"YOU MUST SEE THIS FILM!" - Richard Schickel. Life OPEN JACK NICHOLSON 1 PMj_ SHOWS "ROTATE 1;20-3:10 MAC". 57-9 P M5th Week f.: cozaa STATE Theatre 231 S. State DIAL 662-6264 page three C4C Si4 li~tn ~aiIy NEW1S PHIONE: 764.0552 BUISINESS PHIONE: 764.0554 Ii Thursday, February 11, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Pose Three Paa Tre Rogers } . ;} 1 3i 7 I 3 l iX I X k i(!t t t i31 ft. 1 Thursday-Feb. 11 TWO NIGHTS BY RENOIR TH E SOUTHERNER Dir. JEAN RENOIR (1945) USA" Beulah Bondi, Bunny Sunshine The great French director of "Grand Illusion" and "Rules of the Game" comes to America and makes many films. This is a superb drama of a Southern farm family trying to survive against serious odds. FRIDAY: Boudu Saved from Drowning (also by Renoir) 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75c AUDITORIUM NOTICE: CINEMA GUILD announces petitioning for member- ship on its board. All interested and qualified persons are welcomed. Under-classmen especially encour- aged. SIGN-UP for interview appointments in Architecture Auditorium lobby. A sign-up sheet will be posted on the wall at the top of the stairs leading to the projection booth. speaks on U.S. role WASHINGTON (R) - Secre- tary of State William P. Rog- ers said yesterday U.S. troops remaining in Vietnam after May 1 will be assigned outside the combat area. "I don't want to say they will be totally out of a combat role," he told newsmen. "but for all major combat assignments they will be out." Rogers gave this response under questioning prompted by word from the White House Tuesday that 40,000 to 50.000 American combat troops would be remaining in Viet- nam as of May 1, the date when total U.S. military strength there is to be reduced to 284,000. Other U.S. informants indicated that the number of fighting men still on hand in the Southeast Asian nation would number 100,000 or more. Just what the count is de- pends on how one defines functions. Rogers said the main job of the remaining troops would be to pro- test American forces, so at times they might be involved in fight- ing if these forces are attacked. But the policy is to have the South Vietnamese carry the major com- bat role, he said. On other points Rogers said: -No consideration has been giv- en to a suggestion by South Viet- namese Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky that it may become mili- tarily necessary to invade North Vietnam. Rogers noted pointedly that it was not South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu who had suggested the possibility. -"We would support any kind of conference for peace in Indo- china," including the proposal by Sen. George D. Aiken (R-Vt.) for a parley of Asian nations. "But the Communists have shown in the past they are not interested in such pro- posals." -The illness of Cambodian Pre- mier Lon Nol "shouldn't have a serious impact on the governmental operations in Cambodia." The dep- uty prime *minister, Sinik. Matak, is a "capable man." -Stataments from Communist China that the United States plans to use nuclear weapons in South- east Asia are "bunk." 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 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. * -Associated Press Earthquake destruction Rescuers probe the debris that had been a 45-year-old Veterans Administration hospital in the Sylmar section of Los Angeles yesterday. At least 32 persons died when the hospital collapsed during Tues- day's earthquake. See story, Page 8. SOUTHERN DISTRICTS: Ineligible schools received HEW desegregation fun ds TWO YOUNG CROATIANS seized five persons in the Yugoslav consulate in Goteberg, Sweden yesterday in an effort to secure the release of a Croatian terrorist under death sentence in Yugoslavia. The Croatians threatened to kill their Yugoslav hostages unless Yugoslavia gives them $100,000 and frees Miljenko Katz, condemned by a Belgrade court after a series of bombings directed at Yugoslav Serbs. HIGHER ELECTRICITY BILLS for the nation's consumers are indicated in final figures on swollen 1970 fuel prices paid by electric utilities. Municipally operated electric power firms have been hit harder than many privately owned power companies because they frequently are prohibited by law from negotiating long-term fuel contracts. Fluctuations in fuel oil, natural gas, and coal prices have apparent- ly had a large effect on customers' of the municipally operated con- panies. * * * ISRAEL FOREIGN MINISTER Abba Eban called on Egypt yesterday to lift its March 7 deadline on the Middle East cease- fire. He also urged Egypt to take a second look at Israeli Premier Golda Meir's proposals for a mutual Israeli-Egyptian cutback along the Suez canal. * . * * ABOUT 50 BLACK YOUTHS were arrested at Sexton High School in Lansing yesterday after occupying the school office for several hours in a dispute over student demands. The arrests on trespassing charges were made after the office was damaged extensively before the 80 or more persons inside finally ~left. Though each person who emerged was given the opportunity to leave without being arrested, most chose arrest instead. news -briefs By The Asscated Press HUEY NEWTON, Minister of Defense of the Black Panther Party, denounced two-New York Panther leaders yesterday, calling them "enemies of the people." Richard Moore and Paul Tabor are among 13 Panthers charged with a bomb conspiracy in New York City. They failed to show up for trial,. skipped bail, and have been declared fugitives with a warrant out for their arrest. THE APOLLO 14 ASTRONAUTS cruised across a remote stretch of the Pacific Ocean yesterday toward Samoa and an airlift home. The astronauts are quarantined to prevent the spread of any moon germ they may have brought back from the lunar surface, where they collected 95 pounds of rock. * 1 WASHINGTON (A') - The Nix-, on administration,seeking $1.4 billion more to help schools de-! segregate, acknowledged yester- day some funds have gone to in- eligible Southern schools. T h r e e districts in Virginia, Georgia and Louisiana have had - their funds canceled, the Senate education subcommittee was told, and 51 other districts are in dan-. ger of losing theirs. Nevertheless, HEW Secretary Panther shot by deputies HIGH POINT, N.C. (R) - A po- lice officer was critically wounded when city police and sheriff's dep- uties staged an eviction raid at dawn yesterday on a house they said served as a Black Panther headquarters. Police said one occupant of the house was seriously wounded and was hospitalized under guard. Four occupants of the h o u s e were held for questioning. No charges w e r e filed imme- diately and police held the names! of those held. The Panthers had reportedly been given a 30-d a y notice to! move before a magistrate turnedI the eviction proceeding o v e r to the sheriff's department. Elliot L. Richardson said the' Court deadline to end dt $60.7 million the administration temsrthin school year, his has allotted to the South under sacrificed a degree of cor its Emergency School Aid Act has "Because of the dispat been a big help in achieving de- w h i c h funding determ segregation.' were made," he said, "eri The money already spent is part occur which we readily cc of a $75 million down payment on $1.5 billion requested by President:8 Under the administrat Nixon last year to ease the burden posal 8 per cent of the would be allotted to the st of desegregation. Richardson re- newedsthe request and said i the basis of their minorit: among the administration's high- age population. est domestic priorities. However, a conflict with Sen- ate supporters of another deseg- regation bill, which blocked ac- tion last year, appeared unresolv-I estici ed a etr a ' ern.S e n. W alter F. Mondale (D- CHEMICAL EXPERIMENTS es tried on farm workers , Minn.) chief sponsor of the al-j ternate measure, said the admin- istration approach would lead to "a token, sterile kind of elimina- tion of dual school systems with; no real desegregation at all." Mondale cited the report of one group which said 179 of 295 dis- tricts funds by the Health, Edu- cation a n d Welfare Department were ineligible because of various civil rights infractions, and the eligibility of 87 others was ques- tionable. Richardson said the bill, as re- introduced this session, contains safeguards designed to prevent the alleged abuses. He acknowledged that by put- ting the funds out in a hurry to help schools meet a Supreme, WASHINGTON (P) - Two petition with the Environmental pesticide manufacturers hired Protection Agency asking for an farm workers to act as guinea emergency o r d e r prohibiting pigs for experiments with pois- pesticide experiments on human onous chemicals, a nonprofit beings. group studying the agriculture Project officers said state and business industry said yesterday. fegeral agencies allow poisonous Some of the 49 farm laborers pesticides to go on the market tested, including women and before knowing how dangerous children, suffered serious medi- they might be to farmworkers cal effects, the public interest who will be exposed to sprayed group reported. crops. The Agribusiness Accounta- Only after health effects were bility Project released at a news conference information it said dublicize tere farmers rebetwc came from experiments by Ni- eringth ndtimele-etwyen agara Chemical Co. of Middle- spraying and t he re-entry of port, N.Y., and Chemagro Corp. workers, the project said. of Kansas City. Until last July, spokesmen It announced plans to file a said, California required a sev- en-day interval. When this per- iod did not prevent incidents of nerve damage, with symptoms of vomiting, dizziness and sweat- ipg, the state Agriculture De- partment temporarily lengthen- ed the waiting period to 30 days and told pesticide companies to show why the order shouldn't be made permanent, they said. A hearing on the 30-day rule will be held Thursday in Sacra- mento. The farmworkers w e r e paid $3.50 for each blood test they took, the project said, and they had to participate in all t h e pesticide exposure tests to qual- ify for the blood bonus money. SW' THROUGH SATURDAY ONLY! BELLE JACOB WIG CARAVAN INTROD UCING .. . ORAiNGE Jt JLIUS Our name may be new to you, but we've been part of the American scene for 44 years! In early 1926 a man named Julius opened an orange juice stand in Los Angeles. Julius did an average busi- ness until he experimented with serving his orange juice in a specially formulated blend. The enthusiastic response of his customers was highly contagious. There seemed little question of what to call this new taste wonder. The drink was orange, and the man was named Julius. It was a natural: ORANGE JULIUS "A Devilish Good Drink" Every Orange Julius drink is "made-to-order.' We don't just turn on a spigot. You can actually watch us prepare and blend your drink. 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