Ann Arbor 8mm Film Festival TONIGHT and SATURDAY NIGHT in R.C. Audi- toriunat 8:00 p.m. Tickets are 75c and Lovie says he's gonna grow his beard back if all the kids don't come. Cheer your local favorites and hiss at the Bos- ton flicks, but remember no noisemakers in the first lpage three P £ it43n out iy NEWS PHONE: 764.0554 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Friday, February 19, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three ti.. three rows, and R.C. Aud. is in EAST QUAD, and if you're all good kids we'll show some extras at the end, and don't forget your glasses in the ashtray under the... a ' {. CINIMA OVlD' Thurs., Fri.-Feb. 18, 19 TTHE PASSION OF JOAN OF ARC dir. CARL DREYER (1928) Film about the last day of the trial of Joan and her j execution. "Inspired by Dreyer, the company worked together with an almost mystic fervor. 'It was a film made on the knees,' one of Dryer's assistants has said. Falconetti who played the Maid, was never able to make another picture, as if drained by the de- mdnds made upon her by this extraordinary experi- ence; while Dreyer himself has never again equaled the sustained intensity of his JOAN. Into it went the distillation df almost a decade of creative film on the I Continent." Arthur Knight, The Liveliest Art 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75C AUDITORIUM "The dialogue is clever and the performances carry conviction. 'Trash' is alive. Mr. Morris- sey is a talented movie maker." Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times "Sometimes hilarious, sometimes tragic, al- ways powerful-a brilliant portrait." Bernard Drew Sn e -wsbriefs By The Associated Press ROBERT WHITE asked yesterday to be relieved as presi- dent of Kent State University where four students were shot to death in a confrontation with National Guardsmen last May. White asked for a six-month sabbatical leave, starting next Sept. 15, and to be allowed to return afterward as a professor in education administration. He has been president at Kent State, a university of more than 20,000 students since 1963. THE AFL-CIO demanded yesterday that Congress nationalize the railroad industry if it grants President Nixon's request for a? new law to limit rail workers' right to strike Nixon's proposed -legislation would add 30 days to the present 80-day federal "cooling off" injunction to delay transportation strikes, permit partial strikes to prevent a nation-wide crisis and provide for a neutral parwwl. The President could choose only one of these alter- natives in a given dispute. FRED RUSSELL has submitted his resignation as undersec- retary of the Interior and will be offered another high federal post, the White House said yesterday. Secretary of the Interior Rogers Morton announced earlier that, Russel had resigned by mutual agreement. White House sources said it was Russell's view that Morton should be free to select his own No. 2 man. * * * Lair dcreates grouocheek miitr pob ml 1ar r Oe S WASHINGTON (R) - Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird has established a new review council designed to tighten civil- ian control of domestic investigations by military agents. Laird has also reversed his decision to take command of foreign intelligence away from the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Spurred by allegations that military agents spied on anti- war and civil rights leaders, Laird issued a directive Wednes- day calling for a civilian-dominated council which will over- see military intelligence. The program, Laird said, will pro- tect the national security interests while insuring the con- stitutional civil and private ~ -__ THE ARMY had halted an investigation into the Korean War activities of an American businessman who created a monopoly on sales to servicemen's clubs, a retired Army investigator told senators yesterday. William Crum, the businessman, gave bribes and kickbacks to the custodians of army clubs and used his privileges to smuggle goods into Korea duty free, senators were told. -Associated Press Postal strikers march LONDON POSTAL WORKERS striking for the fifth week march to Hyde Park, where they were addressed by union officials Promises of loans from other unions yesterdaymay make it pos sible for the mail strike to continue into March. PRIVATE INSURANCE: Natonalizedhealti i MICHIGAN MOTORISTS may get 1972 auto license tags by mail under an experimental plan the Secretary of State's office will undertake this fall. WASHINGTON ( ) - President Use of tabs for the 1972 license year will save the state an esti- Nixon, rejecting calls for nation- mated $1 million, Secretary of State Richard Austin said Wednesday. alized health c a r e, asked Con- The tabs would hitch onto the 1971 license plates. gress yesterday to require t h a t Costs of the mail system presumably would fluctuate depending virtually all businesses provide on whether new metal plates or stick-on tabs were issued in a given federally-prescribed private health year insurance for employes and their year, families. Ultimately the system could be extended to allow payments for He called for a National Health licenses or tabs by credit cards. Insurance Partnership to correct ALASKA 'DISASTER' Oil pipes idle during hearings FRIDAY 7, 9, 11 SATURDAY 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 VALDEZ, Alaska t(AP) - Honeycomb stacks of metal pipes piled high in a staging area of this waterfront town await the outcome of a national environmental policy debate. The thousands of pieces of 48 inch steel pipe are meant to be assembled into an 800-mile oil pipeline. Oilmen say the pipeline is the most feasible way of moving the estimated 10-billion barrel crude oil reserve from the frozen arctic desert of the North Slope to the warm water port of Valdez and then to West Coast refineries. Conservationists argue the pipeline is a disas- ter waiting to happen, a delicate artery with the potential of rupturing and spewing a deluge of black crude oil over the tundra. It would inter- fere with the migration pattern of caribou and other arctic wildlife and gouge the tundra with gullies by melting the permafrost, they say. The Interior Department concluded yesterday the first of two hearings on the environmental im- pact of the $1 billion project. The second hearings are due next Wednesday and Thursday in An- chorage. Unlike most major oil fields, the North Slope reserves cannot be refined close to the wells. The shallow Prudhoe Bay harbor, often choked by ice in temperatures 65 degrees below zero, can not be depended upon as a shipping port. Plans to move crude oil through the Northwest Passage to East Coast refineries by ice breaking tankers w e r e dropped after tests. Last summer, then-Gov. Keith Miller said 6,- 000 persons were unemployed in Fairbanks, the 14,300-population base for construction. State of- ficials now say the situation in Fairbanks is no worse than in the rest of Alaska, which has a 1 per cent jobless rate. Most of the equipment has been taken over by Aleyeska and winterized to await the possible beginning of construction. inadequacies in the network care, "not by destroying our pr ent insurance system but by i proving it." This referred to a Democrat sponsored plan in Congress f complete nationalization of hea care at a c o st to the feder Treasury of at least $57billion year. The President proposed: -Replacement of most of t federal-state medicaid progra for the needy with partially su sidized private health insuran for poor families with children. -Elimination of the prese $5.30 a month paid by medics beneficiaries f o r health servi outside hospitals. This $1.4 b lion change w o u 1 d be. finan partially by an increase in t1 maximum Social Security wit holding base to $9,800 from $ 000. -$99 million in new aid health profession schools withi centives to increase t h e ann production of medical gradua by 50 per cent by 1975. -$45 million to stimul growth of pre-paid, group pra tice health organizations provi ing comprehensive care rangi from checkups to hospitalizati All insurance plans, federal a private, would have to provider cipients optional coverage byt # health maintenance organizatio rights" of citizens and organ- izations.I The council will be composed of senior civilian officials, including the undersecretaries of the Army, Navy and Air Force, and a single military man thedirector of the IDefense Intelligence Agency. - AThiscouncil will beheaded by Asst. Secretary of Defense Robert _ Froehlke, who will be directly re- sponsible to Laird. In discussing the first Pentagon- wide mechanism for controlling domestic intelligence, Froehlke said allegations of investigative abuses were exaggerated, b u t "nevertheless did give cause for concern" and led to corrective ac- tions and organizational changes. For example, Secretary of the Army Stanley Resor says the of names of three top Illinois offi- es- cials including Sen. Adlai Steven- m- son III might have shown up in intelligence reports but claims ic- none of them was a subject of tic-Army spying. lth Resor made the disclosure in a ral seven-page letter to Rep. Ogden 1a Reid, (R-N.Y. ). Senate hearings will open next week on allegations that spying on civilians by the military vio- the lated constitutional rights to pri- ms vacy. ub- nce Reser blamed the problem, in S part, on the tense domestic situa- tion in 1967-68. During that time ent when the military was ordered in- are to an area, he said, civilian offi- ces cials were "too imprecise" in tell- il- ing what the military could do. hed h e Under the reorganization, he th- 9,- to in- ual tes ate ac- rd- ing on. ind re- the ns. said, the undersecretaries of each of the military services will have; a direct responsibility for the con- duct of military investigative and related counterdintelligence ac- tivities in his department. Each will also be a member of the board. 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 c.arrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. Computer sales, hit byNixon LONDON (P) - The Anglo- American dispute over the pro- posed sale of British computers to the Soviet Union h a s renewed, w i t h President Nixon asking Prime Minister Edward Heath to insist that the Russians permit inspection of their computer fa- cilities. Nixon has also asked that the Russians agree to limit their use to insure they cannot be utilized for military purposes. The United States has expressed concern on several occasions that the $24 million sale of Interna- tional Computers Ltd machines would effectively breach allied rules for witholding machines with military potential from Com- munist nations. The Americans a s o maintain that the sale would breach U.S. trading rules as t h e computers contain components built in the United States. Authorities have expressed con- cern that possession of the com- puters would enable the Russians to overhaul the Americans in some aspects of nuclear research but the British appear to feel the Ameri- cans overly sensitive a b o u t se- curity. Some British authorities have argued that secrets in the t w o machines the Russians wish to buy are already known and that So- viet computer technology has al- ready outstripped that of many western countries. The dispute is viewed as highly important by m a n y British be- cause of the issue of Britains trad- ing autonomy f r o m the United States. One British authority said the American suggestion for limiting the performance of the comput- ers would be 1 i k e, "offering a steam radio to a man who wants a television set, it won't work." john whiting Andy Warhol presents Joe Dallesandro in Introducing Jane Forth and Holly Woodlawn directed by Paul Morrissey No one under 18 admitted BORDERS BOOK SHOP Paperbacks 1 2 price ART BOOK SALE (limited copies available) 2115. STATE (next to Herb David Guitars) 668-7653 t IFTH Porum] vwT AownA7Loan"mv COWWYOWN ANN ARBOR~ *JPMAION 761-0700 fri. and sat. eve. $2.50 sat, mat. $1.75-other $2.00 i 3 :" .": i :: ': ! ;:': ! : : r E >'" r :>: : := i E I ..._. .;,V.::J:"::' "::":'}:">>::Y:V':':::J:.:: :: :°:":4{:t::1:tit:"::t:'}:':'::1t..1: "::{". :Sti"}.?":'}."" ::':1:::. "t::V.'."::."f: .".".":::.. X:::.'!.'! Eastern Michigan University presents IN CONCERT Juan Serrano Flamenco Guitarist : 14}l y :1' J .} % .}1 3 i t1 t I ":" ttt :":: k S ': i i i V:, )( I 14 -~ ""'"" 11 _ Pease Auditorium February 19, 1971 $2.00 Students $2.50 Non-Students NOW SHOWING! i t 8:00 P.M. TICKETSrAVAILABLE at therdoor, the Centicore, Ann Arbor Music Mort, Student Intn'l. Stores "OPERATION MADBALL" with JACK LEMON ERNIE KOVACS Friday, Feb. 19 2 showings 7 & 9 P.M. Room 100-Law School Cheap Flicks-50c CINEMA II "Dial 'M' for Murder" with GRACE KELLY, RAY MILLAND directed by ALFRED HITCHCOCK I 603 E. Liberty St. THE DEIS THRU SAT, Trueblood Theatre Box Office 12:30 Curtain 8:00 UNIVERSITY PkAYERS - m ERawYI'Ori DIAL 5-6290 DOORS OPEN 12:45 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 p.m. "One of the Year's Ten Best!I" New York Daily News I I I PARAMOuT PcjuRE PRESENTS AllMac~raw -Ryan 0'Neal TheYear's W ~jJ - ~ ~ J 1 5Jj~r~g5 ~11 pm. FRIDAY and SATURDAY 7, 9:05 p.m. - PLUS - "The Birthday Party" with ROBERT SHAW The film version of the Harold Pinter play FRIDAY and SATURDAY1 1 --- _ ",,, - -- -- -- V t/ ___) ) 1 L 7wiz 7 I ! e I I 1 P.M. I 1