GRADS 1NVITED! "Reflections on the Holocaust" RABBI JOEL POUPKOt SUNDAY, FEB. 7 Deli Dinner 6 P.M. Discussion 7 P.M. page three im4c "tri igttn 3atty NEWS PHIONE: 76-1-055'! III SIl' l'SN 1410" E: 76 1-055 1 Saturday, February 6, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three HILLEL 1429 HILL ST. N neBywsThe4sscbriedfs By The Associated Press t CINEMA II Fri. & Sat. LIFEBOAT-7:00 NOTORIOUS-9:05 MARAT SADE-1 1:00{ Sunday MARAT SADE-1 :00, 3:00 Aud. A, Angell Hall 75c x THE RETINAL CIRCUS AND THEt ANN ARBOR FREE UNIVERSITY PRESENT:j SENSORY SOUP Mult'iMedia Happening RAGAMOFFYN AND OTHER BAND(S) * TWO LIGHT SHOWS MOVIES * 100 FOOT PLASTIC I THE SENATE COMMERCE COMMITTEE plans to investi- gate the infiltration of American business by organized crime, Sen. Warren Magnuson (D-Wash.) announced yesterday. He said the investigation will deal with air freight cargo thefts, interstate narcotics smuggling, gambling and the movement of stolen goods. Involvement in legitimate business has advanced from a sideline to "a major and integral part" of the nation's organized criminal operations, Magnuson added. THE NIXON ADMINISTRATION is considering tearing dow n Pruitt-Igoe, a $36 million federal public housing project. The project has become a high-rise hell for the poor of St. Louis, plagued by murder, robbery, rape and vandalism. The recommendation to level the structures and replace themj with garden apartments and row houses in the next five years is awaiting action by Secretary of Housing George Romney. 11 i r I ', i ( ( INFLATABLE SCULPTURE Wear Costumes If You Feel Like It, and Bring Your: Musical Instruments, Noise-Makers, Flashlights, Aluminum Foil, and Your Head in Whatever Condi- tion. UNION BALLROOM SUNDAY, FEB. 7-8 P.M. FREE' EVERYONE IN THE AA COMMUNITY WELCOME! A FESTIVAL OF FILMS OF CLAUDE CHABROL (A New Wave Director) TON ITE TOMORROW LES BICHES LE SCANDALE STARRING: CHAMPAGNE MURDERS Stephane Audran STARRING: Jacqueline Sassard Stephane Audran Jean-Louise Trintignent Anthony Perkins A triangle combining lesbianism Chabrol's Hollywood adventure and irony. ". . . with a nice bit for Universal. He says: "When of murder at the end which we were all writing for Cahiers, forced you to rethink all the we looked at Hollywood films characters.kAndbChabrol was very that everyone thought were com- clearly back in business again." mercial and discovered art anc morality in them. 15 years later with those recent films of mine perhaps I'm taking art and mo- rality and making them com- mercial." 7r& 9:05 Architecture 662-8871 Auditorium ADVERTISEMENTS prepared. after yesterday by all but one of the nation's cigarette makers will list tar and nicotine content. The U.S. Surgeon General has declared the tar and nicotine con- tent crucial to the links between smoking and disease. An industry agreement, signed last December after the Federal Trade Commission had proposed requiring tar and nicotine disclosure in advertisements, does not require comparative figures in the' ads. The only cigarette maker which refused to sign the agreement was American Brands, which markets Pall Mall, Tareyton and Lucky Strike. An American spokesman declined to give a reason. MORTGAGE SUBSIDIES to selected homeowners of low and moderate income will be resumed, Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary George Romney announced yes- terday. Romney halted the program January 14 to, as he said, "correct deficiencies" and "protect the public." The suspension remains in effect for most of the country. The resumed federal mortgage commitments include all of eleven states, most of them midwestern and western, and nine large cities. THE NEW YORK Patrolmen's Benevolent Association won its suit for $100 a month parity pay increase yesterday. tcThe 27,000 police members were also awarded $2800 a man retro- actively. Mayor John Lindsay said the city will appeal the decision. Failure to settle the suit led to a six-day job action of patrolmen last month. The decision awarding the parity money was expected to pave the way for negotiations of new contracts with police, fire- fighters and sanitationmen. SWISS ISSUE Woll women vote? -Associated Press SECRETARY OF LABOR James Hodgson announced yesterday in Washington last month's slight decline in the national unemployment, rate. He also revealed that 5.4 million workers are now un- employed, the highest figure in ten years. Unemployment rate declines; jobless total hits decade high WASHINGTON A') ---The num- ber of out-of-work Americans rose, in January to the highest point in ten years, b u t seasonal factors shoved the rate of unemployment' back to 6 per cent, the govern-1 ment said yesterday. The rate showed disappointing sluggishness in the economic re- covery, however, and failed to al- lay fears that unemployment would move higher before Presi-1 dent Nixon's prediction comes true - that in 1971 it "will final- ly come under control and begin to recede." Secretary of Labor James Hodg- son, however, hailed the decline of two tenths of one per cent in the rate as "very encouraging," The average work week went up' came a statement that "no amount two tenths of one per cent to 37.1 of statistical juggling can hide the hours while the number of persons fact that unemployment is at its unemployed because of losing their worst level since late 1961, when last job fell by 250,000, the first a Democratic administration was decline in six months. reducing the record unemploy- As the figures were announced ment rates inherited from the last a high Labor Department official Republican administration." told newsmen summoned by the President Nixon has pledged to White House that the January re- bring t h e unemployment rate siort shows a "change in trend. down to about 4.5 per cent in mid it's a change in direction." 1972 ordering a vigorous expansion But, from Democratic NationalI of the economy to achieve h i s Chairman L aw r e n c e O'Brien, goal. 'Welfare purge' sought too oust fuiltirn--e Workers WASHINGTON (A'- - The Nix- less than 100 hours a month. If on administration proposed yes- his work is intermittent and ex- terday to purge welfare rolls of ceeds that for a particular month, men who, although they work full then a jobless father would be one time, can now legally claim to be who has worked less than the 100 jobless fathers eligible for aid giv- hour level for t w o previous en to needy families. ' months and is expected to be un- The Department of Welfare der it for the coming month. called for a redefinition of an un- employed father, and s a i d the In addition to helping cut out change could have an impact on men who really work full time, the about five per cent of the case- change would allow aid to go to loads in the 23 states, the District!neeysmnrwo w r t i ,.f _4 r_ -... for a short time but are not em- Cairo calls for Israeli pullback By The Associated Press Israel came under increas- ing pressure Friday to g i v e ground on Egypt's demand for a partial pullback of Israeli troops from the Suez Canal, as concern mounted that refusal might deadlock the Israeli Arab peace talks. Diplomatic sources at U.N. headquarters in New York where the talks are being held through special envoy Gunnar Jarring said the main pressure w a s coming from France and the Soviet Un- ion. President Aknwar Sadat of Egypt followed his announcement Thursday that Egypt would ex- tend the canal cease-fire 30 days with a demand that Israel make a partial pullback from the area in return for a reopening of Suez to world shipping. S The extension offer -was made on the eve of the expiration of the six month cease-fire, which had been set for yesterday midnight. Sources in Jerusalem said Pre- mier Golda Meir had ordered her Cabinet to keep silent about Sa- dat's proposals. Israeli newspapers, which often reflect official views, generally assailed Sadat's proposals. The independent Haaretz said the promise to open t h e canal blockade since the 1967 war was a tactical move "designed to gain sympathy in international navi- gation circles, especially in West- ern Europe." l The Labor paper Omer saw the move as a response to Soviet de- sire to expand into the Indian ocean. In the Arab world, there was mixed reaction to Egypt's new pro- posals. Only the governments of Libya, Sudan and Lebanon were quick to rally behind Cairo calling the proposals the last chance for. peace in the Middle East. Some Lebanese papers depicted the Egyptian proposal as a pre- lude to an indefinite de facto ar- mistice with Israel. In Washington. State Depart- ment officials s a i d the United " States has told the Soviet Union, Britain and France that it is pre- pared to start preliminary talks on guarantees in which the Big Four might join on a Middle East peace settlement. Washington told the other big powers that its indicated willing- the high joblessness that has ~uq BERN, SWITZERLAND WA) - Swiss men will decide tomorrow whether Switzerland's women will gain the vote. Signs indicate that the 1.5 mil- lion men who are eligible to vote will approve balloting in federal politics for the 1.9 million women. A poll conducted by the Swiss Institute for Public Opinion Re- search indicates 72 per cent of the men favor women voting, All Swiss are equal before the law, according to the 1848 Con- stitution. But Switzerland ranks with Liechtenstein and five Afri- can and Arab countries as among the last countries limiting, suffrage to males. The men will vote on a pro- posed constitutional amendment expressly awarding voting rights on federal matters to both sexes. The government has called for approval as Parliament passed the amendment last summer without a dissenting vote. Twelve years ago a similar amendment was rejected two to one. Since then eight of the 25 cantons and half cantons have introduced the women's vote on cantonal matters. Cantons are equivalent to states. Zurich, the most populous state, gave women the vote last fall. To become law, the amend- ment must be approved by both a national majority and popular majorities in more than half the 25 cantons and half cantons. plagued the Nixon administration. Another labor official, however,' called the drop "marginally sig- nificant." The Labor Department reported that the unemployment rate act- ually was worse in December than1 the 6 per cent originally announc- ed, climbing to 6.2 per cent on the basis of revised figures. It also said the number of un- employed persons rose by 780,000 in January to 5.4 million, t h e highest figure since February and March of 1961, when the nation. of Columbia and G u a m which participate in the program. ' piy a sit cAU.arne such 4Las C z.1 a r m~I experienced some of the highest California and New York have "anU" "W" W1"o I"l """aing "e joblessness in history. over half th~e total caseload, said;harvest. But seasonal adjustment remov- John Twiname, the department's A 1961 amendment to the So- ed nearly a million persons in the social and rehabilitation admin- cial Security law added the un- unemployment calculations, giv- istrator. employed father provisions to fed- ing an equivalent 110,000 decline. Currently, an unemployed fa- eral-state public assistance pro-j Other figures reported by the ther is held to be one who works grams. Currently, about 100,000 Bureau of Labor Statistics showed less than 30 hours per week - or, families participate. the jobless rate for workers cov- at the state's option, 35 hours a The department said the pro- ered by state unemployment com- week. gram is aimed at helping intact pensation programs dropped from The new proposal would define families which have a low income 4.2 to 3.7 per cent. a jobless father as one who works level. - - - j ness to discuss guarantees w a s linked to the prospect for serious Arab-Israeli peace talks. As the new 30 day extension of the Middle East cease fire went into effect yesterday, there were no reports of shooting incidents. Israeli military officials said their troops were on the alert along the Suez Canal. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students atythe University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. nlnv~a lfell timeso c , n-, ncf- A., r m "YOU MUST SEE THIS FILM!" -Richard Schicke. Life OPEN JACK NICHOLSON _ 11P.MI "' I SHOWS "ROTATE 1:20-3:10 MAC" 5-7-9 P.M V 5thWeek SkSTATE.Theatre 231-S. State DIAL 662-6264 W GET ATTENTION I _ - ---._ __ -I) ' r3 GET YOUR VALENTINE .. with an unforgettable something from CAMPUS BIKE & TOY 514 E. WILLIAM . 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