Meanwhile, the Bay of Bengal's second cyclone in a week hit East
Pakistan Saturday, causing "heavy loss of life and severe property
damage," according to unofficial sources.
CHRYSLER CORPORATION has announced the recall of
52,279 of its 1972 Dodge, Chrysler and Plymouth automobiles be-
cause they have an improperly mounted bushing in the automatic
transmission.
A spokesman said the defect could result in the driver of the
car shifting the control lever into the park position while the trans-
mission remained in drive. Chrysler said no accidents connected withI
this problem have been reported.
FEDERAL ATTORNEYS are bringing criminal charges
against executives whose firms have ignored orders to cease pol-
luting Massachusetts rivers.
The president of one woolens firm has pleaded no contest to
charges of violating a 72-year old federal law forbidding the dump-
ing of refuse into navigable waters, and faces possible imprisonment
of up to five years. Charges are also pending against two other firms.
* * *
SOVIET PILOTS FLEW TWO MIG23 FIGHTERS across the
Israeli-held Sinai Desert, Israel reported Saturday.
The flight-came three days after the U.N. reported the flight
of two Israeli jets across Egyptian territory, and coincided with a
statement by Egypt's president Anwar Sadat that Egypt could not
wait forever for a settlement in the Mideast.
Israel attributed the flight to reconnaissance purposes and to an
Egyptian desire to create tension and force the great powers to impose
a settlement in the area.
The MIG23 is the fastest lighter known in the Soviet arsenal. .
SECRETARY-GENERAL U THANT has had blood trans- v
fusions for a bleeding duodenal ulcer, the United Nations report-
ed yesterday.n

-Associated Press
RAYMOND BAYTOS, information officer in the Los Angeles
County Sheriff's office, tell newsmen how 150 prisoners took
over the eleventh floor of the Hall of Justice.
L.A. poli put down
brief prtison uprisin
LOS ANGELES UP) - A force of 75 unarmed sheriff's deputies
marched into a Hall of Justice 11th floor cell block that had been.1
held by prisoners for 4%/2 hours yesterday and quelled the disturbance
within 27 minutes.
"The inmates offered no resistance," a sheriff's spokesman said
minutes after officers marched into the 11th floor cell block and

"'THE CONFORMIST' pro-
vides a chilling fascination
and a film so beautiful in its
depiction of an. era and so
multileveled in its implica-
cation that I defy you to
looks away from the screen
for its duration. Bertolucci's
subtleties, his poetic pass-
ages and memory-stimulated
imagery are overwhelming."
-Judith Crist,
New York Magazine

will be acceptable to the admiis-
tration.
Officially, the State Department 1old
has said the $3.4-billion House-
passed authorization measure is BRACCIAN
the minimum acceptable. Seeking to ma
The House plans to consider on world affai
Tuesday the continuing resolution Europe's most
to fund the Defense Department, ments agreed
District of Columbia, Office of at a summit cor
Economic Opportunity and for-
eign aid program until Congress The agreeme
passes their regular appropriation ble by Britain
bills. An effort is due to limit the Common A
sharply the foreign aid portion of ing with Londo
the measure, ket's present m
Mansfield said the Senate has West German
many things to consider and they Holland and L
shouldn't be shunted aside for the three other cot
foreign-aid measure. He listed the not yet finally
Okinawa treaty due for debate Ireland, Norwa
.Tuesday, the President's tax and Foreign Min
economic proposals, the two Su- all 10 made the
preme Court nominees, the un- ing in the 5th
passed regular money bills and the Castle near Ror
two new foreign aid authorization
~bills. Paris, was e,
Mansfield said he does not know site of the sum
whether the Senate will pass the. ticipants are ea
separate new economic and mili- no date was se
tary aid bills which total $2.3 "The favorite
billion - some $600 million less British diplomE
than the bill rejected by the Sen- are 3 to 1. But
ate on Oct.29. 1 against Febr
The Senate had killed the or-
iginal $2.9 million foreign aid bill The failure t
on Oct. 29 in a surprise 41-27 lighted the diff
ot. tries face in fo
The Senate Foreign Relations on major issu
Committee then split the bill into meet until the
separate economicvand military the internation
aid sections on Nov. 4, while the - the most a
House began to work on a reso-
lution to revive theroriginalrpro- tween Western
gram on a temporary basis. United States.

talks

or foreign ai
WASHINGTON (R) - Majority Leader Mike Mansfield
said yesterday he sees little chance of Senate action by the
Nov. 15 deadline on an interim funding measure to keep the
foreign aid program in operation.
But the Montana Democrat said a delay will work no
hardships despite protests from aid officials that failure to
act on a continuing resolution by the Nov. 15 expiration of
current authority will force the aid program to come to a
halt and throw thousands of employes out of work.
Mansfield said the Nixon ad-- ----
ministration still wants "the same
old program" rejected by the Sen-
ate 10 days ago. I
He declined to speculate on the
the end come up with a $2.8-bil-
lion aid measure and that this

Paramount Pictures presents
JEAN LOUIS TRINTINGNANT
STEFAN IA SANDRELL I
in
the conformist

fe i'TH 'oS'uM1
..TM M/ AT LIBERTY
vu M1tOWNd ANN ARBOR
INFORMATION 761-9700

"FRIENDS" 5 & 9
"CONFORMIST" 7

SUNDAY MATINEE ONLY
ALL SEATS $1 .00 Starts 3 P.M.
Over 4:40

i
1
3
I
t
i
i
1
I

A bulletin issued here also said he was "making good progress" confronted prisoners who had set fires and broken light fixtures
and that "intestinal bleeding has stopped." in a protest over the quality of jail meals.
Thant. 62, has been in Leroy Hospital, New York, since Tues- A spokesman said the disturbance broke out at 7:15 a.m. The
day, when he suffered a spell of extreme weakness in his office. deputies were sent in at 11:25 a.m. and reported at 11:52 that the
- - - --- -- -~ - - area had been secured.
VIETNAMIZATION PRAISED The protest, officials said, cen-
1tered on inmate complaints that
food served for breakfast was not
' G Z /(.1 ~V u~e7 fit to eat and that they had no
Laird announces troopwithdrawals central dining area.
"We felt no weapons were need-
ed," said the sheriff's spokes-
SAIGON UP) - Allied authori- frame his mid-November an- withdrawals. will start pulling man. He said officers carried nei-
ties ainounced sizable U.S. and nouncement on the next stage of out 10,000 marines and support ther guns nor batons.
South Korean troop withdraw- U.S. disengagement. troops next month,nthe South No hostages were taken during
als yesterday, and U.S. Defense The defense secretary declin- Vietnamese Foreign Ministry the conflict. Deputies said the
Secretary Melvin Laird declared ed to tell an airport news con- announced. The 50,000 man Ko- prisoners had no weapons, They
Vietnamization of the war is ference how fast a withdrawal rean force, which has been op- d h ffe
on or ahead of schedule in all pace the administration has in erating along the central coast, ed minor cuts when they broke the
aspects, mind. And he gave no details is regarded generally as the best light fixtures.
Winding up three days of con- of his talks with U.S. Ambassa- disciplined in the country. At the height of the disturb-
sultations here,tLairdtold dor Ellsworth Bunker; Creigh- The U.S. Command reported ance, fires set by inmates lit up
newsmen that South Vietnam's ton W. Abrams, commander of that the Americal Division's 6th the windows of the gray stone Hall
assumption of primary ground U. S. forces in Vietnam; Presi- Engineer Battalion and the of Justice in the down town Civil
combat responsibility has "en- dent Nguyen Van Thieu and Navy's 5th Construction Batta- Center.
joyed tremendous success" and other South Vietnamese lead-
thatthyViedteme suess"emovind ers uhlion are being phased out. Au- Deputies said the men were out-
thwatdha t ingaover mghe movs e declared that "phase thorized strength of the two side of their cells on a walkway
towad tkingove th majr Bt hedecare tha "pase units totals 1.175 men. in front of the cell ai'ea. The area
air role "at the rate not fore- two" of Vietnamization - turn- in which they were located still
seen by me . . . last year." ing over artillery, logistics and U.S. military strength in Viet- is surrounded by bars however.
Laird then headed for Wash- air operations to the South Viet- nam, now put at 196,700, is ex-iBrksusded truhodr
Breakfast is served through food
ington, where he will report to namese-"is going forward on pected to drop to 175,000 by tray openings through the bars.
President N i x o n tomorrow. schedule or ahead of schedule in Dec, 1. and informants say Officials said the men refused
Results of Laird's talks with U.S. all respects." America probably will be back s sid them resed
and Vietnamesb officials in Sai- South Korea, last of Saigon's to a 40,000 to 50,000-man ad- toudrerttheir ceras.n
gon will help the President four fighting allies to begin visory role by midsummer. wouldn'tead,turn to inmates began
yelling, banging on bars and set-.
ting fire to mattresses and cloth-
fling, Some prisoners broke light
fixtures and toilets.

New violence in Ireland
spreads to Dublin streets

O, ITALY (R) -
atch U.S. influence
drs, 10 of Western
important govern-
yesterday to meet
inference in 1972.
nt was made possi-
's decision to join
Market. Participat-
on will be the mar-
nembers - France,
y, Italy, Belgium,
uxembourg - and.
intries which have
decided to join-
y and Denmark.
isters representing
decision at a meet-
century Odescalchi
me.
xpected to be the
mit. Although par-
ger to move ahead,
t.
is May." said one
at, "and the odds
I'll give you 10 to
uary."
o set a date high-
iculty the 10 coun-
rging a solid front
es. They can not
y get together on
nal monetary issue
acute problem be-
Europe and the

ENTHRALLING!"
\ -New Yorker
O $DIPUS TH KING
$1.00 admission for
"Oedipus the King" ONLY

BELFAST, Northern Ireland
OP) - British troops uncovered
what they called a terrorist
bomb factory in a remote Ul-
ster village yesterday even as
violence spread to the Irish
republic with bomb explosions
in the Dublin area.
A mother of five was slain in
a crossfire between British
troops and guerrilla snipers in
Londonderry. She was the 153rd
victim of two years of internal
strife in Northern Ireland.
People were thrown from
their beds and windows were
shattered by the explosion of a
homemade bomb hurled from
a speeding automobile at an
apartment building in the Dub-
lin area. The building is owned

by a British insurance com-
pany.
Only hours after Kathleen
Thompson, a women in her late
40s, was shot dead in London-
derry, four bombs blasted build-
ings in widely separated dis-
tricts of Belfast. Four, women
were injured in one explosion
and there was widespread dam-
age.
Thompson, police said, was a
member of the women's "dust-
bin brigade" out banging on
garbage cans in the Roman
Catholic Creggan Estate sector
of Londonderry to warn the
menfolk when 200 soldiers raid-
ed a house opposite her home.

UAC--DAYSTAR presents
TICKETS ON SALE TOMORROW
10 A.M.-MICHIGAN UNION

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 48i04. Published daily Tues-
day through Sunday morning Univer-
sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by
carrier, $1i by ma il.
Summer Session published Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-
tion rates: $5 by carrier. $6 by mail.

MAOR Theater presents

FRI., NOV. 19th

Ike &

Tina

Turner
REVUE
and SHADOWFAX
$3.50-4.50-5.00

SAT., NOV. 20th
Jefferson
Airplane
and HOT TUNA
$3.50-4.50-5.50

The

A DRAMA OF SURVIVORS OF THE CONCENTRATION CAMP
by JON BERNSTEIN

Newcomers

This Weekend Sat.-Sun., Nov. 6-7

8 P.M. at Hillel

1429 Hill-50c

t~he ann arbor film cooperative presents
COME and SEE JANE FONDA as
B ARB A EEL A

-A LIMIT OF 25 TICKETS PER PERSON PER SHOW

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