I 3 I p DIAL 5-6290 STARTING THURSDAY NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 im4c Sftx~a pati page three AV CL NT EASTWOOD Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, November 10, 1971 "PLAY MISTY FOR ME** ...an Invitation to terror... A UNIVERSAL-MALPASO COMPANY PICTURE " TECHNICOLOR" ® ,.r One of the most exciting films you'll see this year ENDING TONIGHT: LAURENCE OLIVIER IN "DANCE OF DEATH" "Schlesinger, with his ability to capture the insularity and the hos- tility (remember 'Midnight Cow- boy') of urban life (in this case it is Londaon that gets the going-over), and Miss Gilliatt, with her tart script, strike a responsive note in all of us as they do what amounts to, a seismographic tracing of the eimo- tional ups and downs of two people trapped in the death throes ofa love affairs. The film is chock full of cut- ting, sharp, sociological observa- tions. More than that it is a sophis- ticated, but very human dissection of love as it exists in this age of non- comimunication." -Kathleen Carroll, N.Y. DAILY NEWS 4oseph Janni Pro- a John Schlesinger Film BoSunday/Snday" SIM T W T F S Snews brie fs By The Associated Press THREE DELEGATES from the People's Republic of China yesterday appeared at the United Nations. The three initial delegates arrived to discuss the arrival tomor- row of China's main U.N. delegation-including permanent repre- sentative Huang Nua-which is expected to take its place on U.N. committees and in the General Assembly Friday. The General Assembly voted Oct. 26 to seat People's China and1 exclude Nationalist China--contrary to U.S. wishes. CRIMINAL ASSAULT warrants will be sought against six students allegedly involved in racial disturbances at Ann Arbor High School, Police Chief Walter Krasny announced yesterday. Krasny also said a black youth who allegedly hit a white stu- dent over the head with a steel bar at Scarlett Junior High Mondayf will also be charged with felonious assault.k There have been racial disturbances at Huron daily since lastI Thursday. Krasny said police will remain in the school as long as "the danger of trouble" exists. THE CITY OF MIAMI BEACH has been awarded almost $400,000 in federal funds to buy sophisticated police equipment and train security forces for the 1972 Democratic National Con- vention. The unprecedented grant has been approved by the Law En- forcement Assistance Administration and will supplement $178,000 in local funds already earmarked for the elaborate security precautions. that will surround the July convention. More than $228,000 of the allocation will be used to buy equip- ment ranging from night vision and optical devices to 35 police hel- mets, 40 face shields for riot duty, 120 gas grenades and 20 gas grenade launchers. THE SUPREME COURT yesterday refused to interfere with a lower court ruling that pension plans compelling women work- ers to retire at an earlier age than men violates women's civilI rights. The ruling, on behalf of an Indiana woman brewery employe, came from the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Forcing women to retire earlier than men, the court said, "is tantamount to dis- charge" on the basis of sex and thus violates the 1964 Civil Rights Law. SEN. EDMUND MUSKIE (D-Maine) yesterday charged the Nixon administration "is using direct behind the scenes pressure in the House to, dilute the water pollution bill that was passed unanimously by the Senate."{ Muskie said the President is now opposing the bill because he doesn't have the environmental backbone to support a tough bill." SUPREME COURT nominee William Rehnquist yesterdayj submitted a sworn affidavit to the Senate Judiciary Committee! that he has never been a member of the ultra conservative John Birch Society. The allegation that Rehnquist is a former John Bircher came in a New York radio statement by Sidney Zion, the former news- paperman who first publicly linked Daniel Ellsberg to the disclosure of the Pentagon papers. Civil rights leaders Joseph Raugh, Jr. and Clarence Mitchell said they were dissatisfied with Rehnquist's affidavit and urged the com- mittee to investigate further. Re-elect Nixon -' drive begins - WASHINGTON (M - With election day precisely 52 weeks away, the campaign to re-elect Richard Nixon as president is already in high gear. The campaigners' slogan: "We're going to run like we've never run before." Nixon has not said publicly that he will seek a new term and probably won't before early next year. But the ever widening preparations for campaign battle would not be under way without his consent. Interviews with key officials in the Nixon camp dis- close a curious blend of caution and confidence about 1972. Some aides, looking over the crowded field of Democratic presi- dential hopefuls, talk boldly of an I ayvictory for Nixon nx year. Some even forecasta landslide such as the one rolled up by Lyn- don Johnson in 1964. But other advisers play down such talk. "I don't look for land- slides," one veteran political plan- ner said. "All I want to do is get the most votes. If you win, you're in-it doesn't matter if it's by one x vote or 10 million votes."= In addition to the headquar- ters staff, recruiting of the state and local chairmen is underway. "The chairmen are being select- ed on the basis of their ability to organize down to the precinct -Associated Press level," said one Republican stra- - ategist. "We've got to find out who President Nixon )r trial our friends are and to make sure )und) yesterday arrives they get out to vote." start of his third trial I Yesterday the President's sched- i ebate over arged with the fatal ule included visits to New York and Chicago for appearances at Republican fund-raising dinners. His speeches were to be beamed foreign " via closed-circuit television to 18 * other dinners. At $500 a plate, the GOP hoped to raise $5 million as Ibill resum-ies a substantial down payment on Iiea rin g the 1972 campaign. WASHINGTON (R) - The Aside from such forays, Nixon Senate yesterday began its for- is expected to maintain a low eign-aid debate all over again on political profile in the months a $2.3-billion program Secretary I aIf ahead by concentrating all his of State William Rogers has energies on being President, his termed inadequate. advisers saye UNOFFICIAL CAMPAIGN Newton arrives fc Black Panther leader Huey Newton (foregro at the Alameda County Courthouse for the on manslaughter charges. Newton is ch shooting on an Oakland policeman in 1967. DRAFT EVASION CASE aCourt denies on citizensl * WASHINGTON (3) - A 27- applied for Canadian citizenship year-old North Carolina native and Canada has no legal obliga- who renounced his citizenship to tion to take him back. avoid serving in the Army was If Canada agrees to allow Jol- denied a hearing yesterday by the ley to live there, said chief coun- Supreme Court.- - sel Charles Gordon of the Immi- The " igling means that Thomas gration Service, then Jolley will Jolley, a man without a country, cross. the border voluntarily or be may have reached the end of the forced to go there. If Canada re- road in his fight to remain in the fuses, Gordon said, "we will have United States. to find a country that accepts Jolley, who renounced his citi- him." zenship in Canada in 1967, never When the news reached Jolley i 3 r Still undecided, sources say, is the timing of Nixon's re-election announcement. The deadline for entering the New Hampshire pri- mary is Jan. 6, and some sources predict a presidential statement shortly before then. Early next year, sources pre- dict Atty. Gen. John Mitchell will. leave his Cabinet post and take charge of the election effort which he also headed in 1968. Secretary of Commerce Maurice Stans may take command of fund-raising forces, they say. In 1968, Nixon's campaign spent about $14 million for advertis- ing, and campaign planners say the 1972 advertising budget prob- Suit against !Jnrve'v filed in Tallahassee, he said he was not I surprised and that he doesn't know what legal avenues remain open. He said he wants to remain in the United States and he still The Senate agreed to spend six hours on each of two foreign- aid bills, a $1.1 billion economic assistance measure, and a mili- tary aid' program of just under $1.2 billion. On that timetable, Senate ac- tion would be completed by the end of the week. "I think there is an under- standing that defeat of this bill wouldnbe a catastrophe for the foreign policy of the United States," Rogers has said. While Republican leaders dis- cussed efforts to increase the bill, Sen. William Fulbright (D-Ark.) called for further reductions, terming the program "a grab bag for everyone but the American people who foot the bill." Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird took the administration's case for foreign aid to a meeting with Republican senators. The House, meanwhile, is scheduled to take action today on a joint resolution including au- thority for the Agency for Inter- national Development to keep spending money, at a rate of about $2.6 billion a year after Nov. 15, when current spending authority expires. '' might have a chance if no coun- starring GlendaJatcksonPeter Finch Murray Head with Peggy Ashcroft Tony Britton Maurice Denham Bessie Love Vivian Pickles Screenplay by Penelope Gilliatt Produced by Joseph Janni 'Dihrected John Schlesinger United Artsts ( iyo TH 'orUM FIFTH AVENUE AT LBIRTY DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR INFORMATION 7614700 WED. & THURS. 7 and 9 FRIDAY 7 ! 9 ". 11 A U.S. EXPERT painted a bleak picture yesterday for South try can be found to accept him.- Vietnam if Washington cuts off all economic aid. DETROIT u(IA-A Pinckney man Attorneys for Jolley argued The informant, who asked not to be identified, said its armed has filed an $845,000 damage suit that his renunciatiop was involun- forces would have to be cut nearly in half at the risk of military against Washtenaw County Sher- tary since he did so to avoidv setbacks. If not that, then the nation will have to try to ride out dis- iff Douglas Harvey for allegedly Army service. They said the issue asru ~beating him and holding himbAfrytseoric.theyasaidtherissue astrous inflation, he said. ; without cause in the county jalbefore the court was whether a in Ann Aror.-jailman could be coerced by his own In a suit filed Monday iU.S. country's penal laws into invol-a District Court in Detroit, Leland untarily giving up hisgct sde- Snay said deputies Walter Farley, They cited the high court's de- Hugh Anderson and Lloyd Stamp- cision which held that Japanese er beat him while he was visiting Americans living in Japan during a friend in Ypsilanti. World War II did not lose their Snay said he was held in the citizenship if drafted by Japan county jail for eight hours with- because they were forced into the ' out charges and never was in- Japanese Army under penalty. 4 formed of his constitutional The government argued that JUDY KRrights. He was finally charged Jolley had "by clear, unequivocals with disorderly conduct but the and convincing evidence" shown; charges were later dismissed, that he had "knowingly and de- Harvey was unavailable for liberately . . . renounced his al-t comment on the suit. legiance. The School of Music and Department of Art present MOZART'S OPERA The Magic Flute1 English translation by Josef Blatt NOVEMBER 19, 20, 22, & 23-8 P.M. 19th MENDELSSOHN THEATRE $1.50 & $3.00 ($1.50 tickets for U-M students only) Conductor Josef Blatt Stage Director: Ralph Herbert urn rTICKET INFORMATION: 764-6118 MAIL ORDERS: School of Music Opera, Mendelssohn Theatre, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Please enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope BOX OFFICE OPENS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, AT 12:30 P.M. TICKETS: $3.50-4.50- EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY 5.00 PRESENTS MICH. UNION DONOVAN and SALVATION in concert RECORDS,A 'Y l ,'wnrA . ! FIlDAY. NOVMBER 19, 8:30 p.nm..z ably will be in the same range. But there will be a new twist- instead of hiring an outside ad- vertising agency, the campaign is setting up its own agency to be run by Peter Daily, a Los Angeles advertising executive. Daily's staff will prepare the ads, then buy newspaper and magazine space and television and radio time, tasks usually handled by an outside ad agency. 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 mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subsecrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. But Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said he will oppose any such resolu- tion until Congress has completed action on legislation authorizing the program. DIAL 8-6416 4hWE Shows At 1-3-5-7-9 It is a trip much worth taking. Not since '2001' has a movie so cannily inverted consciousness and alter- ed audience perception. -Time Magazine r I I HELLSTROMCHROINICLE IZPSI-ANNO9147 ; _' o0 WASHTENAW AVE. Between BOX OFFICES OPEN 6:30 SHOW STARTS AT 7:00 TRADER HORNEE Rated X for Adults... F for Funny . Shown Nightly at 7:00 & 10:30 PLUS The Definite Film of the Newly Found Freedom of the Screen. THE RAMRODDER F) Weekdays 8;45-Fri.-Sat. 8:45 & 12:00