At State & Liberty Sts. ENDS WEDNESDAY! DIAL 662- 6264 .,', . s .-.eaei COLU*+B'A DC IU8ES A.... +885 Pon,.,ow ,I JACK NICHOLSON FlVI IT .9IPIECES,, "YEAR'S BEST"* -N.Y. Film Critics OPEN 1 P.M. SHOWS: 1:20, 3:10, 5P.M. 7 P.M., 9P.M. R. MON. -FRI. 7:15-9:00 SAT.-SUN.-2:00-3:40 5:25-7:15-9:10 A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION PETER SELLERS SGOLDIE HAWN - ' ~ LJ~ a COOR I umb iatre= 1 Thursday, February 18th Department of Speech Student Laboratory Theatre presents an experimental production of an original musical sketch JOHANN ORPHEUS. by FRED PIEGONSKI ARENA THEATRE, Frieze Building Promptly at 3:10 P.M. ADMISSION FREE 603 E. Liberty _ DIAL Shows at 5-62 * 1,3,5,7, 5-6290 9 p.m. Ali Mac~raw - RyanO'Neal FREE LIST \ SUSPENDED No Ladies Dayj price durinq John Marley& Ray Milland Love Story FG IN.COLOR A PARAMOUNT PICTURE presents ISAACSTERN World-renowned Violinist IN RECITAL-IN HILL AUDITORIUM Sun., Feb. 21, 2:30 PROGRAM Sonata in B-flat, K. 454 Mozart I Sonata No. 3, Op. 25 .. Enesco Sonata No. 1 in G, Op. 78 ..... ........ . Brahms Divertimento ......... ... Stravinsky news briefs By The Associated Press THE UNITED STEEL WORKERS Union yesterday struck three can manufacturing companies and reached agreement with a fourth. The contract agreement, reached with National Can Co.. provided for at least $1 an hour raises over three years for the lowest paid workers, said a representative of the Steel Workers international office. Negotiations, which began last November, are in indefinite recess according to the three struck manufacturers. SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY (D-Mass.) plans to use his new post as chairman of the Senate health subcommittee to press the case for a national health insurance system. Although the subcommittee does not have legislative jurisdictionI over the bill, Kennedy feels its prospects will be strongly enhanced by holding hearings in Washington and throughout the nation. The legislation, because it involves new taxes, falls under the committee jurisdiction of Ways and Means in the House and Finance in the Senate. Neither panel is considered likely to approve any plan as comprehensive as Kennedy's, which provides comprehensive{ benefits for every person in the United States. ABOUT 15 POLICEMEN were rushed into a two block area of downtown Atlanta yesterday, to quell a disturbance in which windows were broken, at least one officer was injured and 29 arrests were made. Charges brought against those arrested include inciting to riot, creating a turmoil and aggravated assault., Police reported that the disturbance began when an officer ar- rested one of two blacks fighting with each other. Other blacks scuf- fled with the arresting officer, and at least two were struck with riot clubs. THE POLISH GOVERNMENT yesterday announced it would revoke on March 1 the sweeping price hikes which provoked bloody pre-Christmas rioting.j Premier Piotr Jaroszewicz said this was made possible by aidj from the Soviet Union and a possible increase in livestock production. The Premier, who replaced ousted communist party chief Gomulka, seven weeks ago, appealed to 10,000 striking mill workers to return to work. Workers immediately rejected the appeal and repeated demands for more pay and cheaper food. Tuesday, February 16, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three State Democrats -Associated Press Police quell disturbance Police arrest a youth yesterday in downtown Atlanta. Police moved in after windows were broken. (See Digest.) - ---- -- --- - - - - 'CONFLICT OF INTEREST': Hart e asks review of Starts' holdings4-. WASHINGTON (A') - Sen. Vance Hartke (D-Ind.) urged c" I P SitI~titn -d a4l, :43 t I y * yesterday that the Senate inquire immediately into Secretary PORTUGUESE GUINEA President Sekou Toure chargedain of Commerce Maurice H. Stans' interest in a Penn Central an interview published yesterday that foreign mercenaries are railroad subsidiary and determine whether the Cabinet of- preparing a new invasion of his country. ficer had knowledge of transactions involving a so-called Accusing Portugal of permitting whites from America, France fblind trust and West Germany to train in Guinea-Bissau, he further charged b that nationals of his own country were being recruited for future Hartke said he would ask Sen. Warren G. Magnuson, (D- aggression. Wash.), chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, to Guinea was attacked last November and Toure then claimed the hold hearings "at the earliest possible date to hear Secretary invasion was mounted by Portugal. Stans' explanation of matters which on their face seem to indicate a strong possibility of TTT'TlT A iU)AXTIn rriet urge end to wr, attack repression From Wire service Reports Michigan Democrats ended an unusually quiet conven- tion this weekend, as they avoided major battles on contro- versial issues. The 2,454 delegates quickly adopted resolutions which called for an immediate cease-fire in Indochina and an end to political repression. The party also passed a watered-down resolution holding out a hope of amnesty to men who, as a matter of conscience, refuse to fight in the Indochina war. The disunity present last August when Democrats passed an amnesty plank for draft -- -_- resisters seemed to have dis,- appeared as the party pre- sented a consensus platform in preparation for the battle for Republican Robert Grif- fin's Senate seat in 1972.rg Responding to a movement by the liberal wing of the party, mem- bers drafted and passed a cam- relating to the arrest and trial of b 1 1e n Angela Davis. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. () - Davis, a communist and ex- George Meany, president of the philosophy professor at UCLA, AFL-CIO said yesterday that any was arrested last year after being plans by President Nixon to single charged with conspiracy in the out the construction industry for killing of a judge in California. wage-price freezes would be un- The resolution stated that the workable and unfair. party "insists the established le- Meany also labeled as "gim- gal principle of presumption of micks" the administration's reve- iInnocence be emphasized by pub- nue sharing program and a pro- lic officials . . . pending the trials posal to consolidate the Labor De- of persons who may otherwise be- partment with other agencies in come political victims, such as An- a governmental reform plan. gela Davis, the Fathers Berrigan Speaking at a news conference and co-defendants under indict- after the opening session of the ment." AFL-CIO Executive Council's win- The same resolution condemned ter meeting, Meany said Nixon's the use of violence as "undemo- revenue sharing plan to return $5 cratic and counterproductive." billion a year to the states would The Indochina resolution called endanger funds for education, anti- for an immediate cease fire, with- poverty, civil rights and other pro- drawal of all American troops by grams because there would be no Dec. 31, release of prisoners of assurance how the states spent the war, and the holding of national unehyt elections in Southeast Asian coun- oney. tries, supervised by an interna- The labor council recommended tional body. instead pumping another $6 billion The resolution on draft resisters into money starved social pro- was much milder than the one grams already authorized and- spe- edastA tthiteonly cifically earmarked for spending. r cogni inAughose who cannot Meany also described as a "gim- participatein the war c"mick" Nixon's proposal to reduce riciaei h a. the present federal Cabinet de- Last weekend's convention, on prent edhinludin lm- the other hand, focused mostly on partments to eight including lump- strategy as leading party figures ing the Labor Department with jockeyed for early support for the other agencies into four broad de- Senate race against Griffin. partments of human resources, Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley and community development, natural former Detroit Mayor Jerome Ca- resources and economic develop- vanaugh are currently front run- ment. ners in the race, and were present Meany listed the AFL-CIO's two at the convention soliciting future top legislative goals in Congress support. this year as a national health in- Cavanaugh, who unsuccessfully surance program to cover all challenged ex-governor G. Mennen Americans, and a boost in the $1.60 Williams for the party's nomina- minimum wage to at least $2. tion in 1968, has continued to be He said the AFL-CIO would go active in the party, though party along with federal controls on all leaders expect Wayne County Cir- forms of income if the President cuit Judge Blair Moody Jr. to pro- felt them necessary and applied vide strong competition if he en- them nationwide rather than to ters the race as expected. just one industry. V 11 IETNAI IBAN Army halts slot-machine use TICKETS: $7.00-$6.50-$6.00-$5.00-$3.50-$2.50 at The University Musical Society Burton Tower, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Office Hours: Mon. thru Fri., 9 to 4:30; Sat., 9 to 12 { (Telephone 665-3717) (Also at Auditorium Box Office 1 1 hours before performance time) i °:k . WASHINGTON (P-The Army late last week announced that it plans to remove slot machines from its clubs in Vietnam. But senatorial investigators are still interested in determining how the devices got there in the first place and whether the mil- lions of dollars put into them have contributed to widespread cor- ruption. Hearings opening before the Senate permanent investigations subcommittee tomorrow are ex- pected to produce demands that the machines be banned from all military bases. 75c " In making its announcement, the Army said it is banning the more than 1,700 slot machines from its bases in Vietnam be- cause of diminishing use and in- creased difficulty in maintaining them in a war zone. But some members of Con- gress see the machines as the front for the corruption they say has spread throughout the maa- agement of the military services' annual $6 billion nonappropriated fund activities. Sen. Edward J. Gurney (R- Fla.) reporting to the subcommit- tee on a trip to Vietnam last November for the investigations panel, is the latest to demand that the machines be banned from the bases. He said the potential of that corruption is more profound than merely the stealing of slot ma- chine receipts or the temptation to steal. "All too often the firms and in- dividuals who install, service and profit from these machines are not the sort with which the U.S. government should deal," he said. In the past the Pentagon has defended the presence (of slot machines on overseasbases as a morale builder and as an accept- able alternative to unsupervised and perhaps more destructive forms of gambling. In 1969, the Pentagon repsrted there were 16,318 slot machines operating at U.S. military bases overseas and that their total in- come was $67.72 million. 1110 upr y. According to Hartke, Stans had a $318,000 stock interest in a maj- or Penn Central railroad subsid- iary at the time his department was involved in Nixon administra- tion efforts to save the railroad from bankruptcy last June. Stans did not specifically men- tion these holdings in a financial statement to t he Senate Com- merce Committee dated Jan. 13, 1969. Stans last week indicated the holdings were included in a clause that referred to "undivided inter- ests of indeterminable value" in two partnerships. Stans. in his financial state- ment, pledged to put these hold- ings and all other assets into a blind trust and order the trustee to make no accountings or re- ports to him. However, in response to a ques- tion, Stans indicated knowledge of a trust transaction which he said occurred in September 1969. 41. AAFC 7-9:30 --14 NOW AT POPULAR PRICES ' Ali McGraw in Goodbye Columbus Aud. A Tues., Feb.16 A RAY STARK" HERBERT ROSS Productoa, Barbra Stresad George Segal Tkow andlthe Panavsm' Co~orCD TONIGHT AT 7 & 9 m! - RADICAL FILM SERIES Alexander Dovzhenko's A EARTH A detailed personal picture of the collectivization of Russian farms "EARTH remains a true classic of the silent screen. -Arthur Knight 75c TUES.-ALICE'S RESTAURANT, Alice Lloyd Hall, 7-9-11 p.m.Q WED.-NEWMAN CENTER, 331 Thompson (between William and Liberty) 7-8:30-10 p.m. meeseennssmeneeee DOUBLE FEATURE-ENDS TONIGHT I/II "The 'FACES' of the skin flicks" LATimes RELESEDBY U-MFLM DW RIBUTORSC COLOR byMoveIE Oefinit in The Hitchcock Tradition GP q cocoR 00 "Bird"-7:00 only "Couples-9:00 only SEATS ON SALE! $1-$4.50! PPTH orUM _ DOWNTOWN ANN' ARUOM WNFORMATION 701-8700 "The most revealing and sensiilve film ever about our generation. A fantasticl flCk."-EVO UNOMI Jneis Conn~ctions A provocative Andy " U .I s... .ik' -AA JW,