The U-M Folklore Society Presents NEWS PH1 BUSINESS P EARL ROBINSON hor of Ballad for Americans, Joe Hill, etc.) -Ann Arbor, Michigan MONDAY, DEC. 13 8:30 P.M. at the Ark-1421 Hill Street ADMISSION CHARGE $1.50rj ($1.00 FOR FOLKLORE SOCIETY MEMBERS) ONE: 764-0552 PHONE: 764-0554 al4c SftP~i!3an~ a- at'lu page three Saturday, December 11, 1971 B' riePfs By The Associated Press i I i Rehnquist High Coi approved. for .- . 4* - . . ..- r U of M Arts Chorale Christmas Concert Dec. 12, 1971 at 8:40P.M. in Hill Auditorium Works by Stravinski, Poulenc, Britton - Bach, Pinkham, and others. - MAYNARD KLEIN, conductor FREE ADMISSION rt after debate I Ll"-t --s 'ts 1=1-71 ARM/Michigan Film Society presents Orson Welles' incomparable masterpiece tizen Kane The $60,000,000 ego-trip of Charles Foster Kane "He had some private form of greatness, but he kept it to himself."-Rosebud -TONIGHT- NATURAL SCIENCE AUDITORIUM -U U.S. STEEL CORP. announced price increases of 7.7 per cent yesterday on a broad range of products to be used in the autoand appliance industries. The announcement followed by just three days a ruling by the Federal Price Commission in Washington granting U.S. Steel per- mission to raise prices across the board an average of 3.6 per cent. A spokesman said the 7.7 per cent increase, applied to "less, than half of out total products and does not affect the rest of the line." GOVERNMENT SCIENTISTS reported yesterday that most of the DDT used in the world remains unaccounted for and that man is extremely lucky not to have absorbed more than he has. Nearly 6.2 billion pounds of the pesticide have been manufactured and used worldwide since 1942, the report said, but only about 11.9 million pounds can be found in the tissues of all humans, plants, animals, fish and birds on the planet. ** * THE NATO ALLIES closed ranks yesterday in the face of a Soviet military buildup around the world. The 15 NATO members set about patching up old differences with a series of new compromises covering political, economic and military issues that have nagged them for years. At the center of NATO's re-emerging unity was a political agree-: ment' to delay the start, of talks with the Communist countries on European system of security. These exchanges will begin, the allies said in a communique, only after the Soviet Union signs and seals a Big Four accord on divided Berlin. A BROADER, more intensive $1.6 billion attack on cancer will be launched under a bill sent to President Nixon yesterday. The bill gives an enlarged budget to the 34-year-old Nationalj Cancer Institute and mandates it to step up its research into the causes of and a cure for cancer. It also contains provisions designed to give the cancer agency direct access to the White House in getting support for its effort. * * * A LIFEBOAT with 12 aboard was sighted and its occupants picked up in mid-Pacific yesterday near where a Danish freighter had radioed Wednesday that its crew was abandoning ship. The vessel, the Heering Kirse, was several hundred miles north- east of Midway Island when it encountered trouble. The survivors did not know whether any other members of the 36 man crew left: the ship. Nobel Prizes awarded by Sen. Birch to postpone Jan. 18. WASHINGTON (R) - The Senate confirmed yesterday President Nixon's nomination of Asst. Atty. Gen. William Rehnquist to be a Supreme Court Justice. The vote was 68-to 26. On the roll call 30 democrats voted for Rehnquist's nom- ination and 23 against; 38 republicans voted for and three against. The dissenting republicans were Jacob Javits (N.Y.), Edward Brooke (Mass.), and Clifford Case (N.J.). Opponents, who challenged Rehnquist's commitment to civil rights and civil liberties, gave up the fight after the Sen- ate rejected, 70-22, a motion(1 -- Bayh (D-Ind.) a vote until Sweden's 89-year-old King Gustaf Adolf handed out Nobel Prizes worth a hefty $90,000 each yesterday to four scientists and a Chilean poet-diplomat. Meanwhile in a separate cere- mony in Oslo, Norway, Chancel- lor Willy Brandt of West Ger- many was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Pictured above are four of the five winners including, from left to right, Pablo Neruda, Earl Sutherland, Gerhard Herzberg and Dennis Gabor. Missing from the picture is Simon Kuznets, a Harvard professor cited for his theories of economic growth. Pablo Neruda, a Chilean poet and ambassador, won his prize in literature; Dr. Sutherland of Nashville, Tennessee for his work in hormone research. In Physics, Dr. Dennis Gabor, a British subject working in the U.S. was awarded a prize for inventing holographic three-di- mensional photography while in chemistry, Canadian Gerhard Confirmation of Rehnquist fol- lowed an 89-1 Senate vote last Monday approving President Nix- on's nomination of Lewis F. Pow- ell, Jr., a Richmond, Va., attorney, to fill a second vacancy on the Su- preme Court. Rehnquist, 47, a former Phoenix, Ariz., lawyer, will replace retired Justice John Harlan. Powell, 64, a former president of the American Bar Association, will succeed the late Justice Hugo Black. Nixon; in announcing the nom- inations on Oct. 21, described both Rehnquist and Powell as judicial conservatives and indicated he hoped their appointment would strengthen the "peace forces" in society. Rehnquist's nomination quickly ran into opposition from civil rights and labor leaders. Bayh and some other liberal democrats in the Senate joined in the effort to block his confirmation. Supporters of the nomination said opponents had failed to make a case and called Rehnquist out- standingly qualified to serve on tht Supreme Court. The vote on confirmation came speedily after the overwhelming rejection of Bayh's motion to cut it off. Phase 2 controls extended, The House voted overwhelming- ly yesterday to extend President Nixon's economic control powers and to compromise the touchy is- sue of retroactive pay. Nixon also signed a bill cutting individual and business taxes by $15.8 billion over three years, hil- ing it as in inflation-controlling measure that will increase pur- chasing powers. Nixon had been expected to give the bill quickap- proval after it was passed by the House and Senate on Thursday. In a related economic develop- ment, the Federal Reserve Board yesterday approved the actions of four federal reservebanks reduc- ing the discount rate for 43/ to 411 per cent. S TheHouse supported the full extension of economic powers re- quested by Nixon through April 30, 1973 in a 324-33 vote. It rejected proposals for an earlier cutoff. A second amendment would re- quire retroactive payment of pre- viously negotiated raises caught in Nixon's 90-day freeze under spe- cified conditions: When prices had been increased because of such raises, in the case of teachers and other public em- ployes when taxes had been raised or appropriations voted and when worker productivity had increased so as to justify the raises. 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. 8 and 10 p.m. $1 cont. C I Herzberg, a was cited. molecular specialist, CENEMWA II FRIDAY and SATURDAY at 7 and 9 THE FIREMEN'S BALL (Czechoslovakian 1968) directed by MILOS FORMAN A comedy about a firemen's ball held for the purpose of awarding an honorary hatchet to an 86-year-old fire chief. Its release caused the resignation of 40,000 Czech firemen. Renata Adler-"A shaggy dog story, with the pes- simism of the exquisite logic that leads nowhere." Auditorium A, Angell Hall 75c 1h I the ann arbor film cooperative presents I Steve McQueen and Jaqueline Bissett in Peter Yates' Ti IC~rAV I V Ca WAR I DEC. 14 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. (And 11:15 p.m. if pre- vious show sold out and attendance warrants) BULLITT A cop with existential cool. Knock-out chases, exciting, believable de- tective thriller. Color. Rated M I THURSDAY Raquel Welch, Mae West in Michael Sarne's version of DEC.16 MYRA BRECKENRIDGE 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. after Gore Vidal's novel. Controversial camp! Color. Cinemascope Ann Arbor Premiere! RATED X. Persons under 18 not admitted. Both showings at AUDITORIUM A-ANGELLHALL-still only 75c-on sale at 6 p.m. Happy Holidays!-See you in January with ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT COUNCIL THEATRE presents THE DAY LATKE LOST ITS LATKES orI When the Jews were caught with their Pans down. A HANNUKAH COMEDY-FARCE written by MEL FOSTER and ALAN EISENSTOCK 3 SHOWS: 4:15, 7, and 8:30 directed by Alan Eisenstock TUESDAY, December 14 at Hillel-1429 Hill only 25c I B BILLIARDS TABLE TENNIS BOWLING FOOSBALL UNION I 1I SHOWCASE NO. 2 Schehade YASco a m 1 I IS ARM/Michigan Film Society presentations for the rest of December -clip and save $1 exam break escapes Holiday fare TUESDAY WEDNESDAY FRIDAY-SATURDAY CHRISTMAS DAY NEW YEAR'S DECEMBER 14 DECEMBER 15 DECEMBER 17-18 DECEMBER 25 DEC. 31-JAN. 1 Color double-bill for the finally FRANZ KAFKA'S the much heralded Fearless Vampire imagination: Michoel Curtiz' classic if a 24 year old rock star were elected The Trial BOGART Killers President of the U.S. and everybody double-bill-both films also with CASABLANCA or, PARDON ME, BUT over 30 were retired into LSD camps ... written and directed by Edward G. Robinson YOUR TEETH ARE IN MY NECK Hollywood would call it- Orson Welles BULLETS or BALLOTS Bogart, Peter Lorre, Sidney Greenstreet,wh ski Sha T Wild in the Streets 1936 Ingrid Bergman, Claude Rains, Paul wit Polan, aron ate- with WELLES, JEANNE MOREAU, ANwoHenreid, and Dooly Wilson. Intelligent vampire spoof. CHRIS JONES, SHELLEY WINTERS, THONY PERKINS, ELSA MARTINELLI, with Joan ndellTWO SHORT FILMS: DIANE VARSI 7:00 & 10:15 P.M. ROMY SCHNEIDER. -:-0"play it again Sam." "Welles best film since KANE." -AND- Death of the Stag -and-DRACULA HasWellesbes film , A A. v... nf. t--lit. .. Rick's cafe Americaine teems with Trueblood Theater ENDS SAT. Box Office 2-8 thi8s WOKPIW $1.50 * from England John Roberts and Tony Barrand English Music Hall Novelty, Humor SAT.--2:00 P.M. 50c