NOON BOOK DISCUSSION T H URSDAY 3545 Student Activities Bldg. THE TEACHINGS OF DON JUAN THE YAQUI WAY OF KNOWLEDGE author-CARLOS CASTENADA reviewed by MARI SHORE -Next Week- THE BLACK WOMAN OFFICE OF RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS Michigan Union, 3rd floor and ANN ARBOR CITY MUSIC PRODUCTIONS present in concert "BUDDIES IN THE SADDLE" and "CARNAL KITCHEN" SAT., NOV. 13-8:30 P.M. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE (LEAGUE) TICKETS $1.50 AVAILABLE AT: University Cellar, Discount Records (S. Univ.), Salvation Records (Maynard & S. Univ. stores). Available at Mendelssohn Box Office Sat, Noon 1 i I 'i" 4 I k i i II NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 94P tcl t9ttn I3aitly page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, November 11, 1971 y briefs, By The Associated Press Senate passes Program Information 665-6290 Shows at 1 -3 - 5 - 7 - 9 STARTING TODAY " . gut-tightening thriller and one of the most excit- ing films you'll see this year!" CUBAN PRIME MINISTER Fidel Castro arrived in Chile late Wednesday on his first trip to another Latin American country since 1959. He was greeted in Santiago by fellow Marxist Salvador Allende,j president of Chile. Castro headed a high-level delegation of Cuban leaders who plan to remain in Chile for 10 to 12 days. UNITED STATES intelligence sources report more than 5,000 tons of Soviet military equipment, including aircraft, should arrive in India this month. The arms shipment were said to result from recent visits to In- dia by high-ranking Russian diplomatic and military officials after the signing in August of a Soviet-India treaty of friendship and cooperation. ENEMY FORCES attacked Cambodia's Phnom Penh air- port and a nearby communications center in coordinated attacks yesterday inflicting heavy casualties and damage. No accurate count of the casualties was available, though unof- ficial reports said about 25 Cambodians were killed and 30 wounded in the the two attacks. THE EGYPTIAN GOVERNMENT has intensified its cam- paign to prepare its people for possible renewed war with Israel. President Anwar Sadat repeatedly has vowed that 1971 will be the year of decision on progress in the Middle East, either through diplomacy or war. Sadat met for four hours Tuesday night with the Supreme Council of the armed forces. He is to make a major speech to par- liament on Thursday. CONGRESSIONAL SPOKESMEN called yesterday for rever- sal of Nixon administration policies which, they said, have re- sulted in huge grain surpluses and the lowest farm prices since the depression. At issue before the Senate Agriculture Committee are bills which would divert millions of bushels of wheat and corn and other feed grains off the market and into a strategic reserve and increase loan rates on grains by as much as 25 per cent. THE NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION I adopted the first international guidelines on controlling air pol- lution yesterday. They cover protection against particulates-pollutants which are not in the form of gas-and sulphur oxides. These are produced largely by the burning of coal and petroleum products. By the end of 1972, guidelines are to be ready for the pollutants originating in auto exhausts, such as carbon monoxides and the chemicals that cause smog.I THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION announced yesterday it has recalled during the last 'half year about 105 million vitamin C pills which it said were inadequately labeled and posed a threat to heart patients trying to ward off colds. The agency warned the public last May that excessive use of some vitamin C tablets, containing undeclared sodium ascorbate rather than ascorbic acid, may be hazardous to persons on low salt diets. bill1 for foreign 0 economic aid WASHINGTON UP) - The Senate passed last night a slimmed down, $1.1 billion foreign economic aid bill to re- place a combined package rejected 12 days ago. The vote was 61 to 23. It voted in favor of the new bill after rejecting amend- ments to increasing funds and ease lending restrictions. Ac- tion on a companion military aid bill, second half of a $2.3 billion package, is scheduled today. The House meanwhile, was expected to pass and send to a doubtful fate in the Senate an interim funding resolu- tion. The Senate's timetable for work on the two regular foreign aid s o bills called for final action by the Jap a o end of the week. Senator Hugh Scott (R-Pa.) ex- pressed confidence that the for- aiy i l l will n cthe RfrtP -Associated Press Harris drops out Sen. Fred Harris (D-Okla.) announced yesterday he is ending his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination because he is "broke." CONFIRMATION EXPECTED Labor disapproves nominee for Court Ken Barnard-Detroit News CLINT E t yf ' .t WVS;'7r. t '> ,, y Labor leaders joined yester- day in the attack on the civil rights and civil liberties record of William H. Rehnquist, one of President Nixon's nominees for two Supreme Court vacan- cies. Spokesmen for the AFL-CIO and the United Auto Workers union urged the Senate Judici- ary Committee to reject Rehn- quist's nomination. H o w e v e r, the Commit- tee chairman, Sen. James O. Eastland, (D-Miss.), has ex- pressed confidence that Lewis F. Powell, Jr.. and Rehnquist will be speedily confirmed by the Senate after the committee acts on the nominations. Sen. Birch Bayh, (D-Ind.), a member of the committee's lib- eral bloc, also has said he thinks both nominees have majority support despite his frequently expressed in i s g i v i n g s about Rehnquist's appointment. Andrew J. Biemiller, testify- ing for the AFL-CIO, called Rehnquist "a right wing zealot .. . an extremist in favor of ex- ecutive supremacy and diminu- tion of personal freedom." Leonard Woodcock, president of the United Auto Workers union, has assailed Supreme Court nominee Rehnquist as possessing "neither the breadth of vision nor the humanity which is required of a Su- preme Court justice." Lewis F. Powell Jr. of Rich- mond, Va. and Nixon's second nominee, was attacked by Henry L. Marsh III, a black attorney and Richmond city council member. He said powell con- sistently attempted to thwart federal court bans on subsidies of white parents who were send- ing their children to private schools during the period Pow- ell was on the Virginia state board of education from 1961 to 1969. Rep. John Conyers Jr. of Michigan, testifying for the congressional B 1 a c k Caucus, urged rejection of both Powell and Rehnquist. eign ali willw pass Le oenabe if introduced as two separate eco- nomic and military bills. "There seems to be ample votes for the military aid measure and prob- ably enough for the economic aid bill," he said., Even if the Senate approves the, bill by Monday, the House-where leaders want a $3 billion program. -and Senate almost certainly could not work out a final new foreign aid authorization bill be- fore the program expires. Meanwhile the State Depart- ment said a new General Ac- counting Office ruling yesterday means that as matters now stand the U.S. foreign aid agency must go out of business Monday. Press officer Charles Bray said the GAO finding "lends further urgency" to administration backed efforts in Congress to continue the aid program on a temporary ba- sis until the legislators agree on a regular authorization. The GAO is Congress' financial watchdog. The State Department spokes- man said he does not expect Con- gress will wash its hands of the foreign aid program and leave 13,000 employes of the aid-ad- ministering Agency for Interna- tional Development stranded here and abroaa. But he said that since the two Senate and two House committees that pass on aid legislation are unlikely to finish work on a new regular aid bill by Monday Con- gress should pass a stopgap con- tinuing resolution. Okinawa WASHINGTON (P) - The Sen- ate approved overwhelmingly yes- terday the agreement returning Okinawa and the Ryukyu Islands to Japan next year. The agreement represents the end of an era in U.S.-Japan rela- tions. It returns to Japan the last remaining occupied territory held by the United States and ends some 27 years of the status of oc- cupying power. The treaty will not take effect until after the Japanese Diet has also ratified it and adopted leg- islation required to carry out the agreement and defense arrange- ments. However, the United States will retain for an indefinite period the use of 100 of the 134 separate military installations on the is- land. Meanwhile Tokyo police said they arrested 90 leftist demon- strators in Japan yesterday who were among thousands of work- ers and students supporting a 48 hour general strike on Okinawa. The strike and demonstrations protested the new - U.S.-Japanese Okinawa agreement because it allows U.S. military bases to re- main. 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. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. TONIGHT ONLY-THURS., NOV. 11 BATTLE OF ALGIERS dir. GILLO PONTECORYO, 1966 "PLAY MISTY FOR ME' ,..an invitation to terror... Co-Starrng JESSICA WALTER DONNA MILLS JOHN LARCH' SCREENPLAY BY JO HEIMS AND DEAN RIESNER STORY BY JO HElMS - DIRECTED BY CLINT EASTWOOD PRODUCED BY ROBERT DALEY . A JENNINGS LANG PRESENTATION A MALPASO COMPANY PRODUCTION"A UNIVERSAL-MALPASO COMPANY PICTURE TECHNICOLOR" RI- " ' " The School of Music and Department of Art present MOZAR T'S OPERA The Magic Flute English translation by Josef Blatt NOVEMBER 19, 20, 22, & 23-8 P.M. MENDELSSOHN THEATRE $1.50 & $3.00 ($1.50 tickets for U-M students only) Conductor Josef Blatt Stage Director: Ralph Herbert TICKET 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. Shows at 7:15,& 9 :45 AUD. B Angell'Hall 75c presented by Alley Cinema- ann arbor film cooperative { - - I Czech mates Czechoslovakia boasts of six major string quartets of quality, but the Prague String Quartet ranks higest on the scale. Their masterfully integrated ensemble work has kept this group high on the list of chamber music artists throughout the world since 1956, when the present quartet began their public performances. They were first introduced to American audiences in the 1965-66 season with three concerts on the West Coast and one in Hawaii, between engagem ents in Japan and South America. Such was their reception that the following season they were presented in a series of thirty successful concerts throughout the United States. On Tuesday evening, Nov. 16, in Rackham Auditorium, the Prague Quartet will present Haydn's Quartet in C major, Op. 54, No. 2; followed by the music of t wo Czech composers, Janacek's Quartet No. 2, and Dvorak's Quartet in G major, Op. 106. Tickets are available at $2.50, $4 and $5. Performances at 8:30. SHOP TONIGHT AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. hand-crocheted cloche and scarf set imported from Italy add charm and color to winter outings. The cloche and fringed 68" scarf are shell-stitch wool. Purple/pink/blue or olive/orange/white. Set, $12 ** A ENEAATI®N. A revealing portrait of the new liberated woman * BLAZING COLOR Plus 2nd feature* cinema 481.330 DII PL, Thursday and Friday BAKER'S WIFE F Dir. MARCEL PAGNOL, 1939. The village baker cannot work because he laments his wife's depar- ture with a stupid, sexy ~.E 'lL! ~