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December 02, 1971 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-12-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

--
...

BOX OFFICES OPEN 6:30.
SHOW STARTS AT 7:00

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Come and Meet Cheri ..She's
"LOVE & KISSES"

an expert in

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"CHERRY, HARRY & RAQUEL"
Complete Showings of Both
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I CI OR-83 ~ iLOW43 00 I

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ne wsR briefs
By The Associated Press
IN THE WAKE of the growing threat of war in the Middle
East, Secretary-General U Thant yesterday called for a new
U.N. look at the situation, aimed at getting the deadlocked Arab-
Israeli talks back on the track.
In a report issued on the eve of the scheduled General Assembly
debate on the Middle East, Thant said that recent developments had
given an urgency to his September warning that new fighting would
break out if the impasse continued.
Thant also acknowledged that peace initiatives on the part of!
both the United States and his own envoy, Gunnar Jarring, had
failed to find a solution to the crisis.
ATTY. GEN. Frank Kelley yesterday said that he will file
Friday an appeal of U.S. District Judge Stephen Roth's Detroit
schools desegregation ruling.j
Gov. William Milliken announced Nov. 3 he would ask Kelley to
appeal the decision for clarification purposes. The State Board of
Education also voted for an appeal.

'Group

of

Ten'

CLOSED FOR
THE SEASON
Thanks for your support
and patronage.,
SEE YOU IN MARCH
1972

Thursday, December 2, 1971 Page Three

Str ii4 n

a- at'ly

OPEN Fri.-Sat.-Sun.
with
The Love Story From
Denmark
"RELATIONS"
"AROUSED" Q
Plus a Bonus Feature
Sandy Dennis
"THAT COLD DAY
IN THE DARK"

I

advances toward
monetary accord
ROME LT - Finance ministers from the "Group of Ten,"
representing the world's most economically powerful capital-
ist nations, yesterday reported limited progress toward solv-
ing the international money crisis as their three-day confer-
ence ended.
The ministers rejected on Tuesday American plans for
solving the crisis, insisting that the U.S. devalue the dollar.
They agreed yesterday to meet again in Washington Dec. 17-
18.A
Treasury Secretary John Connally, speaking as chairman
of the meeting, told newsmen

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illipq R i I

NOW

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is a work every bit as
mature and mysterious as
anything ingmar Bergman has,
done in the last few years!"
-Richard Schickel, Life Magazine
"Ingmar Bergman's 'The Touch' is
the best film about love he has
ever made."99-Penelope Gilliatt, The New Yorker

"Bergman's
'The Touch' is
as brilliant
as the best
of his
recent films.
Consummate
artistry!"
-Playboy Magazine

"'The Touch',
a fascinating
picture to place
in Bergman's
gallery of
haunting
experiences
and yours."
-Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post

Roth had ruled on Sept. 27 that segregation existed in Detroit
schools "by actions and inactions" of city and state officials, order-
ing Detroit school officials and the state board to propose plans for
desegregation in the Detroit area.
THE U.S. EQUAL EMPLOYMENT Opportunity Commission
(EEOC) yesterday submitted a report to support its 1970 charge
hat American Telephone and Telegraph and its associate compa-
nies engaged in "pervasive, systemwide and blatantly unlawful
discrimination against women, blacks and Spanish-surname
Americans."
The Federal Communications Commission was asked by the
EEOC to reject an increase in long distance telephone rates and also
to hold public hearings on the discrimination charges.
AT&T, which denied the discrimination charge, will have until
Jan. 31, 1972 to study the report before the public hearings begin.
IRISH GUERILLA leaders and the Belfast government have
rejected an appeal for a Christmas truce in Northern Ireland.
Prime Minister Jack Lynch of the Irish Republic called for the
truce Tuesday night but John Taylor, a minister in the Belfast gov-
ernment, yesterday dismissed the appeal as a "crazy proposal" de-
signed to permit the insurgent underground Irish Republican Army
(IRA) to regroup its forces.
The militant branch of the IRA responded by saying a truce
would only be acceptable when all Ireland is united and all British
influence removed.
MICHIGAN STATE POLICE have revealed that they are
seeking td plug a leak in their network of undercover agents and
informants which became evident when mimeographed copies
of a list of names and telephones began circulating on the Michi-
gan State University campus.
The list showed up late Monday, according to a spokesman for
the State police.
"We don't know where they got it, maybe a roster was lost," the
spokesman said. "Frankly, the less said about it the better as far as
we're concerned."
THE WHITE HOUSE announced yesterday the retirement
from' active servic tPtf TS . Distrit . Jud Julius Hoffman. who

TREASURY SECRETARY John Connally (right) shakes hands
Tuesday with Guido Carli, governor of the Bank of Italy. Finan-
cial representatives of the 10 wealthiest western nations met this
week in Rome to discuss solutions to the present international
monetary crisis.
BILL PASSES 86-4:
Nixon wage-price power.
extended by Senate. vote

Ingmar Bergman's first English language motion picture starring
Elliott Gould, Bibi Andersson, Max von Sydow
"The Touch"
Presented by ABC Pictures Corp.
- Asubsidiory of the American Color Distributed by
Broadcasting Componies. Inc ICIO Cneromo Releosing -
TONIGHT and FRIDAY at 7-9 P.M.
AMERICAo AFRICA

WASHINGTON (A) - T h e
Senate yesterday passed the bill
extending until April 30, 1973,
President Nixon's power to con-
trol wages and prices, and also
granting retroactively most of
the raises halted by the p a y
freeze.
The 86-4 vote sent the legis-
lation to the House where the
Banking Committee is working
on a similar measure.
The final Senate bill contain-
ed practically all of the author-
ity the President asked to car-
ry out Phase 2 of his ecomonic
controls program.
But it also included a pay re-
troactivity proviison originally
opposed by the administration
and finally accepted with some
reluctance by the executive
branch.
Meanwhile, the Price Com-
mission ruled that the coal in-
dustry may pass on to its con-
sumers only 60 per cent of the
cost of its recent large w a g e
boost.
It also warnedU.S. business
not to expect that it can use
price increases to cover the full
cost of excessive pay raises.

The commission's precedent-
setting decision in the case of
Old Ben Coal Co. put the coal
industry in a gulf between the
commission and the Pay Board,
which recently approved a new
coal contract carrying a 15-per-
cent, wage-and-benefits in-
crease.
The commission said the
amount of the wage increase be-
yond 9.6 per cent would be infla-
tionary if passed on to coal
consumers in the form of higher
prices.
C. Jackson Grayson, the Price
Commission chairman, told a
news conference his panel de-
cided to, allow Old Ben to pass
on a 5.5 per cent wage increase
and added another 4.1 per cent
in allowable pass-on costs to
protect the pensions of retired
miners.

last night: "I think some pro-
gress was made today. We did
not reach a decision. We did
not s6lve the problem."
He said, however, the progress
made "was hopeful enough to war-
rant another meeting soon."
"I think the meeting can be
characterized as one which pro-
duced considerable frankness and
candor," Connally added.
He said the absence of a final
communique did not mean there
was any fundamental discord and
added some ministers took t h e
view that a communique does not
always "reflect the real sense and
flavor of a meeting."
Connally noted a communique
had been prepared but it was de-
cided instead that as chairman he
would sum up the meeting to
newsmen.
Connally reported the day's
meeting discussed a number of hy-
pothetical solutions and a num-
ber of assumptions.
Although he did not elaborate.
other delegation sources said that
among the hypothetical settle-
ments discussed was what sort of
upward revaluation would be de-
creed by other countries if the
United States agreed to devalue
the dollar against gold.
The Secretary reported it would
be wrong to blame any one coun-
try or one particular matter, such
as the past U.S. refusal to devalue
the dollar, as the reason the
Rome meeting produced no final
settlement.

Court claimis'
prisoners at
Attica abused
NEW YORK (W) - Attica state
prison inmates were tortured,
beaten and threatened in the
wake of last September's riot, a
federal appeals court heldyes-
terday. The three judges barred
corrections officers from any fur-
ther "barbarous abuse and mis-
treatment."
The Sept. 9-13 riot involved
about half of Attica's 2,280 pri-
soners, 85 per cent of whom were
black or Puerto Rican. It was
quelled by state police at the cost
of 44 lives-35 inmates -and nine
white hostages.
In the aftermath of the rioting,
U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Wal-
ter Mansfield wrote in his opin-
ion that the prisoners were sub-
jected to treatment "beyond any
force needed to maintain order."
"It far exceeded what our so-
ciety will tolerate on the part of
officers of the law in custody of
defenseless _ prisoners," a d d e d
Mansfield, whose opinion was en-
dorsed by the other two oppellate
justices, J. Edward Lumbard and
James Oakes.
In Albany, State Correction
Commissioner Russell Oswald had
no immediate comment.

i

i il-uie l le U1 .k . c 15LI Juge Jlu 1111l, l
presided at last year's celebrated "Chicago Seven" conspiracy
trial.
Five of the seven defendants in that trial were convicted of
inciting violence at 'Chicago's 1968 Democratic National Convention,
in February, 1970. I

I

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THE ALLEY CINEMA
330 MAYNARD
TONIGHT ONLY-THURSDAY, DEC. 2
THE
SCARLET EMPRESS
dir. OSEF VON STERNBERG, 1934
starring MARLENE DIETRICH
MARLENE DIETRICH exotically portrays Catherine the Great in this
Kremlin wonderland. Also starring SAM JAFFE and LOUISE DRESSER.
"Josef von Sternberg knew the value of the mobile camera and its ability
to convey an abstract thought or merely to suggest what was not possible.
-Richard L. Bare, THE FILM DIRECTOR
SHOWS AT 7 & 9:30 $1.00

FREE ALUMINUM CASSETTE LIBRARY

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Program Info 662-6264

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INCLUDING
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Hot Baked Beans
Tossed Salad with Dressing
Macaroni Salad
Pickled Beet Salad
Kidney Bean Salad
Rolls and Butter

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