Wfl. fit" .. . ' A ' ...A.,,.,A. ..........: .'......2 , 5<' U of M Film Society (ARM) PRESENTS Pier Paolo Pasolini's teorema with Terence Stamp "Theorem-The Geometry of Love") in COLOR "On the other hand, what is authetntic is the love the Terence Stamp character arouses, because it is a love without any com- promise, a love which provokes scandal, which destroys, which alters the bourgeois' idea of themselves; what is authentic is this love, and the cause of this love is this ambigious person -PASOLINI .r.."} r, r". srr1 t+w: page three im4c Friday, January 22, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Sit i an 43 ttity y briefs n e -w-s-By The Associated Press Friday Saturday free coffee contribution $1 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 7:30-9:00 JAN. 22 & 23 10:30P.M. Society of Friends Meeting Hall 1420 Hill bet. Lincoln and Olivia :; ' Lit __" y J . ..... ..........1 <.*-_:.>:. ............*....... : . r:!i~fv"x. v... .iFrf}"R. ;Y. ... s4" h4 "Your attention is riveted. The director plays his little game with sadness and efotocism: in clever ashi0n! Freena Films Limited preents -William Wolf, Lmtdpeef Cue starring BIBI ANDERSSON {The Rape} BRUNO CREMER (AS TMANCOLOR DIAL 8-6416 - - - - - - - - -- - - - - SENATOR RICHARD RUSSELL, the Democrat from Georgia who was the oldest and one of the most influential men in the Senate, died yesterday. Russell had spent over half his life in the Senate and had risen to the head of the Senate Appropriations Committee. He was 73. * * * 200 NEW YORK CITY welfare workers walked off their jobs yesterday, protesting the suspension of three colleagues who checked a welfare family of five into a $76-a-day suite at the Waldorf-Astoria. The.12,000 member Social Security Employes Union threatened a city wide strike over the suspension of the trio. Mayor John Lindsay, who ordered the suspension, called the incident an example of "colossal bad judgment." It cost the city $152.64 for a stay of two days and a night at the internationally known hotel. AN OIL SLICK continued to spread in the Pacific Ocean off San Francisco yesterday, but only traces were left in San Fran- cisco Bay as more than 1,000 workmen and volunteers labored to clean up the water and beaches. Standard Oil Co. of California said yesterday about 840.000 gallons of bunker oil were lost early Monday when two of its tankers collided in dense fog near the Golden Gate Bridge. An estimated 336,000 gallons were scooped up by Standard Oil workmen and volunteers, and about 2,000 wild birds were brought to cleaning stations where oil was removed from their feathers. COMMUNISTS launched a devastating rocket and mortar attack on the Phnom Penh airport early today in the closest major blow at the capital since fighting erupted in Cambodia last March. The rockets and mortars hit an aircraft fuel storage area and also one of the four ammunition dumps in the airport touching off explo- sions that continued through the night. Sources reported that the airport remained open at daybreak1 despite damage to several runways and taxiways. The main runway was not seriously damaged, they said. * * * ' BRITAIN, in the second day of, a nationwide postal strike, was threatened last night with a world ban on manual telephone, telegraph and telex links with overseas countries. Britain's Union of Postal Workers appealed to its international headquarters Wednesday night to cut Britain off from the rest of the world to display solidarity with other union members. EXCHANGE MOON R( Senators charge U.S. air stri~kes violate legislation WASHINGTON (-- Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield called yesterday for "ever greater vigilance" on U.S. activities in Indochina as the 92nd Congress opened with a call for hearings on the increased U.S. air action in Cambodia. Sen. John Sherman Cooper, (R-Ky.), joined Sen. Frank Church, (D-Idaho), in calling for an inquiry by the Foreign Relations Committee into whether the Nixon administration is violating the Cooper-Church amendment limiting U.S. military activities in Cambodia. The amendment was enacted last month as part of the administration's $255-million aid program for Cambodia. It bars U.S. combat ground troops and military advisers from Cambodia. I i1 Q Q FROM THE INTERNATIONALLY RENOWN BOOKS KAMA SUTRA ...the motion picture... THAT SHOWS The Indian rter vats ALL YOU WANTED *yaya composed the KamaSutr a TO SEE ABOUT SEX ! Sutra means text), a work full of ingen- ious }and poetic elaborations o foreplay and coitus, from ight forms of love scratches td more complicated maneu- vers such as "chasing the sparrow" and QUT EF O the "attack of the wild boar." h hUOTE FROM -that Seven a whibang like the "Kama Sutra N ew sw eV is only a summary, of a given society's New sw e sexual cusoms taboos, wisdom, myth and foolishness at a particular time. the books that might actually change a soci- MAGAZINE ety s sexual habits are not usually how-to manuals at all but sober, unreadable sci- L entific reports-notably Alfred Kinseys psoneer work showing what American sexual behavior really is, and Masters and Johnson's unparalleled demonstra- tions of the physiological nature of or.z 5 gaim and the clinical cure of many major sexual disabilities, including impotence, premtature ejaclaton and frigidity. I -Associated Press JF Accuse Representatives of a group of men who identified themselves as Navy and Air Force officers tell a news conference in Los Angeles yesterday they want an inquiry into possible war crimes com- mitted in Vietnam by U.S. commanders. CONSERVATIVE WINS: Byrd tops Kennedy. for ey Iem. post WASHINGTON W-) -Sen. Rob- if Sen. Richard B. Russell of ert C. Byrd, a little known con- Georgia had died before the party servative, ousted Sen. Edward M. caucus started in mid-morning. Byrd felt he needed Russell's sup- Kennedy from the number two port to win. Senate Democratic leadership post Russell died about 4 hours in a surprising blow to Kennedy's after the vote. party stature.afethvo. Ironically,.Byrd told newsmen, Byrd, who has made a career of he would have avoided the contest doing favors for his colleagues in the number three leadership job, tif -nnt,- d Knnrdv in a show- "There should be hearings to find out what is happening there," Cooper said, adding that, ifpress reports are accurate, the Nixon administration is violating the spirit if not the letter of the Cooper-Church amendment. Reports from Saigon say U.S. advisors are on helicopter g u n- ships supporting Cambodian forc- es, and that some have occasion- ally set foot on the ground. Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird told a news conference Wednesday that Congress auth- orized present U.S. actions in Cambodia by limiting the amend- ment to combat ground troops and military advisers. Laird also said that the action in Cambodia falls within the Nixon Doctrine under which the United States is supplying air and naval support - but not ground troops - to its allies. But Cooper said the Cambodian action "is an ex- tension" of the doctrine. "Recent news accounts suggest .i SovietS, U.S. reach space accord MOSCOW (P) - The United States and the Soviet Union took another cautious step yesterday toward joint exploration of outer space by agree- ing to exchange lunar soil samples and to set up a joint panel to study other ways of cooperating. Dr. George Low, acting administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and Mstislav Keldysh, president of t h e Soviet Academy of Sciences, initiated the agreement Thursday after four days of talks on space coop- eration. "By sharing, by cooperating, by working to- gether - by joint and common and complimen- tary programs," Low told an airport news confer- ence before leaving Moscow, "we will advance the store of human knowledge for the advancement of the Soviet Union, for the benefit of the United States, for the benefit of all mankind. "We agreed in these meetings that we would exchange two or three grams of samples from. Luna 16 in exchange for two or three grams from Apollos 11 and 12." Apollos 11 and 12 were the United States' first two manned flights to the moon in 1969, and Luna 16 was the Soviet Union's unmanned lunar probe in September of last year that scooped lunar sam- ples and returned to earth. "We intend," Low added, "to establish joint working groups composed of scientists and en- gineers from our side and theirs to work together to establish specific fields where we will cooperate together." The working groups also would discuss the im- provement of already existing arrangements for exchange of information in the fields of space medicine, weather data, research with meteoro- logical rockets and techniques for studying the natural environment, he added. Low said that although the actual weight of lunar samples to be exchanged is v e r y small, "just a few grams of samples can be analyzed in great detail." ju O-coun~ea ueil y i iu down decided 31 to 24 by secret ballot in the caucus held just be- fore the 92nd Congress convened. But Byrd told reporters "I am known to be a conservative coun- ter" and that he did not finally decide to make the race until he was certain he had 28 votes, pro- viding a majority of one. There was speculation that two factors might have played some part in the outcome. One of these was the tragic ac- cident at Chappaquiddick Island in July 1969 in which a young wo- man died in a car driven off a bridge by Kennedy. The other was a possible desire of some of the numerous Demo- cratic presidential hopefuls to strike a blow at the Massachu- setts senator. However, Kennedy himself discounted this latter fac- Stor. Byrd had been considered too conservative in some quarters t, have much chance against Ken- nedy when liberals are in the ma- jority among Democratic sena- tors. N1Xon plan . rejected b 1mayors' anel WASHINGTON (') -- President Nixon's promised revenue-sharing program w a s dealt an advance blow yesterday when the nation's mayors refused to accept its re- ported price-cuts in some present aid programs. A 15-mayor legislative commit- tee of the U.S. Conference of Ma- yors announced it w o u ld lobby against any cutbacks in present federal aid programs, even as a partial trade-off f o r revenue sharing. Nixon has promised that a new proposal to share federal money with states and localities will be a main theme of his State of the IUnion address tonight. Adminis- tration officials have said, how- ever, that some of the m o n e y would come out of present aid pro- grams, and the mayors described this as "betrayal ...a sleight-of- hand ploy . . . a sham." New York's Mayor John V. Lind- say, chairman of the 15-mayor lobby, said the administration is withholding $200 million in urban renewal funds approved by Con- gress, and t h a t rumors abound about possible future cuts in the Model Cities program, antipoverty programs and urban renewal. "Such program reductions, so devastating to our people, would mark a turning away from the cities and a betrayal of the hopes of our governments and ourcom- munities," Lindsay said. "Revenue sharing for states, counties and cities is no revenue sharing at all if it is financed, ev- en 'in part, on the backs of the cities," Lindsay said. He said cities n e e d revenue- sharing, in addition to other pro- grams, to meet costs of basic ser- vices such as police and fire pro- tection, sanitation, education and hospitals. Sen. Mansfield only the motion picture screen can bring to life the story of males and females enjoying KAMA SUTRA's 200 mystic marriage techniques. Could be the friends and neighbors you are talking about, who have established a" NEW DEFINITION of SEXUAL NORMALCY! a stretched and, perhaps, distorted interpretation of the intent of that legislation in Indochina," Mansfield added at a Democratic caucus. Mansfield said "it is clear that we are still deeply in the war and we are still committed to remain until the end, whenever that may be. It is the form of the U.S. in- volvement which has been chang- ed; not the involvement itself." iI w I. %A M OI %MS*.Z P*WMAMAWJ +. W200 WEn. 0M IPN A CONTIF" -p.r okwitKI USAOER ...dRICHARD Rk *PAWLI wr.4 w IMIBN SOIMOT "* USWM, SAP- b Bk~m4u1 C*.. I " 0 I. persons under 18 not admitted PiPTH POr'um DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR l.JJINFORMATION 761-9700 ADMISSION $2.50 FRI.-7:15 and 9:00 SAT.-2:00, 3:15, 5':30, 7:15, 9:00, 10:45 SUN.-2:00, 3:15, 5:30, 7:15 and 9:00 PRESENTS "BUDDIES IN THE SADDLE" rock . . . a . . . billy SMASH HIT! FRI., SAT.-JAN. 22-23 9 P.M. Admission $1.00 i IvId 1235 S. 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