~-1 j.J~-Z-1 D"1 ~ I BOX OFIES OPN 6:0 -NEWS PHONE: 764-0532 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0534 Sid~i§an ~aiti~ page three p THE TOWERING TRIUMPH OF ADULT MOVIES! TRADER HORNEEX Rated X for Adults . .. F for Funny ... Shown Nightly at 7:00 & 10:30 PLUS The Definite Film of the Newly Found Freedom of th'e ScenWeekdays 8:5-Fri -St 845 & 12:00 Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, November 12, 1971 news briefs By The Asiocsated Press Ui.S. BOMBING INTENSIFIED FRI.-SAT.-SUN. $2.50 PER CARLOAD 3 Adult Features "TH E MINX" x "T:HE FEMALE"s "BORA BORA" Free passes to the car wi GIMME SHELTER GP ENDLESS SUMMER G -SAT. NIGHT- Early & Late, Late Show- th 10:30C& see all 3 features thFree Coffee from 10:30 Free Door Prizes! p Subscribe to Te Daily "'SUNDAY, BLOODY SUNDAY' is Schlesinger's ('Darling,' 'Midnight Cowboy') wisest, least sentimental film, and al- most perfect realization of Penelope Gilliatt's original screenplay . . . Miss Gilliatt has the extraordinary ability to create intelligent characters who don't sound like mouth- pieces, to capture those looks and sounds of the surface of things that suggest the universes just beneath, and to write dialogue that is simultaneously rueful and funny, and as spontaneous as love itself. It's a movie of unusual tensions and reserves .. . 'SUNDAY, BLOODY SUNDAY' opened yes- terday at the Coronet Theatre, where, I'm sure, it will remain for a long, long time." -Vincent Conby, NEW YORK TIMES AJoseph Janni prdcto John Schlesinger's Film B___dySunday" SM T W TF S PRESIDENT NIXON announced yesterday he is replacing his embattled Secretary of Agriculture and abandoning a plan to abolish the Agriculture Department that was not popular in the farm belt. Nixon told newsmen that 56-year-old Clifford M. Hardin is leaving the cabinet to take "an exceptionally attractive offer" from a private firm. Hardin, the fifth original member of the Nixon Cabinet to leave his post, will be succeeded - if the Senate agrees - by Earl Butz, 62, who was an assistant secretary of agriculture in the Eisenhower administration. SENATE AND HOUSE negotiators agreed yesterday on a compromise plan of federally supported day care for the nation's children, ending a deadlock of almost a month. Under the Senate bill, free day care and other services would be given to children from families with incomes of up to $4,320 a year. The compromise represented a major concession to the Nixon. Administration, which had threatened to veto a far more liberal day-care plan approved by the Senate earlier this fall. * *, * SEN. HENRY JACKSON said yesterday he believes in inte- gration "in the fullest sense" but ,objects to school busing which would move his children to slum area schools from their "lily Iwhite neighborhood." Jackson, an unannounced contender for the Democratic presi- dential nomination, told a group of party contributors in Washing- ton, D.C., that the answer to the busing problem is to provide equaL schools for all neighborhoods. New York Mayor John Lindsay and Sens. Hubert Humphrey and Edmund Muskie also talked to the gathering of campaign givers. during the day-long meeting. THE LEADERS of the People's Republic of China's first permanent delegation to the United Nations arrived at Kennedy airport yesterday. Deputy Foreign Minister Chiao Kuan Hua was greeted by UN delegates from Zambia, Albania and Pakistan and UN chief of Protocol, Sinan Korle. Chiao read a statement, declaring, "Our delegation will work jointly in the United Nations with the representatives of all the: countries that love peace and uphold justice for the cause of safe- guarding the international peace and promoting human progress.'' THE HOUSE APPROPRIATIONS Committee yesterday re- jected a measure that would tack a June 1 deadline on all U.S. Laos .By THOM MARLOWE @Pacific News Service Vientiane, Laos - "What's happening in Laos?" a curious Vientiane-bound traveller asked his companion. "Who knows?" was the reply. They are not the only ones in the dark. For -the 800,000 to one million refugees - approximate- ly one-third of the country's populationh - logic in Laos is a Certainly, to thousands of people who used to live on the Plain of Jars life seems a good deal less than reasonable. They are now living in a dusty arid area less than 30 miles from Vientaine, administrative capi- tol of the Royal L aotian Gov- board shacks. These refugees were evacuat- ed from their homes more than Lao soldiers, undera theaegi of the U.S., and were promised farmland and food until the first crop would be harvested. In addition, they were told, their Pathet Lao-issued money would be exchanged for Govern- ment iKips when they got to Why then, many ask, will there be no first crop, and why is there no suitable farmland? And why are they still trying, unsuccessfully, to e x c h a n g e their Pathet, Lao money for Kips? . The displaced civilian popula- tion of Laos has a slanted view of what has happened to it, ac- cording to Jack Williamson, Deputy Director of Refugee Re- national Development (US -D) "A lot of them feel they are- being lpicked on," Williamson mainUSAD compound in Vien tiane. They feel that they are the only ones being pushed around. They don't see the whole picture or understand the picture throughout Southeast Asia." On the whole, though, U.S. officials are reluctant to discuss the refugee problem. Some re- fuse to admit that a problem exists. A common complaint of the refugees is that they were bombed out of their villages. refuge es face perils NAPALM DROPPED by U.S. planes burned this Laotian child, according to Fred Branfman, a free-lance journalist who spent several years in Laos. In a recent appearance here, Branfman of- fered this photograph to support his assertion that, contrary to claims by military officials, civilians are suffering from continued U.S. bombing. combat anu support operations in Indocnina to a $7 i Diion defense bill. The deadline was proposed by Rep. Edward Boland Jr. (D-Mass.)., Boland said an effort will now be made to write it into the measure when it reaches the House flOor next week. "I approve every bomb strike myself." said Ambassador God- ley, a large jovial looking man. "And I certainly don't condone the bombing of villages." The complaints of refugees underscore a recently released study of the air war in Indo- china done by a Cornell Univer- sity team of professors. They concluded that bombing in Laos remains at a level ecqual to one four years ago while ground cmbat has been drastically cur- tailed. Claims of increased bombing are false, according to U.S. am- bassador G. McMurtrie Godley. When asked about Phantom Jets which had been flying over the royal capital of Luang Prabang, the commander of the first military region Brigadier General Tiao Sayavong replied, "There are no U.S. jets bomb- ing in this area of Laos." ''The planes you have seen," the General announced from his headquarters near the scen- ic mountain capital, "are all on their way to North Vietnam," About an hour later, a group of three Phantoms dropped na- palm several kilometersv ay for comment. One point on which both Lao and American officials agree is that about one million people are still living in areas being bombed; areas comprising two- thirds of the country. But agreement is; unfortun- ately not always available. Asked about the bombing of Sam Neua in the north, the director of U.S. Information Service in Laos stated that there had been no bombing of that area of northern Laos for several years. Several days later, the Penta- gon announced that it had been conducting intensive bombing over northern Laos for the past several years. One point on which most au- thorities agree is that the Meo Tribesmen, who no one suspects of being Pathet Lao, and about 300,000 of whom are, now settlesi in Ban San, have suffered ca- tastrophic losses in the war. An estimated 50 per cent of the Meo men have died thus far. .The result of the decimation is that many of the soldiers in Van Pao's CIA-backed mercen- ary army, and the Royal Lao Army, too, are children. There are no children in the Army according to a spokesman f~or the Lao Defense Ministry "There is no one unde'r 18 years of age in -our armed forces," he stated. But a lieutenant in yang Vien had a different story to tell. "Some of the children In my company are so young that they cannot carry a weapon," he ex- plained. The lieutenant has been with Van Pao two years and is a Thai mercenary. His words are backed up easily - adolescent soldiers are plainly visible any- where one travels in Laos. Meanwhile, the ruling class of Laos lives well on U.S. spoils and has all the playthings of the rich. Kids drive fancy sportscars, while their parents, are taken to the plush, air-con- ditioned Lao-Bowl Center a mile from towhn in chauffeur- driven Mercedes. Only occasion- ally does a refugee find his way into Vientaine to mar the lush town's illusion of prosperity. MARINER 9 sailed closer and closer to Mars yesterday while scientists awaited the first television pictures that might Glenda Jackson Peter ~ich with Iegy Ashcroft Tony Brirton Maurice Denham Bessie Love Vivian Pickles Screenplay b~y Penelope Gilliatt roduced ty Joseph Janrn RDirected by John Schlesinger Usnd Artsss help to reveal some of the mysteries that surround the planet. Scientists expect the photographs to be the first to show the. The Michigan Daily, edited and man.- planet more clearly than it can be seen .through earth telescopes. agdnystent th e 76University of * * Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- THE FOOD AND DRUG Administration announced yester- igan, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor,. day the recall of 87 tons of corn meal mix allegedly containing Michiga ro48104 Published daily Tues- aflatoxin, a cancer causing substance produced by mold. sityer.ii subscription rates: $10 by The ecaledproducts are Lil Lulu self-rising white cornmeal sarrier$1b masionul. se edy mix enriched, and Morrison's Corn Kits prepared corn bread mix, through Saturday morning. subacrip- both produced by Morrison Milling Co. of Denton, Texas. tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. Daily Classifieds Get Re sults Pone 76-05 O ~;P~TH ~'Or'UM FIFTH AVENUE AT LIBERTY DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR INFORMATION 761.9700 FRI. 7@89@ I i Sat. 3@e 5@e7@ 9 Late Show Sat. 11 'I 6~ 6 J ;rV THRU TH4E EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY PRESENTS - f~. DONO VAN in concert. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19,38:30 p.m.- Bow en Field House - TICKETS-$3.50, $4.50, $5.50 Avtailable at * McKenny Union Ticket Office * Ann Arbor Music Mart, Liberty St. * Michigan Union .4 DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY ANNOUNCES A LECTURE BY hstorian RONALD RADOSH ON HIS NEW/ BOOK Conservative Critics of the American Empire Saturday, November 13 Time: 4:30 p.m. Place: 411 Mason Hall EVERYONE INVITED STUDENTS OF SCHOOL OF MUSIC Present J.S. BACH I I CONCERTOS Ma'ilyn Mason-harpsichord Howard Leyton-Brown-violin Grover Wilkins Ill,-conductor U REFORMED CHURCH Tues., Nov. 1 6--8 P.M. Gen'l Adm. $1.00 Stu. 50c. I I U U and Ann Arbor City Music Productions present in concert Buddies in the Saddle' and 'Carnal Kitchen' SA T LIfw/I 1' 0.2fl. I I ARM University of Michigan Film Society Claude Chabrol's thriller U